Monday Ephemera

I want a shirt that says, “If life says you can’t align=left, then try align=right”. This is something I recently learned after spending hours trying to make something work. Then I changed it a bit, and it’s working perfectly now.

I am considering offering advertising on this blog. I did pretty good with some of the stuff I had on here before, but I think I am going to try something a bit different for August.

I am thinking of starting a series: Blogs I like. Don’t worry, it will be a rather short series because I think most blogs are just vacuous potholes on the information super highway, including mine. However, there’s a few I do like and I’ll probably be writing about them in the next few days/weeks/months/years/whenever I can.

One of my cousins keeps sending me inaccurate political information. I wish everyone would understand that Barack Obama probably isn’t affiliated with terrorists. They need to stop focusing on that and look at the more important issues, like the fact that his birth certificate is probably a forgery and he may not even be a U.S. citizen. I started reading about it on Glenn Beck‘s site, and there’s some pretty convincing evidence online, if you take the time to read it all. It would be so easy for Obama to dispel all this and stop the rumors. He could just send someone in to the State of Hawaii Vital Records with a few bucks and get a fresh certified copy for all the world to see. Yet, he hasn’t for some reason. I’d love to write more about this, but as always, gotta run!

Later Taters

More on African American Incidental UV Transference

African american incidental uv transference and its pernicious lies seems to have spread further on the net than I had previously imagined. I am sitting here dozing off at my computer, but I wanted to say this:

If you do research the topic, do NOT believe all the anecdotal posts on the footnotes of blogs and forums. Go to reputable medical sites, like webmd, or mayo clinic. I know wikipedia isn’t totally reliable, but there’s nothing there either. The only thing you’ll find online is stinking garbage in posts on blogs that say something like:

“We’ve learned the best way to avoid skin cancer is to avoid black people. Reportedly their African American Incidental (UV) Transference (AAIT) is the leading cause of our melanomas. After the loss of my wife, by the AAIT, people in my community started taking it VERY seriously. We are fortunate and don’t live around a lot of blacks. My wife, however, worked with them. We’ve got our children in a private school with no black children. We hate to raise them in this kind of environment, but this is the world we live in today.”

Even if you don’t believe in traditional medicine, go find some alternative therapy, especially sites that talk about the Budwig diet, and you’ll find that no one in their right mind believes that one person is physically capable of storing and transmitting UV rays. If I weren’t so sleepy, I could go into the physics of the whole thing and talk about angstroms and light waves and stuff like that. But I can barely see the screen, so if you don’t believe that AAIT is a pile of garbage, make sure you take the time to do your research and use reputable sources.

To all you lying racist bastards

Yep, little ol’ G-rated me just called you bastards. You’ve made up something that you call, “African American Incidental UV Transference” and try to use it to cloak your bigotry and racism. I wrote about this term you call AAIT a few months ago, and since then, a few of you have stopped by and left derogatory comments. It would be in your best interest to stop deluding yourself into believing that I care about your opinion. As a matter of fact, what my cat leaves in the litter box is more socially relevant than anything you’ve got to say.

For everyone else, there is no such thing as AAIT. It is scientifically impossible for one person to store UV rays and then transmit them to another. Anyone with a brain stem would know that. But maybe that explains the jerks that think their comments matter to me, because if they are capable of reading anything beyond third grade science, they would know that they are wrong.

Somehow, I don’t think science matters to them. I don’t think anything matters to them except their hatred. I could go on and on about how sickening these kind of people are, but I can sum them up in just one word:

Bastards

Did you see John McCains’s new campaign video?

I was just over at CNN, and apparently, Sen. John McCain has given them exclusive right to release his new campaign video. Among other things, it shows him being interrogated while he was a POW during the Vietnam War. His entire experience was pretty harrowing and someone else may have died enduring what he endured.

But does that make him a good candidate for President? I know he’s from Arizona, and I *should* be rooting for him, but I’m still undecided. I can’t even decide whether or not this video was/is a good decision on his part. I guess I’ll watch it again, but I also would like to find out what others think of it too.

FDA says Food Recall is Urgent

I hope that everyone has checked everything in their pantry to make sure that they don’t have any of the recalled food on the list. You’ve got to make sure to check carefully because there is more than one brand name involved. Castleberry is just one of the names on the labels of the contaminated food recalled by the FDA. Apparently, they’re owned by Bumble Bee, which in turn is a part of Connors Bros. Income Fund. I am really disgusted with both of these right now because neither of them have any recall information whatsoever on their site. I understand about subsidiaries and such, but these companies need to show some moral responsibility and spread the recall information in all ways possible.

It probably won’t make a difference to Bumble Bee or Connor Bros, but I won’t be buying any of their products for a long time. If they can’t do their part to warn the public, then they don’t get my money.

Weekend Leftover: Sayet Right

I hadn’t heard of Evan Sayet until I stumbled across his video at YouTube. I haven’t looked closely at everything he stands for, but so far, I totally agree with everything he says. If you want to know more about me, then you can watch his video. Among other things, he says that liberals are “diametrically opposed to everything good, right and successful.”

He also states that Jimmy Carter’s recent book is tantamount to blood libel.

I have to admit that I was confounded by many liberals and their statements until I read/heard his rather elucidating opinions. This isn’t a direct quote, but it’s pretty close to what he says:

Liberals look at man’s history and see that wars, poverty haven’t been eliminated by prior efforts. They think that the real cause of war and poverty can only be found in the attempt to be right. Their utopia can be achieved if no one is wrong and everyone is right. If no one ever thought they were right, there would be no disagreements.

YouTube Preview Image

1 in 2 Americans receives income from government programs

Wow, shocking, isn’t it? It seems that if you’re not getting help from the government, then you’re probably paying for someone who is. I don’t begrudge anyone that needs a helping hand, but how many people out there could do something productive instead of leaning on the government for support?

It used to be that getting any sort of charity was shameful because you looked like you were lazy and shiftless. Too bad that ethic isn’t prevalent today. I just wonder what it’s going to be like in twenty years. How many more people will be on the public dole?

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