Oriental Noodles with Vegetables
October 29, 2006 at 10:39 am | In Food | Leave a CommentSimilar to the pad thai we love so much, but without the SPICE!!
1 pkg. Chinese Egg noodles
1/2 Green pepper, diced
1 1/2 tb Vegetable oil
1/2 tb Soy sauce
1/2 Garlic clove, sliced/peeled
1/2 tb Sesame oil
1/2 Chopped onion
1 tb Crushed Peanuts
1 Sliced carrot
1. Cook the noodles in boiling water for 7 minutes.
Drain well. 2. Heat
the oil in a Wok and stir fry the Garlic and ginger
for 1 minute. Add
the onion and stir fry for 2-3 minutes. Add the
pepper, and carrot and
stir fry for 2-3 minutes. 3. Add the noodles and cook
for 2-3 minutes.
Stir in the soy Sauce and sesame oil and sprinkle with
the peanuts.
Serve. Serves 4.
How to prevent the vote from being stolen–spread the word baby!
October 29, 2006 at 9:46 am | In Domestic Violence, Law, Politics, Reference and tools, Stuff & Rants | Leave a Comment
As for election day itself, Miller has a couple of suggestions. The first is that the U.S. government should make it a national holiday to make it as easy as possible for people to get to the polls. The less obstacles to voting we put in front of people, the greater the turnout we’ll experience.
Additionally, and extremely important, Miller said every voter should go to the polls this November armed with the phone number 1-866-OUR-VOTE from Election Incident Reporting System, which records and analyzes information about voting problems before, during, and after elections. He also mentioned the Election Defense Alliance, “which is setting up a citizen’s rapid response mechanism to go to places where there are close races–and where Republicans are cheating–to help people gather evidence.” Should you witness fraudulent and/or suspicious activity on election day, get on your cell phone and contact these groups immediately.
Source: The Ostroy Report
Future Tax Shock – New York Times
October 29, 2006 at 9:39 am | In Uncategorized | Leave a Comment
Published: October 29, 2006
One of President Bush’s be-very-afraid lines this campaign season is that Democrats, if elected, will raise taxes. What he doesn’t say is that if you are one of tens of millions of Americans who make between $75,000 and $500,000 a year, your taxes are already scheduled to rise starting next year — because of laws that Mr. Bush championed and other actions he failed to take.
The higher taxes stem from the alternative minimum tax, a levy that is supposed to snare multimillionaires who would otherwise get away with using excessive tax shelters to wipe out their tax bills. But these days, the alternative tax is snaring many upper-middle-income filers.
Mr. Bush set the trap in 2001 — and in 2003, 2004 and 2006. In each of those years, he flogged for new tax cuts without requiring corresponding long-term changes in the existing rules for the alternative tax. It was well known that failure to update the alternative tax would create perverse interactions with the new tax cuts, causing filers’ tax bills to drop because of the cuts, only to shoot back up again from the alternative levy.
Mr. Bush said he would vanquish the problem through tax reform. Didn’t happen. Congress never wrestled with lasting solutions. The truth is, the president and lawmakers are paralyzed. To fix the alternative tax while keeping the Bush tax cuts on the books would result in the loss of some $800 billion in revenue over 10 years, blowing a hole in the federal budget and exposing how utterly unaffordable the tax cuts of the last five years really are.
The taxpayers wrongly afflicted by the alternative tax are not tax dodgers. For the most part, they are couples with children who have broken into the ranks of six-figure earners, and who live in high-tax states like New York and California. They are being penalized, in effect, for claiming everyday deductions — like write-offs for dependents and property taxes — which, under the alternative tax rules, are viewed as excessive shelters.
Meanwhile, multimillionaires are not being snared at nearly the same rate as other filers. In part, that’s because much of the income of the superrich comes from investments. The tax breaks for investments — the grail of the administration’s tax-cutting crusade — are not counted as shelters under the alternative tax the way, say, children are.
For the past few years, Congress has papered over the mess by passing temporary relief measures to shield most — though not all — upper-middle-income taxpayers from having to pay the alternative tax. The latest stopgap expires at the end of this year, leaving taxpayers exposed at ever lower income levels. Congress could pass another temporary stay, and it will probably do so.
But stopgaps do little to protect the families already being unfairly clobbered by the alternative tax. And they make the nation’s underlying budget problems worse. Like the Bush tax cuts themselves, they result in less tax revenue than is needed, requiring the government to borrow heavily. The mounting debt of the Bush years — all of which must be paid back with interest — makes tax increases or budget cuts, or both, inevitable.
The president wants to push off the day of reckoning until he leaves the White House, while whipping up voter fear of future tax increases. But the reality is that he and his supporters have laid the groundwork for higher taxes and hamstrung government, no matter who is in office in the months and years to come.
library smut | MetaFilter
October 29, 2006 at 9:15 am | In Humor | Leave a Comment
great comment!
First, I slip off your buckram, exposing your anthropodermic bibliopegy. Then, I slowly unstitch your quire. There are three nested signatures and I spread them apart. I stroke the recto side of your outer leaf and your imposition becomes undone. Your words start getting blurry as my paper size increases from a flaccid sextodecimo to a raging folio. Next, I lick the foxing off of your page. In a great passion, I peruse deep into your content, coming to a full stop on your foamcore mounting. I quietly slip you back into your shelf, making a mental note of your Colon classification, so I can look you up later.
posted by Falconetti at 4:11 PM PST on October 28
Source: library smut | MetaFilter
Waterboarding
October 29, 2006 at 9:06 am | In Law, Politics | Leave a CommentI do not approve. I did not give my government permission to use this as a tool.
know what it is before you vote
Top Government Official Says US on Verge of Economic Disaster
October 29, 2006 at 8:11 am | In Politics, Stuff & Rants | Leave a Comment~so who are these fucking retards who think it’s wise to vote for continuing cutting taxes while at the same time committing unimaginable amounts of our dollars on Bush’s chest-thumping penis-envy war in Iraq….selfish selfish evil men who put the cost of this bullshit on our children and grandchildren~ listen up, assholes:
Their basic message is this: If the United States government conducts business as usual over the next few decades, a national debt that is already $8.5 trillion could reach $46 trillion or more, adjusted for inflation. That’s almost as much as the total net worth of every person in America – Bill Gates, Warren Buffett and those Google guys included.
A hole that big could paralyze the U.S. economy; according to some projections, just the interest payments on a debt that big would be as much as all the taxes the government collects today.
And every year that nothing is done about it, Walker says, the problem grows by $2 trillion to $3 trillion.
Source: Top Government Official Says US on Verge of Economic Disaster
Traveling the "National-Security" Route to November 7th
October 28, 2006 at 5:16 pm | In Politics | Leave a Comment
A BANANA-REPUBLIC VOTING SYSTEM
Another aspect of American life that foreigners have trouble comprehending is our slipshod election system. The U.S. has a reputation for sophistication and technological smarts, but our current voting procedures are so deficient, corrupted and easily corruptible, that we resemble a banana-republic dictatorship in the way our rulers are chosen.
France, Canada, Germany, and so many other countries, are so far advanced in how they tabulate the votes — most by hand-counted paper ballots, with tight security involved in doing so — and how quickly they are able to announce the winners. In the U.S., the Republican Administration in effect has outsourced voting equipment and voting tabulation to three Republican-supporting private corporations. They make the voting machines and control the proprietary software that programs the way those work, which means the way votes are registered and, most importantly, counted. Their technicians have access to the machines, sometimes by remote control, and can alter the programming without anybody ever knowing about the manipulation.
Because of this flawed system, the past three U.S. elections (2000, 2002 and 2004) are suspect. Statistical and anecdotal evidence leads to the obvious conclusion that each of those results were fiddled with, or in some states such as Ohio and Florida, the Republican Secretaries of State declared hundreds of thousands of likely Democratic voters ineligible to vote, forcing them to legally fight for the right to have their choices counted.
“I simply find it incredible that your citizens put up with such rubbish,” said a New Zealand businessman as we ate breakfast in the Sahara Desert in southern Morocco two years ago. “Why on earth do they permit such a scandal?” Other foreigners have said something similar whenever the subject comes up.
And how does one explain why Americans are so lackadaisical about their right to have their votes counted honestly? Even the nominal opposition party, the Democrats, haven’t taken the issue seriously enough to loudly protest or take the case to court. It is a scandal, one that easily could be repeated, at least in key districts, in next month’s midterm election. And if you think Karl Rove and his minions are not aware of their opportunities in this regard, you’re amazingly naive.
read more>>> http://www.crisispapers.org/essays6w/traveling.htm
Shakespeare Searched.
October 28, 2006 at 9:31 am | In Reference and tools | Leave a Commenta Shakespeare search engine~~love it!
The 20 tips that got me an IT promotion – by Dumb Little Man
October 28, 2006 at 8:56 am | In Reference and tools, Uncategorized | Leave a Comment
The 20 tips that got me an IT promotion
11 months ago I almost quit my IT support job with a large Accounting company. Jay, the owner of Dumb Little Man, and my best friend, told me to list 25 things I could personally do to get ahead. I was skeptical because I seriously hated this place but I made the list because I had nothing to lose but time and I didn’t want to start to job search.
I couldn’t come up with 25 so we settled on 20. He then tweaked it a little saying that it was too easy to fulfill. Anyway, I took the list and posted it on my cubicle wall. I read that damn thing every morning when I got into the office. To this day, I still have it practically memorized.
Last Friday, I was promoted and I actually moved up 2 spots so I am now earning an extra $15K year. Kind of nice if you ask me.
Here are the missions we put together:
- I will work and think as if I were the SVP of my IT group. This will include how I interact in meetings, with co-workers in the hall, etc. This will train me for the future.
- If I ever decide I don’t like the company I work for, I will still act like the SVP because that is the position I want. I will not become a complaining, gossiping troll because my reputation will follow me.
- I will look for areas that my company fails. One day I will fix that failure by starting my own company.
- I will be the guy to speak out with new ideas in meetings. If it’s going to save money or increase revenues, I will never be out of line.
- I will lead others and show my strengths because someday I may want these people to work for me.
- I will finish everything I start. I am not going to mentally bail on a project.
- I will shut up and listen when I don’t know 110%.
- I will study new trends so I am the guy with the good idea.
- Regardless of what my boss says, I will review myself each month and then ask for help where I need it. My company can train me so that I can move on.
- If they ask for 132 TPS reports, I will do them. One day I may ask an employee of mine for similar reports (even though it’s repulsive to think).
- I will speak my mind in the face of rejection when I am confident that my idea is a winner.
- I will know how competitors do things so I can suggest better solutions in meetings.
- I will not bend to process bureaucracy. If the customer needs it, we have to figure it out.
- I will learn as much as possible about the roles people play in my company. One day I will have to fill those roles.
- I am able to recite my 5-year goal at any time.
- Resume builders are nice but I am pushing for seminars that will train ME.
- I will dress more professionally then the rest on casual Friday.
- On internal conference calls, I will ask questions. Not dumb annoying ones, but questions that pertain to the company’s EPS or EBITDA.
- I will be in the office before my boss’ boss 90% of the time.
- I will leave the office after my boss 100% of the time.
A lot of Jay’s list irritated me but in 30 days things got a helluva lot better. In retrospect, it wasn’t the job making me upset, I just had an ego problem – I felt like I was better than everyone else. After I followed through on my list, I proved I was better.
I know a lot of you may call some of this ass kissing but I was pretty blunt in these meetings and it wasn’t my boss that promoted me – it was his boss. The job was never even officially posted. I am now a firm believer that leaders are winners. This list is coming with me wherever I go.
Take it or leave it.
Frank
Source: The 20 tips that got me an IT promotion – by Dumb Little Man
Carl Sagan’s Cosmos Series
October 28, 2006 at 8:48 am | In Astronomy, Science, Spirit | Leave a Comment
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