The Invisible Adjunct is required blog reading for every academic and student. Your view through the academic looking-glass…
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The price of space
Forwarding from Boing Boing…
This morning on The Current, a CBC radio show, Bob MacDonald (the CBC’s science commentator and host of the brilliant show Quirks and Quarks), was asked to justify the expense of the space program. Among other things, he said:
“It costs NASA less to send a probe to Mars than it would cost Hollywood to make a movie about it”
Unstoppable force. Immovable object.
In this corner, the McDonalds corporation – purveyor of cardboard fast food. In the other corner, Edoardo Raspelli – hardboiled food critic for the Italian newspaper La Stampa. Get ready to rumble!
My money is going on these guys.
Feel Good Now – Part IV
As antidote to yesterday’s FUD, here’s some good vibes to go into the weekend with courtesy of Mark Morford’s column in the SF Gate.
There are, apparently, still plenty of things to give you hope amidst the warmongering and the chaos and the staggering feeling that BushCo and its cronies are simply hell-bent on squeezing this nation into a vicious little spit wad of fear and ennui, all via record budget deficits and staggering unemployment and gutted schools and gutted Medicare and a truly nauseating anti-environment pro-industry agenda and civil rights like an afterthought.
Feel Good Now – Part III
Buy a SUV – get a government subsidy
Among the provisions of the tax package just approved by Congress is an increase in the deduction allowed for small-business equipment purchases, which rises from $25,000 to $100,000. That means real estate agents, lawyers, doctors — anybody who files a Schedule C or corporate tax return — can write off the entire cost of virtually any big sport-utility vehicle. The potential tax savings in the top bracket is $35,000.
Feel Good Now – Part II
Apparently the best way to deal with the budget deficit is to pretend it doesn’t exist.
The Bush administration has shelved a report commissioned by the Treasury that shows the U.S. currently faces a future of chronic federal budget deficits totaling at least $44 trillion in current U.S. dollars.
The study, the most comprehensive assessment of how the U.S. government is at risk of being overwhelmed by the “baby boom” generation’s future healthcare and retirement costs, was commissioned by then-Treasury secretary Paul O’Neill.
But the Bush administration chose to keep the findings out of the annual budget report for fiscal year 2004, published in February, as the White House campaigned for a tax-cut package that critics claim will expand future deficits.
The study asserts that sharp tax increases, massive spending cuts or a painful mix of both are unavoidable if the U.S. is to meet benefit promises to future generations. It estimates that closing the gap would require the equivalent of an immediate and permanent 66 percent across-the-board income tax increase.
Feel Good Now – Pt. I
Paul Wolfowitz on “selling the war”:
The decision to highlight weapons of mass destruction as the main justification for going to war in Iraq was taken for “bureaucratic reasons”, according to the US deputy defence secretary.
But in an interview with the American magazine Vanity Fair, Paul Wolfowitz said there were many other important factors as well.
The famously hawkish Mr Wolfowitz has been a long-time proponent of military action against Iraq.
Picking weapons of mass destruction was “the one reason everyone could agree on”, he says in the interview.
The day I peed on Hootie’s soap
Sometimes when you’re steeped in personal miasma, there’s nothing like a rude cathartic story to cheer you up.
The Ultimate Shopper
Rob@cockeyed.com got tired of using false names with grocery store membership cards and swapping them with friends so now he wants an army of clones.
Now I want to try something different. I want to take the credit for all of my shopping, and for your shopping too!
The key to this plan is the UPC on the back of the card. Typically when I use my Safeway card, the cashier swipes the card over his scanner. With a BEEP my card number is recorded, my savings deducted.
In November I registered a new card with my real name and address. Then I carefully photographed my card and printed the UPC onto a sheet of address labels. Send me an email with your address and I’ll send you a label with my membership number and bar code on it. When you get the label in the mail, stick it on the back of your own Safeway Club Card, carefully covering the old zebra stripes.
The next time you shop at Safeway, your card will link your purchases to my club card number! Your old Safeway Club identity will be gone forever, just like in that movie Eraser, with Arnold Schwarzenegger.. unless you swipe your card through the magnetic reader. Anyone who does this will be lumping their shopping data together with mine. Together we might amass a profile of the single greatest shopper in the history of mankind.
In return I promise to post photos of anything we earn related to the Safeway Club:Â 5% discount coupons, free turkey certificates, jewel-encrusted scepters, etc.
The Pesusich Mix 2003
Couple years ago a friend of mine asked me what sort of new music I was listening to and it came to me that it would just be a whole lot easier to hand off a mix tape/CD and just say “listen.” The first mix was a great success and when I ran into my friend again a couple of weeks ago the inevitable “so what are you listening to?” question came up again.
So here’s the 2003 edition of The Pesusich Mix (named after the friend that started this). There’s no real theme to it other than it’s all stuff that’s been released in the past 12 months (more or less), isn’t on a major label, and tends to be on the droney side of things. I was listening to it in the car today and it’s a pretty good little comp.
- The Lovetones, “The Sound And The Fury”
- The Solarflares, “State Of Mind”
- Manitoba, “Kid You’ll Move Mountains”
- Languis, “Touch A Cloud”
- Charles Atlas, “The Light They Intended For You”
- The Land Of Nod, “Half-Light”
- Surface Of Eceyon, “Over Land, Over Ice”
- I Am Not The Janitor, “Follow (Introduction)”
- Kinski, “Waves Of Second Guessing”
- Scenic, “Year Of The Rat”
- Paik, “Killing Windmills”