And a Monday morning chain yank by Drudge provokes a response from the USDA …
Oops.
Agriculture Sec. Vilsack: ‘Purchased 760,000 Lbs of ham at cost of approximately $1.50 per pound’…
FOOD LION: $.79 Lb…
And a Monday morning chain yank by Drudge provokes a response from the USDA …
Oops.
Agriculture Sec. Vilsack: ‘Purchased 760,000 Lbs of ham at cost of approximately $1.50 per pound’…
FOOD LION: $.79 Lb…
“Libya’s Moammar Khadaffy led me by the hand through the ruins of his private quarters…”
Is there nothing that Obama can’t do?
The administration’s annual midsummer budget update is sure to show higher deficits and unemployment and slower growth than projected in President Barack Obama’s budget in February and update in May, and that could complicate his efforts to get his signature health care and global-warming proposals through Congress.
The release of the update – usually scheduled for mid-July – has been put off until the middle of next month , giving rise to speculation the White House is delaying the bad news at least until Congress leaves town on its August 7 summer recess.
The administration is pressing for votes before then on its $1 trillion health care initiative, which lawmakers are arguing over how to finance.
The White House budget director, Peter Orszag, said on Sunday that the administration believes the “chances are high” of getting a health care bill by then. But new analyses showing runaway costs are jeopardizing Senate passage.
“Instead of a dream, this routine report could be a nightmare,” Tony Fratto, a former Treasury Department official and White House spokesman under President George W. Bush, said of the delayed budget update. “There are some things that can’t be escaped.”
(Speaking of dreamworlds – has L. Ian MacDonald been living in a cave ? Or just Canada?)
More, from The Anchoress;
I am waiting to hear the outrage in the press, over the heavy-handed, brazen and rather arrogant moves of a president who sounded downright thuggish last week when he went before the microphone and said this monstrosity was going to pass, and it was going to pass quickly and “I mean it.”
President Obama’s daily finger-wags and bully-pulpits are not in the mode ala President Bush, who said, “I have all this political capital, and I’m going to spend it,” which the press found unpardonably arrogant. It’s not even Obama saying, “I won,” which made the media giggle. This withholding of public information/ramming through of legislation is a whole ‘nother kind of arrogance.
A documentary by David Sington that includes previously unseen mission footage, you can watch it here.
Also – “Lunar Probe Delivers First Photographs of Old Apollo Landing Sites” at Popular Science. |
![]() |
![]() |
Good evening ladies and gentlemen, welcome to our second of three special
Apollo 11
editions of SDA Late Nite Radio. Tonight, for your delectation and pursuant to that singular time in history forty years ago, here is some
documentary coverage, The Eagle Has Landed, and here is the original Man On The Moon, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, & VIII broadcast coverage, as you would have seen it, live, on television, landing on the moon at 20:17 GMT on July 20, 1969, with twenty-five seconds of fuel left, and then setting foot on the surface of the moon, at 02:56 GMT on July 21 1969. And lastly, here is some documentary coverage from the Lunar Ascent at 17:54 GMT later that day.
Your Reader Tips are, as always, welcome in the comments.
“As God as my witness, I thought hams could fly…..”
Is there nothing that Obama can’t do?
h/t Speedy
Note: This has been reported as “debunked” as the order was for a whole bunch of 2 lb hams. Actually, this company received two such contracts, the other for over $2 million. Apparently, frozen ham is a key component in the rebuilding of California’s crumbling infrastructure…
There’s plenty of other stimulus entertainment to be had if you have time to search the small contracts on this page.
Monday morning chain yank at Drudgereport:
SPENDING SCARED: WHITE HOUSE PUTS OFF RELEASE OF BUDGET UPDATE…
RECOVERY.GOV // AWARDED: $2,531,600 FOR ‘HAM, WATER ADDED, COOKED, FROZEN, SLICED, 2-LB’…
RECOVERY.GOV // AWARDED: $1,191,200 FOR ‘2 POUND FROZEN HAM SLICED’…
RECOVERY.GOV // AWARDED: $351,807 FOR ‘REPLACE AND UPGRADE THE DUMBWAITER’…
RECOVERY.GOV // AWARDED: $1,562,568 FOR ‘MOZZARELLA CHEESE’…
RECOVERY.GOV // AWARDED: $5,708,260 FOR ‘PROCESS CHEESE’…
RECOVERY.GOV // AWARDED: $16,784,272 FOR ‘CANNED PORK’…
RECOVERY.GOV // AWARDED: $1,444,100 FOR ‘REPAIR DOOR BLDG 5112’…
RECOVERY.GOV // AWARDED: $541,119 FOR ‘INSTALL TRAFFIC SIGNAL’…
And the USDA response on Drudge Item on Recovery Act Funding. Heh.
A quick note and photos from SDA reader “Ron from Kelowna”, who remains a safe distance from the fires and advises “We’re ok right here. Forests very dry. Fires are about 3 miles from us. The problem yesterday was the wind. Today so far is calm. Divide the “news” reports by an order of magnitude !!”
Mount Boucherie looking SW
Still, for those with property closer to the fires, I’m sure it’s an uneasy time.
The journey to extinction begins with a single anchorman .
Just another father with a custodial court order worth less than the paper it’s written on…
…the State of Nebraska managed to pass legislation that allows US parents of Canadian-born children to be abducted to Nebraska, and whatever our courts here in Canada decided can be thrown out the window. All you need is a plane ticket an abuse allegation and you’re good to go.
A one stop aggregator for all the news unfit for print.
Good evening ladies and gentlemen, welcome to SDA Late Nite Radio. Tonight, for your delectation, here is Mr. Fats Domino performing Blueberry Hill, in 1956 (1:36). This up-tempo version of Bobby Cerdeira, Al Lewis & Larry Stock’s 1940 song reached #2 in the Top 40, and was #1 on the R&B charts for 11 weeks. It was Domino’s biggest hit, selling more than 5 million copies worldwide in 1956-57.
Your Reader Tips are, as always, welcome in the comments.
General Electric has pulled the plug on its Earth Rewards MasterCard program due to lack of interest, ClimateWire reports.
A first-of-its-kind program, card users could set aside 1 percent of the value of their purchases for carbon offset projects.
Meanwhile… congressman Mike Castle (R – Delaware), meets his constituents at a town hall meeting three days after voting in favour of cap and trade. Things get really interesting at about the 4 minute mark.
(via WUWT)
Damn.
Here’s a man I could have voted for…
Following a 2005 lecture at the University of Dublin’s Trinity College, Ignatieff excoriated Canadians for trading on Canada’s “entirely bogus reputation as peacekeepers” for 40 years and for favouring “hospitals and schools and roads” over international citizenship. “If you are a human rights defender and you want something done to stop [a] massacre, you have to go to the Pentagon, because no one else is serious,” Ignatieff said.
“It’s disgusting in my own country, and I love my country, Canada, but they would rather bitch about their rich neighbour to the south than actually pay the note,” he said, in response to a question about peacekeeping. “To pay the bill to be an international citizen is not something that they want to do.”
Of course, that means he’d have been running for office in the US, and I’d be voting Republican.
A group committed to establishing an international Islamic empire and reportedly linked to Al Qaeda is stepping up its Western recruitment efforts by holding its first official conference in the U.S.
Hizb ut-Tahrir is a global Sunni network with reported ties to confessed 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and Al Qaeda in Iraq’s onetime leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. It has operated discreetly in the U.S. for decades.
Now, it is coming out of the shadows and openly hosting a July 19 conference entitled, “The Fall of Capitalism and the Rise of Islam,” at a posh Hilton hotel in a suburb of Chicago.
More here: – “Hizb ut-Tahrir: An Emerging Threat to U.S. Interests in Central Asia” (2003)
h/t
Good evening ladies and gentlemen, welcome to SDA Late Nite Radio. Tonight, for your delectation, and pursuant to SDA LNR Archive Maintenance, we have a new version of one of the top dozen available Interwebothique Late Nite Radio Shows that we listed here when we officially started this gig over a year ago, which is a good thing since that version we had previously linked to has long since gone away, and for bonus points, not only that, but both the audio and the video are better in this version, and there are lyrics too, already. So, then, without further ado, here are James Brown and Luciano Pavarotti performing It’s a Man’s World ¤ (4:40).
Your Reader Tips are, as always, welcome in the comments.
Now is the time at SDA when we juxtapose!
July 6th – “San Ramon, California-based Chevron has dismissed 100 construction workers and other contractors since July 2 and plans to send another 900 home by the end of August after Contra Costa County Superior Judge Barbara Zuniga last month ruled the environmental permit covering the project was inadequate. “
July 17th – “On Wednesday, authorities shut down most of the operations of the Los Angeles County Superior Court, the largest court system in the country […] Presiding Judge Charles McCoy said he was forced to take the step in anticipation of a 138-million-dollar funding shortfall for the fiscal year that began this month. “
h/t Adam B.
In, Feb 2006, EPSC submits an industry led product stewardship plan to the Government of Saskatchewan. In May 2006, the Government of Saskatchewan approves the stewardship plan submitted. (Well, it appears that the EPSC has found its compliant Government.)
Shortly there after, EPSC then creates a non profit organization called SWEEP to administer the plan.
Now, let’s have a look at the board of directors of SWEEP:
We see Sean DeVries of Panasonic Canada as Chair, Nick Aubry of Sony Canada, Rebecca Brown of Dell Canada, etc, etc, etc and David Betts of EPSC as Executive Director. Oh, wait a moment, let’s have a look at the board of directors of EPSC. (See: http://www.epsc.ca/a_board.html) We see the brands of Dell Canada , Sony Canada , Panasonic Canada listed (amongst a few other well known brands such as HP, Toshiba, etc) and David Betts as President and CEO of EPSC. (David Betts has recently stepped down and has been replaced)
What is up with this? Many of the same people and companies of EPSC are also represented on the board of SWEEP. It would appear that the industry not only makes products, but it is now in charge of the disposal of the same products they make. Have the foxes just been put in charge of the hen house?
Can we trust electronic producers to police? Has our government sold our environment out to product producers or representatives of producer’s interests? How independent and arms length is this program, and does it represent the public’s best interests? Or does this ewaste program reflect only the interests of the corporations behind it?
These might be some very tough questions to put to the Minister responsible.
Who is exactly paying for development of the SWEEP program? Again, I refer to Mr. David Betts’ speech in Orlando : (see: http://www.epsc.ca/pdfs/betts_orlando_speech.pdf) and I quote: ‘We consider the financing we have received an advance that will be paid back to members following program introduction.’
Just how much money raised from Ewaste recycling fees are being diverted to repay EPSC and it’s member companies? Can the general public who is PAYING ewaste fees every time they purchase a computer or television review or audit the funds and how they are spent?
Canadian Taxpayers Federation: July 17, 2009
As the largest e-recycler in Saskatchewan, Moen’s business was already recycling 60 tonnes of e-waste per month before SWEEP ever existed. Recycling was profitable enough without any government programs. Moen picked up unwanted electronics for free and refurbished what he could for resale. The rest was dismantled and the remaining gold, silver, lead, cadmium, mercury, ferrous metal and plastic was separated and recycled.
Yet, Moen’s company was shut out from SWEEP by the provincial government. Instead, SARCAN became the sole collection agency for the SWEEP program. SARCAN would have the computers dismantled, while all televisions and monitors would go to eCycle Solutions, an Alberta-based company. That company also recycles e-waste collected from other government-mandated recycling programs established in British Columbia and Alberta.
Moen’s competitive disadvantage in the current climate is made clear on the eCycle website. There eCycle admits, “Because we are government subsidized our services represent a significant cost savings for you”; Nearly $2.3 million was spent by SWEEP on collection, processing, and its environmental audit last fiscal year, almost all of which was sent to eCycle and facilities contracted out by SARCAN. Unfortunately for consumers, SWEEP collected more than twice as much ($6.2 million) in Environmental Handling Fees (read: taxes) during that time.
Even greater excesses could soon follow, to the harm of recyclers like Moen and consumers alike. By 2010, SWEEP expects to expand its application of eco-taxes. The EPSC has already identified a list of items to tax, including: copiers, palm pilots, scanners, telephones, cell phones, stereos, speakers, MP3 players, iPods and DVD players.
The worst part is that, unlike private sector recyclers such as Moen, SWEEP has had much talk but little action on refurbishing and re-using electronics. Not only is this worse for the environment, this leaves second-hand computer stores in Saskatchewan having to import products from out-of-province.
Call your SaskParty MLA. They were elected to rid us of the NDP mindset, not emulate it.