News/Politics

RIAA Wants to Stop Recording Digital Radio

This won't affect anyone today, but tomorrow is another story. While I don't record songs off the airways anymore, as a child I did. I would record the songs for later listening or make my own radio show. While I believe that the artists and lables have a right to their hard earned (I guess it is hard) money, if they want to make money selling songs and albumns they will have to find a way to do it, not make the actions of millions of law abiding citizens criminals by passing a law that won't actually curb real pirating.

There is always a work around, there is always a faster computer and a smarter programmer that will figure out how to break what has been locked. The RIAA is getting out of control and to my eternal shame, our government is actually helping them. In the past they have been told to take a flying leap, as was the MPAA back in the early 80's with VCRs. Not anymore.

Broadcast flags, CDs that install software that can cripple your computer, CDs that you can't rip to your iPod. It's just insane! All we can do is complain and not buy products from folks that participate in these ventures.

File under "No Surprise": The RIAA wants to take away your right to record songs off the radio

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Remains of Star Trek's 'Scotty' headed for space - Yahoo! News

James Doohan, best known as Scotty on the original Star Trek ("TOS"), died back in July of this year. In a news story reported by Reuters his remains will be shot into space on December 6th aboard Space Service's, Inc's Explorers Flight. Apparently this was his wish. 120 others will also be shot into space with him, of which at least one is an unidentified former astronaut.

Unfortunetly known of them will remain in space for ever. The orbit they will be put into will keep them up there for at least 50 years, and up to 200 years.

Apparently those so wishing can record a message for Mr. Doohan that will be launched into space with him.

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Vote 2004

Okay,

Everyone else is making their predictions.... so let me make mine as well. I am not using any polls, scientific research or black magic; just my own mental abilities, such as they exist. So, who do I think will be the President of the United State of America come February of 2005? Well, I believe it will be George W. Bush, but it will be by a popular vote margin nearly as close as the last election and an electoral vote even closer. I really think that the nation is just that split down the middle.

What is this worth... well, if you have a post-it note anywhere near you... it is worth one sheet of that pad. The weather is an issue, the people's perceptions of the election on the west coast, the number of registered voters that actually turn out at the polls and maybe even a butterfly in China flapping its wings.

In the end, the President of the United States is the President of the United States. I will support whoever sits in that office. It is truly that simple. I support the office of the President, and not the man. The man or one day woman, is the issue during the campaign but once the polls close and victor decided the "Office" takes precedence until such time as the person holding the office belittles the "Office" and that my dear friends is when we look as removing the person.

I have my favorite, Bush, but I support him with trepidation; but I just can't find it in myself to vote for Kerry. If I were to vote for Kerry it would have to be because he offered me something as a person that I think would enrich the office beyond the current resident. I don't think he does. I am not too kean on his character, which isn't to say I think he is a bad person, and I do have some issues with his past and that is only an issue with me because he made it an issue (mistake on his part I think). I believe in his right to speak out against the Vietnam war... I just disagree with him and do not believe everything he said in the way he said it.

I have my issues with Bush. I think we went to war too quickly. I think we should have declared war on Iraq and on the terrorists of September 11th. I think that taking Sadam down was for the good of the world and it was the time to do it, I just think we could have handled it better and still gone down the same road. I don't think we have planned the war out very well and our men and women are suffering the consequences as are the Iraqis people; but show me a war that went "as planned, as advertised." Not one. I trust though that Bush will do what he says. I trust that Bush will do what he feels is in the best interest of the country, even if I at times disagree with him. In short I trust Bush and I don't have that same feeling about Kerry. Trust doesn't mean I agree with you, just that I believe you will do what you think is best and not what you think everyone else thinks is best. If I were President, I would be doing what I thought was best because that is how a Representative Democracy (Republic) works. You don't take polls or have elections for every decision... the leader makes decisions. Bush makes decisions in my mind, I don't think Kerry does.

I will end this by saying, that I believe Bush will win; but I further believe that Bush needs to make some changes in his administration in a bid to try and win back the trust of so many Americans.

President Ronald Reagan 1911-2004

As I walked out of the movie theater this afternoon my phone buzzed announcing a news alert had just arrived. As I opened up the message it simple read,

3:59pm Break News: Former President Ronald Reagan has died.

I had been watching the news off an on all morning as the 60th Anniversary D-Day celebrations kicked into high gear. Through the broadcasts they had been saying that President Reagan had taken a turn for the worse and that he might have only months or weeks left. Apparently he had contracted pneumonia and no longer had the strength to fight. After suffering 10 years of Alzheimer his passing was probably more of a blessing than anything else.

Regardless of how individual Americans felt about the man and his particular beliefs, I have no doubt that they will feel a loss of a man who became the very embodiment of the title President of the United States of America. His policies will be debated long into the future, long after everyone alive have themselves passed into the misty past.

Anytime we loose a President we feel a loss. With Reagan that loss will be felt acutely, if only because of his huge and long lasting presence. He had been a part of American life for some seven decades. First as an actor, then as a Governor and finally as President. His last 10 years were quiet and secluded as he and his family fought the ultimate battle against the ultimate disease of the mind. Surely when he passed he had little or no memory of his contributions to not just America, but the world at large. It will be up to us to remember him and his legacy. Love him or hate him, it can not be denied nor easily dismissed.

Let his final words as President ring out and peer into his soul:

And how stands the city on this winter night? More prosperous, more secure, and happier than it was 8 years ago. But more than that: After 200 years, two centuries, she still stands strong and true on the granite ridge, and her glow has held steady no matter what storm. And she's still a beacon, still a magnet for all who must have freedom, for all the pilgrims from all the lost places who are hurtling through the darkness, toward home.

We've done our part. And as I walk off into the city streets, a final word to the men and women of the Reagan revolution, the men and women across America who for 8 years did the work that brought America back. My friends: We did it. We weren't just marking time. We made a difference. We made the city stronger, we made the city freer, and we left her in good hands. All in all, not bad, not bad at all.

And so, goodbye, God bless you, and God bless the United States of America.

Good-bye Mr. President, you have surely "slipped the surly bonds of earth... to touch the face of God."

Bob Hope Turns 100 Next Month

I saw the link to this story on another blog and thought I would include the link and the text. Bob Hope is one of my favorite comedians and his movies are timeless. What follows is a really nice article about his upcoming birthday with remarks from friends and celebrity admirers. It was lifted from the Voice Of America web site.

Link to the article on VOA

Hollywood Legend Bob Hope, Honored and Celebrated
Mike O'Sullivan
Los Angeles
16 Apr 2003, 12:47 UTC

The legendary entertainer Bob Hope will turn 100 next month, and friends and fans gathered in Hollywood Tuesday to celebrate his career. The comedian was named Hollywood's "Citizen of the Century" for his work as an entertainer, and his work entertaining U.S. troops overseas.

Bob Hope has been making people laugh since 1909, when the six-year-old immigrant from England mimicked comedian Charlie Chaplin in front of a Cleveland firehouse. As a teenager, he entered talent contests, where he honed his skills as a song-and-dance man. He went on to the Broadway stage, where he found his calling as a comic, and later gained fame on radio, in movies and television.

To mark his 100th birthday, friends and admirers gathered on Hollywood Boulevard to recall his career. Bob Hope has already received four plaques on Hollywood's Walk of Fame, and this time received another proclaiming him "Citizen of the Century"

The entertainer is frail and did not attend, but many who know him did. Comedienne Phyllis Diller is a friend who sometimes worked with him on television and in movies.

"We are all indebted to this wonderful man whose body of work will never be touched - 200 movies, 60 years in television, all the way back to vaudeville. What a guy, what a guy. And he's lived to be a century old, and any honor isn't big enough for him," she said.

Phyllis Diller was part of Bob Hope's troupe of entertainers who travelled to southeast Asia during the Vietnam War to boost the morale of U.S. troops. That was an annual Christmas tradition begun in the Second World War, which continued through wartime and peacetime for nearly six decades. Bob Hope's last trip overseas was at Christmas, 1990, when he entertained the troops of Operation Desert Storm stationed in Saudi Arabia.

Comedian Kelsey Grammer said he attended the tribute because of Bob Hope's work in bringing the country laughter. "And for my own sense of admiration that he did the job so well, laughter that has helped us through some very difficult days and has helped us to relish the good ones. Bob Hope's contribution to this country and to our society is invaluable," Mr. Grammer said.

Actress Eva Marie Saint is one of many performers who has appeared with Bob Hope on the screen, most notably in the 1956 film That Certain Feeling. An admirer of his comedy skills, she said his work in cheering the troops is what was really important.

"And through this war of late, I thought what those boys really need is Bob Hope. Happy Birthday, Bob," Ms. Saint said.

Dennis Miller is a popular comedian who has never met Bob Hope but has admired him since his childhood. He recalled Bob Hope's theme song, Thanks for the Memory.

"I want to thank Mr. Hope for the memories. I know he'll be here in 2103. I hope the rest of us are, so that we can sing his praises once again," Mr. Miller said.

The U.S. Congress has honored Bob Hope five times, including once when it named him an honorary veteran of the U.S. military. He is the only person in history given that tribute. He has also received an honorary British knighthood.

The NBC television network will offer its own tribute later this month with a two-hour special called 100 years of Hope and Humor. Bob Hope will turn 100 May 29.

Bagdad Residents Begin Jubilation

This morning, as my TV turned on as a sort of alarm clock, I was greeted by Good Morning America and news of US troops moving into the city center of Bagdad near the Palestine hotel. With the movement of the troops into the city, the residents began to come out onto the streets. First in a trickle and then in a flow. As with a river, the flow had a direction... A huge statue of Sadam Hussein. Over the next hour Iraqi men climbed the statue, tied a rope to it and even began to hack at the bottom of the huge pedstal (standing 30 or 40 feet). Unfortunetly the statue, like Bagdad itself, is huge and not an easy object to bring down. In many ways it seems to be a metaphor for the US effort to free Iraq. A big job laced with dangers, but a job ready to be engaged.

A US armored recovery vechicle drove up to the statue offering its increadible power to help the crowd of young Iraqis to bring down the statue of Sadam Hussein. With a heavy cable from the armored vehecial in toe an energetic Iraqi climbed the pedestal and tied the cable to the statue joined later by marines lacing the statue with more cables and eventually tied an Iraqi flag to the neck of the statue. An image that is as fantastic in showing Sadam's Iraq dieing quickly as it is amazing in that Iraqis and US Marines are working together towards a common goal, the end of Sadam and his many statues. A symbolic act that has been seen time and time again throughout time as hostile regimes fade away into history.