blog.paulmurray.net |
|
Paul Murray's weblog, with news you may have missed and my $0.02 worth on a number of topics. "You can't make up anything anymore. The world itself is a satire. All you're doing is recording it."
Internal Links
External Links I bet you don't have a friend who's an acupuncturist E-mail me: pmurray63 [at] hotmail.com (Be patient, I don't check it often.)
Blogs of Note
Political Blogs
Net Radio
|
Saturday, July 25, 2009
The pandering continues.
"Every time I think I'm a Republican, they do something crooked. And every time I think I'm a Democrat, they do something stupid." That's how Jay Leno answered a question from a 60 Minutes correspondent about his political leanings. It's the most insightful thing I've ever heard him say, and current events frequently remind me of it. Keeping track of stupid proposals by politicians would be a full-time job. I cataloged the Bush Administration's bad ideas for awhile, but eventually gave up. (Six months after they left office, we're still learning more.) This week's political stupidity comes from Mark Brewer and the Michigan Democratic Party. Brewer was secretly behind last year's atrocious would-be ballot proposal that would have made about 120 changes (if memory serves me correctly) to the state constitution. He denied involvement until a Democratic PowerPoint presentation about it turned up on a union website. Courts ultimately threw it out. Brewer's now back with more shamelessly pandering ballot proposals: Party officials declined to release details on any of the plans, but said the potential measures include:Rather than document the overwhelming stupidity of these proposals, I'll just refer you to this Daniel Howes column. We deserve better than absurd unrealistic promises.
Changes for another "safe" profession.
For years, it's been well-known that there's a shortage of nurses in this country. That's why a lot of people choose it as a profession: the comforting knowledge that you'll always be able to find work. Well, chalk up another thing our current economic recession has changed, at least temporarily, according to PRI's Marketplace: The story goes on to say that hospital administrators predict this is only temporary, and they're pressing ahead with their efforts to encourage more people to enter the profession. Labels: jobs, professions, recession Monday, July 06, 2009
Robert McNamara, 1916-2009.
Some people lead lives that would seem appropriate as the subject of a Shakespeare play (in the tragic sense, although there are probably some appropriate examples for comedy as well). The first person who always comes to my mind in Richard Nixon, whose positive attributes were thoroughly undone by his negative ones. I've come to think that another may be the late Robert McNamara. Some supporting evidence:
(Last two links via Metafilter) Labels: biography, history, obituary
Incandescent innovations.
I seem to have stumbled into writing about light bulbs on a semi-regular basis (the Google ads on this page are testimony to that). In today's installment, courtesy of the New York Times, we learn that incandescent light bulbs may survive the 2012 Federal standards, thanks to some recent innovations:
Read the article to find out some of the approaches they're using. Labels: CFLs, energy, Light bulbs
|