Month: August 2006

  • Hate Crimes, Journalistic Priorities, and a couple diversions

    Oh, shit. This is so not cool. Yeah, I know Minneapolis has hate crimes, I just don’t like it when it happens.

    ###

    Some of you will have gotten this already. If you didn’t, you may wish to consider joining TrueMajority:

    Tell National TV News Anchors to Focus on Stories that Matter

    Last
    week, guess which story topped the national evening news on ABC, CBS,
    and NBC? JonBenet Ramsey. Who was the big guest on Nightline and the
    Today Show? JonBenet Ramsey’s father. What story made front-pages of
    America’s newspapers, including the New York Times. You got it.

    It
    wasn’t the war in Iraq or the tenuous truce in Lebanon, or even 10
    million kids here at home who lack health insurance. It was JonBenet.

    We’re so disgusted with “journalism” in America that we’re suggesting an action today that we’ve never suggested before.

    Contact the News Anchors at ABC, CBS, and NBC, and tell them we’ve had enough JonBenet by signing the petition to the right.
    Send this petition to:

    * Brian Williams, NBC
    * Charles Gibson, ABC
    * Katie Couric, CBS

    As
    professional journalists, I cannot understand how you can justify your
    decision to make the murder of JonBenet Ramsey the number one story
    last week on your evening broadcast.

    Sure, it’s an interesting
    mystery and a terrible murder, but under what criteria of professional
    journalism could it possibly merit being the top story in America last
    week?

    There’s the war in Iraq, which continues to kill Americans
    and Iraqi civilians alike, including six-year-olds like JonBenet.
    There’s the fragile truce in Lebanon. There’s global warming, Darfur,
    the budget deficit, the health care crisis at home, the upcoming
    elections, and so much more.

    Please, get your journalistic priorities straight.

    If you’ld like to jump on this bandwagon, click here.

    ###

    Did you make it through all that? Cool, here’s a couple light things:

    Embrace your inner idiot.

    and

    Twin Cities are #2 on drunkest cities list.
    here and here

    My theory is that it is compensation for not being able to buy booze on Sundays.

    And, speaking of beer and religion, here’s a YouTube.

  • Today’s post to the city issues list (written yesterday):

    This is a long email and really didn’t come out as articulately as I would like.

    All I really want you to do is watch this video:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LayaGk0TMD

    And then think about what we can do locally about this issue.

    #######

    Ever since moving to the “big city”, I haven’t been able to shake the feeling that much of our society’s crime is fueled by the “War on Drugs”.

    As Prohibition fueled the rise of the Mafia, so have these laws and efforts fueled the rise of the modern gangs and all the pain that has gone with them.

    But how to voice that without sounding like just another whining progressive?

    I’ll let someone else say it – the officers whose job it has been to fight the war. Please turn your attention to this presentation by Law Enforcement Against Prohibition:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LayaGk0TMD

    One thing they don’t really focus on is what happens to a kid who gets caught up dealing or using? How easy is it to get out? You can die, you can go to jail, but how hard is it to go legit? Especially if you’ve picked up some jail time or obvious gang tattoos? Once you’ve thought of yourself as a criminal and been seen as a criminal, how easy is it to stop? Especially for the non-living wages that are likely all that is available to some of them? Former street dealers likely have a bit more trouble than I do finding a paying gig.

    There are people who do manage it. They deserve the respect they’ve earned, but are we really surprised that many don’t?

    Beyond that, what does it do to a kid to be raised in a society that defines success as wealth but in a neighborhood where the most blatantly wealthy are violent criminals? Yes, parents can teach them better, but isn’t it a pretty destructive social force? How many of these kids get the chance to see that there even is an alternative before their reality has gone a long way towards shaping the adult they will be?

    Beyond even that, what does it do to a society to have laws that are seriously enforced that are blatantly disregarded by people in all walks of life because they are laws against human freedom and those laws are never followed? What does it mean about the general social respect for the rule of law? We live in a “don’t get caught” society rather than a “I follow the law because its the right thing to do” society. Whether its OK or not for people to feel that way is irrelevant – many of them do.

    So, what can we do about it? Even though they are fueling the fires that burn in our city, our City Council can’t change the drug laws. The general response is “more law enforcement”, “push harder to crush the violent criminals”, “run the drug dealers out of here”. It doesn’t work. Its like pushing on fluid – you can squeeze it somewhere else, but its going to still be there, somewhere and its always going to look for the places it can fit the best.

    I keep wondering if there’s another way for us to deal with it. Sure, I’d like it if people could go buy them at the pharmacy but we probably wouldn’t get away with that for long w/o state or federal permission. Is there some way for us to decriminalize it and put some of the money used enforcing laws against non-violent users and dealers into helping addicts who want help? Have the efforts of our police focused on those who actually commit crimes against people and property?

    I guess to an extent, that’s whats already happening by default. There aren’t enough police to go after every law breaker, so presumably they go after the highest priorities leaving non-violent offenders in peace (I hope I’m not being too optimistic). In its current form, it doesn’t seem to be working so well.

    I this know is full of holes, but here’s what I keep thinking of:

    Say we were to set aside some areas in a few of our city parks or buildings that aren’t too near schools and make them adult only locations where drug dealing is tolerated. Keep enforcement as usual in the rest of the city, but in these locations people can buy, sell, possess or use drugs as they wish as long as they do not break any other laws. Have them well patrolled by police (on foot/bicycle/horse – not in vehicles). Let the police and these dealers establish a relatively cordial relationship. If anyone commits violence or brandishes a firearm, be johnny on the spot to shut them down and lock them up. Heck, we could even warn them if the feds are coming in to do a bust.

    Given a “shelter” that makes them safe from inter gang violence and jail, dealers that operate like this should be able to undercut everyone else in the city. Sooner or later, drug dealing the way its done now just wouldn’t make ends meet.

    Like I said, I know its pretty full of holes. It isn’t a realistic solution – just an idea to prime the pump. There’s GOT to be some way to think outside the box and improve the situation. Maybe the city can sue the state or the feds over this?

    I don’t know exactly what to do, but I do know that we’re GOING to have these problems as long as we have these laws. We may tone down the violence from time to time, but it’ll flare back up. We may fix it in one neighborhood, but it will come back in another one. It has to because how it currently works is that we’re basically providing a cash cow to the bravest and most ruthless parasites willing to go after it.

    Again, whether you agree with me or think I’m a nut (you’re right either way), listen to some folks that have been there, done that and have a much better perspective on the situation than I ever could:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LayaGk0TMD

    So, yeah.

  • 1) This seems a bit off. Minneapolitans, you’ve till tomorrow to call
    your council members if you’ve any strong feelings on this:

    8/23/06
    after 1:30 PM (That is when the Public Safety & Regulatory Services
    Committee meeting starts, the public hearing could be anytime
    afterwards) – Public hearing on Use of Alleys by Pedestrians: Ordinance
    prohibiting use of alleys for through pedestrian traffic, except for
    abutting property owners, tenants, their guests and invitees, law
    enforcement personnel, emergency medical or fire personnel, persons
    performing public service activities or inspections, and person
    performing services for public or private utility, garbage collection,
    or communication companies.

    Well, at least bikes aren’t
    peds, but it seems to me that anything limiting the spaces where its
    legal to be a human on two feet is a bad thing.

    2) In other
    news, We are so stupid! I am part of a survey panel that occasionally
    has quick one answer surveys when you’re just logged in. Todays (with
    30,000 respondents) was:

    Should laptops and cell phones be banned as carry-on items for air flights as a way of preventing terrorist attacks?

    The results:

    9%: On international flights only
    1%: On domestic flights only
    45% On all flights
    46% Should not be banned

    Today
    I made an assertation that congress does not follow the will of the
    people. More and more, I fear it does. The obvious question is why is
    that will what it is and when did We become a bunch of cowardly sheep?

    3) Imagine you’re this guy.
    Detained for 5 years. No charges. Welcome to Amerika (With help from
    Kanada). Yes, I can see why this guy got flagged, but for crying out
    loud, this is WHY that constitution of ours is more than just a damn
    piece of paper.

    4) OK, so say you support the idea of reducing
    the use of and dependence on oil. Obviously one of your significant
    opponents are the oil companies who like their fat profits. So now say
    you hear that someone (Democratic candidate for Minnesota Attorney
    General, Bill Luther) is planning on spearheading a movement to sue/prosecute the big oil companies for price gouging and making huge profits.

    What
    do you do? Do you support it figuring they have been making record
    profits and you’re against them anyway so whatever can be done to
    weaken them is good? Do you not support it figuring all it wants to do
    is get gas prices low again which would increase consumption? Something
    else?

  • Ever want to see a televised social train wreck? Check the Richard Pryor clip out here (bottom of the page).
    The Cripsin Glover clip is also well worth watching. The other three,
    *meh*. Seriously though, the Richard Pryor one is fairly unbelievable
    (and you should pay attention to some of the things that come out of
    his mouth! Wow! In 1980!)

    And now that you’re done wasting your
    time with that, you might find this post by a guest author on
    Sullivan’s Daily Dish interesting:

    Backlashes in Lebanon and Israel
    19 Aug 2006 12:56 pm

    By Michael J. Totten

    Lebanon
    is not yet a mature liberal democracy. Syria still has agents in many
    high places. Iran all but dictates its foreign policy. Lebanon is
    partly, if not mostly, democratic even so. And now that the country has
    been torn apart by the unilateral actions of a warmongering street
    gang, the predictable backlash has begun.

    Abu Kais at From
    Beirut to the Beltway calls Hassan Nasrallah The Decapitator. Raja at
    the Lebanese bloggers says ENOUGH. Rampurple goes further and tells
    Hassan Nasrallah to eff off. Opinion page editor Michael Young at
    Beirut’s Daily Star says Nasrallah is trying to turn Lebanon into a
    “gigantic Hizbullah barracks.” Druze chief Walid Jumblatt darkly
    suggests the civil war may ignite again if Hezbollah does not comply
    with the wishes of Lebanon.

    The mood here in Tel Aviv is pretty
    grim, too. The Olmert government looks like it could collapse under
    pressure at any time. Hardly anyone in this country seems to think the
    air war over Lebanon was a good idea anymore. Hassan Nasrallah’s claim
    of “victory” sounds almost plausible after a month of hard fighting
    failed to produce many of the tangible promised results.

    Yossi
    Klein Halevi at the New Republic says many of the last month’s
    disasters were self-inflicted and that the reckoning is already
    beginning. (Subscription required.) Yoel Marcus says “Never has a new
    government with a line-up of fresh faces and ambitious goals been
    entangled in so many foolish affairs within such a short span of time
    as the government of Ehud Olmert.” Haaretz published an absolutely
    devastating indictment of the government by Ari Shavit who said 2006 is
    “the most embarrassing year of Israeli defense since the establishment
    of the State of Israel.”

    Israelis are far quicker to criticize
    their government during and immediately after a war than Americans are.
    Perhaps this is natural since Israel’s parliamentary system allows the
    people to change the political leadership without having to wait for
    the next scheduled election that could be years away. Maybe George W.
    Bush would no longer be president if Americans were able to pick
    someone else before 2008. It’s also possible that Israelis are just
    more self-critical for cultural reasons.

    An even starker
    contrast is noticeable between Israel-supporters in Israel and
    Israel-supporters in America. Israel’s partisans in the U.S. often talk
    as though Israel rarely makes any mistakes, that because Israel is a
    democracy with a right to defend itself it can do no or little wrong.
    Israelis themselves rarely do this.

    What I wonder is what’s
    the reaction in Israel when an Israeli voices criticisms? Are they
    listened to and their points taken issue with on their own merit or are
    they dismissed as traitors and ingrates?

    I suspect a combination of the two of course, but I’d be interested in really grokking the difference between here and there.

  • OPC (Other People’s Content)

    A couple quick grabs from wherever today:

    Donde
    haya un árbol que plantar, plántalo tú. Donde haya un error que
    enmendar, enmiéndalo tú. Donde haya un esfuerzo que todos esquivan,
    hazlo tú. Sé tú el que aparta la piedra del camino. (Gabriela Mistral,
    poeta chilena)

    Where there is a tree to plant, plant it. Where
    there is a mistake to correct, correct it. Where there is an effort
    that everyone avoids, do it. You be the one who moves the stone off the
    path. (Gabriela Mistal, Chilean poet)

    And

    50 ways to save your life

    We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit. – Aristotle

    The
    best bike in the world is scrap – or soon will be – unless you learn
    how to use it. The most powerful piece of high-performance hardware is
    between your ears. To help you program it with the right information,
    we’ve assembled 50 potentially lifesaving bits of street savvy. Some
    you’ll know, some you won’t. All are worth remembering, because when it
    comes to riding motorcycles on the street, the people over at the
    Motorcycle Safety Foundation (www.msf-usa.org) have the right idea with
    their tagline: The more you know, the better it gets.

    1. Assume you’re invisible
    Because
    to a lot of drivers, you are. Never make a move based on the assumption
    that another driver sees you, even if you’ve just made eye contact.
    Bikes don’t always register in the four-wheel mind.

    2. Be considerate
    The
    consequences of strafing the jerk-du-jour or cutting him off start out
    bad and get worse. Pretend it was your grandma and think again.

    3. Dress for the crash, not the pool or the prom
    Sure,
    London Drugs is a 5-minute trip, but nobody plans to eat pavement.
    Modern mesh gear means 100-degree heat is no excuse for a T-shirt and
    board shorts.

    4. Hope for the best, prepare for the worst
    Assume that car across the intersection will turn across your bow when the light goes green, with or without a turn signal.

    5. Leave your ego at home
    The only people who really care if you were faster on the freeway will be the officer and the judge.

    6. Pay attention
    Yes,
    there is a half-naked girl on the billboard. That shock does feel
    squishy. Meanwhile you could be drifting toward Big Trouble. Focus.

    7. Mirrors only show you part of the picture
    Never change direction without turning your head to make sure the coast is really clear.

    8. Be patient
    Always
    take another second or three before you pull out to pass, ride away
    from a curb, or into freeway traffic from an on-ramp. It’s what you
    don’t see that gets you. That extra look could save your life.

    9. Watch your closing speed
    Passing cars at twice their speed or changing lanes to shoot past a row of stopped cars is just asking for trouble.

    10. Beware the verge and the merge
    A
    lot of nasty surprises end up on the sides of the road: empty
    McDonald’s bags, nails, TV antennas, ladders, used condoms, you name
    it. Watch for potentially troublesome debris on both sides of the road.

    11. Left-turning cars remain a leading killer of motorcyclists
    Don’t assume someone will wait for you to dart through the intersection. They’re trying to beat the light, too.

    12. Beware of cars running traffic lights
    The first few seconds after a signal light changes are the most perilous. Look both ways before barging into an intersection.

    13. Check your mirrors
    Do
    it every time you change lanes, slow down or stop. Be ready to move if
    another vehicle is about to occupy the space you’d planned to use.

    14. Mind the gap
    Remember
    Driver’s Ed? The second’s worth of distance per 10 mph is the old rule
    of thumb. Better still, scan the next 12 seconds ahead for potential
    trouble.

    15. Beware of tuner cars
    They’re quick and their
    drivers tend to be aggressive. Don’t assume you’ve beaten one away from
    a light or outpaced it in traffic and changing lanes without looking.
    You could end up as a Nissan hood ornament.

    16. Excessive entrance speed hurts
    It’s
    the leading cause of single-bike accidents on twisty roads and
    racetracks. In Slow, Out Fast is the old adage, and it still works.
    Dialing up corner speed is safer than scrubbing it off.

    17. Don’t trust that deer whistle
    Ungulates
    and other feral beasts prowl at dawn and dusk, so heed those big yellow
    signs. If you’re riding in a target-rich environment, slow down and
    watch the shoulders.

    18. Learn to use both brakes
    The front does most of your stopping, but a little rear brake on corner entry can calm a nervous chassis.

    19. Keep the front brake covered – always
    Save a single second of reaction time at 60 mph and you can stop 88 feet shorter. Think about that.

    20. Look where you want to go
    Use
    the miracle of target fixation to your advantage. The motorcycle goes
    where you look, so focus on the solution instead of the problem.

    21. Keep your eyes moving
    Traffic
    is always shifting, so keep scanning for potential trouble. Don’t lock
    your eyes on any one thing for too long unless you’re actually dealing
    with trouble.

    22. Think before you act
    Careful whipping
    around that Civic going 7 mph in a 25 mph zone or you could end up with
    your head in the driver’s side door when she turns into a driveway
    right in front of you.

    23. Raise your gaze
    It’s too late to
    do anything about the 20 feet immediately in front of your fender, so
    scan the road far enough ahead to see trouble and change trajectory.

    24. Get your mind right in the driveway
    Most
    accidents happen during the first 15 minutes of a ride, below 40 mph,
    near an intersection or driveway. Yes, that could be your driveway.

    25. Come to a full stop at that next stop sign
    Put a foot down. Look again. Anything less forces a snap decision with no time to spot potential trouble.

    26. Never dive into a gap in stalled traffic
    Cars may have stopped for a reason, and you may not be able to see why until it’s too late to do anything about it.

    27. Don’t saddle up more than you can handle
    If you weigh 95 pounds, avoid that 795-pound cruiser. If you’re 5-foot-3, forget those towering adventure-tourers.

    28. Watch for car doors opening in traffic
    And smacking a car that’s swerving around some goof-ball’s open door is just as painful.

    29. Don’t get in an intersection rut
    Watch
    for a two-way stop after a string of four-way intersections. If you
    expect cross-traffic to stop, there could be a painful surprise when it
    doesn’t.

    30. Stay in your comfort zone when you’re with a group
    Riding
    over your head is a good way to end up in the ditch. Any bunch worth
    riding with will have a rendezvous point where you’ll be able to link
    up again.

    31. Give your eyes some time to adjust
    A minute or
    two of low light heading from a well-lighted garage onto dark streets
    is a good thing. Otherwise, you’re essentially flying blind for the
    first mile or so.

    32. Master the slow U-turn
    Practice. Park
    your butt on the outside edge of the seat and lean the bike into the
    turn, using your body as a counter weight as you pivot around the rear
    wheel.

    33. Who put a stop sign at the top of this hill?
    Don’t
    panic. Use the rear brake to keep from rolling back down. Use Mr.
    Throttle and Mr. Clutch normally – and smoothly – to pull away.

    34. If it looks slippery, assume it is
    A
    patch of suspicious pavement could be just about anything. Butter
    Flavour Crisco? Gravel? Mobil 1? Or maybe it’s nothing. Better to slow
    down for nothing than go on your head.

    35. Bang! A blow-out! Now what?
    No
    sudden moves. The motorcycle isn’t happy, so be prepared to apply a
    little calming muscle to maintain course. Ease back the throttle, brake
    gingerly with the good wheel and pull over very smoothly to the
    shoulder. Big sigh.

    36. Drops on the face shield?
    It’s
    raining. Lightly misted pavement can be slipperier than when it’s been
    rinsed by a downpour, and you never know how much grip there is. Apply
    maximum-level concentration, caution and smoothness.

    37. Emotions in check?
    To
    paraphrase Mr. Ice Cube, chickity-check yourself before you wreck
    yourself. Emotions are as powerful as any drug, so take inventory every
    time you saddle up. If you’re mad, sad, exhausted or anxious, stay put.

    38. Wear good gear
    Wear
    stuff that fits you and the weather. If you’re too hot or too cold or
    fighting with a jacket that binds across the shoulders, you’re
    dangerous. It’s that simple.

    39. Leave the iPod at home
    You won’t hear that cement truck in time with U2 cranked to 11, but they might like your headphones in intensive care.

    40. Learn to swerve
    Be
    able to do two tight turns in quick succession. Flick left around the
    bag of briquettes, the right back to your original trajectory. The bike
    will follow your eyes, so look at the way around, not the briquettes.
    Now practice till it’s a reflex.

    41. Be smooth at low speeds
    Take
    some angst out, especially of slow-speed manoeuvres, with a bit of rear
    brake. It adds a welcome bit of stability by minimizing some unwelcome
    weight transfer and potentially bothersome driveline lash.

    42. Flashing is good for you
    Turn
    signals get your attention by flashing, right? So a few easy taps on
    the pedal or lever before stopping makes your brake light more
    eye-catching to trailing traffic.

    43. Intersections are scary, so hedge your bets
    Put
    another vehicle between your bike and the possibility of someone
    running the stop sign/red light on your right and you cut your chances
    of getting nailed in half.

    44. Tune your peripheral vision
    Pick
    a point near the center of that wall over there. Now scan as far as you
    can by moving your attention, not your gaze. The more you can see
    without turning your head, the sooner you can react to trouble.

    45. All alone at a light that won’t turn green?
    Put
    as much motorcycle as possible directly above the sensor wire – usually
    buried in the pavement beneath you or located by a round or square
    pattern behind the limit line. If the light still won’t change, try
    putting your kickstand down, right on the wire. You should be on your
    way in seconds.

    46. Everything is harder to see after dark
    Adjust
    your headlights, carry a clear face shield and have your game all the
    way on after dark, especially during commuter hours.

    47. Don’t troll next to – or right behind – Mr. Peterbilt
    If
    one of those 18 retreads blows up – which they do with some regularity
    - it de-treads and that can be ugly. Unless you like dodging huge
    chunks of flying rubber, keep your distance.

    48. Take the panic out of panic stops
    Develop
    an intimate relationship with your front brake. Seek out some safe,
    open pavement. Starting slowly, find that fine line between maximum
    braking and a locked wheel, and then do it again, and again.

    49. Make your tires right
    None
    of this stuff matters unless your skins are right. Don’t take ‘em for
    granted. Make sure pressure is spot on every time you ride. Check for
    cuts, nails and other junk they might have picked up, as well as
    general wear.

    50. Take a deep breath
    Count to 10. Visualize
    whirled peas. Forgetting some clown’s 80-mph indiscretion beats running
    the risk of ruining your life, or ending it.

    If you’re ever on public roads, you should go back and read those again.

  • Several Things:

    First:

    My hat is off to the Catholic Workers yet again. If the sheer destructive capability they are standing in opposition to doesn’t chill you, perhaps the sheer waste of money of it all
    will. Its one thing to believe in a prophet that sacrificed himself for
    mankind. Its another to make sacrifices your self. These three deserve
    our thanks, our prayers, our good wishes.

    Second:

    Pure frivolity. Check out this YouTube video of a very impressive double back flip.

    Best part was when he hugs his mom and says “I’m sorry momma, thank you for supporting me.”

    Did I mention that it was on a motorcycle?

    Finally:

    Single
    Transferable Voting (a superset of IRV). Thanks to the hard, hard work
    of those at the Better Ballot Campaign, it will be a referendum on the
    ballot for Minneapolis voters this November.

    Their work is not
    yet done. Now that it can be voted on, they need to let people know
    what its about and let people know why they should vote for it.

    Please, do what you can to help.

    If you live in or near the city, consider asking for a lawn sign. If you have time, consider volunteering to literature drop.

    Also, if you can spare a bit of cash, consider donating a bit to help the effort succeed.

    $ 25 buys 8 “Vote Yes for Instant Runoff Voting” lawn signs
    $ 50 buys 500 pieces of “Vote Yes for Instant Runoff Voting” literature
    $ 100 buys 12 “Vote Yes for Instant Runoff Voting” t-shirts
    $ 500 buys a campaign intern to organize lit drops, phone banks, door knocks, and mailings for a month

    You can contribute on line at http://www.betterballotcampaign.org/BBC/contribute
    or
    Send a check to:
    Better Ballot Campaign
    3606 Harriet Ave S
    Minneapolis, MN 55409

    ALSO, for a bit of fun to support the effort:
    The Better Ballot Campaign is holding a gala event Friday, September 15th at the
    Hennepin History Museum, from 6:00 to 9:00 pm. Live entertainment by Le Cirque
    Rouge.

    Put it on the Calendar!

    Addendum:

    To go with some of the true majority links above, you might have fun playing the Bush Operation game…

    Addendum 2:

    “The
    head of London’s counter-terrorist police, Peter Clarke, said the plot
    had ‘global dimensions.’ He said the number of flights, destination and
    timing were still under investigation.”

    What has Daisy Cutter’s bassist been up to?!? Someone should talk to the reporter though, they added an “e” to his name.

  • Another event

    First Avenue, Downtown Minneapolis, August 12th:

    http://www.carpemammae.info/main.html

    A burlesque and band benefit for breast cancer.

    Again, wish I were in town so I could go. You’re cooler than me. You go.

  • Savage Aural Hotbed + Random Destruction = Fun.

    Oh wow…

    http://www.tcdailyplanet.net/node/1992


    It
    truly is an event not to be missed, so make sure you’re at Gardner
    Hardware for the big drop on Thursday. The event begins at 3:00 pm,
    with Savage Aural Hotbed beginning to play at 5:00 and the drop
    scheduled for 7:00. There will also be food, a raffle, product
    demonstrations, and free samples. Proceeds benefit the MS Society.

    I wish I could go!

    It is on Washington Ave in Minneapolis’ warehouse district. You should go.

  • Wierd

    I got the strangest spam the other day…

    In other news:

    I think I don’t fit
    In this world, In this nation.
    Worse, maybe I do.