Archive for May, 2010
Unions in California are also protesting churches that don’t build with organized labor.
Just think of how much they’re helping the economy standing out there, not doing anything but complaining.
Just so you know how much of a dog and pony show Obama’s troop deployment was: they’re unarmed, and won’t be doing any enforcement – there will be no “shooting to kill”. If he really wanted to do anything to stop even the drug smuggling at the border, the plan would look something more like this.
Also, Obama considers the Phoenix Suns civil rights legends for protesting Arizona enforcing a federal law.
Why would we ever want to enforce immigration? It’s not like there’s any danger or crime from illegal immigrants.
I suspect the answer has something to do with the ideological sympathies Chavez shares with so many Democrats – just like why Democrats wouldn’t ratify free trade with Columbia.
That’s a policy that should go.
Of course, now Liberals won’t be able to use a congressionally mandated law to hide their hate for our military behind.
And what’s more, they were proven right by liberal Harvard economists expecting to prove exactly the opposite.
The results of the study: more government spending is worse for the economy. But don’t expect Democrats to stop, they already know many of their actions are worse for the economy, but still better for their power.
Reason has an interesting article about entrepreneurial foraging, underground farmer’s markets, and rediscovering wild edibles – all activities that are highly prized by greenies. The only thing standing in the way is government.
The main thing I disagree with is the characterization of sea asparagus – I think the stuff is delicious.
$35 million to subsidize The Last Airbender.
There. Doesn’t your economy feel much better now?
Also note how he doesn’t like reporters investigating him.
It’s the newest technology in drug dispensing. Not only are the pills printable with multiple prescriptions, but they digest easier, since the drug is on the surface of the pill rather than in the interior.
Glaxo just released a whole bunch of their potential malaria drugs into the public domain, hoping the rest of society can find a use for them. That’s a great hope, and similar moves certainly work all the time in the software community – but whether drug companies know how to do anything comparable is the big question. Other potentially revolutionary drugs have had trouble getting any research when they’re unpatentable…
We may finally have the technology to stop anything from fogging up, ever again.









