John Furie Zacharias
having a bad day in a strange place
Thunderstorms Anywhere

Thunderstorms in the Imajica



 The different ways I don't like you 
 in a list that may never become organized
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Monday, November 10, 2008
Obama: Zombies!


The Onion

Some people have worried that political comedy could die from an Obama administration.  I mean, what's funny about the guy?  The Onion scores the first comedy goal for me with "Obama Win Causes Obsessive Supporters To Realize How Empty Their Lives Are." 

Well, it's also time for me to add another category to the blog here.  I shall call it "Obama."  Some people assume just because I have been Bush bashing for so long that I must be some mindless moonbat liberal.  That's probably not true. 

You see, when the people in power in my government screw up or act criminally, I'm going to say something about it.  There are only 2-1/2 months left of the disastrous Bush/Cheney administration. 

Still, that's plenty of time to do something else stupid or criminal.  I mean, think about it.  Bush goes to Beijing to watch the Olympic Games and the neocons in the Republican party nearly start a frackin' war with Russia.  Remember Russia?

Of course the new job approval rating for Bush came out today and hit an historic low at 17%:

"The challenge Obama faces has never been greater. No president has ever come to office during a time when the public's mood has been this low. In the 34 years that this question has been asked, the number who say things are going well has never fallen below 20 percent."
— Keating Holland, CNN's polling director

Now, I always like to turn things around.  I have to play Devil's Advocate.  17% of the people polled actually approve of the job Bush is doing.

Who are these people that think that Bush and Cheney are doing a good job?  Where the frack do these people live?  Did they think John Dean was lying when he wrote "Worse Than Watergate: The Secret Presidency of George W. Bush" or are these mouth-breathing Bush supporters not into fancy, high filluting book learning?!

I just realized who these morons are.  They are the people who still think Barack Hussein Obama is a MuslimSo what if he is? 

I think our country can survive the outbreak of Obama zombies.  All we need to do is hand out video game controllers.

[headphones]
Deirdre's project playlist

[quote of the moment]
"Tonight I ask you to pass legislation to prohibit the most egregious abuses of medical research: human cloning in all its forms, creating or implanting embryos for experiments, creating human-animal hybrids, and buying, selling, or patenting human embryos."
George W. Bush 

   


Sunday, November 09, 2008
Got Milk?


God Is Imaginary

I thought the above video was short, to the point, and humorous.  I found it after I checked out the websites of the producers of the video below.  The video below is a little longer, but I was amazed to see that it had 3.4 million views and generated 448,000 comments on YouTube! 

 

Why Won't God Heal Amputees?

This video is called "10 Questions Every Intelligent Christian Must Answer" but it obviously applies to Jews and Muslims, too. 

It is thought-provoking.  I especially focussed in on the end of the video when the narrator asks, "Why does it matter?"  It matters because people who believe in imaginary beings are delusional. 

Taken a step further, it answers the question, "Why isn't there peace in the Middle East?"  There isn't peace in the Middle East because you are dealing with two (three, if you count Christians) groups of highly delusional people who have decided to kill each other over their own imaginary God's holy lands.

If you have a comment to offer after watching these two videos, feel free to leave one.

I have two additional questions related to the first video.

Question #11.  "Are Atheists lactose intolerant?"

Question #12. "If I pray to cheese instead of milk, will I become constipated?"

 

[headphones]
Murphman's Soundclick Playlist

[quote of the moment]
"When I do good, I feel good; when I do bad, I feel bad, and that is my religion."
Abraham Lincoln

      


Friday, November 07, 2008
Movies: Total Recall 2070


Watch it on Hulu

Fans of cyberpunk and dystopian future science fiction should enjoy the sci-fi TV series "Total Recall 2070 - Machine Dreams."  Originally airing in 1999 and unfortunately only lasting one season, this dark future follows the crime-fighting of Agent David Hume of the Citizen's Protection Bureau.  While there are elements of the blockbuster "Total Recall" movie of the same name, starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, the visual world created for us in this TV series also resembles the "Blade Runner" dystopia, starring Harrison Ford

Agent David Hume is played by Michael Easton who is now most noted as portraying John McBain on "One Life to Live."  Easton's portrayal of David Hume in this series reminded me most of Keanu Reeves in "Matrix." 

"Total Recall 2070 - Machine Dreams" is a hybrid of science fiction based upon the writing of Philip K. Dick.  Dick's 1968 novel "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?" was adapted into the 1982 film "Blade Runner."  Dick's 1966 short story "We Can Remember It for You Wholesale" inspired the plot of the 1990 film "Total Recall."

"We live in a society in which spurious realities are manufactured by the media, by governments, by big corporations.  We are bombarded with pseudo-realities manufactured by very sophisticated people using very sophisticated electronic mechanisms.  I do not distrust their motives.  I distrust their power."

— Philip K. Dick *

This television series does have huge powerful consortium companies seemingly running the planet, one of which is called Rekall that is involved in memory transplantation and virtual vacations.  Another company called Uber Braun is involved in the development of androids, following the Blade Runner plotline.

I've watched 6 of the 22 episodes on Hulu so far.  The series is not for young children.  It is rated R.  There is some nudity, violence, and strong language.  There are plotlines that seem to involve prostitution and drug use.

Make some popcorn and watch a few episodes at a time.  That's the beauty of Hulu's video on demand.

*  Philip K. Dick died in 1982 and yet I feel he describes the current dystopian elements embodied in our world by international conglomerate corporations more powerful than all but a few nations, globalization of market economies, mega-cities, and the police state that Bush/Cheney ushered in. 

[headphones]  
Jude's Project Playlist 

[quote of the moment]
"Hope has two beautiful daughters. Their names are anger and courage; anger at the way things are, and courage to see that they do not remain the way they are."
Aurelius Augustinus (aka Saint Augustine) 

     


Thursday, November 06, 2008
Politics: Historic Election

If you wandering here 
 with your mouse 
 you might as well 
 just click it
Graphic Designer Jess Bachman posted a typographical mashup image of the following historical information on his wallstats blog.  

389 years ago, the first slave ship lands in the American colonies.

354 years ago, John Castor becomes the first legally recognized slave, ruled "property for life" by Virginia courts.

320 years ago, Mennonite Quakers sign an anti-slavery resolution.

303 years ago, the slave codes are enacted to regulate the growing slave population. "If any slave resists his master ... correcting such a slave and shall happen to be killed in such correction ... the master shall be free of all punishment ... as if such accident never happened."

296 years ago, a major slave revolt kills 25 whites.

256 years ago, George Washington buys the Mount Vernon estate with 18 slaves. By the time of  his death, in 1799, more than 300 slaves resided at Mount Vernon.


233 years ago, Rhode Island becomes the first colony to ban the import of slaves.

218 yeaars ago, the first census is taken. There are 757,000 blacks in the United States. 9% are free.

200 years ago, the importation of slaves is outlawed. Over the next 50 years, 250,000 slaves are illegally imported.

178 years ago, there were more than 2 million black slaves in the United States.

177 years ago, Nat Turner leads a revolt killing 60 whites. A year later, slavery is abolished in Canada.

149 years ago, the last slave ship arrives.

143 years ago, after the Civil War, slavery is abolished in the United States.

138 years ago, black Americans are given the right to vote.

133 years ago, the Civil Rights Act is passed guaranteeing equal rights to black Americans in public accomodations.

127 years ago, public transportation is segregated.

125 years ago, the Civil Rights Act is overturned by the Supreme Court.

112 years ago, Plessy v. Ferguson establishes the doctrine of "seperate but equal."

107 years ago, the last African American Congressman of the Reconstruction Era gives up his seat.  No African American would serve in Congress for the next 28 years.

99 years ago, the NAACP is formed.

95 years ago, the federal government is segregated.

87 years ago, race riots in Tulsa, Oklahoma leave over 300 African Americans dead.

79 years ago, the first African American is elected to Congress since the Reconstruction.

66 years ago, the first African American is accepted into the Marine Corps.

61 years ago, the first African American is accepted into Major League Baseball.

55 years ago, Hulan Jack becomes the first African American borough president of Manhattan.

54 years ago, the Supreme Court declares public school segregation unconstitutional.  That same year, Emmet Till is lynched in Mississippi; he was 14. That same year Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat.

51 years ago, the Civil Rights Act is passed further protecting the right of African Americans to vote.

45 years ago, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr had a dream.

43 years ago, Malcolm X is assassinated. The Voting Rights Act is signed into law. The Watts uprising occurs.

42 years ago, Robert Weaver becomes the first African American to hold a cabinet post.  The Black Panther Party is formed. Edward Brooke becomes the first African American to be popularly elected to the U.S. Senate.

41 years ago, Thurgood Marshall became the first African American Justice on the Supreme Court.  Race riots in Detroit; 43 killed, 7,000 arrested.

40 years ago, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr is assassinated. 35,000 are injured in the wake of the uprisings.

38 years ago, Los Angeles, Atlanta and Detroit elect their first African American mayor.

33 years ago, WGPR becomes the first black-owned television station.

29 years ago, Frank E. Petersen, Jr becomes the first African American general in the Marine Corps.

26 years ago, Bryant Gumbel becomes the first African American news anchor on a major network.

19 years ago, Ronald H. Brown is elected chair of the Democratic National Committee.

15 years ago, Toni Morrison becomes the first black American to win the Nobel Prize in literature.

10 years ago, James Byrd, Jr is lynched by white supremacists in Jasper, Texas.

7 years ago, Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice become the first African Americans to hold the positions of Secretary of State and National Security Advisor.

4 years ago, Barack Obama becomes the fifth black Senator in U.S. history.

5 months ago, Barack Obama becomes the first black Democratic Nominee.

and on November 4th, the people of the United States elected their first African American President and his name is Barack Obama. Now that's progress.

 

Visit wallstats.com and check out the amazing flash app and poster Bachman created that graphically depicts the U.S. Federal Budget, Death and Taxes 2009.   Heck, I suggest you buy the poster and send it to your own Congress critter.

 

[headphones]
JfZ's WXXL playlist

[quote of the moment]
"You've got to vote for someone.  It's a shame, but it's got to be done."
Whoopi Goldberg 

   


Wednesday, November 05, 2008
Politics: Help me, Obama-won


This was just fracktarded

 

You're our only hope

I watched the election unfold last night via CNN live video stream.  Apparently, CNN reporter Jessica Yellin — who thankfully doesn't scream like someone talking on the first bad cell phone call — speaks with Wolf Blitzer via CNN's first (dun dun dun!) hologram.

Wolf Blitzer reminds Jessica Yellin, "You're a hologram now."

Yellin makes an obligatory Princess Leia reference and explains the complete waste of technology and resources it took to bring us the future of news broadcasting.  I'm just happy that I'm too poor to own shares of TWX stock

 

My Election Night

Thankfully, despite the stupidity of the corporate news media (something upon which nearly everyone can agree despite political affiliations), Barack Hussein Obama will become the 44th President of the United States of America on January 20th, 2009.

The best part of the night occurred for me when two of my favorite friends called me to chat, both of whom voted for Obama yesterday.  One was going to vote Libertarian, initially.  The other has voted mostly Republican in the past. 

They are my friends not because they voted for Obama, of course.  They are my friends because they are smart people who think things through, care about the future, and both have a sense of humor and wit.

 

McCain concedes

I watched Senator John McCain concede the election more than once.  I didn't do that simply so I could point and yell "Hah-Ha!" like Nelson Muntz, but that thought did indeed cross my mind.

I watched it more than once because I was chatting away on the phone when McCain actually conceded and I had the video stream's audio muted.  My (mostly) Republican friend said that McCain had sounded classy, reasonable and conciliatory in his concession speech.

After watching him wave his little arms to admonish his booing mouth-breathers, I can only imagine he's just happy he doesn't have to see those freaks he and Sarah Palin have whipped up into a lather any longer.  I'm just hopeful that this is the last time I have to mention the delusional Alaskan governor's name.

 

Obama claims victory

I have to admit it.  It's been a very long time since I have felt that the future of the U.S. or the planet could trend positively.  I am actually hopeful, for now

Last night, Obama summarized my optimism and patriotism when he simply declared, " ... that more than two centuries later, a government of the people, by the people and for the people has not perished from this Earth.  This is your victory."

For those die-hard right-wing cynics who constantly claim that Obama is just only rhetoric, I say words matter.  Words convey ideas.  Ideas become policy.  Policy shapes reality. 

On January 20th, 2009, America will be removing the Terror President, George W. Bush.  I almost feel like I can breathe again. 

[headphones]
JfZ's WXXL playlist

[quote of the moment]
"You've got to vote for someone.  It's a shame, but it's got to be done."
Whoopi Goldberg 

   


 
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