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Wednesday, April 26, 2017

                                                    On Target                  
                                  
              Yes, the Target store... Materialism, Commercials Advertising

By Shaun Stanert

AN ARTICLE CONSIDERING THOUGHTS ON BUDDHA, TARGET STORE COMMERCIALS, CLEVER ADVERTISING, AND MATERIALISM IN OVERDRIVE!

 "Hundreds of stupid flies gather on a piece of rotten meat, enjoying, they think, a delicious feast. This image fits with the song of the myriads of foolish living beings who seek happiness in superficial pleasures; In countless ways they try, yet I have never seen them satisfied."
                                             -----Quote from: The 7th Dalai Lama
          
           ***********************************

The words of the 7th Dalai Lama remind me of the "Target" commercials.

You know the ones where a woman is singing or more aptly moaning in a somewhat bewildered, anxious, anguished, seductively throaty voice the whimsically captivating words: I don't know what it is but I gotta' have it and I want more. ....or something very close.

I really admire those commercials from a marketing prospective.

They really conjure thoughts of shopping and likely touch the soul of quintessential consumers, where ever or whenever it is aired.

The message is mesmerizing by inference, and in its blatant truth.

It simultaneously, albeit subtly, mocks viewers while managing to catch them and wrap them tightly within a ubiquitous projection of their digitized plasmarized, LCDed, air-waved web of common human desires.  A web that ensures that we, me, us, you, I ... will all soon turn into loyal customers.  A web whose televised waves may bounce around the universe endlessly, perhaps embarrassingly, extolling the essence of our collective humanity.

Wouldn't it be better if we had commercials bouncing around the universe singing in an bewildered anguished, anxious, seductively throaty voice about the horrors of war. The wasted billions spent on a war and the pitiful waste of young vibrant lives.

Nevertheless, those clever commercials always stop me. I always pay attention, much to my chagrin.

It must be the fanciful rapid-fire, syncopated scenes that seem to enterprisingly highlight each product in surreal multiples, as if infinitely reflected in a fun-house mirror.

Still, the message, and its delivery method as ingenious as it may be, always makes me feel a momentary twinge of hollow melancholy in the pit of my abdomen right at the solar plexus.

The solar plexus Chakra BTW, according to some beliefs, is the vortex of mental functioning, power, control, freedom to be oneself, career. It is known as Manipūra, its color is yellow, it's element fire.

Hmmm.............It's interesting that it hits me there. Wonder what that means?




Maybe I resent being manipulated is such a pleasantly entertaining way.

Would I ban the commercial if I had the power?

No. In fact, if I were giving out a Madison Avenue advertising award this resourceful production would certainly get one. Why? Well, it does exactly what an advertisement is supposed to do, and it does it in a low key but nudging memorable way.

As far as advertisements go, It works!

In any case, so much for the blah blah blah.....When it comes to consumerism, if I am being honest......I'm GUILTY!  Sometimes.  Even as I ever strive to not be.

As a fellow human, conspicuous consumption both repulses and fascinates me. The good thing about it is that it confirms that I am a human.

That also indicates, however, that I am not a Buddha.....not yet an enlightened one.

                                                     END



https://newhopetoday.blogspot.com/2017/04/on-target-materialism-commercials.html

https://newhopetoday.blogspot.com/2017/04/on-target-materialism-commercials.html

Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Henry Mercer, Fonthill Museum, Doylestown Pennsylvania

Creeping Elements Slowly Eating Away Mercer's Museums A Fund-raising Effort To Upgrade And Repair 2 Facilities Has Entered The Second Phase. The Goal: $3 Million.

February 28, 1993|By Shaun Stanert, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT

DOYLESTOWN BOROUGH — When it rains, the concrete walls inside the Mercer Museum weep.
From the outside, the massive, castlelike structure appears to be an indestructible fortress. But, just as a mighty mountain range is eventually worn down by the elements, the museum and its precious contents are slowly being ravaged by moisture and sunlight.

Enter the Bucks County Historical Society, whose trustees are determined to stop further deterioration through a two-phase $4 million fund-raising campaign called "Celebrating An American Original."

Between 1913 and 1916, Henry Chapman Mercer, an architect, historian, collector and ceramist, built the Mercer Museum to display his collection of more than 50,000 pre-1850 tools and artifacts, said the museum's curator Cory Amsler.

The seven-story building, with its rising towers, gables and parapets, is made entirely of reinforced concrete. It is one of the earliest applications of reinforced concrete on this scale in the United States, Amsler said.
The concrete, however, absorbs water and during freeze-thaw cycles it cracks and flakes. The cracks allow moisture to penetrate deep into the structure and rust the building's steel reinforcing rods.

During a December rain storm, water was found standing on the floor of virtually every exhibit room on the east side of the building. It had been forced through the cracks and fissures by the driving rain. Some artifacts were saved from a potentially destructive soaking because they were on platforms, but those on the floor suffered from some corrosion...

https://newhopetoday.blogspot.com/2017/04/henry-mercer-fonthill-museum-doylestown.html

https://newhopetoday.blogspot.com/2017/04/henry-mercer-fonthill-museum-doylestown.html

Read complete article at below Link:

http://articles.philly.com/1993-02-28/news/25954407_1_mercer-museum-fund-raising-fonthill-museum

http://articles.philly.com/1993-02-28/news/25954407_1_mercer-museum-fund-raising-fonthill-museum

oscar buzz full article

THE OSCAR BUZZ….zzzzzzzz

And the Oscar goes too..........


By Shaun Stanert

I am only human and as a human, not an enlightened Buddha, I am just full of opinions.

In fact, I am a Piñata of opinions. All one need do is tap me hard enough and those opinions burst forth falling to the floor waiting to be picked up by anyone interested.

I know my opinions likely annoy some, but being a mere human, a human aspiring to be enlightened, yet one whom most certainly has not arrived, I cannot seem to muzzle myself.

On my mind, is the vast amount of attention focused on a relatively frivolous production like the Oscars.. Thus, to belabor the Oscar buzz a bit longer albeit with a different spin, I really have to say..............WHO CARES!

I am sincerely hoping that among the many who obviously seem to care, their reason for caring is heavily influenced by the money factor. That seems preferable to being exclusively fueled by nothing more than an insatiable inquisitiveness for the insignificant that is so all consuming it shunts aside all other issues occupying their minds.

In that sense, The Academy awards are a marketing tool and perhaps, yes, a sham.

It is apparent from a marketing perspective that the Oscars generate epic incomes for a lot of businesses, as well as the movie industry.

The businesses involved harvest heaps of priceless passive advertising in every model of the mass media and they earn admirable profits as a byproduct of the attention drawn to the Oscar extravaganza. There are the dressmakers, the designers, the advertisers, the caterers, the printers, the..... You get the picture.

The well-oiled Oscar production evidently keeps the machinery of the entire industry rolling gainfully along.

In fact, critics claim that because Studios lobby heavily for their films to be considered, a complaint is that nominations and awards may be largely a result of this lobbying rather than quality.

In addition Academy members are not required to watch all films nominated in a category, with exceptions being the Best Documentary and Best Foreign language titles, before being allowed to vote, leading to claims that voting is often politicized by campaigning or personal connections within the Hollywood community, according to Wikipedia

I am all for marketing. I like to earn money, too, nothing wrong with that. The Oscar ceremony creates jobs and that is always a good thing for the economy. Nevertheless, earning profits is not my complaint, and neither is the desire to be curious. I certainly have a passing interest in knowing, who won what award.

My complaint is that the focus on the Oscars is so ubiquitous for a quite a few days before and after the event that it dominates the news and in a way that seems to be an inevitable magnet for massive amounts of pointless sniping done solely for sniping’s sake.

Moreover, the Oscar buzz seems to mandate interest, rather than request it. The endless coverage seems to command that we all focus on something that does not really affect the lives of many people in a significant or life-changing way.

So what if a handful of people at The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, a committee of comprised of academy people that most other people never met or heard of, vote that a movie is best picture. So what if they vote that a handful of actors are heads above the others. What does that mean in the real world to the majority of its inhabitants?

Of course, the nominees care. Who doesn't like acknowledgment for a job well done? Who does not like to win? Craving recognition and needing to win both seem to be deeply ingrained aspects of our human nature.

Still, with all the things needing attention in America like the war, the environment, extreme weather, the confused confusing patchwork fiasco we label the modern medical system in our supposedly innovative country. Why, why, oh why are we focusing so on the clothing the actors wear or their hairstyles?

Wouldn't it be better if the USA, as a world leader and Hollywood with all its influence used their collective clout to lead by guiding global focus to something more productive?

I like pretty cloths, too, and pretty people, pretty things, or pretty scenery. They all make my pupils reflexively dilate in appreciation, and I realize beauty sells.

Nevertheless, marketing aside, the thing that seems to blemish Oscar-buzz the most is the scathing personal critiques. That seems to be the most flagrant dubious attention-getting scam.

Moreover, people who could do well to focus a critical eye on themselves before deigning to cast aspersions on others often level the critiques.

For example, the morning after the Oscars, while brushing my teeth, I walked past the Plasma and heard a best-dressed critic lambasting a most likely momentarily unsuspecting actress for wearing a dress that in the critic's opinion had just "too much going on." She hoarsely whined something about the neckline, the tightness, the cut, the flared hemline the frou frou at the bottom, and on, and on.

I am embarrassed to admit that I was shockingly eager to see that dress after hearing her suspenseful scolding diatribe. I quickly silenced my electric toothbrush, trading its annoying buzz for Hollywood's prying buzz, and stood barefoot, foaming toothpaste, transfixed by expectant curiosity.

When I caught a glimpse of the offending dress, however, it was not nearly as bad as the critic claimed it to be. It wasn’t my taste, but it was far from awful.

It was, not something I would choose to buy or wear, but it also was not the type of dress that would capture my attention, stopping me in mid sentence prompting me to stare in disbelief. It was just.........well.....a dress.

It was indicative of the wearer's style, not mine. Isn't that the way most people choose clothing? They dress in clothing that appeals to them, that strikes a visceral emotional chord by its design, color, or the way the material feels against their skin.

I always think that it is the differences and diversity of life that give life its spice.

If we all had the same taste in clothing, we may as well all simply wear uniforms.

Why bother with personal style at all? We may as well buy the same furniture, too, and, live in the same cookie-cutter houses, and drive the exact same car, in the exact same color. Why stop there? Why not have plastic surgery to ensure that we all look the same?

Why can't we enjoy the differences without sniping about them?

While listening to the critic critiquing the dress, the thing that stood out most in my mind was not the dress in question, nor the actress who wore it. I can't even remember the name of the actress or her face; I was too fixated on her dress. The thing I recall most vividly now, is the critic's voice.

She had a crusty accent evocative of a laborer rather than the elocution expected of someone tapped to give scathing on-air critiques about other peoples' ill-advised habits, clothing choices and general style. I cannot get her incongruently unrefined voice out of my mind.

Yes, I am being judgmental. However, I would not be judging if the critic had simply neutrally mentioned that the actress chose a dress that reflected her personal flare, and left it there.

When I was growing up, and muddling through high school, I was hoping we humans would leave all those silly concerns about who wears the toniest clothing and who has the trendiest hairstyle, behind in those musty high-school hallways.

In fact, my elders promised, as we all matured, our focus would change to issues that are more important. Their implication was that the socially awkward moments experienced in school would no longer plague us because as productive wise adults our minds would be more preoccupied with intellectual humanitarian, altruistic pursuits.

However, based on the Oscar buzz, it seems to me that the social setting of the world at large is no different from the social setting of our high school days.

If we do not focus on the important issues, the ones that need some honing because they seem to have gone awry, how will we change things for the better?

Perhaps the Oscars are simply a distraction, a way to procrastinate, and a way to take our minds off all the troubling things going on in our own country and worldwide.

I know I am being judgmental and being judgmental is unenlightened, but if someone doesn't mention it, nothing will ever change.

https://newhopetoday.blogspot.com/2017/04/oscar-buzz-full-article.html

Link to awards page:
http://www.oscars.org/79academyawards/nomswins.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Academy_Awards

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Short Story:

THE NEW YORK TO PHILLY TECHNO BLACKOUT   BLUES

                                  Or,  A RANDOM ACT  

 

By Shaun Stanert


Holly Cormac is struggling to focus sleep-deprived eyes on the dashboard clock. It is almost midnight on a moonless August night in 1989 and the humidity is opaque on the windshield of her Blue Isuzu Trooper.

The wipers push it aside.

She is on the last leg of a journey. Right now, by her own biased assessment, she is in the middle of nowhere. She estimates it will take at least another couple of hours to reach her Philadelphia home. And, home is where she wants to be.

The humdrum of the roadside scenery pushes her inside herself. She recalls her four-week photographic assignment and the images as they blossomed on developing film: diaphanous and immutably stained on the negatives by light and perceptive determination. She is transported to captivating scenes of foggy morning Meadows, venerable trees, and translucent leaves, silhouetted against the lusty rays of a setting sun.

Soon she is relaxed; too relaxed. As if in confirmation, a yawn seizes the muscles of her heart-shaped face fleetingly rumpling flawless features. It calls attention to an odd flavor that seems to have settled on her parched tongue, an indescribable taste distantly reminiscent of the morning’s breakfast tainted with a hint gasoline fumes. She shakes an empty coke bottle roosting in the cup holder between bucket seats…. not a drop.

The unpalatable impression remains.

She attempts to distract herself from weariness and thirst. She turns on the radio. She punches the buttons. She finds a song that inspires her to sing along.

When the news starts reporting the latest statistics on “carjacking,” she shuts it off and listens to the wind lament as it squeezes through the narrow spaces of her speeding vehicle.

She loves her work, but dislikes traveling alone. She is eager to get home. She leans forward in her leather seat. She shifts toward the windshield, as far as she sensibly can, scrunches her brow, and beams a likeness of herself through the ebony sky. Her target is the townhouse she shares with her tall tender husband, and their dog.

She smiles anticipating the exaggerated greeting her silver Alaskan Malamute will give her, knowing that the wolfish, wiggling, “wanna-be-person” will greet her at the door as if she's been gone a decade.

She hangs on to thoughts of home like a child clutching a useless, frayed blanket. She glides down the darkened roadway, past miles of woods and open grassy pastures. She is so intent that she no longer registers her true environment. She is absent, lost in a longing for home and it in this altered state she bypasses a rest-stop gas station.

It is a mistake.

One that she remains complacently unaware of, as she continues, blissfully tooling along Interstate 95, mesmerized by pleasant thoughts, and the endless spectral glow of blurry taillights.

Soon, she is rudely summoned from her cozy self-induced trance by a disturbing change in engine noise. The comforting hypnotic monotony of the engine's predictable hum has been transposed into a discordant airy rattle.

Without a glance at the dash, she knows that the Isuzu needs fuel. Reflexively, her foot floors the gas pedal in a futile attempt to outdistance destiny. Nonetheless, the accelerating engine will not be fooled. Demanding the liquid treat it craves, it begins to buck and cough until the needle on the r.p.m. gauge sinks soundlessly to zero.

With no choice, she steers and coasts until she feels the wheels bounce onto the road's shoulder. She stomps the brake pedal, yanks the emergency lever, and snaps on the emergency flashers. Extending a dainty foot toughened by years of ballet training, she inelegantly kicks the driver's door open, with an unforgiving force matching the ferocity of her frustration.

She then exits, and marches back to the trunk. Leaning in she extracts a worn white T-shirt from the musty depths of the rarely opened built-in storage bin. She rips the Tee in half and ties the ragged remnant of cloth to the antenna. She, then, tucks the other half into the pocket of her knee-length summer dress, walks to the front of the Trooper and raises the hood in the classic distress signal.

With that done, she wipes her hands on the listless cloth faintly flagging surrender in the nearly breezeless night. Then sinking back until cloth-covered thighs press hot metal, she unconsciously folds her arms tightly across her chest in a symbolic self-hug, and processes the dilemma.

Several interminable minutes pass.

Her thighs begin to sweat, and the sharp bits of road gravel pressing into the flimsy soles of her well-worn summer shoes begin to feel like nails. Their nagging fragmented presence underscores the inner voice that is scolding her for neglecting to refuel.

For a few moments she remains, feet pressing gravel, punishing herself with pointed discomfort, then relents. Guilty or not, it is safer, wiser, and likely more comfortable, to wait for help inside the Trooper.

Still, she cannot shake the edge off her tension. In a flash of stress-discharging volatility, She jerks open the driver's door. She flings her body into the seat. She balls her small hand into a tight fist and systematically hammers down all four door locks. Then, somehow, somewhat relieved, she rolls up the windows sealing herself within the Isuzu's now steamy interior where she sits, a damsel in distress, awaiting the police. Awaiting and waaaiiting...................and waaaattiiiiiiting!

Exasperation engulfs her; where is a cop! She muses about the way they never fail to materialize when her tail light or turn signals unknowingly fail to work. Still, if one shows up now, all past transgressions are forgiven.

More than an hour passes. She is sweltering. Without the engine running, there is no air conditioning, and the soupy heat heartlessly seeps in claiming the once cool refuge.

Discomfort heightens her irritation. She cracks the windows. It gets worse. Dampness tickles her forehead. She pulls the other half of the T-shirt from her pocket. She presses it to her brow. Its soothing cotton obligingly absorbs the perspiration wending a prickly path toward her brown eyes.

Her solace is short lived as her stomach vies for attention in low rolling rumbles that protest a lack of food since morning.

She stretches to the side, foraging through the clutter of the glove compartment for something to defeat her hunger, and catches a jarring glimpse of herself in the rear-view mirror. Her shoulder-length, jet-black hair, sucking moisture from the air like a thirsty cactus, has swelled into a frizzy halo around her pallid face. Her Mascara has formed a dark ring around one eye in a way that reminds her of the markings on the trademark RCA dog.

She looks away; too drained to fuss over her appearance.

A scene from a television show begins scrolling through her mind. In it, a quirky, fiftyish, ad-agency boss is melodramatically sharing the details of the near-fatal heart attack he suffered while driving solo on a Philadelphia expressway. When he finishes, he pierces an associate with an eerie gaze, and drawls condescendingly "Never let anyone ever tell you a car phone is a luxury."

A cellular phone would be handy. As a barely employed photographer, however, her perception of their usefulness was clouded by a lack of cash.

She considers that perhaps no one can see her within the shadowy confines of the Isuzu. Warily she opens the door. Reluctantly, she eases a slim, athletic frame back out into the humid night air, liberating herself from the suffocating lair.

Alas, there is no perceptible atmospheric variation within or without. Her sheer dress begins to adhere to her skin like a wet gauze bandage. She apprehensively peers down the murky highway and mentally wills the welcome sight of a patrol car.

She is, countered, instead, with a carload of frisky young men. They whiz past hooting, laughing and whistling. They hang their bare, muscular arms out the open windows and playfully pound the side of their red mustang. They rotate their forearms, Arsenio Hall style, and grunt HOO HOOO! HOOOO!

The wake from their speeding sedan ruffles the delicate, bare-shouldered sundress she now regrets wearing, and sends her scurrying for the skimpy security of her locked Isuzu.

Inside her vehicle, sweat and panic fill her eyes. She tells herself they were just having fun. Still, her blind probing fingers delve beneath the passenger's side seat until they locate a heavy metal crowbar stashed there.

She is choked with nameless dread. The muscles in her neck are taut as steel girders, and her rapid breathing seems unable to secure adequate oxygen. She is mortified by her fearfulness. She is tough; resilient; a roll-with-the punches type. She runs her hand over the rough metal of the crowbar. Its weight and substance offer her a modicum of security. She allows the soothing click-clack of the four-way flashers to hush the hysteria welling within.

The respite is temporary. Like an endless loop video, her imagination repeatedly recycles detailed pictures of all the sinister things that could happen. She presses her palms over her eyes, massaging them gently, attempting to erase nasty thoughts.

She envisions empowering thoughts. Those thoughts, as slippery as Hudson River eels, elude her concentration. Soon she is relentlessly chewing her bottom lip. She brusquely stops when she tastes the saline stickiness of her own blood.

Enough is enough. She will walk to the nearest indiscernible exit in search of help.

She moves to open the door. Simultaneously, a large truck barrels past leaving her Trooper trembling fitfully in its dust. The eighteen-wheeler smoothly hisses to a halt about fifteen yards ahead, its flashers blinking in tempo with hers.

She is immobilized by suspicion. She strains to see the truck through the fogged windshield. The sound of rasping metal ricochets off the shadows, as its door swings open. A lanky man, with thick, partially graying hair, agilely drops from its rugged cab. She can hear the crunch and spray of burdensome work boots displacing gravel as he advances toward her.

She peers through the darkness. He does not appear threatening. Still, fearful of being trapped inside her Ute, she tucks the crowbar-wielding arm behind her back. She eases out. She ascertains the level of force to muster should the need arise.

She falters. Perhaps, It might be best to run, avoiding a tussle altogether.

The man is moving closer.

When he is near enough to clearly see Holly's fragile figure, he stops abruptly. His tall body cartoonishly vibrates back and forth slightly, as if blunted by an invisible force field.

Unexpectedly, she gains insight into the scenario from his perspective and finds herself suppressing an urge to laugh. She controls the reflexive reaction and appraises him with tempered empathy as he appraises her.

She tracks his eyes. They take in her weather-wild hair, slide to her heat-flushed face, and briefly take note of her attempt to conceal at least one arm. She sees his shoulders stiffen, then relax, a hardly discernible action. Slowly, almost too nonchalantly, his eyes drift back up and settle on hers.

His expression is unreadable. Either he senses her fear, or he fears her.

He maintains a deferential distance. She finds it disarming. Then he cups his hand to his mouth and using the measured, octave-raised pitch usually reserved for lost children or full-grown lunatics, he hollers, "Do you need help?"

"Yes," she bleats, startled by the swiftness of her response, but pacified by his lack of proximity, she continues. "I'm out of gas." The sheepish timbre tolling her words chafes already tattered pride. He must think her a simpleton. A warm blush of embarrassment spreads up her neck and face. For the first time this night, she is grateful for the dark.
In response, a friendly chuckle bridges the space between them. "I've done that a few times myself," he confesses. Gesturing toward his truck and broadcasting his solution to her dilemma, "I'll use my mobile phone to call a service station," he says, raising his hands chest level, palms beseechingly facing out as if warding off a gunslinger’s bullet. "I'll wait in my rig till help gets here, O.K.?"

Apparently, however, not needing an answer, he disappears into his truck, where he stays.

A giggle broods in her stomach and rises to her throat like an air bubble surfacing in a pond. Is it a physical manifestation of relief, or does she truly find the situation humorous? She is not sure. Tentatively loosening the grip on her paranoia, she releases the weapon and rests it on the hood, placed within easy reach although now she intuits no danger.

Within fifteen minutes, a service truck sidles up. Its presence snuffs any remainder of apprehension like a cap over a candle flame. Focused on the immediate resolution of her problem, her attention is elsewhere. Still, the intent to thank the trucker for his unconditional kindness never leaves her.

While speaking to the attendant, a gear-grinding whine intrudes. She realizes it is the trucker firing up his massive engine. Regret sinks her heart. She feels the ground shiver as the long silver rig rumbles onto the highway, but she can only see the broad back-end of it lumbering away.

The knowledge that she now has no way to thank the driver wounds her.

Blinking away a haze of fatigue and disappointment, she scrutinizes the departing truck for a clue to the identity of her modest Good Samaritan. There is not one. Her gaze clings to the license plate and tries, but fails, to read the rapidly diminishing numbers on the rectangular scrap of metal. Passenger cars, dwarfed by the vehicle's mass, relentlessly crowd the space behind it, still, her eyes continue to pursue the truck, and she is overcome with a perplexing sense of helpless loss.

As she walks slowly along the roadside trailing the path of the lone truck like a bewildered toddler, the attendant fills her tank and processes her credit card.

Meanwhile, with nothing else left to do, Holly does the only thing she can. With solemn determination, she directs her thoughts to the briskly retreating vehicle. Slowly, she draws in a chest full of steamy night air. She holds it in; she wills the tenseness from her body closes her eyes and slowly exhales.

As she sets her breath free, she imagines it forming a cushion around the hulking rig, an invisible, invincible bumper. She knows it is only a thought, and few believe thoughts have power. Nevertheless, she reminds herself, a thought is the only gift she has to give.

She dismisses self-doubt. She intensifies her aim. She expands the image. She positions it in front of, behind, beside, above and below the rig. She concentrates…. She connects…. She tucks the image into a corner of her mind's eye and keeps it there long after the truck has faded into the inky distance. .....

                                                    END

THE NEW YORK TO PHILADELPHIA TECHNO BLACKOUT BLUES

THE NEW YORK TO PHILADELPHIA TECHNO BLACKOUT BLUES

OR........... A RANDOM ACT

By  Shaun Stanert

[A slice-of-life snapshot of the world before the ubiquity and banality of cells phones changed it forever.…]


Holly Cormac is struggling to focus sleep-deprived eyes on the dashboard clock. It is almost midnight on a moonless August night in 1989 and the humidity is opaque on the windshield of her Blue Isuzu Trooper.

The wipers push it aside.

She is on the last leg of a journey. Right now, by her own biased assessment, she is in the middle of nowhere. She estimates it will take at least another couple of hours to reach home in Philadelphia.

And, home is where she wants to be.

The humdrum of the roadside scenery pushes her inside herself. She rekindles her four-week photographic assignment invoking captive images as they flower on developing film diaphanous and immutably stained on negatives by light and perceptive determination.

The memories transport her to entrancing scenes of foggy morning meadows, venerable trees, and translucent leaves silhouetted against the lusty rays of a setting sun.

Soon she is relaxed; too relaxed. As if in confirmation, a yawn seizes the muscles of her heart-shaped face fleetingly ruffling flawless features. It calls attention to an indescribable taste, settled on her parched tongue, distantly reminiscent of the morning’s breakfast absurdly tainted by a hint of gasoline fumes.

She shakes an empty coke bottle roosting in the cup holder between bucket seats…. not a drop.

The unpalatable impression remains.

She attempts to distract herself from weariness and thirst. She turns on the radio. She punches the buttons. She finds a song that inspires her to sing along.

When the news starts reporting the latest statistics on carjackings, she shuts it off and listens to the wind lament as it squeezes through the narrow spaces of her speeding vehicle.

She enjoys her work, but dislikes traveling alone. She is eager to be home. She leans forward in her leather seat. She shifts toward the windshield, as far as she sensibly can, scrunches her brow, and beams a likeness of herself through the ebony sky. Her target is the townhouse she shares with her tall tender husband, and their high-spirited dog.

She smiles, anticipating the exaggerated welcome her silver Alaskan Malamute will give her, knowing that the wolfish wiggling wannabe person will greet her at the door as if she's been gone a decade.

She hangs on to thoughts of home like a child clutching a useless frayed blanket. She glides down the darkened roadway past miles of woods and open grassy pastures. She is so intent that she no longer registers her true environment. She is absent, lost in a longing for home, and in this altered state, she bypasses a rest-stop gas station.

It is a mistake.

One she remains complacently unaware of as she continues blissfully tooling along Interstate 95 mesmerized by pleasant thoughts and the endless spectral glow of blurry taillights.

Soon she is rudely summoned from her cozy self-induced trance by a disturbing change in engine noise. The comforting monotony of the engine's hypnotic hum has transposed to a discordant airy rattle.

Without a glance at the dash, she knows that the Isuzu needs fuel. Reflexively her foot floors the gas pedal in a futile attempt to outdistance destiny. Nonetheless, the accelerating engine will not be fooled. Demanding the liquid treat it craves it begins to buck and cough until the needle on the r.p.m. gauge sinks soundlessly to zero.

With no choice, she steers and coasts until she feels the wheels bounce onto the road's shoulder. Next, she stomps the brake pedal, yanks the emergency lever, snaps on the emergency flashers, extends a dainty foot toughened by years of ballet training to inelegantly kick open the driver’s door with an unforgiving force matching the ferocity of her frustration, exits and marches back to the trunk.

Leaning in she extracts a worn white T-shirt from the musty depths of the rarely opened built-in storage bin. She rips the Tee in half, ties the ragged remnant of cloth to the antenna, tucks the other half into the pocket of her knee-length summer dress, moves to the front of the Trooper, and raises the hood in the classic distress signal.

With that done, she wipes her hands on the listless cloth faintly flagging surrender in the nearly breezeless night. Then, sinking back until cloth-covered thighs press hot metal, she unconsciously folds her arms tightly across her chest in a symbolic self-hug, and processes the dilemma.

Several long minutes pass.

Her thighs begin to sweat and the sharp bits of road gravel pressing into the flimsy soles of her well-worn summer shoes begin to feel like nails. Their nagging fragmented presence underscores the inner voice incessantly scolding her for neglecting to refuel.

For a few moments she remains, feet pressing gravel, punishing herself with pointed discomfort, then relents. Guilty or not it is safer wiser and likely more comfortable to wait for help inside the Trooper.

Still, she cannot shake the edge off her tension. In a flash of stress-discharging volatility, she jerks open the driver's door. She flings her body into the seat. She balls her small hand into a tight fist and systematically hammers down all four door locks.

Then, somehow somewhat relieved she rolls up the windows sealing herself within the Isuzu's now steamy interior where she sits, a damsel in distress, awaiting the police. Awaiting… and waaaiiting…, and waaaaitiiiiiiing!

Exasperation engulfs her.  She muses about the way a cop never fails to materialize when her tail light or turn signals unknowingly fail to work. Still, if an officer shows up now, all past transgressions are forgiven.

More than an hour passes. She is sweltering. Without the engine running, there is no air conditioning and the soupy heat heartlessly seeps in claiming the once cool refuge.

Discomfort heightens her irritation. She cracks the windows. It gets worse. Dampness tickles her forehead. She pulls the other half of the T-shirt from her pocket. She presses it to her brow. Its soothing cotton obligingly absorbs the perspiration wending a prickly path toward her brown eyes.

Her solace is short lived as her stomach vies for attention in low rolling rumbles protesting a lack of food since morning.

She stretches to the side, foraging through the clutter of the glove compartment for something to defeat her hunger, and catches a jarring glimpse of herself in the rear-view mirror. Her shoulder-length, jet-black hair, sucking moisture from the air like a thirsty cactus, has swelled into a frizzy halo around her pallid face. Her Mascara has formed a dark ring around one eye in a way that reminds her of the markings on the trademark RCA dog.

She looks away; too drained to fuss over her appearance.

Meanwhile, a scene from a television show begins scrolling through her mind. In it, a quirky fiftyish ad-agency boss melodramatically shares the details of the near-fatal heart attack he suffered while driving solo on a Philadelphia expressway. When he finishes, he pierces an associate with an eerie gaze, and drawls condescendingly "Never let anyone ever tell you a car phone is a luxury."

A cellular phone would be handy. As a barely employed photographer, however, her perception of their trendy techno usefulness was clouded by a serious lack of cash.

Mulling her dilemma, she considers that perhaps no one can see her within the shadowy confines of the Isuzu. Warily she opens the door. Reluctantly she eases a slim athletic frame back out into the humid night air liberating her from the suffocating lair.

Alas, there is no perceptible atmospheric variation within or without. Her sheer dress begins to adhere to her skin like a wet gauze bandage. She apprehensively peers down the murky highway and mentally wills the welcome sight of a patrol car.

She is countered, instead, with a carload of frisky young men. They whiz past hooting laughing and whistling. They hang their bare muscular arms out the open windows and playfully pound the side of their red mustang. They rotate their forearms, Arsenio Hall style, and grunt HOO HOOO! HOOOO!

The wake from their speeding sedan ruffles the delicate bare-shouldered sundress she now regrets wearing, and sends her scurrying for the skimpy security of her locked Isuzu.

Inside her vehicle, sweat and panic fill her eyes. She tells herself its Saturday night. They are just having fun. Still, her blind probing fingers delve beneath the passenger's side seat until they locate a heavy metal crowbar stashed there.

She is choked with nameless dread. The muscles in her neck are taut as steel girders, and her rapid breathing seems unable to secure adequate oxygen. She is mortified by her fearfulness. She is tough, resilient; a roll-with-the punches type. She runs her hand over the rough metal of the crowbar. Its weight and substance offer her a modicum of security and she allows the soothing click-clack of the four-way flashers to hush the hysteria welling within.

The respite is temporary. Like an endless loop video, her imagination repeatedly recycles detailed pictures of all the sinister things that could happen. She presses her palms over her eyes, massaging gently, attempting to erase nasty thoughts.

She envisions empowering thoughts. Those thoughts, as slippery as Hudson River eels, elude her concentration. Soon she is relentlessly chewing her bottom lip. She brusquely stops when she tastes the saline stickiness of her own blood.

Enough is enough. She will walk to the nearest indiscernible exit in search of help.

She moves to open the door. Simultaneously a large truck barrels past leaving her Trooper trembling fitfully in its dust. The eighteen-wheeler smoothly hisses to a halt about fifteen yards ahead, its flashers blinking in tempo with hers.

She is immobilized by suspicion. She strains to see the truck through the fogged windshield. The sound of rasping metal ricochets off the shadows as its door swings open. A lanky man, with thick partially graying hair, agilely drops from its rugged cab. She can hear the crunch and spray of burdensome work boots displacing gravel as he advances toward her.

She peers through the darkness. He does not appear threatening. Still, fearful of being trapped inside her Trooper, she tucks the crowbar-wielding arm behind her back. She eases out. She ascertains the level of force to muster should the need arise.

She falters. Perhaps, It might be best to run, avoiding a tussle altogether.

The man is moving closer.

When he is near enough to clearly see Holly's fragile figure, he stops abruptly. His tall body cartoonishly vibrates back and forth slightly, as if blunted by an invisible force field.

Unexpectedly, she gains insight into the scenario from his perspective and finds herself suppressing an urge to laugh. She controls the reflexive reaction and appraises him with tempered empathy as he appraises her.

She tracks his eyes. They take in her weather-wild hair, slide to her heat-flushed face, and briefly take note of her attempt to conceal at least one arm. She sees his shoulders stiffen, then relax, a hardly discernible action. Slowly, almost too nonchalantly, his eyes drift back up and settle on hers.

His expression is unreadable. Either he senses her fear, or he fears her.

He maintains a disarming deferential distance. Then he cups his hand to his mouth and using the measured octave-raised pitch usually reserved for lost children or full-grown lunatics, he hollers, "Do you need help?"

"Yes," she bleats, startled by the swiftness of her response. Pacified, however, by his lack of proximity, she continues. "I'm out of gas."

The sheepish timbre tolling her words chafes already tattered pride. He must think her a simpleton. A warm blush of embarrassment spreads up her neck and face. For the first time this night, she is grateful for the dark.

In response, a friendly chuckle bridges the space between them. "I've done that a few times myself," he confesses.

Gesturing toward his truck he broadcasts his solution to her dilemma, "I'll use my mobile phone to call a service station," he says, raising his hands chest level, palms beseechingly facing out, as if warding off a gunslinger’s bullet. "I'll wait in my rig till help gets here, O.K.?"

Not needing an answer, he disappears into his truck…, where he stays.

A giggle broods in her stomach and rises to her throat like an air bubble surfacing in a pond. Is it a physical manifestation of relief, or does she truly find the situation humorous? She is not sure. Tentatively loosening the grip on her paranoia, she releases the weapon and rests it on the hood within easy reach, although now she intuits no danger.

Within fifteen minutes, a service truck sidles up. Its presence snuffs any remainder of apprehension like a cap over a candle flame. Focused on the immediate resolution of her problem, her attention is elsewhere. Still, the intent to thank the trucker for his unconditional kindness never leaves her.

While speaking to the attendant, a gear-grinding whine intrudes. She realizes it is the trucker firing up his massive engine. Regret sinks her heart. She feels the ground shiver as the long silver rig rumbles onto the highway, but she can only see the broad back-end of it lumbering away.

The knowledge that she now has no way to thank the driver wounds her.

Blinking away a haze of fatigue and disappointment, she scrutinizes the departing truck for a clue to the identity of her modest Good Samaritan. There is none. Her gaze clings to the license plate and she tries, but fails, to read the rapidly diminishing numbers on the rectangular scrap of metal. Passenger cars, dwarfed by the vehicle's mass, relentlessly crowd the space behind it, still, her eyes continue to pursue the truck, and she is overcome with a puzzling sense of helpless loss.

As she walks slowly along the roadside trailing the path of the lone truck like a bewildered toddler, the attendant fills her tank and processes her credit card.

Meanwhile, with nothing else left to do, Holly does the only thing she can. With solemn determination, she directs her thoughts to the briskly retreating vehicle. Slowly, she draws in a chest full of steamy night air. She holds it in, she wills the tenseness from her body, closes her eyes, and slowly exhales.

As she sets her breath free, she imagines it forming a cushion around the hulking rig, an invisible invincible bumper. She knows it is only a thought, and few believe thoughts have power. Nevertheless, she reminds herself, a thought is the only gift she has to give.

She dismisses self-doubt. She intensifies her aim. She expands the image. She positions it in front of, behind, beside, above, and below the rig. She concentrates…. She connects….

She tucks the image into a corner of her mind's eye and keeps it there long after the truck has faded into the inky distance. .....

                                                         END

https://newhopetoday.blogspot.com/2013/07/the-new-york-to-philadelphia-techno.html

https://newhopetoday.blogspot.com/2013/07/the-new-york-to-philadelphia-techno.html

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Lyme disiease: What you need to know.

HERE:

Lyme Disease: Hard To Diagnose, Harder To Shake Chameleon like And Unpredictable, This Ailment Has No Foolproof Test. 

August 20, 1992: By Shaun Stanert  Inquirer Correspondent

About a month after a camping trip in 1989, the Yeager family started suffering from a persistent ailment. Various doctors diagnosed it as anything from milk allergies to stress to multiple sclerosis.

But, Angela Yeager of Falls Township, suspected Lyme disease, a bacterial infection transmitted through the saliva of infected ticks.

Yeager took her family to scores of skeptical doctors who rejected her self-diagnosis even though Yeager, her two daughters and her husband all exhibited classic Lyme disease symptoms: stiff necks, joint pain, visual problems, swollen glands and unrelenting, overwhelming fatigue.

Yeager's husband, Bob, was the only family member with a skin rash, but it was not the textbook bull's-eye rash usually attributed to Lyme disease. Hardest hit was their younger daughter, Jennifer, 9, who had a constant low- grade fever and swollen knees.

"When you consider that we were campers, and all had similar symptoms, it just makes sense that we all had Lyme disease," Angela Yeager said.

When the last in a long line of doctors could not definitely match a malady to the family's symptoms, Yeager refused to leave his office until he tested the family for Lyme disease.

Only Jennifer tested positive.

READ FULL ARTICLE..... HERE

http://articles.philly.com/1992-08-20/news/25989867_1_lyme-disease-rash-doctors

Monday, February 7, 2011

Lyme disease, by Shaun Stanert Inquirer Correspondent

Lyme Disease: Hard To Diagnose, Harder To Shake Chameleon like And Unpredictable, This Ailment Has No Foolproof Test.

August 20, 1992|By Shaun Stanert, INQUIRER CORRESPONDENT
About a month after a camping trip in 1989, the Yeager family started suffering from a persistent ailment. Various doctors diagnosed it as anything from milk allergies to stress to multiple sclerosis.

But, Angela Yeager of Falls Township, suspected Lyme disease, a bacterial infection transmitted through the saliva of infected ticks.

Yeager took her family to scores of skeptical doctors who rejected her self-diagnosis even though Yeager, her two daughters and her husband all exhibited classic Lyme disease symptoms: stiff necks, joint pain, visual problems, swollen glands and unrelenting, overwhelming fatigue.

Yeager's husband, Bob, was the only family member with a skin rash, but it was not the textbook bull's-eye rash usually attributed to Lyme disease. Hardest hit was their younger daughter, Jennifer, 9, who had a constant low- grade fever and swollen knees.

"When you consider that we were campers, and all had similar symptoms, it just makes sense that we all had Lyme disease," Angela Yeager said.

When the last in a long line of doctors could not definitely match a malady to the family's symptoms, Yeager refused to leave his office until he tested the family for Lyme disease.

Only Jennifer tested positive.

READ FULL ARTICLE HERE:

http://articles.philly.com/1992-08-20/news/25989867_1_lyme-disease-rash-doctors

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Happy Brithday Scientific American -- The magazine

Aug. 28, 1845: Scientific American, the Magazine for the Rest of Us

By Tony Long

The Scientific American logo has changed some from this rendering, circa 1869.

1845: Scientific American, the oldest continuously published magazine in the United States, makes its debut.

Founded by Rufus Porter, a prolific inventor as well as a pretty fair painter and the scion of a wealthy New England family, was originally printed as a single-page newsletter with a demonstrated liking for news coming out of the U.S. Patent Office.

The first edition focused on the improving the quality of the American railroad passenger car . It included this passage to whet the appetite of potential travelers:

Let any person contrast the awkward and uncouth cars of '35 with the superbly splendid long cars now running on several of the eastern roads, and he will find it difficult to convey to a third party, a correct idea of the vast extent of the improvement. Some of the most elegant cars of this class, and which are of a capacity to accommodate from sixty to eighty passengers, and run with a steadiness hardly equaled by a steamboat in still water, are manufactured by Davenport & Bridges, at their establishment in Cambridgeport, Mass.

Today, Scientific American enjoys a solid reputation despite its broad target audience. While peer-reviewed journals like Science and Nature circulate widely in the professional scientific community, Scientific American's typical reader is a card-carrying (if educated) member of the general public.

Now owned by German-based publisher Verlagsgruppe Georg von Holtzbrinck, Scientific American publishes 15 foreign language editions, with a worldwide circulation of more than one million. The magazine's has been online since 1996.

(Source: Wikipedia)

Friday, June 22, 2007

US general laments Google Earth capability

Posted Fri Jun 22, 2007 8:43am AEST

By Reuters News

The head of US Air Force intelligence and surveillance says data available commercially through online mapping software such as Google Earth poses a danger to security but cannot be rolled back.

"To talk about danger ... really is irrelevant because it's there," said Lieutenant General David Deptula, deputy chief of staff for intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance.

"No one's going to undo commercial satellite imagery," he told reporters in Washington.

Lt Gen Deptula cited Google's Google Earth, which gives Web users an astronaut's view of the earth and allows them to zoom down to street level. He said it had provided anyone with a credit card the ability to get a picture of any place on earth.

"It is huge," he said. "It's something that was a closely guarded secret not that long ago and now everybody's got access to it."

Asked if the US military might try to implement restrictions or blackouts on imagery of some areas, Lt Gen Deptula said he was not aware of such an attempt.

"I don't want to speak to specifics, but not that I'm aware of," he said.

Instead, governments are trying to mitigate the effect through camouflage, concealment and deception, he said, providing no other details.

-Reuters

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

60 MINUTES NEWS STORY ABOUT NON-TRADITIONAL AND ONLINE VENUES FOR SELLING REAL ESTATE SPARKS DEBATE

Reactions to the 60 Minutes story on online real estate that aired May 13 continue to pour in to RISMedia. Here, read some of the many responses to the piece, our coverage of it and how you can get involved.

Responses range from outrage over what viewers say was the news
magazine's unbalanced coverage of traditional real estate brokerage, to
staunch support for online brokerages and their various models.

Many of our readers have requested information on how to get in touch with 60 Minutes to submit letters. Those interested may write to:

CBS News/60 Minutes:
524 West 57th St.
New York, NY 10019
60m@cbsnews.com
PHONE: (212) 975-3247

Or send your thoughts directly to 60 Minute Executive Producer, Jeff Fager:

Jeff Fager
Executive Producer
CBS News "60 Minutes"
555 West 57th, 9th Floor
New York, NY. 10019

To email your responses to RISMedia, send them to realestatemagazinefeedback@rismedia.com.

Letters to the Editor

To the Editor:

Stop the whining - 60 Minutes went easy on "traditional" brokers.

Like most Realtors®, we anxiously awaited the airing of the CBS 60 Minutes segment on real estate ("Chipping Away at Realtors' Six Percent," May 13, 2007). Our interest was based on the hope that our company, Assist-2-Sell, would be featured. When interviewed earlier in the year by 60 Minutes, we offered them plenty of examples of the unethical, unprofessional, and anti-competitive practices we've encountered over the past 20 years as "discount" brokers. We anticipated a format similar to Dateline NBC's To Catch A Predator, perhaps entitled To Catch A Realtor®. While we were disappointed, we suspect more than a few brokers breathed a sigh of relief. In fairness, we have no first hand knowledge of 60 Minutes obtaining footage of anyone during their investigation behaving in an inappropriate manner.

The 60 Minutes report was fair and balanced. Both the traditional business model and the Internet based business Redfin model were given adequate opportunity to present their value propositions. It is unfortunate CBS did not discuss other alternatives for consumers, such as our established business model. Our company has more than 600 offices serving all size markets with a proven business model. We offer an alternative consumers can enjoy today in most markets, as opposed to paying high commissions offered by many other firms.

The National Association of Realtors (NAR), in its response to CBS, claims it "supports all business models and favors none." We respectfully beg to differ. We've witnessed numerous rule changes and support of legislation intended to create roadblocks for competitors to the traditional model under the guise of protecting consumers. If NAR truly supported all business models, the DOJ would not need to resort to litigation to get the MLS information opened up to those Realtors ® who use different models. NAR refuses to allow Assist-2-Sell "Non MLS" listings to be displayed on the powerful Realtor.com® Web site. The Web site is not titled MLS.com, but rather Realtor.com®. We believe our franchisees, as Realtors ®, should be entitled to display all their listings on Realtor.com®, which ultimately benefits the consumer.

We continually hear that commissions now average only 5.1%. The truth is the 5.1% number came from an industry trade publication, and was an estimate of average commissions charged by the nation's top 500 brokerages. John C. Weicher, Director of the Hudson Institute's Center for Housing and Financial Markets, found the industry trade publication's commission data limited by its focus on the largest brokerages and most expensive homes. NAR needs to invest in a commission survey conducted by an independent company and share those results with the media.

Despite challenges to our business model from within the industry, we do very well. We are approaching one billion dollars in commission savings for our home sellers* and the number is growing. Seller's recognize our "Full Service with $avings!" marketing programs as a legitimate alternative to paying high commissions. Internet models like Redfin should be allowed to succeed or fail based on their business model, not interference through legislation, rule changes or anti-competitive practices.

Lyle Martin and Mary LaMeres-Pomin
Co-founders, Assist-2-Sell
North America's Leading Discount Real Estate Company

* Savings based on statistics for all Assist-2-Sell offices in North America compared to paying 6% commission, which is used for comparison purposes only.

******

Sunday, May 27, 2007

KARMA DEFINED

                                            KARMA DEFINED!

 

Karma is one of the most important concepts in Buddhism. Karma is an imprint in one's Mind. 

When one performs a good deed out of good intentions, the good intentions come from the Mind. Having done that good deed, the residues of these intentions stay in one's Mind as "imprints", and that is "good karma". 

The opposite goes for evil deeds (or what the Buddha would call "unwholesome deeds") done out of greed, hatred etc.

A person's karma affects a person in 2 ways. The first is his disposition. If a person is an angry one, performing many deeds with anger, his mind will be imprinted with experiences and intentions of anger. 

 Because of this imprint, in a similar situation, he would be more likely to feel angry.  

In a sense, the imprint creates and reinforces a sort of mental habit that causes a person's mind to react in a certain predisposed way.

KARMA DEFINED

Karma is one of the most important concepts in Buddhism. Karma is an imprint in one's Mind. When one performs a good deed out of good intentions, the good intentions come from the Mind. Having done that good deed, the residues of these intentions stay in one's Mind as "imprints", and that is "good karma". The opposite goes for evil deeds (or what the Buddha would call "unwholesome deeds") done out of greed, hatred etc.

A person's karma affects a person in 2 ways. The first is his disposition. If a person is an angry one, performing many deeds with anger, his mind will be imprinted with experiences and intentions of anger. Because of this imprint, in a similar situation, he would be more likely to feel angry. In a sense, the imprint creates and reinforces a sort of mental habit that causes a person's mind to react in a certain pre-disposed way.

CONTINUE READING AT:



Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Washington Post Launches Social Networking Component

Late last week the Washington Post launched a light social networking component called My Post. The feature allows users to create a profile that will be linked to whenever a user comments on a Post article. The profile includes personal information about the user and aggregators all of a user’s comments. The feature also includes the ability send private messages to other users, make other users your “friend” and to recommend the posts of other users.

A screenshot of a profile is below and you can view a profile page here. Note that this feature is powered by Pluck’s Sitelife software, the same package used to power the social features on USAToday.com (although the Post version has less features).

Continue reading this article at its source:

http://www.bivingsreport.com/2007/washington-post-launches-social-networking-component/



Friday, April 20, 2007

GENDER DIFFERENCES IN WRITING STYLES

By Shaun Stanert

Is it possible to know if an author is male or female simply by reading their words?

I recently found a website with a program that is touted as capable of determining the difference between a male and female author by using algorithms.

Apparently, women use more pronouns and men use more noun specifiers.

Hmm!  Is that true?

The website has a way for guests to load anonymous copy for testing. After the copy is submitted, it is scanned and an opinion returned on whether the author is male or female.

It was fun to test it, but the algorithms are a bit confused about me.

Here's the link: http://bookblog.net/gender/genie.php

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

HUMAN AND ANIMAL FOOD POISONING WITH MAD COW A SLOW DEATH

Human and Animal Food Poisoning with Mad Cow a Slow Death

an editorial by Terry S. Singeltary Sr.

Dear Mr. Ed:

With all the pet food deaths mounting from tainted pet food, all the suffering not only the animals are going through, but there owners as well, why are owners of these precious animals not crying about the mad cow tainted animal carcasses they poison there animals with everyday, and have been for decades, why not an uproar about that? well, let me tell you why, they don't drop dead immediately, it's a slow death, they simply call it FELINE and or CANINE ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE, DEMENTIA OR MAD CAT/DOG DISEASE i.e. FSE and they refuse to document CSE i.e.Canine Spongiform Encephalopathy, but it's there and there is some strange pathological findings on that topic that was convientantly swept under the rug. Sadly, this happens everyday with humans, once again confidently swept under the rug as Alzheimer's and or dementia i.e. fast Alzheimer's. Who wants to spend money on an autopsy on an old dog or cat? Sadly, it's the same with humans, you get old and demented your either die or your family puts you in an old folks home and forgets about you, then you die, and again, no autopsy in most cases. Imagine 4.5 annually with Alzheimer's, with and estimated 20+ million dieing a slow death by 2050, and in reality it will most likely be much higher than that now that the blood supply has been infiltrated with the TSE agent, and we now know that blood is another route and source for this hideous disease. It's hell getting old now a days.

Now, for the ones that don't believe me, well mad cow has been in the USA for decades undetected officially, but the late Richard Marsh documented way back, again, swept under the rug. Then in 2003 in December, the first case of BSE was finally documented, by accident. Then you had the next two cases that were documented in Texas and Alabama, but it took an act of Congress, literally, to get those finally documented, and when they were finally documented, they were atypical BSE or Bovine Amyloid Spongiform Encephalopathy (BASE), which when transmitted to humans is not vCJD or nvCJD, but SPORADIC CJD. Now you might ask yourself what about that mad cow feed ban of August 4, 1997, the year my mother died from the Heidenhain Variant of Creutzfeldt Jakob Disease (confirmed), well that ruminant to ruminant was merely a regulation on paper that nobody enforced. Just last month there was 10+ PLUS MILLION POUNDS OF BANNED BLOOD TAINTED MBM DISPERSED INTO COMMERCE, and there is no way the FDA will ever recover it. It will be fed out again. 2006 was a banner year for FDA mad cow protein fed out into commerce. Looks like 2007 will be also.

Our federal Government has failed us at every corner when it comes to food safety. maybe your dog, your cat, your mom, your dad, your aunt, or your uncle, but again, who cares, there old and demented, just put them down, or put them away. It's hell getting old.

Article source:
http://www.swnebr.net/newspaper/cgi-bin/articles/articlearchiver.pl?160273


Saturday, April 14, 2007

BLACKOUT THREAT FOR MUSIC THIEVES

By Peter Holmes

April 15, 2007 01:00am

  • Tough guidelines to stop illegal music downloads
  • ISPs in plan to cut services to thieves
  • 18 per cent of Australians download 30 illegal songs a month

PEOPLE who illegally download music would have their telephone and internet services cut off under a radical new plan proposed by the music industry.

Fed up with falling sales, the industry - which claims Australians download more than one billion songs illegally each year - has been discussing tough new guidelines with internet service providers (ISPs) since late last year.

Record labels, music publishers and other copyright holders are involved.

The value of CDs sold in Australia between January and March this year fell by more than 20 per cent - from $100 million to $80 million - compared with the first three months of 2006.

This is despite big-selling albums from Australian Idol winner Damien Leith, Justin Timberlake, The Killers and Snow Patrol.

The remarkable plunge mirrors the US experience.

Continue reading article at its source:

http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,21555941-2,00.html



Thursday, April 12, 2007

MOOSE REINDEER TO TAKE TASTE TESTS

The Associated Press

Stockholm, Sweden

Moose and reindeer at a Stockholm wildlife park have been invited to an unusual taste panel that will help decide which type of salt should be used to de-ice the country's roads in wintertime.

The less they like it, the better.

The National Road Administration plans to introduce a new, sweeter blend of road salt, but wants to make sure it doesn't attract wildlife to Sweden's highways, project organizer Frida Hedin said Tuesday.

She said the 14 hoofed jury members at Stockholm's Skansen open-air museum will be presented with two salt blocks - one with the new sugary flavor and another tasting like the road salt being used today.

The project is expected to start in about a week and last for around two months, Hedin said.

Traffic accidents involving wildlife are fairly common on the Scandinavian country's highways.

Link to source: http://www.thestate.com/371/story/31989.html

Tuesday, April 3, 2007

POLLUTION in SOME CITIES WORSE than CHENOBYL EXPOSURE!

Study rates risks of city life as greater than radiation and
Passive smoking worse than living in blast zone

Ian Sample, science correspondent
Tuesday April 3, 2007
The Guardian

Air pollution in major cities may be more damaging to health than the radiation exposure suffered by survivors of the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, according to a report published today.
The study suggests high levels of urban air pollution cut short life expectancy more than the radiation exposure of emergency workers who were sent into the 19-mile exclusion zone around the site straight after the accident.
Two explosions at the Chernobyl reactor killed three people immediately and more than 30 died from acute radiation poisoning, but the radioactive plume released from the reactor spread over most of Europe and is estimated to have caused up to 16,000 deaths.

Read the full story at its source: http://environment.guardian.co.uk/waste/story/0,,2048662,00.html?gusrc=rss&feed=1

Sunday, March 25, 2007

THE EGO, PERCEPTION AND BUDDHIST PHILOSOPHY

According to Buddhist philosophy perception is one of the five aggregates.

The other four are FORM, FEELING, MENTAL FORMATION, AND CONSCIOUSNESS

Below are some thoughts pertaining to perception and the ego.

The eye sees only shape and color, but perception has the conditioning of memory. Somebody who hasn’t got a clock might think, “I want one like that too.” Or somebody who has a better one might think, “Mine is much more valuable.” Ego is arising immediately, asserting its desires or superiority feelings. In reality, all we have seen is a square little box black at the back and white at the front. Because of ego delusion and conditioning, perception creates a thinking process which we, of course, believe. There’s no reason to disbelieve it because we’ve never analyzed it. By believing it, we are perpetuating the ego illusion. We are constantly thinking because we have to support our ego illusion. The ego is so fragile that it will fall apart unless it’s supported. We keep adhering to the demands of the body and we become the feeling to support our ego illusion. If we were only to look at the feeling and say, “It’s just a feeling,” then there would be no ego affirmation.

Ego needs constant support because it isn’t real. We don’t have to keep saying, “This is a house. This is a big house. This is an old house.” It’s obvious. This house exits. But the ego doesn’t and therefore it needs constant confirmation. This support comes from our thinking process and gets additional help from being appreciated and loved and through sense contacts and our perception of them.

READ MORE AT:
http://www.compassiontemple.org/english/basicbuddhism/five_aggregates.htm


Friday, March 23, 2007

Controversy Sells: Witness the Wet-Wine Dress, grown in a Vat, and Woven by Bacteria

By Shaun Stanert

Employing controversy as a marketing and promotional tool to sell products effectively is nothing new. Still, the fact that it does work, and works well, always intrigues me.

Creating a clamor a around an issue also appears to be a popular way to catapult a career. It seems that it does not matter what the ethical content surrounding the issue is, just that it garners publicity and eventually name recognition for those involved. Hence the saying any publicity is better than no publicity.

There are benign uses of this “creating controversy” marketing method. Uses, in which no one gets hurt such as concept cars, made only for attention-getting demonstration purposes at auto shows, which never actually make it to car-dealership showrooms.

There are also not so harmless controversies such as scandals. These negative scenarios often manage to catapult one person’s career while humiliating someone else. In the USA, the Monica Lewinsky- former President Clinton scandal, likely falls into this category.

A recent example of a benign but fascinating product presently creating ripples of admiring turbulence is the “wet wine dress.” I have included an article about it below. Apparently, this dress is grown in a vat of wine, from cellulose woven by bacteria. It also must be kept wet to prevent it from becoming brittle.

The dress design is obviously not practical, at this point, and is presently only an attention grabber for fashion in general. If scientists can someday make the fibers more flexible, the dress may actually be wearable by the public.

This dress certainly caught my eye. The captivating scientific aspects of the dress, particularly the fact that bacteria weave it, lured me in. I was not aware that bacteria could weave, were you? That tidbit of information simultaneously fascinates and repels me. It brings to mind bizarre visions of an army of bacteria weaving a brittle wine-soaked barrier around everyone and everything.

I am also attracted to and respect the marketing brilliance of choosing to use this futuristic dress as a marketing tool.

HERE IS THE ARTICLE:
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Wet wine dress grows as 'cave woman' fashion
POSTED: 12:09 p.m. EDT, March 15, 2007
SYDNEY, Australia (Reuters)

-- It's guaranteed to make your head spin.
An Australian scientist has grown a dress from cellulose woven by bacteria in a vat of fermenting wine, saying it is art but could be the future of fashion.

The "cave woman" design dress must be kept wet because the cellulose fibers are not long enough to be flexible and, as it dries, they become brittle and break.

In order to shape the dress, slimy cellulose is scooped off the surface of the fermenting wine and layered around a blow-up doll. It then shrinks, taking the form of the body. The doll is deflated when the dress is in the right shape.

"This is art; it is not meant to be practical," inventor Gary Cass told Reuters on Wednesday.
"It is meant to be a provocative object, to spark debate about future fashion," said Cass, a scientific technician at the University of Western Australia in Perth.

Cass was inspired to create the dress when he was working in a vineyard many years ago, but it was not until he gained funding from an arts group that he was able to produce it.

Cass said fermenting wine produces a slimy, rubbery top layer caused by bacteria which, if left alone, keep spinning cellulose.

"We just took winemaking to the next step," he said.

"But the problem is that the fibers are not long enough to be flexible. The next step is to try and make the fibers longer or join them to get more flexibility."

Cass said that, once the fibers became more pliant, his creation would have a more practical application.

"If you wanted a shirt you could get a cast made of your body and layer the cellulose around it," he said.

Copyright 2007 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.