Interesting take by Mimi Swartz in the Sunday Times Magazine on Rick Perry and his Presidential aspirations facing an Old South-New South divide. Swartz, executive editor at Texas Monthly, has a bird’s-eye view of the backstabbing and jockeying. An excerpt:

“What is surprising is the situation among Republicans. ‘There’s no doubt that there’s been a split in the Republican Party in Texas between the country-club wing and the much more conservative base segment of the party,’ says Matt Mackowiak, an Austin-based political consultant and a Perry supporter. That divide is only going to expand. When Karl Rove takes digs at the governor on The Wall Street Journal’s op-ed page, and when George H. W. and Barbara Bush endorse Perry’s gubernatorial primary competitor Kay Bailey Hutchison, that’s the sound of early salvos in an intrastate, intraparty class war.

This isn’t just about snobbery but about something far more important here: money. Texans who have spent zillions to brag about the state’s opera and ballet companies, and who have paid the likes of Santiago Calatrava for architectural gewgaws, also know that multinational corporations aren’t willing to locate in a place that has awful schools and toxic air and that wears its provincialism proudly.”

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Santiago Calatrava’s Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge, Dallas, Texas:

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"Obama and John Boner pretend to be political enemies...

A vast conspiracy (Our beloved USA)

Think all this political nonsense actually involves real differtences between Dems and Repubs and their allies and faithful followers? Hah! What no one understands is that ALL OF THESE GODDAMN POLITICAL CELEBRITIES ARE WORKING TOGETHER TO SCREW US ALL. Sarah Palin and Al Sharpton secretly put their money into interracial porn productions, then they attack each other, with both gaining publicity–and more money from naive contributors and organizations willing to pay tens of thousands of dollars to have Rev. Al and the Soccer Mom/Moosekiller Mom address their gatherings. Obama and John Boner pretend to be political enemies, but are carrying on sexual foursomes with their wives, negotiating government policy between blowing loads on Michele and What’s-her-name’s faces. Rick Perry is not a live human being, but a remote-controlled puppet who is programmed to make increasingly absurd statements so that The People and The Press will be so distracted they won’t see Chris Christie and Joe Biden sneaking off into a corner–and a corner is pretty hard for Christie to fit into–to discuss how the two parties will split next year’s election without the public’s learning about their back-channel contacts. Christie may be the living personification of a “fat cat,” but skinnier Joe Biden is just as bad. Has anyone noticed that Michele Bachmann has been spending a lot of private time with Rick Santorum lately? Santorum isn’t the Evangelical true believer he claims to be, but a crypto-Satanist hedonist free-love Mansonite who is schooling our sweet, sexy, crazy-eyed Michelle in the black arts. Remember, when you go black, you never go back!

Mark Twain wrote in the 1880s: “All politicians are scumbags. Some speak beautifully, some plainly, some stupidly. All are dangerous. All should be driven from power immediately and hanged by their heels. And be sure to buy The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.”

The Wall Street protesters are right! We must destroy all political celebrities, Hollywood celebrities, celebrities of every kind. They suck the lifeblood from The People! Down with the Scarjo’s Leaked Naked Photos police state! Ka-BOOM!

..but are carrying on sexual foursomes with their wives."

Can your surgeon do this? (Thanks Wired.)

 

Some search-engine keyphrases bringing traffic to Afflictor this week:

Afflictor: Assuming the school lunch program will change once the Teapublicans take over.

  • Dan Snyder owns the American company with the most racist name.
  • Robots are likely going to take all of our jobs.

In the aftermath of the 1960s tumult, social networks arose, but of a non-virtual sort. People gathered in circles, discussed their feelings and tried to come to a point where true intimacy could exist with their spouses and with others. Paul Mazursky’s comedy of manners, Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice, is interested in both spouses and the others, studying a pair of married couples racing to the front lines of the sexual revolution before the hand-to-hand ends.

Middle-aged journalist Bob (Robert Culp) and his beautiful wife, Carol (Natalie Wood), leave their kid behind to attend just such a weekend retreat. They’re ostensibly there at this groovy 24-hour crash course in intimacy so that Bob can write an article, but his long hair and mod clothes make it clear that Bob isn’t interested in growing old before he’s had a chance to be young.

Bob and Carol both emerge greatly changed, ready to open their minds and blouses and pants. Bob soon has an affair, and is taken aback when his suddenly non-judgemental wife doesn’t mind. Bob has a much tougher time dealing with his emotions when Carol beds her tennis pro, Horst. But soon he and Horst are drinking and laughing together, and Bob feels liberated from feelings of jealousy. But the acolyte swingers have a difficult time explaining their moral shift to their best friends, the uptight marrieds Ted (Elliot Gould) and Alice (Dyan Cannon). Ted and Alice are revolted—and perhaps just a wee bit curious.

When the four friends head to Atlantic City together for a weekend of gambling, they’re soon weighing whether or not to get their group on. Or as one member of the quartet puts it: “First we’ll have an orgy, and then we’ll go see Tony Bennett.”

Mazursky tries to find a balance in the concluding scenes, acknowledging the need to break down walls, but perhaps not every last one. An utter lack of boundaries can’t work, but are we any closer now, with all our connectedness, to finding a middle ground? What are we connected to? An icon? An identity? A “friend”? It brings to mind something uttered in the film’s consciousness-raising circle: “You chat…but you don’t really look at each other.”•

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This classic (and spooky) 1970 photo, taken by an unnamed Denver Post reporter and now housed at the Library of Congress, shows a worker at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal using a caged rabbit to detect leaks of Sarin gas, which that plant produced. Poor bunny. An odorless, colorless, lethal nerve gas, Sarin was used in the 1995 terrorist attacks in the Tokyo’s subway system. Rabbits weren’t the only ones exposed to the deadly gas. An excerpt from a 2002 Telegraph article, which stated that sarin was tested on British soldiers as recently as 1983:

“One former soldier who underwent a Sarin test in 1983 alleges that Government scientists assured him that there had never been problems with the nerve agent during previous experiments. He says he was not told that Ronald Maddison, an airman, died minutes after being tested with Sarin in 1953.

Ian Foulkes, 38, who was then a private in the 28th Signal Regiment, said: ‘I specifically asked them what the long-term implications of taking part in the tests were because I was not happy about it. Of course if they had mentioned what happened to Ronald Maddison I would not have taken part.'”

 

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From the introduction of “Will Robots Steal Your Job?” a series of articles about the increasing IQ of artificial intelligence, by the resolutely excellent Farhad Manjoo at Slate:

“Artificial intelligence machines are getting so good, so quickly, that they’re poised to replace humans across a wide range of industries. In the next decade, we’ll see machines barge into areas of the economy that we’d never suspected possible—they’ll be diagnosing your diseases, dispensing your medicine, handling your lawsuits, making fundamental scientific discoveries, and even writing stories just like this one. Economic theory holds that as these industries are revolutionized by technology, prices for their services will decline, and society as a whole will benefit. As I conducted my research, I found this argument convincing—robotic lawyers, for instance, will bring cheap legal services to the masses who can’t afford lawyers today. But there’s a dark side, too: Imagine you’ve spent three years in law school, two more years clerking, and the last decade trying to make partner—and now here comes a machine that can do much of your $400-per-hour job faster, and for a fraction of the cost. What do you do now?”

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“Bring it on”:

A 1986 CBS News report about a hole in the ozone layer. These “In the News” segments from the ’70s and ’80s were aimed at children and ran during breaks in cartoons on Saturday mornings. There is way more information available to kids (and everyone) today, but the delivery of it is seldom this impressive. Media functionality has grown exponentially more impressive while journalistic content has not followed.

"I have inside info."

World War 3 to begin soon. (Earth)

i’m no talking about the world series. i’m talking about the war that will end the modern mankind as we know it. 

our govt. knows about it but will not stop it because they think we are going to come out on top, and that it will ultimately
boost our economy, especially the funeral businesses. over 566 million will die in this war, with the US wiped out almost completely.

it will start when IRAn launches a nuclear attack on Israel who will retaliate by wiping out the rest of the middle east, as it finally sheds its
victim status. germany will then bomb and destroy Israel wiping out the tiny jewish state. this will trigger a series of attacks by CHINA, in their 
attempt to be the number one super power. the US will reluctantly step in again to save europe but this time it will not be successful as CHINA will
send nuclear bombs via Europe which they have taken over, on to the US. In the end their will be a new chaos in the world. Finally Russia seeing CHina’s bad intentions will launch bombs into CHINA, and china will retaliate. when the smoke clears both countries will be barren, and full of nuclear dust. 

You may be asking how i know all this. trust me on this one. I KNOW. this aint no joke. i have inside info. how do you plan for it? good question, but no answer. just enjoy your last few weeks is the best i can offer. you can act with dignity or stoop to the lowest intentions, knowing you will get away with anything. i hope you choose the latter.

your friend god 

Dan Snyder, the hapless owner of the Washington Redskins, dropped a lawsuit against the Washington City Paper earlier this month. He had originally claimed that a picture of himself with horns and a goatee in the manner of the devil, which ran with the article “The Cranky Redskins Fan’s Guide to Dan Snyder,” was a crude anti-Semitic slur. Snyder was rightly ridiculed for the suit, as the City Paper was clearly lampooning a terrible sports owner and intended nothing racist, and eventually he gave up the fight. One thing I haven’t read in response to his puzzling outrage (though others must have noted it) is that Snyder owns the American company with the single most racist name. If he owned the Washington Blackskins or Yellowskins, there is no way the NFL would allow such an outdated slur. But for some reason it’s permitted with the Redskins. 

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The world was stunned when NASA announced last December that arsenic-based life existed on Earth, a finding that ran counter to everything we believed, suggesting a parallel life form was possible on our planet. Then the microbes hit the fan, and Felisa Wolfe-Simon, the young astrobiologist at the center of the discovery, was caught up in a firestorm. The opening of a Tom Clynes article on the controversy at Popsci:

“It is this mud, and the peculiar microbes in it, that have stuck Wolfe-Simon in the middle of one of the most extraordinary scientific disputes in recent memory. Last December, at a highly publicized NASA press briefing, Wolfe-Simon announced that her research team had isolated bacteria from Mono Lake, on the edge of California’s Eastern Sierra mountain range, that could subsist on arsenic in place of phosphorus, one of the elements considered essential for all life.

The research, financed mostly by NASA and published initially in the online edition of Science, jolted the scientific community. If confirmed, scientists said, the discovery would mean that this high mountain lake hosts a form of life distinct from all others known on Earth. It would open up the possibility of a shadow biosphere, composed of organisms that can survive using means that long-accepted rules of biochemistry cannot explain. And it would give Mono Lake, rather than Mars or one of Jupiter’s moons, the distinction of being the first place in our solar system where ‘alien’ life was discovered.

But within days, researchers began to question Wolfe-Simon’s methodology and conclusions. Many of them cast aside traditions of measured commentary in peer reviewed periodicals and voiced their criticism directly on blogs and Twitter. Then, as the conflict spilled into the mainstream, the scientific community witnessed something few would have predicted: meaningful public engagement over a serious scientific issue. For several days, at least, a good many water cooler conversations revolved around the metabolic capabilities of a Gammaproteobacterium.

Among academics, the debate devolved into something more vitriolic and personal. One researcher questioned whether Wolfe-Simon and her team were ‘bad scientists.’ Another called her work ‘science fiction.’ One blog post bore the title ‘Is Felisa Wolfe-Simon an Alien?'”

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“A tiny microbe that can survive concentrations of arsenic that would kill all normal life dead”:

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Simon Cowell: Poor taste in singers, cosmetic surgeons.

That former superpower Great Britain sent more unique visitors to Afflictor than any other foreign nation in September. The top 5 finishers:

  1. Great Britain 
  2. Spain
  3. Netherlands
  4. Canada
  5. Germany

 

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Frank Zappa profiled on the Today Show, 1993, the year he died.

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A 1985 CBS News report about the 40th anniversary of two Japanese cities being destroyed by atom bombs during WWII.

"I will happily take any left over meat." (Image by Chris Fryer.)

Deer Meat/Scraps (Bethel)

Hunters…It is that time of year again..If you need to make room for this years hunt I will happily take any left over meat for you. With this season coming up I am also looking for any scraps after processing. I am able to use all parts of the deer except the hide.

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“Bambi Meets Godzilla,” 1969:

Cool vintage 1971 NASA film links the history of knowledge gathering in America, from Benjamin Franklin to space travel.

Related post:

Gizmodo has a good post by Mat Honan which fleshes out what became obvious yesterday after Amazon’s dazzling Kindle Fire presentation: For the time being, Jeff Bezos will fill the void created by Steve Jobs stepping aside at Apple. Amazon has always been formidable, but a little blah. No more. An excerpt:

“And so when it was all over, the press, the great opinionator that drives purchasing decisions, was utterly flabbergasted. It was totally Jobsed, so to speak. Hypnotized and drawn in by the mind-blowing Bezos.

Much of that that is because of his passion. You can see it in his eyes, full of zeal and bordering on crazy. He isn’t just conning you, he believes in it. He feels strongly that he’s got the right product, at the right time. And so watch him and you will too.

And yet, it’s not just about his salesmanship. ‘Jeff Bezos is the new Ron Popeilis a whole other story. He mirrors Apple’s former CEO in a host of other ways as well.

Most obviously, he’s a founder/CEO. Amazon is his. Yes, it’s a public company, but it goes where his vision takes it. It follows his mind into markets. Amazon is Jeff Bezos. Without him it would be adrift.”

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“The instruction we find in books is like fire”:

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In South Korea, Big Brother might actually be your big brother, or somebody’s big brother. The unemployed (and underemployed) have found a niche working as “paparazzi,” but not of the usual variety. Citizens are paid by the government to photograph anyone committing illegal acts. The opening of Choe Sang-Hun’s excellent New York Times article about the league of professional snitches:

“SEOUL, South Korea — With his debts mounting and his wages barely enough to cover the interest, Im Hyun-seok decided he needed a new job. The mild-mannered former English tutor joined South Korea’s growing ranks of camera-toting bounty hunters.

Known here sarcastically as paparazzi, people like Mr. Im stalk their prey and capture them on film. But it is not celebrities, politicians or even hardened criminals they pursue. Rather, they roam cities secretly videotaping fellow citizens breaking the law, deliver the evidence to government officials and collect the rewards.

‘Some people hate us,’ Mr. Im said. ‘But we’re only doing what the law encourages.’

The opportunities are everywhere: a factory releasing industrial waste into a river, a building owner keeping an emergency exit locked, doctors and lawyers not providing receipts for payment so that they can underreport their taxable income.”

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A 1979 CBS report about the potential of rollerskating as an Olympic sport.

While “softening of the brain” refers to the degeneration of tissue in the cerebellum, it seemed to be a catch-all phrase to explain a variety of different types of ailments in the 19th century. The following articles from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle focus on those afflicted by this vague, nebulous disorder.

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“Hoadley D. Ives’ Precarious Condition” (March 11, 1894): “New Haven, Conn.–The condition of Hoadley D. Ives, the millionaire financier, who became suddenly ill yesterday, is very critical. Dr. Russell, his physician, says he has softening of the brain, and, while he is not now confined to his bed, his death is likely to occur at any moment. He is not violent to-day, but this morning insisted upon going out to feed his chickens. He is the wealthiest man in New Haven and is a leading director in two or three banks and has important business connections with almost every large enterprise in the city.”

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“Death of Jacob Gius” (August 12, 1887): “About midnight Jacob Gius, of Jamaica, died from softening of the brain. He kept an oyster saloon in the village for twenty years, and was known to hundreds of Brooklynites. Domestic troubles and drink destroyed his mind.”

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"Richard Waycott, a prominent telegraph operator and a well known resident of this city, died yesterday of softening of the brain."

“Death of Richard Waycott” (February 9, 1893): “Richard Waycott, a prominent telegraph operator and a well known resident of this city, died yesterday of softening of the brain. He was born in Canada but came to this country when a young man. He held several responsible positions for the Western Union Telegraph company until about a year ago, when he was attacked with the dread disease which necessitated his removal to a sanitarium. Mr. Waycott was past master of Commonwealth lodge No. 400, F. and A. M., and was a prominent figure in masonic circles. He was about 30 years old and leaves a wife and a child.”

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“Insanity Consequent on Sunstroke” (February 10, 1882): “One of the unfortunate results of the reviews held here last Summer was the number of cases of sunstroke. It happened on one occasion when one division was called out to Prospect Park and the thermometer was high up in the nineties. The hot spell came suddenly, and the men were overdressed and they were speedily overheated and some of them succumbed to sunstroke. One of the unfortunates, Mr. Henderson, of the Forty-Seventh Regiment, has since developed one of the most dangerous consequences, namely, irritation of the brain, which manifests itself in insane delusions. It is sincerely to be hoped that he has fallen into the hands of an able medical practitioner, for under such circumstances only can a permanent cure be expected. The specific effect of overheating is to produce a slight cerebral irritation, which is not immediately allayed. Even under treatment the patient is for two years liable to the recurrence of symptoms–predisposed, in fact, to inflammation of the brain. But with intelligent watchfulness the worst effects can be avoided and permanent recovery accomplished. Sometimes, where the progress of the inflammation is not arrested, softening and sloughing away of the brain matter ensue, ending in paralysis and insanity.”

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"An area of softening was found in the left hemisphere."

“Hanged an Insane Man” (July 3, 1893): “Reading, Pa.–It appears from the report of the physicians who made an examination of the brain of Buccieri, who was hanged on Thursday, that his mind was diseased, and that he was not responsible for the crime for which he was executed.

In the report they say that the third membrane was markedly congested; an area of softening was found in the left hemisphere, and the entire left lobe of the cerebellum was softened to such an extent as to diminish the tracings of the well known lines of the brain. In one portion they found at least a dozen cysts, some of them as large as a pea, and several calcareous deposits. This report has created quite a sensation.

It is now said that a number of those in charge of the prisoner were convinced that he was insane. The priests who attended his spiritual needs felt so.”

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"Collector." (Image by Dota.)

Don’t throw that old alcohol away! (NYC, Tri-State)

Don’t throw grandma & grandpa’s old booze in the garbage! Turn it into quick CASH!!! Collector paying top dollar for Rums, Brandy, Cognac and Whisky. 
Call Jack

Jimmy Carter tries to reform Washington ethics in 1977. It didn’t take.

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Nissan and Swiss university EPFL are attempting to build cars that can read the thoughts of the driver. From Physorg:

“‘The idea is to blend driver and vehicle intelligence together in such a way that eliminates conflicts between them, leading to a safer motoring environment,’ said Jose del R. Millan, a professor at Swiss technological university EPFL who is leading the project.

The project uses ‘brain activity measurement, eye movement patterns and by scanning the environment around the car in conjunction with the car’s ownsensors’ to forecast the driver’s next move.”

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“You got me so I don’t know where I’m going”:

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A 60 Minutes report from 1978 about the burgeoning business of movie piracy.



60 Minutes on Video Piracy – late 1970s – part 2… by tvnut

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