Wednesday, January 30, 2008

REMOVING POSTS FROM INBOX

Many users have contacts or groups that occasionally post content that doesn't quite interest them. That happens to me too. I am not interested in every post by all my contacts or in all my groups (though, I have read every post in Refugees, to my knowledge.) The best way to get that content out of you inbox is to "x" it off. Here's a quick tutorial:




Basically, the green arrow points to the envelope. When this option is engauged, you will receive an email alert for every comment to that blog. The blue arrow points to the pushpin, used to pin items to the top of your inbox so you don't miss them. The red arrow points to the "X," the feature we'll be atlking about.

Simply clicking the "X" for any posts permanently (yes, that means forever) removes the post from your inbox, and you won't receive further updates on it. If you don't have those three icons there, follow these instructions:


First, scroll to the top of your inbox, and it should look something like mine there. Click "Preferences," where the green arrow is pointing.



This is a screenshot of what it should look like. Put a check mark in "Show 'Subscribe,' 'Pin,' and 'Remove' links for each item" Head back to your inbox. It should look like the first screenshot at the top.


Here's another screenshot. This one has "Pin" and "Subscribe" checked. I'm not about to click on the "X" as I don't want to "X" off my guestbook!

If you are coming across content you're not interested in, just "X" it off and it won't pester you. That's the best route for keeping your inbox clean and tidy.

-Ze Baron

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

LIVE GREEN OR DIE TRYING

Look at the nearest light fixture. Do it.

Which do you see?



For the most part, I bet you see the one on the right -- an incandescent bulb. Most of mine are incandescents, but I'll admit I caved and bought a pack of the ones on the right -- CFLs, or compact fluorescent light bulb. I hate the damned things. They remind me too much of a 'sterile' environment... work or the hospital. I put them in places where that wouldn't matter, closets and the kitchen. In the bedroom, bathrooms, living rooms, and dining room, I still have incandescents. I think they cast a much warmer light.

There's a problem, though.


I knew about this right after it happened. Now, of course, there are some hitches. The largest bulb, the 100-watt, will be banned in 2010, through the smallest, a 40-watt, by 2012. Most of what we have in our homes are 60-watts.

I bet most of you who are reading didn't know this. This, of course, affects all of us, everywhere, in more ways than you may think. I wouldn't expect the FBI to come kicking doors down and ripping lighbulbs out. I suspect it only bans the sale, or manufacture of them. I'd suggest you buy a few, try them out, and if you like 'em, don't worry. If you don't, buy a bit of a stockpile of regular bulbs. The only reason I suggest that is that the ban is inevitable. Other than that reason, I'd highly recommend you don't buy them.

What really has me shaking my head over the whole compact
fluorescent lighbulb (CFLs, from here on in) business is that there are major risks associated with these bulbs that have been overlooked. There is a major push for these CFLs from the green community, but I would think that they'd analyze every aspect of the CFLs before putting themselves in such a compromising position.

You see, CFLs contain small amounts of highly-toxic mecury. Smashing one of these bulbs will have more of a consequence than a regular bulb, as illustrated in this news story. An excerpt:

WASHINGTON – Brandy Bridges heard the claims of government officials, environmentalists and retailers like Wal-Mart all pushing the idea of replacing incandescent light bulbs with energy-saving and money-saving compact fluorescent lamps.

So, last month, the Prospect, Maine, resident went out and bought two dozen CFLs and began installing them in her home. One broke. A month later, her daughter's bedroom remains sealed off with plastic like the site of a hazardous materials accident, while Bridges works on a way to pay off a $2,000 estimate by a company specializing in environmentally sound cleanups of the mercury inside the bulb.

blog it

"Live Green or Die Trying"

It's a scary prospect, but it won't just happen in your house. Once this ban takes effect and bulbs start burning out, then what? You're going to throw them away. Maybe you'll smash them in the garbage can. Maybe the garbage truck will compact them. Either way, they will be smashed at the dump, where that lovely mercury will seep its way into our water supply. Pass me a drink.

This ban, while in good heart, has likely done more wrong than good. It would have been in Congress's best interest to make sure there was an established way to dispose of them, namely recycling programs that can handle this and are widespread. I find the entire thing laughable. What about small towns that don't have the facilities or budgets? They'll just have to toss them in the trash, and with a small-town dump, it is almost guarenteed to enter the water supply.

How about another anecdote?

The warnings on the packages of some of the new bulbs are in fine print – hard to read. They are also voluntary, with many bulbs being sold and distributed with no disposal warnings at all.

Charmain Miles of Toronto, Canada, had another frightening experience with a CFL bulb.

Last month she smelled smoke on the second floor of her home, only to discover it was emanating from a new energy-efficient bulb.

"I was horrified," she told a local TV station. "I went through every place upstairs and took out every bulb."

The bulb had been placed in a track-lighting fixture. Though the bulb contained no warning about such fixtures, it turns out CFLs are not for use in track, recessed or dimmer fixtures.


blog it
Voluntary warnings? And they're going to be mandated?

Take a look at this:

Nobody promoted CFLs as aggressively as IKEA. Not only does the retailer sell them, it also provides one of the very few recycling centers for the burned out bulbs. But even with a plethora of recycling centers, how will the public view the prospect of saving up dead bulbs and transporting them to recycling centers? And how about the danger of breakage in that process?

"The industry is currently aiming at totally mercury-free CFL lighting, but this is still five to 10 years away," admits IKEA.

Well, that's good news. At least there are recycling facilities available. The problem is this is a private retailer. They can pull it any time they want. That, and the nearest IKEA is four hours away, for me. I am not taking my smashable bulbs four hours to have them recycled.

This is something I found interesting. I think this would be a much more realistic approach. That, and it promotes free market by not banning a specific product and almost favoring another.

The American Lighting Association has some ideas. It has created a list of five considerations that should be weighed by all legislative bodies considering bans on incandescent bulbs.

The association of American manufacturers and retail outlets suggests any such legislation include the following provisions:

  1. a lumen per watt energy efficiency standard should be established rather than a ban on a specific type of product. It should include a 10-year goal

  2. halogen bulbs should be exempted

  3. incandescent bulbs 40 watts or less should be exempt

  4. collection and disposal plans for mercury-based CFLs should be made prior to any ban;

  5. persuade consumers through education rather than coerce them through limiting choices
blog it
Another aspect -- CFLs cost, on average, $3 each. Unless the industry is going to pull out a remarkable way to save money on them, or take a volunatry profit loss, I would suspect that prices will still hover around $3 when they are the only practical lighting solution. A normal lightbulb costs, on average, $0.50 a day. How are folks who don't have money to throw at lightbulbs going to light their homes when they can buy six normal bulbs for one CFL? Are people in the inner cities going to be stealing bulbs from homes and stores to light their homes?

Yes, the CFLs do last about three years. Yes, the CFLs do use less energy. I think, with the evidence I've shown you, that there is a price to pay for saving the planet. Live Green or Die Trying.

-Ze Baron


Links Depositry:
"
Consumers in dark over risks of new light bulbs"
"Planet Earth banning common light bulbs"
"Congress bans incandescent bulbs"

(Print or link to this blog or one of the above articles. Get the word out.)

Saturday, January 26, 2008

SC CHOOSES OBAMA

Well, the numbers are in. South Carolina choose Obama in the Democratic primaries. But who would have guessed otherwise?

It's his race, stupid!
You see, I really don't think it was much of a primary. They forecasted that 52% of the turnout would be black. Obama won with 55% of the votes. I doubt that all of the black voters voted for him, but I'm sure more did than not.

He's black, you know!
I read articles and hear news stories about all sorts of pundits saying that they think that some white voters will vote against Obama because he's black. I'm sure that is going to happen. There'll be voters who vote against Hillary because she's a chick. There'll be voters who will vote against McCain because he's old and Romney because he's Mormon.

He's what?
He's black. As I mentioned before, 52% of the Democratic voters were black. Obama swept this state by a huge margin. Coincidence? Well, maybe, but take a look at things. The media was crucifying any racism or bigotry in the election as evil. They were denouncing the thought that race could play a major part in the primaries -- They wouldn't vote against Obama over his race!

Well, folks, race did play a part in the primary. White voters likely did vote against Obama over his race. Black voters like voted for him because of his race. I think that's bigotry.

BIGOTRY?!?
Yes, folks, bigotry. A bigot is defined by Webster's as "a person obstinately or intolerantly devoted to his or her own opinions and prejudices." Wouldn't a vote against the white man be bigotry? I think it would.

What does it mean?
It means that race does play a factor, both ways. I think it's terrible that they're voting for or against someone based on the color of their skin. I am not saying that can't play a factor. What if, for instance, Jesse Jackson had been elected in one of his Presidential bids in the '80s? You can bet he had nothing on his mind but race and making a statement when he did that. A black candidate might be prone to give more funding to groups for black kids than white kids?

But seriously, how many groups do you know of that grant scholarships or federal aid to strictly white kids? How about a NAACP, or "National Association for the Advancement of Caucasian People"? You'll never hear of it.

Really...
Race can play a factor. It just shouldn't be the solo factor when voting.

-Ze Baron


Read more on the SC primary here.
Read Webster's definition of "bigot."
Read more about Jesse Jackson.

Friday, January 25, 2008

YAHOO! 360 REFUGEE BADGE

Wanna promote Y!360 Refugees but don't know how? Now, I designed a badge for our group! The great part about the badge is that there's a hyperlink inside, so if you click on it, it'll take you right to our group. I suggest you put one in your Welcome Message. They're available in three sizes, here: (please pardon the poor formatting)

200x300
















150x225














50x75







To put one on your site, copy the HTML code for the appropriate image size and paste it into anywhere HTML is acceptable. To put one in a blog, be sure to turn HTML editing on first. I recommend putting one in your welcome message. Just copy it in there. If you would like a different size, adjust the height and width ratio in one of the formulas. If you are unsure how to do that, please PM me right away.-Ze Baron

WIKIPEDIA SUCKS

Well, not Wikipedia in and of itself. I do like Wikipedia. It's just that when people rave about how anyone can edit an article, well, I find that to be not true.

You see, last night (Fri., 26th) there was a note posted at Refugees asking why Multiply wasn't in this index of social-networking sites on Wikipedia. As it turns out, it was, the user just didn't notice because he looked quickly at work. A Multiply employee commented that the Multiply entry, saying that the entry needed major work but it would be a conflict of interest for him to edit it. I decided to go in, and play with it a bit.

Wikipedia stated that they would display my IP address as having done the changes unless I registered. I would rather not have my IP everywhere (though I know it is) so I registered. You can find me as "Zebaron" over there. I edited in a few sources for the article, I expanded on some information already there, and added some updated information. I added the 3rd, 5th, and 7th paragraphs here.So that was fine and dandy.

Then as I was scrolling down the list... Yahoo! 360 was included. I decided to scoot over and check out what was going on there. I decided to edit some stuff in. So I wrote a bit about how the community is falling apart, and that many users have switched to other platforms or quit blogging entirely. Okay, I saved it, and admired my work. Then I added it to my watch list.

So I came back over here, to Multiply, to catch up on some PMs. After I was done, I checked my Watched posts, not really consisting of much except Multiply and 360. I noticed that 360 was edited. So I click on it, head in. Here, another user deleted what I wrote!

I decided since I was new, I'd go to the users page and ask why they did it. They said I didn't source it properly. She told me I needed a reputable 3rd-party source. Fine, I said, but how do I document a source of people leaving an internet site? So I looked, and I looked, and found an article on TechCrunch about Jerry Yang's decision to close Yahoo! 360, and that 360 lost 51% of it's readers between 9/06 and 9/07 (in America) and 22% in the same time internationally. I cited that, and wrote up a rather nice paragraph, even citing it with a footnote. I was proud of myself. I went back to the user's page and told her that I thought I cleared everything up, if she had problems, would she please contact me rather than just remove everything I did. I checked back on the article, and it was already re-edited by her, almost completely removing and rewriting what I had just written!

I went back to her page, telling her "Do I say "Thank you" or do I tell you how disgusted I am?" among other innocuous comments. I hit "save," but it said another user was commenting, so I waited a few seconds, saved, and she already came back explaining her edits. I was furious!

After more squabbling, I decided to hell with it. I surrendered. I left her a nice parting gift, too. To read that conversation, I'd invite you to click here. Scroll to the bottom where it says "Yahoo! 360 Edits." This is the comment I left when I finally got fed up, and resigned:

clipped from en.wikipedia.org
I do see your reason, but unfortunately, I think something larger is at play. It appears that, in its entirety, I wasted quite a bit of my time. I do suspect that nothing I would have written would have been good enough for you, and I concede that point. It would be quite a shame for I, a new editor, to try and add information to a C-list article as per the aims of Wikipedia. I should hope that you realize the disgust factor was not Wikipedia, or the complications of the system, but rather the inhospitality that was willing to undermine every step I tried to take. I do believe I'll be removing my account in the next few days... it's all for naught. Respectfully, Zebaron (talk) 05:02, 26 January 2008 (UTC)
blog it

You see, dear friends, I have a theory. I think that there are prolific contributors there, sort of "hall monitors," if you will, since anyone can edit (and vandalize!) articles. I think these hall monitors, once they write or do a fair amount of editing, squat on an article by "watching" it. Watching automatically notifies you of updates. I think these hall monitors do their damnedest to have the biggest rack of medals by having the most articles under their paw. I think it's superiority complex -- they resent a new user coming in and adding content.

So, in the end, I guess the title's wrong. Wikipedia does not suck. It's the concepts Wikipedia was founded on: Anyone can edit. Well, they can -- if only for a few minutes.

-Ze Baron

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

THE FALLACY OF FATALITY

Or, On Abortion and the Death Penalty

I had been thinking for quite some time what to title this blog. I had been wondering when I was going to do it. I had initially thought it up on New Years Eve, but I decided it would be too morbid to post on such a night. So, here we are. Today there is a pro-life march in DC, so I figured that now's better than ever.

Before reading this, to any woman who has had an abortion: Please understand that this is not directed at you. This is not a rant on the morality of the act. This is a piece that is to try and understand people's position on the matter, whether they be voters or elected officials. I am not chastising you.

People confuse me. Let's get that straight out of the way. The liberal left has been constantly hammering presidential candidate Mitt Romney for changing his position on a few issues to jockey in with national opinion and that of his base. I'm not sure what issue it was on (ironically, I think it was abortion) but the point remains the same: These people, notably the left, were criticizing him for changing his position. We're not here to argue why he did it, though, or any of that stuff.

The left platform, in general, is pro-choice for women, meaning that they choose to uphold the Roe v. Wade decision, but they are against the death penalty. I'm citing Wikipedia because for something like this, a general consensus as per the masses seems like reliable data. This is clipped (using a fancy add-on for Firefox) directly from Wikipedia. This is part of a long list of "Positions Associated With Modern Liberalism."

clipped from en.wikipedia.org
  • The belief in a woman's right to abortion by Roe v. Wade standards
  • Government role in alternative energy development
  • Government responsibility to supervise ports and infrastructure in the public interest
  • A spirit of international cooperation and strong alliances
  • The elimination of the death penalty
  • blog it
    So, it's not like I'm making this stuff up. Entertain my train of thought for a few moments.

    Liberals do not have a problem with a innocent human who has not yet even breathed air, let alone committed an act, be executed, but they are against a human who has been convicted through our legal system of a heinous act being executed. This does not seem to add up for me.

    Now, I understand that liberals are supposed to really exemplify individual liberties, so that villain has a right to live and that woman has a right to choose about that child's future. The thing is, the villain has willingly committed the act, and presumably he knew the consequences. The baby, however, has no say in the matter, and the woman is sometimes just looking out for her own good.

    I couldn't find a source on Wikipedia that explicitly stated the conservative position, but I know it to be pro-life, pro-death penalty. This means that, with the exception of incest or rape, abortion should be forbade. It also means that in cases warranting it, the death penalty should be on the table, and exercised if decided as such.

    Innocent babies will be allowed to survive, convicted criminals will be tried to the full extent of the law. Of course, for an executioner, that poses all sorts of mental damage of having to execute a living developed human. I'd also like to point out that no one with much of a medical background are allowed to administer the drug cocktail in the lethal injection. The Hippocratic Oath, penned by Hippocrates in the 4th century BC, explicitly states:

    clipped from en.wikipedia.org

    I will neither give a deadly drug to anybody who asked for it, nor will I make a suggestion to this effect. Similarly I will not give to a woman an abortive remedy. In purity and holiness I will guard my life and my art.

    blog it

    It states that the doc can't give a deadly drug to anyone, or help a woman with an abortion. Some modern additions to the Hippocratic oath state:

    clipped from en.wikipedia.org
  • To practice and prescribe to the best of my ability for the good of my patients, and to try to avoid harming them. This beneficial intention is the purpose of the physician. However, this item is still invoked in the modern discussions of euthanasia.
  • Never to do deliberate harm to anyone for anyone else's interest. Physician organizations in most countries have strongly denounced physician participation in legal executions. However, in a small number of cases, most notably Oregon[2] and the Netherlands[3], a doctor can perform euthanasia, by both his and the patient's consent.
  • blog it

    Which brings me to my next point. TIME magazine recently featured an article that was pretty anti-death penalty. The major case they made is that these convicts aren't being executed properly, as the people doing it don't have medical background and don't know the proper amounts of which chemicals, how to mix it for the patient's body mass, how to inject it, how to find a vein, et cetera.

    I would call Roe v. Wade almost a decision that had to be made the way it was. Did you know that the only constitutional amendment that limited our freedoms was Prohibition, which was repealed with another amendment? Limiting another freedom would have had repercussions that echoed for a long time. However, the defined legality of it in Roe v. Wade is not a point in this article.

    I personally think that abortion is a bad idea. It is the holiest of all holies in the church of instant gratification. Sleep around now, write off the consequences 9 months later. What really bothers me is that being responsible about their sexual habits, and understanding that when he puts his in hers, it makes a baby not just a good time, would go a long way. Other forms of contraception (either the latex or the pills) are also available. What messages does this send to young people about their sexual habits? That there is no consequence?

    Ultimately, I think a respect for life is necessary. That means understanding and accepting the consequences of actions, be them having unprotected sex or knocking off a few coworkers. The consequences of those, respectively, are a baby (that's why those body parts are there) and a death sentence. I think that the pro-choice, anti-death penalty position is wrong. There's no consequence.

    -Ze Baron

    Sunday, January 20, 2008

    WHAT A GENTLEMEN

    Considering I just remodeled my page, giving all the men another wonderful Marylin Monroe shot to gawk at, I figured the least I could do would be to include something for the ladies.

    I give you Tom Cruise.

    ...and you thought Michael Jackson's changes were bad.

    -Ze Baron

    MULTIPLY APPRECIATION WEEK (and a CONTEST)

    Multiply Appreciation Week is well underway. If you'd like to visit some of the activities hosted here at Refugees, go to our notes, here. If you would like more information on the goings-on here and in the Multiply community, here are two more links:

    • Meg is hosting links to Multiply Appreciation stories on her blog. Find out more here.
    • Dantcer also has an extensive collection of links, found here.

    I would encourage you to post your stories on your pages, and link to them in Refugees and at one of the above links. Also, you could post them on your page and on a note here, providing Meg or Linda with a link. Again, members are hosting some games and entertainment over in our notes section, so be sure to check them out. Games and contests will continue throughout the week.

    I would like everyone to realize that after Multiply Appreciation Week, all future games and non-related material will be deleted if not expressly authorized by myself. Some members have expressed negative thoughts about our deviation from our mission. Again, these games and celebrations are in part of Multiply Appreciation Week.

    If you have any concerns about Refugees and the goings-on now, or in the future, please send me a private message explaining your thoughts and I will take your concerns into consideration.

    ↓↓ ↓↓↓ ↓↓↓

    Also, in case you didn't notice, our previous theme was a beautiful bright blue theme put together by our very own Missy. The theme was great, it even incorporated our logo into the image banner across the top. Unfortunately, I was trying to edit it, and being unexperienced with CSS, I screwed it up pretty bad one night. That's why we are currently using this easy-to-read but drab theme.

    In celebration for Multiply Appreciate Week, I will be hosting a contest for a new theme for Y!360 Refugees. You can design your own or you can submit one that someone else has created. If you did not create it, make sure the theme owner has given permission for it to be used. If not, obtain permission, or the entry will be voided.

    Unlike the group headshot contest, however, this contest is not open to voting. The group theme is important in that if it is unreadable or lewd or anything like that, it will have adverse effects on the group. That's why this contest is going to be chosen by executive decision, meaning that I'll choose. You guys trust my judgement, right? (Don't answer that...)

    -Ze Baron

    Friday, January 18, 2008

    LIFE'S A BITCH

    And for those of you who are still optimestic, join me, a cynic. Recent events today (IRL) have confirmed to me that there are many people out there who do not hold helping out the fellow man high in regard. There are many people who just like to be problematic and give others problems.

    Now, I can handle bullshit, so don't worry too much about me. Let's just pray that I don't find choice words for the problem-maker.

    More Sunday (maybe.)

    -Ze Baron

    Sunday, January 13, 2008

    What a Wonderful World

    Folks, I'll have you know I'm still plenty alive. This last week was a little busy and I forsee this next week being rather stressful, so I'm not sure how much time I'll have to blog. I'll try to make it around and comment, though, as usual.

    I've got a small piece of good news... I bought a new computer. I'm going to keep running this one until it wakes up dead one morning. They new one is a really fancy (and hence, rather expensive) one for the baronly things that I do. That, and it has all sorts of fancy gagets to play my games in exquisite detail.

    Speaking of which, I order the damn thing on Wendesday and got an email they shipped it on Thursday. Saturday I come home, check the order status, and find that there was an "Unsuccessful Delivery Attempt." I went outside and looked around, and FedEx had stuck one of those "We tried, but you weren't home to sign" stickers to my door and I hadn't even seen it. Today it's Sunday, so they aren't running, and it says they don't do home delivery on Mondays! Now I have to wait until Tuesday. I hope that sticker is wrong and I get my PC tomorrow.

    Anyway, yes, that's about it, folks. Also, if you haven't seen it, Multiply has done some renovations. Check that out here.

    -Ze Baron

    Saturday, January 12, 2008

    POP QUIZ

    Think you're smart?

    Take the pop quiz! First, I suggets you go through and answer all the questions you think you know, and then you are allowed to look up the others. It is unacceptable to talk with others taking this quiz, but you can use the general internet.

    You have until 9:00 PM EST to submit your answers to my email, arrow.of.day@gmail.com. While that's four hours away, I suggest that you give yourself a comfortable one-hour challenge to see if you can get it done.

    All accepted quizzes (before 9 PM) are then corrected. The first place winner has the most questions correct, on down. Grand prize winner is the first 100% correct quiz. All answers are subject to our interpretation.

    Good luck.

    -Ze Baron

    Tammy (rk2this)'s 15 Questions:

    1.)This US state's name means 'People of the south wind'. The buffalo and the honeybee are just two of its symbols. It is located equidistant from the Pacific and the Atlantic Ocean. Susanna Salter (the first woman mayor in the US) was elected mayor of a city in this state.
    2.)True or false: All US Presidents have worn glasses.

    3.) "Do, or do not. There is no try" was a mystical phrase used in which classic film?
    4.)What is alektorophobia?
    5). What is the name of the first book by Darwin that directly dealt with evolution?
    6.) True or false: Cats can steal the air from a baby's mouth.
    7.) Complete the state motto of Pennsylvania: Virtue, Liberty and _________ .
    8.) What does a "Mohel" do ?
    a.perform marriages
    b.perform circumcisions
    c.slaughter sheep
    d.design Mohair coats

    9). The food colorants, cochineal and carmine, are made from what?
    a.a type of root
    b. flower petals
    c. beetles
    d.beet powder

    10).What is the origin of the color ‘magenta?”
    11.)On “The Simpsons,” where did “Santa’s Little Helper” come from?
    12.) This fictional teacher calls Harry Potter "a nasty little boy who considers rules to be beneath him" and taunts him during lessons.
    13.)What is the only metal that is liquid at room temperature?
    14.) What is the common name for the class Aves, which consists of over 8,500 living species?
    15.) How many hubcaps does Steve McQueen's car lose in the famed chase scene from Bullitt?

    Ze Baron's 15 Questions:

    1. What is the official name for Mormon underwear, and what does it signify?
    2. Interlingua, a language developed by the International Auxiliary Language Association, is designed to be easily learned by people with what language family as their native tongue?
    3. What is the main difference between strategic bombing and tactical bombing?
    4. What’s Alexander the Great’s epitaph…in Latin?
    5. Who was George Washington’s Secretary of War?
    6. What’s the bow number of the ship on which the Japanese surrendered in WWII?
    7. Radiocarbon dating is workable up to about how many years old?
    8. What two leaders of what two countries negotiated the Louisiana Purchase?
    9. What’s the highest point in the continental United States?
    10. Describe the Sampson option in general terms.(A sentence, more or less.)
    11. Why can’t the Vatican, a sovereign country, sign the UN Human Rights Declaration?
    12. What is the only nation that is completely landlocked by one other nation?
    13. Name two of the four (excluding the Holy See) small nations in Europe.
    14. What animal are the Canary Islands named after?
    15. On Ze Baron’s Multiply page, his location is listed as Antarctica. If you ask him how it is in Antarctica, and he tells you it’s wonderful, except for the polar bear and penguin poop in the yard, how can you tell he doesn’t live there?

    POP QUIZ

    Think you're smart?

    Take the pop quiz! First, I suggets you go through and answer all the questions you think you know, and then you are allowed to look up the others. It is unacceptable to talk with others taking this quiz, but you can use the general internet.

    You have until 9:00 PM EST to submit your answers to my email, arrow.of.day@gmail.com. While that's four hours away, I suggest that you give yourself a comfortable one-hour challenge to see if you can get it done.

    All accepted quizzes (before 9 PM) are then corrected. The first place winner has the most questions correct, on down. Grand prize winner is the first 100% correct quiz. All answers are subject to our interpretation.

    Good luck.

    -Ze Baron

    Tammy (rk2this)'s 15 Questions:

    1.)This US state's name means 'People of the south wind'. The buffalo and the honeybee are just two of its symbols. It is located equidistant from the Pacific and the Atlantic Ocean. Susanna Salter (the first woman mayor in the US) was elected mayor of a city in this state.
    2.)True or false: All US Presidents have worn glasses.

    3.) "Do, or do not. There is no try" was a mystical phrase used in which classic film?
    4.)What is alektorophobia?
    5). What is the name of the first book by Darwin that directly dealt with evolution?
    6.) True or false: Cats can steal the air from a baby's mouth.
    7.) Complete the state motto of Pennsylvania: Virtue, Liberty and _________ .
    8.) What does a "Mohel" do ?
    a.perform marriages
    b.perform circumcisions
    c.slaughter sheep
    d.design Mohair coats

    9). The food colorants, cochineal and carmine, are made from what?
    a.a type of root
    b. flower petals
    c. beetles
    d.beet powder

    10).What is the origin of the color ‘magenta?”
    11.)On “The Simpsons,” where did “Santa’s Little Helper” come from?
    12.) This fictional teacher calls Harry Potter "a nasty little boy who considers rules to be beneath him" and taunts him during lessons.
    13.)What is the only metal that is liquid at room temperature?
    14.) What is the common name for the class Aves, which consists of over 8,500 living species?
    15.) How many hubcaps does Steve McQueen's car lose in the famed chase scene from Bullitt?

    Ze Baron's 15 Questions:

    1. What is the official name for Mormon underwear, and what does it signify?
    2. Interlingua, a language developed by the International Auxiliary Language Association, is designed to be easily learned by people with what language family as their native tongue?
    3. What is the main difference between strategic bombing and tactical bombing?
    4. What’s Alexander the Great’s epitaph…in Latin?
    5. Who was George Washington’s Secretary of War?
    6. What’s the bow number of the ship on which the Japanese surrendered in WWII?
    7. Radiocarbon dating is workable up to about how many years old?
    8. What two leaders of what two countries negotiated the Louisiana Purchase?
    9. What’s the highest point in the continental United States?
    10. Describe the Sampson option in general terms.(A sentence, more or less.)
    11. Why can’t the Vatican, a sovereign country, sign the UN Human Rights Declaration?
    12. What is the only nation that is completely landlocked by one other nation?
    13. Name two of the four (excluding the Holy See) small nations in Europe.
    14. What animal are the Canary Islands named after?
    15. On Ze Baron’s Multiply page, his location is listed as Antarctica. If you ask him how it is in Antarctica, and he tells you it’s wonderful, except for the polar bear and penguin poop in the yard, how can you tell he doesn’t live there?

    Friday, January 11, 2008

    NEW AND IMPROVED: UPDATES 1/11/08

    Well, today as I was browsing Multiply, I noticed there was a banner across the top warning me new software was going to be implimented and that Multiply would be off line. Yipee! I finished what I was doing, then left the Multiply servers to check my email while things transgressed. Here I am, about two hours later (I was watching Walker, Texas Ranger, not checking email) and the features have been installed!

    For full coverage on the new updates, please click here.

    Please be forewarned that we at Refugees will not be fielding questions in this blog about the updates, but we will continue to help you with techinal problems. I would ask that no comments be made here asking about the new features. If you have a question about the updates, post that here. If you have a techinal question, post that here.

    The new features include:
    • Faster photo album browsing
    • Group admin content control
    • Quicker replies
    • Guestbook pages
    • New Email Alert Formats
    I'm not going to talk about the features themselves, rather, how they impact you as a blogger and member of this group.

    Group admin content control means that the admin can choose which modules are accessible to group members. So far, I've only done that to one module -- blogs. As the group grows and develops, I'll be adding important content, like tutorials, information, and various other important announcements in the blog feature. I understand that many of you were using the blog as an announcement area, as I had requested, but unfortunately, too many questions were being placed in blogs. Now, those are all going to be posted in the Q & A, as I'd requested before.

    If you'd noticed, using the reply option is almost instantaneous. If you don't know how to use the quote thing, here's how:


    This is a comment I made on my friend's blog. If you click edit, then you can edit your original comment. If you click delete, then your comment goes bye-bye. If you click "reply," then you can reply to the original comment. You can reply to anyone's comments. You can only, however, delete your comments, or comments on your page or your thread, or in your group.

    Normally when you would go from your main page to your guestbook, you would have to load all the comments. Sometimes that's 1000, 2000, even 5- or 10000 comments. It's a pain to load that many comments. Multiply has introduced paged comments. This means that instead of loading all the comments in someone's guestbook to reply to one of their comments, you can load only one page.

    Ultimately, I think Multiply made some great decisions regarding what they did and how they did it. Granted, there still are some bugs floating around out there, and if you have a problem with one of those, I suggest you report it to Customer Service pronto.

    If you have any suggestions regarding who can post to what modules here in humble Refugees, please do not hesitate to send me a PM.

    -Ze Baron
    Group Admin


    MUSIC DOWNLOAD

    Before we start fielding many concerns, Multiply has indeed removed the download music feature. We at Refugees, and those at User Support, are unable to do anything about that. Download copyrighted music without the copyright owner's permission is highly illegal, and I believe it was done to protect Multiply users and Multiply itself from a lawsuit.

    Please do not post questions about this topic in our notes. Those will be promptly deleted as there is nothing we at Refugees can do to reinstate that feature.

    I would ask that if any such notes do pop up, please refer them to this blog, and leave no further comment. I would ask that if you were referred to this blog, please remove your note as we can offer you no help here.

    Thank you for your concern at this time.

    -Ze Baron
    Group Admin

    Tuesday, January 8, 2008

    DISCRIMINATION?

    Note: I had originally posted this at my 360. The links should all still work, though.

    In the poll, thirty-nine people said that white men are discriminated against. Nine people said they are not.

    I don't know who voted which way, but I would bet that those nine are either not Caucasian, or not men.

    This is a topic that has bothered me at the back of my mind for the last year or so. I'd like to inform you nine that white men are discriminated against. It may not be out loud, but it happens. How about some examples?

    The NAACP is the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. I'm sure you've heard of it.

    While the NAACP is well-intentioned, it and organizations like it keep racial discrimination alive. If we want white, blacks, and Latinos to be treated the same, we must not differentiate among them. I believe that if our society wants equal rights, we have to become color-blind.

    I read a news story about a crime against a black girl. Unless the crime was racially motivated (I don't believe it was) then race should play no factor. But at the end of the story it said that the NAACP was investigating. Why?

    Al Sharpton, while billed as helping the black community, is only helping to further isolate it. He has advocated for and defended many people mainly because they were black. For example, three white Duke lacrosse players were accused of raping a black stripper. Black victim? White attackers? Al Sharpton is there for that reason. The prosecutor who ran with the charges against the lacrosse players was disbarred last week for falsifying the evidence against them. Has Al Sharpton apologized for his racially motivated conduct? No, nor will he.

    Sharpton is what is referred to as a "race baiter ." He frequently plays the race card. While sometimes it is valid, I surmise that he brings it up to gain passionate support for otherwise non-meritorious causes. If a white man were to do that, his character would be burned at the stake.

    This brings me back to something else. Remember when there was this talk of doing Survivor teams by race? I don't know if they ever did it, but consider this:

    If a black or Latino were in a bar cheering "Go blacks, go blacks!" or "Go Latinos, Go Latinos!” no one would have a second thought. But if I were in a bar yelling, "Go whites, go whites! Beat the blacks! You can win!" I would sound like a Klan member. This wouldn't happen with other races.

    Why is there this double-standard?

    THIS site describes the arguments for and against Affirmative Action. It outlines that African-Americans are being "repaid" for past mistreatments. While, granted, those mistreatments were done by whites to blacks because they were black, the issue of race isn't prevalent here. It is the fact that they were mistreated. But you can't make the fact that race played an issue just *poof!*, go away.

    The point that I'm trying to make is this: giving preferential treatment to blacks because they were mistreated in the past is wrong. They have equal rights; they are equal now. Giving them preferential treatment (say, hiring a black instead of a white because of Affirmative Action) is discrimination against whites. Besides, I did not ever own slaves. No African-Americans I know now are slaves. Why are they being repaid when all the slaves and slaveholders are dead? What more than equal treatment should they really ask for?

    The previously mentioned site alleges that "Those who use the term 'reverse discrimination' are actually engaging in moral absolutism, a completely unworkable concept that has never been practiced by any society in history." What I am outlining in the above paragraph is reverse discrimination. By attempting to right a wrong by helping a culture, we inadvertently discriminate against another culture. But this site wrongly labels it moral absolutism.

    I wasn't familiar with the concept of moral absolutism until recently. Here is a quote from that website:

    "Suppose our society passed a law that says, "No one shall forcefully take a television set from the possession of another." But the next day your neighbor comes over to your house with a gun and forcefully takes your television set from you. Having identified your neighbor, you call the police. The police show up at his door and demand that he surrender the television; he refuses, whereupon they pull out their guns and forcefully take it from him.

    "Now, it would be illogical for your neighbor to claim that the police were immoral and broke the law, since they forcefully took a television set from his possession. This is a completely invalid argument, because correcting injustice is neither immoral nor against the law. Only in a world of moral absolutism would an act be condemned in and of itself, without considering its context or its justness. And at any rate, falling back on a defense of moral absolutism is disingenuous. Your neighbor, having acquired the TV set immorally, would now evoke moral absolutism to avoid giving it up -- and act morally outraged in the process. This is nothing more than a weaselly attempt to protect his self-interest through slippery rhetoric. It is certainly not a morally consistent argument."

    "Zero Tolerance" is moral absolutism. But so is rewarding a race for past injustices. They are both blanket solutions. It is the job of the criminal justice system to correct criminal injustices. The police are "exempt" from the rule that says a person cannot forcefully deprive another of something in his possession, because that television did not belong to your neighbor. They are giving back what is yours. Besides, they have no intention of keeping the television.

    What differentiates the above example from Affirmative Action – taking back what was wrongfully acquired, thereby taking something from someone – is that the television, the person it was stolen from, the thief, and the policing authority are all alive. But in Affirmative Action, the rights, the victim, the thief, and the authority are all new – none were around back then.

    This brings me to THIS Internet site. White male professors are at the Northern Arizona University sued for $1.4 million in back-pay and raises. They claim they were discriminated against by the University. The University gave raises of up to $3,000 to women and minorities. Isn't this discrimination?

    The point that I am trying to make by bringing up this site is that if the University wanted equality they shouldn't have paid previously discriminated more – thereby discriminating themselves. The simply should have given raises based on ability. This brings me to the settlement and how it was reached:

    "The fact-finder in the case, Senior Judge Robert C. Broomfield, of the U.S. District Court for Arizona, agreed with the 40 white male professors that the raises "went beyond attaining a balance" ( The Chronicle, July 16, 2004).

    By overcompensating women and members of minority groups, Judge Broomfield ruled, the university had violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits employers from discriminating on the basis of race or sex. He ordered a separate trial to decide damages.

    Last Wednesday Judge Broomfield decided that the university, which said it had addressed the professors' concerns in the mid-1990s by providing $693,000 in retroactive pay increases to the white professors, had not gone far enough. He instead concluded that the professors were still owed a combined total of $1.4-million.

    So, essentially, the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which undoubtedly was enacted to protect minorities, is protecting everyone – as laws should. Discrimination works both ways.

    THIS site has commentary on THIS story. Apparently, "An English professor at the University of North Carolina illegally subjected a student to "intentional discrimination and harassment" because he was "a white, heterosexual Christian male" who expressed disapproval of homosexuality, the U.S. Education Department's Office of Civil Rights has ruled."

    The class was having a discussion and Timothy R. Mertes, a white student, stated that "he was a Christian and felt ‘disgusted, not threatened’ by homosexual behavior." Was his statement covered by the First Amendment? Sure it is, yes. The freedom of speech is in the First Amendment to the Constitution. It’s the first thing listed in the Bill of Rights, those vitally important things. After the discussion, the professor sent an email to the class accusing Mertes of making a "hate speech."

    The writer on the first site wonders this: “I wonder if this had been a black lesbian female expressing her displeasure with straight white men, or an [A]rab straight man saying the same as Mr. Mertes and then being harangued in an email by the Professor if the outcome would have ben [sic] different. I believe it would have.”

    Sadly, I agree with that author. Would there have been a public outrage against the professor's email if the speaker of the "hate" had been black, lesbian, or Arab? Blacks, lesbians, or Arabs would have been outraged had a professor tried to stifle their speech, but white men are not outraged that one of theirs was called a "hater" for saying something disgusted him. Why is this? He wasn't saying that homosexuals should be banned, discriminated against, or otherwise treated differently. This white man said that the behavior of certain other people "disgusted" him. Those are not words of hate. They are an expression of feeling. His feelings aren't politically correct, though, so he is classified as a hater.

    Here is a quote from that Washington Post article:

    The federal ruling comes as Mr. Moeser and UNC administrators at the Chapel Hill campus have moved this month to shut down a male Christian fraternity there, Alpha Iota Omega, on the grounds the student group is violating the university's anti-discrimination policy because it excludes non-Christians and self-professed homosexuals from membership. The fraternity has filed a federal lawsuit against UNC to protect its membership policy from university interference.”

    A fraternity refused to allow non-Christians or homosexuals join. Is this discrimination? Yes, it is, but it is the nature of a fraternity to be selective about who joins its ranks. It’s a social organization. What differentiates a fraternity from other organizations is that is selective by its very nature - not everyone is supposed to be invited to join - and why would anyone want to join a purely social club that specifically excludes people like themselves?


    Should organizations like the NAACP be dissolved because they continuing racism by differentiating? There is no reciprocal organization to the NAACP. Can you imagine the outrage over a National Association for the Advancement of White People?

    This reminds me of a story I read on the Internet a while back.

    Read THIS link. It’s quick and just a news story. I’m outraged by it. The Angels gave a red nylon tote bag to the women over 18 on Mother’s Day of last year. A man, Michael Cohn, field an age and sex discrimination lawsuit claiming that “thousands of males and fans under age 18 are entitled to $4,000 in damages each because they were treated unequally at last May's promotion.” He has a reasonable case if you look at it on the surface. Discrimination… women… over 18… But four grand for a dumb tote bag? If I had to guess, I’d say he was suing for emotional damages and stuff like that. I’m sorry, but I’d be more emotionally damaged and humiliated if the old lady at the ticket booth handed me a “Happy Mother’s Day” tote bag when I went to an Angels game…

    The man should have sued to get the Angels to hand out, say, beer steins or baseballs or something. Four thousand dollars over a well-intentioned Mother’s Day gift is nuts. They probably give out stuff on Father’s Day, too. Should females sue because they’re excluded from the promotion that celebrated fatherhood? Is this discrimination? In the textbook, it is. But in my eyes, there is a reciprocal holiday for Father’s. Next thing an eight-year-old is going to sue because he isn’t allowed to be a father by nature… Mr. Cohn should attend an Angels game on Father’s Day.

    Maybe he’ll get an Angels man-thong.

    HERE is a list of all-women’s colleges. Note that there are 68 all-women's colleges in the US. Now let me inform you that there are four all-men’s colleges. They are Wabash College, Deep Springs College, Hampden-Sydney College, and Morehouse College. It should be noted that all colleges that receive government funding are co-ed. The single-sex colleges are private colleges. This is not discrimination because they are private and not government funded. But notice how the numbers match up. Four versus sixty-eight.

    Read this quote taken from THIS site:

    “Blumrosen ignored the act and its statutory prohibition against regulatory interpretation. He bet that he could get away with rewriting the act because of the courts’ deference to the regulatory agency. Blumrosen redefined discrimination to be statistical disparity or under-utilization of blacks. If an employer’s work force contained a smaller percentage of blacks than blacks comprised of the local population, the company was discriminating. Anything that had disparate impact, such as employment tests, Blumrosen declared to be discriminatory. Having eliminated intent, he was able to shift the act’s focus from specific discrimination against individuals and initiate agency proceedings against employers even in the absence of complaints of discrimination.”

    Alfred Blumrosen rewrote “discrimination” as stated in the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to mean “statistical disparity or under-utilization of blacks.” Discrimination can happen to anyone. Not just blacks. Granted, the law was passed and aimed at blacks, but it did not explicitly say that. He added it later. The site also stated “House Judiciary Committee Chairman Emanuel Celler (D-NY) amended the bill to prevent the EEOC from making any substantive regulatory interpretations of the act.” That basically means that this Celler guy added to the bill an amendment that made it so you couldn’t have regulatory interpretations of the law. A regulatory interpretation is what Blumrosen did.


    He helped get us where we are.

    “Blumrosen’s redefinition of discrimination created 'reverse discrimination.'” Whites lose opportunities for racial reasons alone. When Brian Weber’s reverse discrimination case came before the Supreme Court in 1979, the Court ruled that Kaiser Aluminum’s discrimination against whites in the company’s training program was “benign discrimination” consistent with the “spirit” of the Civil Rights Act.

    “Public universities, being public, are restricted by the Constitution’s equal protection clause from voluntarily adopting racial quotas like private companies. Other rationales have had to be created, such as “a compelling government interest,” “remedying past discrimination,” and “diversity.” No court has yet explained the power granted these concepts to trump the Constitution. But a number of judges, justices, and law professors have assumed that these exemptions to the Constitution’s equal protection clause exist.”

    What that’s basically saying is that Blumrosen redefined discrimination, which in turn created that reverse discrimination that we’ve been talking about. When you artificially promote minorities, it ruins chances for the majorities, here whites. Public universities are bound to not discriminate, which is the equal protection the Constitution describes, so they cannot have race quotas. Note the three bolded statements in the second paragraph. These are words used to avoid using words like “reverse discrimination.”



    “Another explanation is that elites believe blacks cannot compete with whites on equal terms and can only be rescued by privilege from being a permanent underclass. A third explanation is that elites accept Gunnar Myrdal’s view that all whites are “aversive racists;” therefore, democracy cannot deliver justice to blacks and must be supplemented or superseded with legal coercion.”



    That’s an interesting term, “aversive racists.” I’m not sure whether it means that all whites are racists who don’t want confrontation (I doubt that, since I’m not) or that all whites are afraid of race difference and trying to make up for their past mistakes. I don’t see me as that either; I’ve never been racist.



    “The common denominator of these answers is that justice for blacks requires whites to become second class citizens in law. Second class citizenship for whites is a definite result of Blumrosen’s rewrite of the Civil Rights Act. Every administration since Nixon’s and every Supreme Court since the Burger Court has diminished the rights of white people. The resurrection of a feudal legal system is occurring without debate. Moreover, it is white elites who are destroying the rights of white people. The vast majority of whites either accept the diminution of their rights or they are unaware of it.”



    This paragraph outlines my beliefs in a more eloquent and fact-backed way. White leaders believe the only way that they can make up for past injustices is making blacks better than whites, however I think the proper justice would be equality.



    I constantly say that I want people to judge me by my attitude, ability, and personality, not my appearance. I am 100% satisfied by my appearance and I like it. But if I post my picture, you, my friends, in addition to the general public will judge me before you even leave one comment, even if you don't intend to. Is that how we want things?

    -Ze Baron