Most Recent Comments

  • 07/08/2008 - 18:16
    Jason Hsu (not verified)

    http://tobaccofreeaction.org/contributions/display.php?StateID=CO

    Marilyn Musgrave is so dedicated to promoting moral values that she is Joe Camel's favorite member of the Colorado Congressional delegation. Since 2001, she has accepted $48,000 in campaign contributions from tobacco interests. Remember that Musgrave doesn't live in our universe but in a bizarre parallel universe where homosexuality is a crime against humanity but seducing kids into nicotine addiction is just making a living.

  • 07/08/2008 - 17:55
    Jason Hsu (not verified)

    Oh, come on! In McBush's world, most cases of emphysema and lung cancer and a large percentage of heart attacks and strokes are caused by homosexuals, not tobacco.

    Did you know that McBush has turned against FDA regulation of tobacco after he was for it? Check out:
    http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2008/03/26/mccains_stand_on_t...

    Did you know that McBush's senior adviser (Charlie Black) is a glorified drug pusher? (Oops, I mean Phillip Morris lobbyist.) Check out:
    http://firedoglake.com/2008/03/26/mccain-and-charlie-blackand-big-tobacc...

    Rest assured that Charlie Black had absolutely nothing to do whatsoever with McBush's change of heart on FDA regulation of the tobacco industry or tobacco taxes. Forget all about the nonsense that tobacco is the only legal product that kills such a large percentage of users even when used as directed. Those 400 thousand fatalities per year are caused by homosexuals. Rest assured also that the analysts on CNBC are trying to help you make money, not unload shaky assets at premium prices to gullible people.

    PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE do NOT tell anyone in Utah about Joe Camel's efforts to help McBush protect America, uphold moral values, and preserve the sanctity of life. That would spoil everything.

  • 06/25/2008 - 07:41
    linda

    Jeremy,

    I'd be happy to send this to your gmail account, but I don't know the address. Can you send it to me via the 'contact' link on my site and I'll get it out to you.

  • 06/23/2008 - 21:19
    Jason Hsu, AA0II (not verified)

    What's even worse is excessive use of heat in winter. At least when you're cold, you can remedy that by adding clothing. When I'm in an overheated building in winter, what am I supposed to do? I can only strip down so much before I start violating public decency laws. I can't believe that I'm better at handling the winter cold than everyone else given that I'm much more likely to wear a hat and gloves outside than most other people, and I'm much thinner than most other people. (Don't get me started on how hard it is to find pants and belts that fit.) You'd think that having less flesh would make me want warmer rather than cooler indoor temperatures in winter.

    I grew up thinking that heavy sweaters are for winter and short sleeves are for summer. The powers-that-be who control indoor temperatures seem to be trying their best to deprogram me from that kooky notion. If room temperature in winter is supposed to be as warm or warmer than that in summer, I'd love to see how these climate controllers decide whether to use air conditioning or heat on those mild late spring and early fall days when I'm using neither. There should be a wide intermediate indoor temperature range at which neither heat nor air conditioning is required.

    Is it just me, or is has this rampant climate control abuse become much more prevalent over the years? I don't recall being so cold in summer or so hot in winter when I was a child back in the 1980s. If all the schools now roast the students in cold weather and freeze the students in hot weather, how are the students supposed to learn that sweaters are winter attire while T-shirts and shorts are summer attire? Also, if your body is well adjusted for the over-air-conditioned buildings of summer, how can you stand being out in the summer heat for more than about 20 seconds? If your body is well adjusted for the overheated buildings of winter, how can you stand being out in the winter cold for more than about 10 seconds?

    You'd think that concerns about high energy prices and the environment would lead to warmer indoor temperatures in summer and cooler indoor temperatures in winter. The sad irony about air conditioning is that using it promotes the very heat the users are trying to escape from. Think about it: People turn on the air conditioning to cool off. The air conditioner guzzles electricity (a few thousand watts, compared to 40-120 watts for an inefficient incandescent light bulb), which requires the burning of fossil fuels at the power plant. The burning of fossil fuels releases carbon dioxide into the air, which promotes global warming, and that means higher temperatures and an even greater need for air conditioning.

    I can't believe people think President Carter's thermostat settings (78 degrees in summer, 68 degrees in winter) are harsh and draconian. I grew up thinking that was normal. When I'm wearing a sweater and used to the winter cold, 72 degrees feels sweltering, and mid-70s feels sweltering even without a sweater. When I'm wearing a T-shirt and shorts and am used to the summer heat, 72 degrees will make me shiver, and temperatures in the 60s will numb my hands, face, and body.

    In summer, I air condition my home to only 81 degrees. At the start of the heating season in fall, I heat to only 67 degrees, and I gradually lower the thermostat as we head deeper through fall and into winter and then gradually raise the thermostat in spring. From late January to early March of this year, I had the thermostat down to 58 degrees. Believe it or not, 58 degrees in February didn't feel colder than 67 degrees felt in September and early October. That's partly because I became better adapted to the cold and partly because I was wearing heavier clothing (long johns, wool socks, sweater). As cold as 58 degrees may sound to you, that was toasty when compared to the bitterly cold air outside here in Iowa.

  • 06/18/2008 - 20:47
    linda

    Jeremy,

    Can you send me your address via the 'contact linda' link? I'd be happy to send it out to you. It's pretty rough code. More of a prototype than a finished product but it should get you started.

Most Recent Flickr Comments

IMG_7854: Mount Vernon Path


On Sat, 09/06/2008 - 21:06 rnlivingston marked this photo as a favorite.

On Mon, 02/26/2007 - 14:19 suo commented:

** This was voted a MAYBE from Hit, Miss, Maybe, WHY? **

I like the flat colours, but I´d lose the house(s?) on the top left corner.


On Mon, 02/26/2007 - 14:02 SharpMonkey commented:

** This was voted a Maybe from Hit, Miss, Maybe, WHY? **

Lighting is a little dark, could add some contrast to accent the stairs.


On Mon, 02/26/2007 - 13:55 Anastasia Larisa commented:

** This was voted a maybe from Hit, Miss, Maybe, WHY? **
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On Mon, 03/20/2006 - 01:52 bgelb commented:

I like the flat color. It almost looks black and white if you're not paying attention.

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Philadelphia Folk Festival Sign


On Tue, 09/02/2008 - 18:42 Gwynedd commented:

Hi, I'm an admin for a group called Philadelphia Folk Festival, and we'd love to have this added to the group!
Come and join us and bring your Fest pics - no limit!

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On Tue, 09/02/2008 - 04:47 verylonghairlover2008 marked this photo as a favorite.

On Mon, 09/01/2008 - 02:23 tassadhar marked this photo as a favorite.

On Thu, 08/28/2008 - 21:44 bill23t commented:

Hi, I'm an admin for a group called Women with very long hair, and we'd love to have this added to the group!


On Thu, 08/28/2008 - 21:44 bill23t marked this photo as a favorite.