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Granberry's Parlor

tomierna's Avatar Picture tomierna (Admin) – December 07, 2007 09:46PM Reply Quote
Politics. Don Granberry on the old Spork Boards was quite fond of talking about them, and here we continue on in that fine tradition.

tliet – April 04, 2011 12:38PM Reply Quote
Cows like to be outside, just like pigs. Took this picture from a Dutch newspaper that that ran a small blurb about pigs that just got outside after the winter. in Holland only a few thousand are in such lucky positions, compared to the 12 million in confinement. As one can see, a pig can really look happy. The screaming one hears in those huge pig farms is fear (like the lowing of cows).


John Willoughby – April 04, 2011 12:43PM Reply Quote
Homo Sapiens Sedentarius
I feel the same way about software engineers in "bull pens" or cubes. They're so much happier when they are free range engineers. (And, yes, the squeals are fear. Mostly.)

tliet – April 04, 2011 12:44PM Reply Quote
DPBD

My wife wants to go to this place when it's her birthday in a few weeks time: http://212.204.229.251/pigmassage.html

edit; John, how would your species respond to a 'massage a developer' workshop?



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 04/04/2011 12:57PM by tliet.

El Jeffe – April 04, 2011 01:03PM Reply Quote
What a journey.
Not sure why, but the 'grass fed' farm's cows could roam, but they were content to be in the barns. And the barns at the large place were pretty big. Not confined, really. More like high school.

ddt – April 04, 2011 02:16PM Reply Quote
Hm, "free-range" chickens are usually let out for only a few minutes a day into a small lot. They often don't go out because, well, if all you know is the inside world... and, of course, they're chickens.

ddt

John Willoughby – April 04, 2011 02:45PM Reply Quote
Homo Sapiens Sedentarius
Quote
tliet
edit; John, how would your species respond to a 'massage a developer' workshop?

Most would probably squeal with joy; I don't like personal contact from strangers, so I would squeal with fear.

Tony Leggett (Moderator) – April 10, 2011 03:21PM Reply Quote

El Jeffe – April 11, 2011 02:36AM Reply Quote
What a journey.
Big Ed Bubble thinking by PayPal co-founder
(Doesn't get into a very interesting discussion on the subject, though. )

http://techcrunch.com/2011/04/10/peter-thiel-were-in-a-bubble-and-its-not-the-internet-its-higher-education/

Quote

“If Harvard were really the best education, if it makes that much of a difference, why not franchise it so more people can attend? Why not create 100 Harvard affiliates?” he says. “It’s something about the scarcity and the status. In education your value depends on other people failing.

John Willoughby – April 11, 2011 07:29AM Reply Quote
Homo Sapiens Sedentarius
Higher education is getting obscene in its pricing.

tliet – April 11, 2011 08:55AM Reply Quote
Why do I read NSW differently?

Tony Leggett (Moderator) – April 11, 2011 06:28PM Reply Quote

ddt – April 15, 2011 06:55AM Reply Quote

Tony Leggett (Moderator) – April 15, 2011 02:38PM Reply Quote
Interesting read, ddt.

http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/politics/rising-passions-of-the-right-20110415-1dhtq.html

Quote

Anger at Obama and his agenda had been seething. The movement to deny him legitimacy by claiming he was not born in the US grew and merged with the claim that he is a Muslim.

When his Democrat allies in Congress passed his health insurance bill, the anger surged, fomented by right-wing shock jocks. A number of right-wing figures, including political candidates, called for ''revolution''. And the anger was focused by the Republicans' Sarah Palin, former vice-presidential candidate. She famously urged supporters: ''Don't retreat - RELOAD!''

And she published her so-called target map with crosshairs pinpointing the districts of 20 Democratic Congress members, the priority list of seats for Republicans to retake.

The next day, Giffords, a Democrat who had voted for the health insurance bill, was interviewed on television. She said that Palin had put the ''crosshairs of a gunsight over our district''. She warned that ''when people do that, they've got to realise there's consequences to that action''.

She didn't know that it would be Jared Loughner, apparently insane, who would be the one to put bullets into his guns and decide to hunt an elected member of Congress. And she didn't know that she would be the member he would come after.

But she heard the rhetoric, noted the escalation, saw the incitement, and predicted ''consequences''. So did others. We don't know whether Loughner saw Palin's crosshairs or was affected by the level of anger in the political rhetoric.

But we do know that, after the shooting, Palin's staff redefined the crosshairs on her target map as a ''surveyor's symbol'' rather than gunsights. The map was withdrawn from Palin's website.

Publicly advocating the assassination of elected officials is treason isn't it? Why does Palin hate America?

John Willoughby – April 15, 2011 02:48PM Reply Quote
Homo Sapiens Sedentarius
Because it thinks she's an idiot.

El Jeffe – April 15, 2011 02:53PM Reply Quote
What a journey.

Coincidentally, the lecture I am listening to just ended with Jefferson's death by stating

"After Jefferson's death - a death that occurred on the fourth of July in 1826, 50 years to the day from the adoption of his Declaration of Independence, Monticello was seized and sold to pay the debts that only Thomas Jefferson's last breath released him from" (End of chapter 10)

El Jeffe – April 16, 2011 05:41PM Reply Quote
What a journey.

El Jeffe – April 21, 2011 01:26PM Reply Quote
What a journey.
Any comments on Al Franken vs Apple storyline?

Tony Leggett (Moderator) – April 21, 2011 02:33PM Reply Quote
What's Al Franken doing/done?

El Jeffe – April 21, 2011 04:15PM Reply Quote
What a journey.
Oh, he's called for Jobs to address the iPhone location collection/archival that was reported upon earlier this week.


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