Thur. Dec. 2, 2021 – snip!

By on December 2nd, 2021 in culture, decline and fall, dogs, personal, WuFlu

Cool and clear, warming with sun. Like yesterday, and possibly tomorrow.

Really nice day yesterday, so I was too busy to enjoy it.

My storage unit was in fact broken into. A tenant cut the lock on several units and poked around inside. That was my industrial stuff unit, so nothing was missing that I noticed. Met the manager and had an interesting chat. He got red-pilled by the Trump campaign and presidency, moved here from NYFC because he felt like ‘all my freedoms were being taken away.’ Yup.

Eventually made it out to my client’s house and did a couple of hours work there. Wife eventually returned from her training. Got home, made dinner…. normal domestic bliss. These are the good old days.

Today, my wife is taking the dog to be neutered. He’ll be wearing the cone of shame for a few days. I’ll be back out at my client’s house, trying to make a bunch of progress.

————————————————————————————–

I’m definitely getting the feeling that I’m barely keeping the lights on here lately. It’s hard though, as I don’t want to keep repeating myself. We’ve beaten the beginning prepping to death, we can’t do anything about 95% of the B.S. we’re constantly being bombarded with, and just talking about it increasingly feels like ‘bread and circuses’. It’s a distraction from the ongoing collapse. On the flip side, we also have to continue living our lives as if there will be a tomorrow, because that is the smart way to bet, for all of recorded history. SOMETIMES it ends up being snake eyes, but most of the time, the future is like the past only moreso.

On the gripping hand, we know that ‘what can’t continue, won’t’ and that the center can not hold. So we prep.

The holy-days are coming, or if you are like me, and you just practice the secular aspects, the Holidays! Make plans to enjoy them in whatever way best suits you. Find your joy where you can.

Stack it high, especially the joy.

n

98 Comments and discussion on "Thur. Dec. 2, 2021 – snip!"

  1. Nick Flandrey says:

    53F and saturated this morning.  Pretty sure it will burn off later…

    n

  2. SteveF says:

    I’m definitely getting the feeling that I’m barely keeping the lights on here lately. It’s hard though, as I don’t want to keep repeating myself.

    Take it easy for a while. Put in just a stub for the daily post, or your daily status updates, and let people put in comments as normal.

  3. Geoff Powell says:

    @~jim:

    Or is it  "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone"?

    Philosopher.

    "Sorcerer's stone" is a Merkin bastardisation. ISTR that it was thought an American audience would not understand the "Philosopher" reference.

    G.

  4. Nick Flandrey says:

    The headline, while true, obscures the truth of the matter.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10266221/Father-admits-FAKED-photos-daughter-7-accusing-school-abuse-Syndrome.html

    She DID have the mask tied to her despite her parent's wishes.  They did have a mask exemption, that seems to have not been followed.    Old boy did LATER "recreate" the situation.    So yeah, the photo that went viral wasn't a photo of the actual situation, but the situation still existed.

    No need to exaggerate people.  The freaking facts are enough. And it will undermine your case.

    n

  5. Ray Thompson says:

    shooter pretending to be a cop to lure students out of locked classroom' was actually a GENUINE OFFICER

    We have been told by our school district management that in the case of a lock down we are to not unlock or open any doors. Only school administration or someone with a key will unlock the door. No exceptions. Regardless of what anyone says or attempts.

    Subbing again today, and Friday. Scheduled some time back. First period is freshmen, annoying little creatures. Still children, no where close to being grown up, coming from elementary school where they "ruled the roost" and still think they are smarter than the teacher.

    And in other news. The person in charge of the school yearbook asks me to invoice him each semester for the yearbook pictures that I take. It was his idea. Last couple of years I have been paid $750.00 per semester. Now the rules have changed. Anyone that gets paid over $600.00 by the school must be issued a 1099. Of course that triggers self-employment taxes and SS taxes when filing taxes. Many of the sports officials earn more than that from the same school district.

    This requires a different scheme. I have reduced my billed amount to $500.00 per semester with one of those semesters being billed under my wife's name. Thus together we both stay below $600.00 for the year. A little loss of money for me which I am OK with the loss. I have been taking the pictures for 15 years with only the last three getting paid.

    The money I get paid gets put back into the system as a scholarship in the amount of $1,000.00 each year. Vocational school only, no college, awarded to the student the staff feels will benefit the most. A small amount that effectively costs me nothing which goes a long way to helping a student.

    I call it the "Purple Ping Pong Ball Scholarship". Why? I have no idea. I just want to hear that said by the school principal at graduation. I also provide a little trophy which costs about $6.00. I am not seeking anonymity but do not want my name attached to the scholarship.

    I pay the money directly to the school chosen by the student. Everyone thus far has chosen Tennessee College of Applied Technology. The money comes very close to covering the tuition for the vocational classes.

    10
  6. Greg Norton says:

    Or is it  "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone"?

    Philosopher.

    "Sorcerer's stone" is a Merkin bastardisation. ISTR that it was thought an American audience would not understand the "Philosopher" reference.

    Scholastic published the books in the US. The audience was projected to be school kids buying at book fairs.

  7. Greg Norton says:

    And in other news. The person in charge of the school yearbook asks me to invoice him each semester for the yearbook pictures that I take. It was his idea. Last couple of years I have been paid $750.00 per semester. Now the rules have changed. Anyone that gets paid over $600.00 by the school must be issued a 1099. Of course that triggers self-employment taxes and SS taxes when filing taxes. Many of the sports officials earn more than that from the same school district.

    There is an obscure standard deduction that applies if you pay self employment taxes, which I used to knock down the tax bill on money my wife received in 2019 from two insurance companies for coding her charts in a way that saved them a lot of headaches in Federal audits. The insurance companies filed 1099-Misc on the payments.

    The IRS and I have gone back and forth on it for a couple of years, but, in the end, what was a nearly $2000 tax bill on almost that much income was reduced to me paying them $120.

    Fine. Paid. All of the correspondence will be kept forever, however.

  8. Chad says:

    “Sorcerer’s stone” is a Merkin bastardisation. ISTR that it was thought an American audience would not understand the “Philosopher” reference.

    I bought a Blu-Ray set of all of the Harry Potter films from Amazon UK years ago. When my daughter was into Harry Potter and I was buying her the books I also bought them from Amazon UK. So, there’s no Sorcerer’s Stone crap in our Yankee home. It’s all Philosopher’s Stone.

  9. Ray Thompson says:

    There is an obscure standard deduction that applies if you pay self employment taxes

    I am not as enlightened as you. I use Turbotax and just follow the bouncing ball.

    And in other news, the little shirtheads(-r) never learn. I tell them when class starts I am taking their phone if I see it. Caught someone with their phone out and they tried to hide it behind their Chromebook.

    I took the phone and told the kid his parents can pick it up at the office. He slammed his Chromebook shut then slammed it on the table. I told him to go to the office. He refused. I told him again to get out of my classroom. He just sat. I got on the radio and asked the principal to remove him from the classroom. At that point he left.

    I have had issues with this student before. I was not surprised of his response.

    He is one of the kids that is going to be waste of oxygen. He has an attitude, demeanor if you will, of not caring and not wanting to follow the rules. It's his way or no way. He will drop out when he turns 18.

    I have seen another kid with that same attitude. That kid refused to leave the class even when the vice principal, principal and school resource officer where in the room. The classroom was cleared during the confrontation. Eventually the school day was over and they could not detain him. He did not return to the school for a couple of weeks. When he did something had changed and he was now doing OK.

    I have no such hope for the kid I just sent to the office.

    Word will spread quickly in the school that I took the phone and sent the student to the office. One student remarked that everyone should know based on past experiences that I don't tolerate cell phones or disrespectful students.

  10. Greg Norton says:

    There is an obscure standard deduction that applies if you pay self employment taxes

    I am not as enlightened as you. I use Turbotax and just follow the bouncing ball.

    Enlightened? Me? Nah. I use HR Block's "Tax Cut" … or whatever they call it now.

    At one point in Vantucky, the education decision was 30 hours and sit for the CPA or CS grad school.

    In retrospect, I think I would have been better off with the CPA path.

    The current job wants an exit interview today with a pair of yoga pants whose email signature includes a C-suite title in Finance. Gotta wonder what that’s about.

    After tomorrow, I’ll post the names of some of the people involved with the company. Some of you will freak. Eh. I needed the gig.

  11. CowboySlim says:

    Today, my wife is taking the dog to be neutered. 

    I am 100%, totally, P.C.; therefore, I had my dog "degendered".

  12. Ray Thompson says:

    Enlightened? Me? Nah. I use HR Block's "Tax Cut" … or whatever they call it now.

    I have argued with the IRS over taxes. Especially with investment transactions. All filed correctly. Somewhere, somehow, what was reported to the IRS, or the IRS software is incompetent, or the agent doing the review is incompetent, and the numbers did not match. Everything had been reported.

    Multiple rounds with the IRS, me refusing a phone conversation, demanding a full in-person audit, and suddenly the IRS owes me money. I still think the IRS is wrong but I have documentation that says the IRS is correct and will avoid penalties and interest if the IRS changes their mind. Which the IRS says they can do in the letter.

    I expect an audit this year, probably a simple audit. My wife and I charitable donations are substantial this year. Enough to be able to itemize. 10% of the MIL inheritance to several units within the church. I have copies of the cancelled checks in the tax folder to support the donations.

  13. Alan says:

    >> I missed the opportunity to play with the date! 12/1/21 

    You can make up for it soon on 2/22/22

  14. Geoff Powell says:

    @alan:

    You can make up for it soon on 2/22/22

    Lucky for you that 'Murika uses a non-ISO8601 date format, otherwise both of those would not apply.

    But this is a battle I have attempted to fight before. And lost.

    G.

    Added: But at least you get the chance to do palindromes.

  15. Geoff Powell says:

    @chad:

    It’s all Philosopher’s Stone.

    Good for you.

    G.

  16. lpdbw says:

    Today is 12022021.  Just sayin'

  17. Mark W says:

    I think Alan means 2022-02-22.

    Also 22:22 or 10.22 PM.

  18. SteveF says:

    Today is 20211202, you heretic! It's still palindromic but my version sorts correctly.

  19. Alan says:

    >> I think Alan means 2022-02-22.

    Next you'll be wantin' to bring up that damn metric system again…

  20. MrAtoz says:

    Today is 20211202, you heretic! It's still palindromic but my version sorts correctly.

    I start filenames like this. Sometimes just to piss my kids off.

  21. Mark W says:

    Kilocycles per furlong

  22. Mark W says:

    Filenames… my current job wants file revisions to have a revision number like "Rev0.1" at the end. I rebel and put "20211202" which annoys some but works much better.

    Windows does sort Rev0.1, Rev0.2, Rev0.11 properly now but didn't always.

  23. JimB says:

    Some put a colon in military time. That was never done in my world. My phone forces this, but Windows let's me format many numbers any way I wish.

  24. drwilliams says:

    12/11/21

    12/22/21

  25. SteveF says:

    Sometimes just to piss my kids off.

    I approve!

    my current job wants file revisions to have a revision number like "Rev0.1" at the end.

    When pushed on something like this, I name documents "New Document(2)(1) New do not overwrite(1)-Rev0.1(1).docx" and such.

  26. CowboySlim says:

    WRT to metric system:  I was involved with another technical forum (not RBT's) with a lot of stupidos, who disagreed with my technical descriptions.  Finally one chided my for using in, ft, lb, and deg F instead of the metric system.

    I responded:  "I will switch when I think that I am smarter than the Dayton, Oh bicycle mechanics that invented the first airplane and made the first flight at Kitty Hawk". 

    They let it go and never argued with me again.

  27. SteveF says:

    There are two kinds of nations: Those which use the metric system and those which have put a man on the moon.

    15
  28. Clayton W. says:

    02DEC2021  Very little confusion.  But I admit to using 20211202 in file names

  29. Greg Norton says:

    I forgot to mention the fun at my house earlier in the week — Greenpiece knocked on the door soliciting donations.

    Twice in the same afternoon.

    I was polite because I didn't want my house besieged by soy boys … and their dogs … late one night.

    Soy boys always have a dog.

  30. JimB says:

    Some put a colon in military time. That was never done in my world. My phone forces this, but Windows let's me format many numbers any way I wish.

    Argh! I posted that from my phone using what passes for spell check. It turned “lets” into “let’s”, and I didn’t catch it.

    Reminds me of RBT (I think) when he said he didn’t bother to correct minor errors where the meaning was clear. Good policy here, but I spent a lot of years in an environment where final copy had to be error free and according to a style manual. Old habits die hard. We also did manual proof reading.

    The auto spell check on my current phone seems a lot better than on the old phone. The old one annoyed me enough that I turned spell check off. I am still on the fence on the new one.

    I am also still getting used to the Word spell and grammar checkers in Word 365, after a year of use. Most of it is very good, and configurable. I never liked Libre Office Writer’s spelling dictionary. It is an international product and has to deal with many dialects. It probably does that very well, but its American English is not so good.

    Word also automagically applies itself to Outlook email composition. Writer and Thunderbird didn’t do that. To be fair, in the early days Word’s integration with Outlook left a lot to be desired. Some days, it’s the little things that satisfy… or annoy.

  31. Jenny says:

    @Nick

    Put in just a stub for the daily post

    I echo this. We are a chatty bunch and even our much missed RBT was known to go skinny on the blogging from time to time. 
     

    @SteveF

    sorts correctly

    +1,000

    I loathe mmddyyyy in file names. An early IT job scanning docs and minding a jukebox drove home the special frustration that comes from mmddyyyy in naming data you want to find efficiently by date. Took twice as long to respond to disk requests because of the retard that set up the naming standard. On the other hand, at least there was a standard.

    We are above 20f for the third day with enough snow to be pretty and slick. Back to zero this weekend.  A shame, as if the warm temps had fallen on the weekend I could have -finally- built my automated watering system.  I don’t want to risk unknowingly cracking a PVC pipe building in zero temps, then have the system fail. And spray the rabbits with water. That would be fatal. 
     

    I have a die due this weekend, another the weekend after that, and one more weekend after that. The young buck was enthusiastic in performing his duties. I am learning to palpate the does but honestly can’t tell if they’re pregnant or fat. Crossing fingers for pregnant and hoping for healthy rabbit kits. 
     

    I have two meat bunnies ready to slaughter. Holding off to see whether current does will produce. If not we will mix up the slaughter plan. This has been a long learning process and the year long move in the middle didn’t help the rabbitry productivity.

    My husband bought me a Lenovo i5 idea pad with 16gb ram so I would have an Oracle test box. I’ll use it with XE and work my way through the Oracle documentation. I’ll be able to blow it away at will. He knew I wanted one and likewise observed my inaction. Fixed it for me. Good husband.

  32. Greg Norton says:

    My husband bought me a Lenovo i5 idea pad with 16gb ram so I would have an Oracle test box. I’ll use it with XE and work my way through the Oracle documentation. I’ll be able to blow it away at will. He knew I wanted one and likewise observed my inaction. Fixed it for me. Good husband.

    Much typing of scott/tiger is in your future.

    3
    1
  33. Brad says:

    Oracle. SAP. Two companies worth avoiding… 

  34. Paul+Hampson says:

    Kilocycles per furlong

    I learned it as furlongs per fortnight from my physics teacher.

  35. Greg Norton says:

    Oracle. SAP. Two companies worth avoiding… 

    SAP is easier to avoid than Oracle, at least in the US.

    Oracle's consulting arm was thoroughly discredited in the Cover Oregon Obamacare fiasco, where the system failed so completely that the state had to print paper forms which applicants completed. The company still sells lots of database systems, however.

    The last job was poking at PostgreSQL to replace Oracle, but the customer base wasn't about to ditch the commercial product.

    UPDATE: Sadly, the Cover Oregon commercials the state ran without a hint of shame have disappeared from YouTube. However, John Oliver’s commisioned Lisa Loeb spoof endures.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dh9munYYoqQ

  36. Greg Norton says:

    No, I was wrong — the horror of the Cover Oregon commercial endures on YouTube, just not under the state's official channel.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z6HMDFXA50o

    The state ran these nightly with a straight face.

    The interesting thing is that, not long after the fiasco of the system's failure, Laura Gibson was nearly killed by a gas explosion in her apartment in New York City.

  37. Chad says:

    02DEC2021 Very little confusion.  But I admit to using 20211202 in file names

    When I was in the USAF in the late 1990s the 02-DEC-2021 or 02DEC2021 format was the standard on most everything military related. (You were also supposed to sign everything with full first, full middle, and last name which they called your "payroll signature" but that wasn’t enforced much.) As a programmer, I've always used YYYYMMDD because it is superior in all ways. 🙂 It’s ISO 8601, IIRC.

    8
    1
  38. JimB says:

    When pushed on something like this, I name documents "New Document(2)(1) New do not overwrite(1)-Rev0.1(1).docx" and such.

    Oh, please. Reminds me that I need to teach my wife a few things about file naming convention and folder structure. I set that aside when things got busy, and the busy-ness has only gotten worse. At least I am amused that even the pros have such issues.

  39. Clayton W. says:

    When I was in the USAF in the late 1990s the 02-DEC-2021 or 02DEC2021 format was the standard on most everything military related

    Yes, I remember it well.  Of course to be complete, we must include the time 02DEC2021Z1932 

  40. Mark W says:

    Kilocycles per furlong

    I learned it as furlongs per fortnight from my physics teacher.

    I believe yours is a speed and mine is a wavelength. I may be wrong. Today is all about project management at work and it sucks.

    OTOH SI units are easier, but as has been mentioned, have not yet put a man on the moon. EM will change that soon.

  41. lpdbw says:

    As a VAX/VMS system programmer, my favorite documented unit of measure was the time interval known as microfortnight.

  42. lynn says:

    Or is it  "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone"?

    Philosopher.

    "Sorcerer's stone" is a Merkin bastardisation. ISTR that it was thought an American audience would not understand the "Philosopher" reference.

    Scholastic published the books in the US. The audience was projected to be school kids buying at book fairs.

    Scholastic publishes a lot of books in the USA and worldwide.  In fact, the "Tomorrow, When the War Began" series that I just read was published by Scholastic.

        https://www.amazon.com/Tomorrow-When-War-Began/dp/0439829100//p?tag=ttgnet-20

  43. lynn says:

    Today, my wife is taking the dog to be neutered. 

    I am 100%, totally, P.C.; therefore, I had my dog "degendered".

    Sounds like what Ellen XXXXXX Elliot Page just did to herself XXXXX himself.

        https://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-10252341/Elliot-Page-posts-thinly-veiled-thirst-trap-posing-shirtless-new-phone-works.html

    Some serious mental illness there.

    And I think that is SFW but am not sure.

  44. lynn says:

    Today is 12022021.  Just sayin'

    I use the opposite to label my backups.  20211202.  I get a much better sort by Winders that way.

  45. ech says:

    The "best seller" list is very suspect.  

    Most of those books are ones that have significant breakout beyond the SF community and/or have been around for a long time. I've read all, btw.

  46. lynn says:

    Kilocycles per furlong

    Or barleycorn per minute.

  47. ITGuy1998 says:

    Last December the screenwriter, who was assigned female at birth, announced that he uses he/him and they/them pronouns interchangeably

    Assigned female at birth? Darn, I had no idea you could assign sex at birth. Maybe it should share how its parents, or birth delivery vehicle, or satanic vessel managed that.

  48. ech says:

    There is an obscure standard deduction that applies if you pay self employment taxes, 

    It's not that obscure of a deduction, Turbo Tax handles it well. You don't pay income tax on half of your SE tax because half of SS/Medicare tax for employees is "paid" by the employer and doesn't show up on your gross taxable income. It gets semi-tricky to figure out yourself when you have income above the limit for SS tax and only pay the Medicare tax on the income above the limit. Turbo Tax always handled it well for us.

  49. ech says:

    The Zvi weekly post on where we are with COVID is up. Well worth reading each week.
    https://thezvi.substack.com/p/covid-122-but-aside-from-that

    At the beginning he has 3 posts linked to about Omicron and a link to the FDA limited approval of Molnupiravir. Also worth reading.

    The TL;DR on Omicron is that we don't know how bad it will be. It's got a chance to be more contagious but not as virulent as Delta and other variants. Very preliminary data from S. Africa has vaccination being a pretty good defense against hospitalization and death, but it's early. (There is some good explanation of why the vaccines may be less effective against severe illness, even against variants.)

    My key takeaways:
     – we need more antigen tests
     – we need Paxlovid approved ASAP. Like as of last week.
     – combo therapy with monoclonals, Molnupiravir , and Paxlovid is probably the best treatment early, but we need more antigen tests.

  50. lynn says:

    The "best seller" list is very suspect.  

    Most of those books are ones that have significant breakout beyond the SF community and/or have been around for a long time. I've read all, btw.

    SF (speculative fiction encompassing science fiction and fantasy) is a fairly narrow niche.  If your SF book can jump into the romance category, your interested potential readership just jumped 100X.   There is a huge difference between the two.

  51. lynn says:

    We are above 20f for the third day with enough snow to be pretty and slick. Back to zero this weekend.  A shame, as if the warm temps had fallen on the weekend I could have -finally- built my automated watering system.  I don’t want to risk unknowingly cracking a PVC pipe building in zero temps, then have the system fail. And spray the rabbits with water. That would be fatal. 

    I would use PEX piping for all of your outdoor plumbing.  PEX can go through freeze cycles hundreds of times.  My plumber buddy says that Uponor PEX is the best.

        https://www.homedepot.com/p/Uponor-1-2-in-x-100-ft-Aqua-PEX-Coil-in-White-F1040500/314861204

  52. Greg Norton says:

    Sounds like what Ellen XXXXXX Elliot Page just did to herself XXXXX himself.

    Some serious mental illness there.

    Page's biggest roles were playing very female characters in "Juno" and "X Men: Days of Future Past".

    He's even expressed interest in wearing the Kitty Pride costume again, presenting as a woman, if the opportunity presents itself.

    The planned Joan Rivers biography series on Netflix was cancelled because the planned lead, Kathryn Hahn (Agatha in "WandaVision"), would have been a gentile woman doing "Jewface" for the role.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P8u8md-NiHM

    Isn’t Jamie Gertz (Hahn’s character at the 0:27 mark) Jewish?

  53. MrAtoz says:

    Geez, plugs at it again:

    It’s not a lie if he believes it! Joe Biden describes the time he went to Israel and met with Golda Meir during the Six Day War, even though he didn’t [video]

    Will the LameStreamMedia call him out, or wait for Psaki to spin it to…how can you spin a bald faced lie.

  54. Ray Thompson says:

    Will the LameStreamMedia call him out, or wait for Psaki to spin it to…how can you spin a bald faced lie.

    The same way you can say you had sex with Julia Roberts, and almost believe it, when it was really only a wet dream. Biden has those sorts of dreams about many adventures.

  55. MrAtoz says:

    Page's biggest roles were playing very female characters in "Juno" and "X Men: Days of Future Past".

    He/she/it also has a main role on The Umbrella Academy as Vanya Hargreeves. They will continue to let he/she/it to play the role even though the character is female.

  56. MrAtoz says:

    I binged out Tales from the Loop. A quirky sci-fi/fantasy series. I liked it enough to hope for some kind of second season. Not for everybody.

    We are also watching Invasion on Apple TV. Scifi with a multi-character view from different parts of the World. I wish it would get on with more of the *invasion* and aliens instead of dramatic soliloquies.

  57. Ray Thompson says:

    Social Security is going up 5.9% starting in January.

    Due to increases in Medicare premiums and prescription coverage my wife's SS payment actually went down $4.40 a month. Wonderful system, increase the benefit, increase everything else, actual money in pocket gets reduced.

    My SS will go up $132.00. My VA benefits will rise $41.64 a month and with the increased prices at Applebee's, about enough for one evening meal.

    My supplemental premiums are going up about $100.00 a month. Wife’s heart attack, my kidney stones are not helping the rates. I think the insurance company also knows about the knee replacement even though they did not pay a dime for the procedure.

  58. Jenny says:

    @lynn

    Agreed, Pex is good stuff. It’s significantly more expensive than PVC up here. My application doesn’t justify the increased cost fr the benefits. 
    My system has lukewarm water running thru it, if power fails and it freezes I’ve got bigger problems. 
     

    Ive been procrastinating because of our recent warming winters. I need to get a block heater installed on my vehicle. Between reduced usage and no block heater, the wear and tear on the engine snd battery is not optimum.
     

    SAP / Oracle. We’ve got them both in my workplace. I like working with Oracle. Glad I don’t pay the bill. I’ve been able to avoid SAP.  

  59. Chad says:

    Assigned female at birth

    That implies it can change. Gender? Maybe. Sex? Nope. One could make an argument that gender is a social construct and so you were "assigned" boy or girl at birth by your parents/society without your mature input. However, you're never going to be able to intelligently argue that you're XY when really you're XX (or vice-versa).

    That's why I try and make it a point to refer to sex and not to gender in certain crowds. The former being an unchangeable scientific classification and the latter open to all sorts of debate. Start labeling restrooms male/female instead of men/women. Start putting XX and XY on the signs instead of stick figures in pants or skirts. Don't leave it open to an interpretation.

    Page’s biggest roles were playing very female characters in "Juno" and "X Men: Days of Future Past".

    Agreed. Their career is built on playing nerdy/geeky/angsty girls. I’m not sure the masses are interested in them doing
    much else. E. Page may have a tiny fanbase of trans people who will now make it a point to watch and rave about everything they’re in, but it’s not a big enough demographic to move Hollywood’s financial needle much.

  60. lynn says:

    My chicken cobb salad lunch at Chik-fil-a went up another 50 cents when I went by there today.  An increase of 6%.  I believe that this is their second increase this year.  I told the kid taking my order that he would be paying $1,000 for lunch when he hits my age.  He agreed with me.  I did not have the heart to tell him that lunches may cost that much in less than ten years with all this excessive federal spending.

  61. lynn says:

    "Woke ASU Students Protest Kyle Rittenhouse Holding “DEATH 2 AMERICA” Signs — While Patriot Counter-Protesters Chant “LET’S GO BRANDON” (VIDEO)"

        https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2021/12/must-read-exclusive-woke-asu-students-protest-kyle-rittenhouse-holding-death-2-america-signs-patriot-counter-protesters-chant-go-brandon-video/

    You have got to be kidding me.  Oh wait, just another liberal university full of illegals.  We need to shut down the students loans that most will never be repaid.

  62. lynn says:

    "The Longest SFF Novels & Series of All Time (2021 update)" by Adam Whitehead

        https://thewertzone.blogspot.com/2021/10/the-longest-sff-novels-series-of-all.html

    "1. Varney the Vampire by James Malcolm Rymer and Thomas Peckett Prest 667,000 words • 1845-47"

    "2. Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand 645,000 words • 1957"

    "3. Jerusalem by Alan Moore 615,000 words • 2016"

    "4. Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace 545,000 words • 1996"

    "5. To Green Angel Tower by Tad Williams 520,000 words • 1993"

    "6. The Fiery Cross by Diana Gabaldon 502,000 words • 2001"

    "7. A Breath of Snow and Ashes by Diana Gabaldon 501,000 words • 2005"

    "8. Ash: A Secret History by Mary Gentle 500,000 words • 2000"

    "9. The Stand by Stephen King 472,376 words • 1978"

    Had to get to nine books before he mentioned a book that I had read, "The Stand".

    All of these are pikers.  I have slogged partially through "Worm the web serial by Wildbow".  1.68 million words.  And there is a sequel.

        https://parahumans.wordpress.com/

  63. drwilliams says:

    Sure.

    "Death 2 America" is free speech.

    Hold up a "Wetbacks go Home" sign and see how free speech is.

    9
    1
  64. drwilliams says:

    oh, oh, oh, omicron…

    First, the patient was vaccinated and had received a booster early last month yet still got infected and experienced a mild case. If you’re looking for evidence that Omicron will be better at dodging the vaccines than Delta was, there’s a data point.

    The case in Minnesota is an adult male who had been vaccinated and who lives in Hennepin County, which includes Minneapolis, state health officials said. He developed mild symptoms on Nov. 22, was tested on Nov. 24, and no longer has symptoms.

    The man had been in New York City in the days leading up to feeling sick and attended the Anime NYC 2021 convention at the Javits Center from Nov. 19 to Nov. 21

    Virologists studying the variant’s genome have begun to wonder where such a strange mutant could have come from.

    Think of it as “gain of function” the old-fashioned way. Instead of sinister Dr. Frankensteins engineering a virus and passing it through different animals in a lab until they have a highly mutated pathogen capable of afflicting humans, Mother Nature may have done it out in the wild.

    https://hotair.com/allahpundit/2021/12/02/community-spread-minnesota-man-had-case-of-omicron-before-south-africa-identified-it-n432804

    OTOH, did I miss the announcement of the closure of the Wuhan Institute of Virology and Germ Warfare? I don't suppose they had supply-chain problems and retrained all their CBW staff to make Chia Pets?

  65. SteveF says:

    All of these are pikers.  I have slogged partially through "Worm the web serial by Wildbow".  1.68 million words.

    I read the whole thing, about six years ago. The beginning is, ah, not great, but overall it's good. Could stand to be edited down to, say, 1,340,000 words.

  66. drwilliams says:

    Alec Baldwin just slipped out of contention for the 2021 Stupidest Flocker with a Pistol award.

    The handgun used in the Michigan school shooting was purchased by the murderer's father 4 days prior. Michigan law requires guns to be locked up, and the parents were well-aware that their child was disturbed.

  67. Nightraker says:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QxXeq_dAyr0

    Kilograms vs. pounds conversion failure leads to airliner out of gas halfway to destination.  Oops.

  68. MrAtoz says:

    Thanks to plugs, we get to wear masks on commercial airlines for another four months, then another, then another…

    We have a gig in Atlanta next week. MrsAtoz is springing for 1st class seats. That will ease the maskage some by not having to smash in like sardines.

    How long before vaccine record and COVID test before we can board domestic? plugs is trying it out for citizens returning from overseas. Except if you are a crimmigrant. Golden under plugs.

  69. MrAtoz says:

    Psaki for the spin win:

    Psaki blames COVID for surge in smash-and-grab raids: Pandemic is 'root cause of lawlessness' and Biden's plans will get more cops 'on the beat', she says

    COVID? Really? She also says the root cause of crime in communities is guns and gun violence. Can't prove it, of course, What happened to "defund the police."

  70. Alan says:

    >> Psaki for the spin win:

    Psaki blames COVID for surge in smash-and-grab raids: Pandemic is 'root cause of lawlessness' and Biden's plans will get more cops 'on the beat', she says

    So the smash and grab robberies before the pandemic we can blame on what? COVID-18? The common cold? Bunions?

  71. lynn says:

    "Tim Cook and 50+ CEOs urge Congress to pass chip subsidies"

         https://www.protocol.com/executives-urge-chip-subsidies

    "More than 50 executives sent a letter to Congressional leadership Wednesday urging the passage of billions worth of subsidies for the semiconductor industry."

    "The letter addressed to Democratic and Republican leadership asks Congress to pass at least $52 billion in incentives tied to a stalled bill that would offer subsidies for chip manufacturing, design, and research, among other things. The billions of incentives are aimed at reducing U.S. dependence on foreign sources and could help avoid future disruptions to the supply of chips used in goods ranging from weapons systems to home appliances."

    Hmm, I wonder what could go wrong with this ?

    Every time I think of chip problems, I think of the Russian cosmonaut in the movie Armageddon: “THIS IS HOW WE FIX PROBLEMS ON RUSSIAN SPACE STATION!!!!!!”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dEkOT3IngMQ

  72. MrAtoz says:

    Hmm, I wonder what could go wrong with this ?

    Yeah, as soon as the goobermint is involved, it's backdoor city from the three letter agencies.

    Maybe in the future, your car will call the police on you.

  73. Greg Norton says:

    SAP / Oracle. We’ve got them both in my workplace. I like working with Oracle. Glad I don’t pay the bill. I’ve been able to avoid SAP.  

    Oracle databases are solid tech but pricey.

    We probably could have got away with MySQL. The database group at the last job was looking at PostgreSQL because it is a Hot Skillz and "free" as in beer and speech.

  74. Greg Norton says:

    "Tim Cook and 50+ CEOs urge Congress to pass chip subsidies"

    Hmm, I wonder what could go wrong with this ?

    Tim didn't get enough subsidies for the new Austin campus?

    Chip design will probably get a bunch of that space.

    Apple poaches engineers from Qualcomm just down the expressway. Of course, it isn't hard — I've heard that their building is a dump, and at one point this summer, I drove by the Qualcomm offices to see a very interesting jury-rigged portable air conditioning system in the parking lot, with ducts connected to openings on every floor.

  75. drwilliams says:

    I got sucked into one of those lists:

    Famous Movies That Would Never Get Made Today

    https://www.moneypail.com/famous-movies-that-would-never-get-made-today/

    which I edited and used to make my own list:

    Movies to Pick Up in Hard Copy

    Blazing Saddles

    Animal House

    Airplane

    Sixteen Candles

    Caddyshack

    Aladdin (1992)

    Big

    Die Hard

    Forest Gump

    True Lies

    Pocohantas (1995)

    Gremlins

    Slap Shot

    Back to the Future

    48 Hours

    Stripes

    Teen Wolf

    Crocodile Dundee

    Short Circuit

    Trading Places

    Dogma

    The Last Samurai

    Me, Myself, and Irene

    Manhattan

    White Chicks

    Monty Python's Life of Brian

    Revenge of the Nerds

    Silver Streak

    Dressed to Kill

    Porky's

    Partners

    The Toy

    Tootsie

    Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom

    The Bad News Bears

    Police Academy

    Weird Science

    Three Men and a Baby

    Robin Hood, Prince of Thieves

    The Crying Game

    Some of these are classics that should be resistant to any attempts at censorship. Some could end up on the forbidden list for one reason or another. Some made it to my list simply because I don't have a copy and should.

    Additions would include any martial arts movie from the 1970's that uses Chinese bad guys.

    This list expands a project to acquire classic movies on dvd before they disappear, rip them to digital storage, and store the originals in inert gas to extend their lifetime.

    I recently lucked into the unfamiliar 1942 film Bette Davis "The Man Who Can to Dinner" when avoiding weekend football, and was reminded that I need a better reference than the voluminous Roger Ebert's Great Movies or Leo Maltin's Classic Movie Guide to cure my extensive ignorance of old films. As with cd's, one criteria that I've started to use is the "what have we here?" test when I come across something I don't recognize. At a buck or two for digital media, I've had enough happy successes that it's become a useful filter.

  76. lpdbw says:

    I've been looking for a place to stream "The Man Who Came To Dinner".  Where did you find it?

    Thinking it may be the kind of quirky Christmas movie I like.

  77. Greg Norton says:

    Movies to Pick Up in Hard Copy

    Add Casablanca. If you don’t know why, you need to watch it again.

    I saw the recent German remake of "Tootsie", "Rubbeldiekatz", starring Matthias Schweighofer. German chick flicks are … interesting. The flick never saw US distribution because it is arguably more non-PC than the American original — Imagine!

    If the name sounds familiar, that's because Schweighofer is the locksmith in the "Army of the Dead" series and directed the first prequel/sequel, "Army of Thieves".

  78. Ray Thompson says:

    Famous Movies That Would Never Get Made Today

    Basically any move without a 50% black cast or 100% black cast, 12 lesbians, three transvestites, 18 cross dressers, mixed marriage or two, and two bald females.

  79. Greg Norton says:

    Movies to Pick Up in Hard Copy

    Dogma

    The entire Kevin Smith catalog through "Clerks II' should be on your list if you are a fan.

    When I saw him in Austin at the beginning of the month, he was doing the standard "woke"-era comedian thing and semi-apologizing for what made him rich and famous when addressing one fan's question about whether he regrets some of the things he wrote.

    For instance:

    “What’s a Nubian? B*tch, you almost made me laugh.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vHLJfxfXHBg

    Smith was almost the first director to get an NC-17 for dialogue alone in “Clerks”.

  80. nick flandrey says:

    COVID has driven Americans to bank $1.6 TRILLION in ‘excess savings’ they stashed over fear of economic chaos: Experts warn value of rainy day money is being slashed by surging inflation

        COVID-19 has driven Americans to hoard $1.6 trillion in 'excess savings' amidst fears of an economic crisis
        The massive amount of savings come despite experts warning of inflation slashing the value of these rainy day funds
        American households have put away $1.6 trillion that experts say would not have been saved were it not for the arrival of the virus
        The amount of current saving funds are far more than the usual three to six months of emergency savings financial advisors typically recommend
        As the Omicron variant continues to cause economic uncertainty and instability, financial experts predict the cash stockpiling will persist
        The result has been the highest personal savings rate since World War II thanks in part to rising incomes and a healthy labor market
        More Americans are using credit cards for smaller items, with 27 percent saying in October they had applied for a credit card over the last 12 months

    By Matt Mcnulty For Dailymail.Com

    Published: 19:21 EST, 2 December 2021 | Updated: 19:34 EST, 2 December 2021

        e-mail

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    The COVID-19 pandemic has driven Americans to hoard $1.6 trillion in 'excess savings' amidst ongoing fears of an economic crisis, despite the fact that experts are warning that the value of these rainy day funds are being slashed by surging inflation rates.

    American households would not have put away the huge sum had the COVID-19 crisis not changed the world over the last two years, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

    The funds are far more than the usual three to six months of emergency savings financial advisors typically recommend.

    Saving rates have dipped to 2019 levels following four consecutive quarters of record high amounts of savings due to Americans hoarding their savings, money managers, financial advisers and economists say, according to the Wall Street Journal.

    But they forsee more cash stockpiling in the immediate future, with the Omicron variant likely to trigger Americans to save yet more of their cash over fears of possible future chaos.   

    To make matters worse, annual inflation rates in the United States have steadily increased since January 2021 and through August 2021, starting at just 1.4 percent in January 2021 all the way to 5 percent in August 2021. It has since surged to 6.1 per cent in October, the most recent figure available, and the highest level since 1990.

    –the nerve of these putzs never ceases to amaze me.  "Excess".   "Hoard".   MY MONEY B!%CHS.

    n

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10269475/COVID-19-turned-Americans-super-savers-hoard-cash-despite-inflation-threatening-value.html

  81. Greg Norton says:

    COVID has driven Americans to bank $1.6 TRILLION in ‘excess savings’ they stashed over fear of economic chaos: Experts warn value of rainy day money is being slashed by surging inflation

    –the nerve of these putzs never ceases to amaze me.  "Excess".   "Hoard".   MY MONEY B!%CHS.

    There isn't a decent place to put money right now. This smells like a planted story to get people to spend.

    Go back to Fall 2019, and the banks were in serious trouble, requiring life support infusions from the Feds.

  82. nick flandrey says:

    Movies to Pick Up in Hard Copy

    Blazing Saddle

    –there  is a nice boxed set of Mel Brooks films that you should definitely have.

    Animal House  -yep  (F her, F her t!ts!)

    Airplane  -yep  (ever been in a roman bath?)  (I speak jive.)

    Sixteen Candles  -yep  (no more yankie my wankie!)

    Caddyshack  -yep (squirm for me Mrs Johnson)

    Aladdin (1992)  -yep, but why?  white guy playing brown?

    Big – don't have it yet

    Die Hard  – all of them yep.

    Forest Gump  -yep

    True Lies  -yep

    Pocohantas (1995)  -yep, whites again?

    Gremlins  -oh hell yep, but been putting it off because D2 gets scared

    Slap Shot – nope

    Back to the Future  – yep

    48 Hours – nope

    Stripes -yep, several versions (any of you homos touch my stuff, I'll kill you)

    Teen Wolf – nope ?

    Crocodile Dundee – nope

    Short Circuit – yep ? indian (dot) stereotypes?

    Trading Places – yep

    Dogma – maybe, I thought the left loved anti christian?

    The Last Samurai – yep, whites?

    Me, Myself, and Irene – don't know it

    Manhattan – don't know it

    White Chicks – don't know it

    Monty Python's Life of Brian – yep, all the pythons

    Revenge of the Nerds – yep, and full frontal, date rape, pantie raids, gay stereotypes

    Silver Streak – nope

    Dressed to Kill – don't know it

    Porky's – looking for a copy

    Partners – don't know it

    The Toy – hadn't thought about it, but maybe

    Tootsie – looking for a copy

    Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom  -yep

    The Bad News Bears – can't find the original, have two more recent versions

    Police Academy  looking

    Weird Science – yep, so much wrongness, one of my favorites

    Three Men and a Baby – ??

    Robin Hood, Prince of Thieves –  Kostner?  Terrible flick, not on my list, but willing to reconsider?

    The Crying Game -?

    I also grabbed all the Flipper versions as an example of what we've lost.   Richard Prior, or any of the LP record comics… because language police.

    I have all the yeps and many more.

    n

  83. drwilliams says:

    @lpdbw

    It was on a broadcast channel: Movies! TV Network

    https://moviestvnetwork.com/previews

    https://www.moviestvnetwork.com/lists/screwball-spotlight-the-man-who-came-to-dinner

    and does not appear to be on the schedule again.

    But another old favorite is:

    https://moviestvnetwork.com/movies/1579

  84. drwilliams says:

    @Greg Norton

    The Humphrey Bogart Essential Collection has been on my shelf for years.

    The Big Sleep is still my favorite,

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sqoxk3SrZRw

    absolute perfection.

  85. drwilliams says:

    @Nick

    Airplane (ever been in a Turkish prison?)

    Robin Hood, Prince of Thieves (Alan Rickman, Connery)

  86. drwilliams says:

    Another personal favorite box set is The Complete Thin Man.

    William Powell and Myrna Loy were perfectly cast in W.S. Van Dyke's The Thin Man. The very definition of on-screen chemistry, and the repartee is lightning fast, rapier sharp, and sparkling.

    Director and actors stayed together through three sequels. Van Dyke was severely ill and died by his own hand before the last two movies were made.

  87. drwilliams says:

    Brandon: I was going to pilot the Columbia home safely but NASA couldn't get me up there in time.

  88. nick flandrey says:

    If he wasn't nominally the leader of the free world it would be comical.  But it is terrifying.

    n

  89. Greg Norton says:

    Weird Science – yep, so much wrongness, one of my favorites

    People forget John Hughes wrote "Mr. Mom" for Aaron Spelling, another flick that probably couldn't get made today.

    Hughes went from penning schlock like "Class Reunion" to "Vacation" and "Mr. Mom" in the space of a year.

  90. lynn says:

    "To fight Omicron, Biden adds travel rules, free at-home COVID tests"

        https://news.trust.org/item/20211202202255-46xyj

    "The U.S. government will require private health insurers to reimburse their 150 million customers for 100% of the cost of over-the-counter, at-home COVID-19 tests, administration officials said, and make 50 million more tests available free through rural clinics and health centers for the uninsured."

    Can he do that ?

    What if you do not have health insurance ?

    Hat tip to:

       https://www.drudgereport.com/

  91. lynn says:

    Weird Science – yep, so much wrongness, one of my favorites

    People forget John Hughes wrote "Mr. Mom" for Aaron Spelling, another flick that probably couldn't get made today.

    Hughes went from penning schlock like "Class Reunion" to "Vacation" and "Mr. Mom" in the space of a year.

    I love Weird Science and Mr. Mom.

  92. Alan says:

    Finally…what our future EVs will be…

    Daily Mail: Tesla launches Cyberquad for KIDS! Four-wheeled ATV inspired by the Cybertruck on sale for $1,900.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-10267813/Tesla-launches-Cyberquad-KIDS-Four-wheeled-ATV-inspired-Cybertruck-sale-1-900.html

  93. Alan says:

    Add so it begins… 

    CNN: DeSantis proposes a new civilian military force in Florida that he would control.

    https://www.cnn.com/2021/12/02/politics/florida-state-guard-desantis/index.html

  94. Nick Flandrey says:

    High tech.   A linux partition.

    Josh Duggar had hi-tech software installed on his work computer to BYPASS monitoring service that alerted his wife Anna when he looked at 'mature teen' porn, court hears

        Jurors in Josh Duggar's child porn trial heard Thursday that his work computer had software that would stop his wife being alerted when he looked at porn
        The court heard the couple in 2013 subscribed to a service called Covenant Eyes that monitors adult internet use and would report material to Anna Duggar
        The company's technology vice president Jeff Wofford testified that Duggar's report sensitivity was set to 'mature teen' – apparently common among clients
        But prosecutors revealed Duggar's HP computer at his car dealership had a sophisticated software called a Linux partition that created a secret workspace
         Wofford said the software could circumvent the porn-monitoring program which would've only worked with Windows operating system on the regular side

    But Duggar had installed a Linux partition, a sophisticated piece of software that effectively creates a second separate workspace, installed on his computer.
    Duggar spent seven days in jail after his April 29 arrest before being fitted with an ankle monitor and bailed into home detention

    Duggar spent seven days in jail after his April 29 arrest before being fitted with an ankle monitor and bailed into home detention

    It's behind that partition – that could only be accessed by the password intel1988, the same password Duggar used for his internet banking – that federal agents found Duggar's stash of child porn, prosecutors have argued this week.

    Good thing criminals are dumb.

    n

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