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Remember when?
posted by GJ on February 1, 2006 @ 10:38AM

Was thinking of old restaurants the other day...and I wonder if anyone remembers either of these:

Lums

Lums is famous for their hot dogs...cooked in beer! We went there a loooong time ago, when living in Plattsburg--and according to my sources, it still exists right off I-87. I last ate at one in Big Flats, NY, near Elmira back in 1994. No idea if it's still there, but Darcy may remember as we visited Elmira back in 2000. However...almost all of the orignal Lums are long gone.


Carrol's

Carrol's is technically still around...they just renamed all their restaurants to Burger King and are now the biggest BK franchisee, based in Syracuse, NY. I have vague memories of eating there...probably dates back to our Liverpool days. Holy crap, I was like, four back then!

7 comments | Tags: None

Free tickets to an AHL game
posted by Steve on January 29, 2006 @ 1:12PM

Get your tickets here

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Tire Rack rocks!
posted by GJ on January 26, 2006 @ 11:23AM

Dateline:

Monday, 1/23, 8:25am: GJ realizes that the combination of 280 ft-lbs of torque and all-season high performance tires make acceleration in the snow rather much like a Yugo towing a 40' yacht. He then turns traction control off, and finds his car can no longer move forward--but it does accelerate well 90 degreee to the forward facing direction.

Monday, 1/23, 12:30pm: GJ coughs up a bunch of cash to Tire Rack, ordering four steel wheels with Blizzak Revo1s mounted to them. He figures they will take a couple of days to arrive, so he flies to Chicago for a couple of days on business Tuesday morning.

Tuesday, 1/24, 9:50am: UPS shows up at my house to drop off my tires premounted on the wheels.

Tire Rack (and UPS) delivered my order in just over 21 hours from the time of purchase. And this did not involve overnight shipping! Cost to ship all four tires and wheels was a typical $60 or so. That's the standard ground rate.

So...need new tires, and need 'em quick? Go visit Tire Rack!

2 comments | Tags: None

Misleading word definitions
posted by GJ on January 24, 2006 @ 6:56PM

The fundies (fundamentalists Christians) often claim that Xmas was invented by Evil Corporate America, to specifically remove the Christ from Christmas. They often rail against the use of the word Xmas.

However, the real story is....

When writing the name "Christ", it is quite common to abbreviate it to X or x, representing the first letter (chi) of the Greek XPICTOC khristos. For example, "xmas" is a common abbreviation of "Christmas". "Xian" just means "Christian". The Oxford English Dictionary dates first use of the word Xmas all the way back to 1551. For those of you who are counting, that is 50 years before the King James verison of the Bible was completed.

Looks like the fundies jumped to a conclusion over that word! Actually, you can blame CS Lewis...he wrote a tale of Xmas vs Christmas many years ago....apparently in total ignorance of the original derviation of the word Xmas. Oops!

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9/11 Conspiracy Theories....shot down again
posted by GJ on January 24, 2006 @ 10:35AM

David Ray Griffin has written a lovely tale of conspiracy in "9/11: A Date That Will Live in Infamy" Richard Morrock had this to say about this pathetic book:

David Ray Griffin’s fanciful tale of Bush administration complicity in the 9/11 terrorist attack is a perfect example of the kind of conspiratorial thinking discussed by George Case in Skeptic Vol. 11 No. 4. There isn’t much to be learned about the fateful events from Griffin’s silly book, but he gives us some useful insight into the origins of paranoia.

Most writers on a subject do what is called research on the material, which means reading books, conducting interviews, and tracking down documents. This consumes far too much time and effort for conspiracy buffs like Griffin. His approach consists of asking disturbing questions, ignoring the actual evidence, speculating about the possible answers, assuming the worst-case scenario, and then drawing up his indictment of the administration based on his assumptions, even where they are in flagrant contradiction to widely-known facts.

Starting with the dubious “who benefits argument?”, Griffin concludes that since President George W. Bush profited in terms of political capital from the 9/11 attacks, he had to be behind them. Given that premise, he argues that the U.S. government masterminded the whole catastrophe from beginning to end, with the al-Qaeda hijackers being either innocent bystanders or U.S. secret agents. The planes that hit the World Trade Center — Flights 11 and 175 — were actually piloted by remote control, with their command center at No. 7 WTC, the 45-story office building across a narrow side street from the North Tower. In addition, the impact of the planes did not cause the buildings to collapse; that was the work of controlled explosions set off inside the Towers. As for the Pentagon, it was a guided missile or, no, maybe a military plane that hit the building, with Flight 77 disappearing inside the smoke and flames. And Flight 93, which crashed in Shanksville, PA, was actually shot down by the U.S. military because the passengers were on the brink of taking it over. The Bush administration didn’t want the hijackers taken alive, Griffin insists, because they presumably could have proven their innocence. How strange that 20th hijacker Zacarias Moussaoui should have been kept alive after the 9/11 events, not to mention the mastermind of the affair, Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, captured in Pakistan and now in U.S. custody.

One of the points Griffin raises is why the South Tower collapsed half an hour before the North Tower, although it was struck 15 minutes later. From this alleged discrepancy in the official story, Griffin concludes that the government had planted explosives in the WTC the previous weekend, using a power blackout as cover, and had dynamited the buildings. He never considers the other explanation: the South Tower collapsed faster because the plane impacted on a lower floor, and more floors were therefore set on fire. Any glance at the photograph of the second impact will show this.

He fails to explain why the government would have waited nearly an hour to explode its bombs in the South Tower, which would have allowed many people to escape; the North Tower didn’t collapse for one and 3/4 hours, and nearly all of the WTC workers who died were in the impacted floors or above. Did Bush’s remote control have a low battery?

Griffin actually does claim that No. 7 WTC, which collapsed at 5:20 pm, was blown up by explosives, and this is taken as proof that Washington was behind it. But what would the motive be? Blowing up an already-evacuated office building after thousands had died in the Twin Towers would seem like a waste of dynamite, not to mention office space. Did Bush think that public opinion had not been sufficiently inflamed by the 3,000 deaths? Do most Americans even know that a third office building, far smaller than the Towers, was also lost on that day? Griffin never explores that possibility that No. 7 was demolished because it had been contaminated by the white dust from the nearby North Tower. Explosives were used because, at 45 stories, No. 7 was too tall for a wrecking crane.

Jet fuel is kerosene, argues Griffin. Kerosene could not have caused a fire hot enough to melt steel, which happened at the Twin Towers. Perhaps Griffin has never attended a barbecue, where kerosene is used to ignite charcoal briquettes, and the charcoal fire then cooks the food. Something similar happened at the Twin Towers, where the jet fuel ignited carpets, furniture, books and papers, which then produced enough heat to bring down the burning floors; their impact on the floors below produced the force that led to the Towers’ collapse.

There is the question of what Bush knew on the morning of 9/11 and when he knew it. Some have claimed that Bush was lying when he said he saw the first impact on the Twin Towers, since there had been no live coverage of that attack; the second impact, about 15 minutes later, was covered by cameramen photographing the fire from the first. It would seem likely that when Bush watched the second crash on TV, as he waited to enter the 2nd-grade classroom in Florida where he was planning to read My Pet Goat, he mistakenly thought he was watching the first. Not until about 20 minutes later was he informed that there were two crashes, indicating a terrorist attack rather than an accident, and at that point he started to look worried. About six or seven minutes later, he left the school.

Well, why wasn’t he, or his staff, concerned about his being targeted by the terrorists? Doesn’t that prove, as Griffin indicates, that Bush was aware he was in no danger, and therefore involved in the attack? Not necessarily, given that both attacks were in New York, a thousand miles from Florida, and the attack on the Pentagon hadn’t happened yet. Furthermore, it is unlikely that the hijackers could have singled out the Sarasota elementary school; all of their targets were highly visible landmarks which could be identified from many miles away, whereas urban areas have numerous indistinguishable schools.

Why wasn’t the Air Force ordered to shoot down Flight 77 as it streaked through the sky on its way to hit the Pentagon? The official 9/11 Commission story is that planes were sent north to intercept Flight 11, with the White House and Pentagon unaware that it had already crashed in New York, and that the threat was coming from another plane, heading in from the west. Griffin believes that Vice President Dick Cheney, in charge of the situation in Washington while Bush was flying to Nebraska in Air Force One, deliberately avoided intercepting Flight 77 so that the Pentagon would be struck. One wonders what Donald Rumsfeld, still in his office at the Pentagon, might have had to say about that! Griffin asks why the Pentagon wasn’t evacuated, but never considers the fact that the government had no idea which target in the Washington area had been selected by the terrorists. Nor does he concern himself with the political fallout if an enemy attack on United States soil had been followed by our military leadership fleeing in panic from their still-intact offices.

Then there is the matter of the disappearing wreckage at the Pentagon, of which conspiracy buffs have made much. Photographs taken in the immediate aftermath of the impact show no sign of airplane debris. That must mean that it was a missile that hit the Pentagon, implicating our diabolical government once again. Official accounts indicate that Flight 77 smashed through several of the concentric rings that make up the Pentagon, so that the wreckage all came to rest well inside the building.

Flight 93, which crashed in rural Pennsylvania as the passengers attempted to wrest it back from the hijackers, may actually represent the one instance where Griffin does cast some light on the matter. The original official story had it that the passengers made their way into the cockpit, but that the plane crashed during the brief struggle. Later, it was announced that the passengers never made it through the door, and the government speculated that the pilot, Ziad Jarrah, downed the plane as the desperate fight broke out in the passenger compartment. Of course, given the fact that Jarrah planned to sacrifice his life for this mission, it doesn’t seem likely that he would have aborted it while there was still some chance of success. Griffin indicates that open cell phone lines recorded two explosions during the fight, followed by the sound of rushing wind; he reports an eyewitness saying that the plane disintegrated in the air, and mentions that one engine was found a mile and a half from the rest of the debris.

This is proof to Griffin that the Air Force downed Flight 93 with a missile, making the government responsible for the deaths of the heroic passengers who nearly foiled the fourth hijacking. He backs up this improbable claim by mentioning that someone saw a white military plane in the sky near the hijacked flight, overlooking the detail that military planes on such a mission would travel in formations of two or more, and that they are rarely white.

Griffin also mentions that the Flight 93 hijackers declared that they had a bomb when they took over the plane, but that the passengers regarded this as a bluff. He never considers the possibility that the hijackers were not bluffing, and that they set off the bomb (more likely two) when they were rushed by the passengers. This would account for the explosions, the sound of the wind on the cell phones, the crash of the plane, the engine landing more than a mile from the fuselage, and the peculiar path of the flight in the last few minutes before it crashed. In the map in the 9/11 report, Flight 93 makes a U-turn in northern Ohio after being hijacked, and then heads southeast, in a straight line, aiming directly for Washington. While over western Pennsylvania, it veers to the left and then makes a clockwise semi-circle, as if Jarrah has suddenly found it impossible to steer. Was this the result of a missile, a fight in the passenger compartment, or the desperate hijackers setting off their bombs?

The 9/11 attacks made Americans feel helpless, even more so than our defeat in Vietnam. Theories of administration complicity in 9/11, based on total denial of even the most self-evident facts, serve as a defense against these admittedly uncomfortable feelings, and allow us to feel omnipotent once again. Our government is all-powerful and all-knowing; a bunch of Middle Eastern fanatics couldn’t possibly take us by surprise, could they? Better a government that’s totally evil than one which leaves us helpless in the face of foreign terrorists.

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Skeptics, start your search engines...
posted by Kristen on January 22, 2006 @ 10:05AM

My friends have gotten into this jewelry lately that is sold the way that tupperware is sold. At home parties. I've been to a few, and my friends rave about the stuff, but when I look at it I think it's 100% crap that is held together by superglue and probably assembed by a 6 year old chinese girl.
Do you know of any good websites that rate stuff like this (for free)? The name of the company is Lia Sophia.

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Some thoughts for Punday
posted by GJ on January 20, 2006 @ 1:36PM

*Every calendar's days are numbered.

*The reading of a will is a dead giveaway.

*It was an emotional wedding. Even the cake was in tiers.

*When a clock gets hungry, it goes back four seconds.

*She had a boyfriend with a wooden leg . . . until she broke it off.

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French patriotism
posted by GJ on January 20, 2006 @ 7:42AM

Why does everyone always bust on France's sense of patriotism?

They have veteran's day parades the same as we do.

The only difference is, all the flags are white.

-TommyymmoT

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Bigfoot Film...proven fake?
posted by GJ on January 20, 2006 @ 7:05AM

Check this out. Someone took the old Patterson film, that shaky, 40-second clip of Bigfoot (or a guy in a monkey suit) that people have claimed as proof of this being.

The author of this clip stabilized the picture--that is, he removed the shaking. What you have left is a very obvious man in a monkey suit--just look how he walks! Looks awfully human now, doesn't it?

But still, the true believers will carry on.

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Deep Questions
posted by GJ on January 19, 2006 @ 9:10AM

Is a submarine engine's capacity measured in seahorsepower?

If Valium cured constipation, would it be called a relaxative?

Why isn't there a me-topia?

Is it legal to panhandle in Florida?

If you're cross-eyed and have dyslexia, can you see normally?

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