Archive for April, 2006

Barqs has bite taken away by Brita ; Photographs for your amusement

Sunday, April 30th, 2006

I had a Brita filter at the end of its life, and a bottle of Barq’s Cream Soda, and wondered what would happen to the soda after it had been filtered. Unlike a normal person who would leave that curiosity unanswered, I conducted the experiment and photographed it so you don’t have to ever do this to see what it’s like.
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Here’s what happened:

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Not too much happened to the colour, so before taste testing the new drink, I had Ashley pour the drink through the filter again. Barq's Filtered by Brita

When it had run through and the last drop was ready, I slurped up the now bland drink. Before being filtered it was sickly sweet, and after the filtering it was more bearable, like it had been diluted. Since the filter was mostly dry before the experiment, it probably didn’t have much water in it to dilute the Barq’s. When I ran the filter under water after, the drips were pink for almost a minute, showing I suppose the gross amount of red food colouring they stuff into the drink.

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Flipping through my photo album, I encountered the first picture I ever took, back in 1985 in Nova Scotia. I wasn’t quite the steady-shot that I am today, blurring this portrait past the headache eyestrain threshold:

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Here’s an interesting shot too from 1981 of Wood Mountain, SK Wood Mountain

[Top is north.] Many of those buildings are gone, including the Pioneer grain elevator in the top corner. A few new buildings have popped up in place of others, or in what were then empty lots, including my parent’s home which isn’t pictured because it showed up 5 years later and off-frame to the left.

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Basil’s blog has an open trackback “picnic” day, so I’m linking to his article and in turn that blog will link here.

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Bush admin back to blaming Canada for terrorism [page fixed]

Sunday, April 30th, 2006
Just days after hammering out the supposed last chapter of the long standing softwood lumber dispute between our two countries, the Bush State Department headed by Condoleeza Rice has accused Canada of being a terrorist “safe haven”. This is familiar and false bad-mouthing of Canada, since many very-conservative media figureheads in the States made inaccurate claims as to Canada’s involvement in the 9/11 terrorist hijackings years ago. Many Americans to this day still believe that some of the hijackers came to the States via Canada even though they landed directly. Even someone like Newt Gingrich who should have known better, still had the facts wrong years after the hijackings. Fewer Americans likely remember the thousands of Americans that Canada took in for days after they were stranded when their their jets had been diverted to the NWT, Newfoundland and Labrador, and elsewhere.
From the National Post canada.com:

According to the Country Report on Terrorism for 2005:

- There were 11,000 separate terror attacks around the world in 2005, killing 14,600 people. This contrasts to 208 terrorist attacks that caused 625 deaths in 2003, and 3,168 attacks that caused 1,907 deaths and 6,704 injuries in 2004.

- At least 30 per cent of all terrorist incidents last year occurred in Iraq, as did 55 per cent of related fatalities, about 8,300 people.

- Fifty-six Americans were killed in terrorist acts, 47 of them in Iraq.

Yet the report doesn’t suggest Iraq is harboring terrorists, like Canada apparently does. When was the last time an IED was set off by the road side in Prince Edward Island, eh? Just what garbage is Rice trying to pull? Is calling your closest ally a terrorist “safe haven” because of “liberal immigration policies” any way to foster goodwill between our law enforcement services? And I thought conservatives were above bashing foreign governments that do a “worse” job than they do in their own country and controlled territories. Ambassador Wilkins almost blew a gasket when Paul Martin suggested the USA should be doing more for the environment [especially funny since Martin’s record wasn’t much better than Bush’s].
It’s no wonder that the Canadian Embassy in Washington resorts to websites like Connect2Canada.com and CanadianAlly.com to help fight the mis-information being spread by Washington’s administration. The American people can’t rely on their own State Department to give an accurate depiction of life in Canada! Thank goodness most Americans have access to the Internet, and thus the truth if they want it. And for the moment at least they don’t need a new passport just to get back into their own country after they visit Canada.
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Open Trackback link to Sam Burns.
[I corrected an HTML error that had this entry destroying the appearance of my blog]
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Colbert has bite

Sunday, April 30th, 2006

Colbert spoke plainly to Bush the other day. It’s about time someone in the media let him have it, and I’m not surprised it’s someone in the “fake media”.

Becky commented with the link to a video of Colbert’s truthiness. which is being discussed on Progressivebloggers.ca extensively.

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Barq’s takes a bite out of Brita. Photos coming later, as I run Barq’s cream soda through a Brita filter.
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Join the new biker gang, the Hokey Pokies. They poke people who don’t cooperate, and that’s what it’s all about.

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International Space Station ; Semans and Raymore area

Sunday, April 30th, 2006

You can find out if the ISS is flying over your house soon, by going to Heavens-Above.com . Here’s a four-second exposure of the International Space Station zooming by Yorkton:
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Semans and Raymore have a Pool Grain Terminal several kilometers between them both. Near by are two old elevators on a farm.

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Sask. Legislature transcript and video site

Saturday, April 29th, 2006

Sask Legislature streaming video and transcript - for when you really want to know what a politician is saying while he’s being shouted over.

Apparently April 26th’s is pretty hot regarding health care bungling by the NDP. Al, a commenter on SDA made a remarkable point. Health care isn’t socialized any longer when money saving is as unethical as money making in a private system. Telling someone to go home to wait for treatment when they have cancer is tantamount to denial of service.

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Autotheft down in Regina ; Harper’s smoke screen ; Garage sales

Saturday, April 29th, 2006

Regina has had trouble with car crooks. Now they are being less effective, finally.

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Is Harper’s verbose legislation designed to confuse legislators while things like 15 year delays to audits comes into effect? Today it was revealed on the news that Harper had made a
Norad deal with Ambassador Wilkins without any media fanfare.  Hmm, I wonder why not? Harper’s promised a debate in the House over the deal though.
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We shouldn’t be excited about the Lockheed Martin involvment in our census according to countmeout.ca . Here’s the CBC hilighting the online availability of the census.

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Today I went to a few garage sales. I picked up a spare 5 speed bike for $10, and made some adjustments to it.  The pedal crank is a bit loose though so I’ll have to see if it’s just something to tighten. I had buffalo burgers for supper, and found the Fraggle Rock theme on my computer after giving the Muppet Show a listen to.  Remember when you used to watch those shows? Hey, they just showed up in my MP3 playlist, OK?

And I saw beef jerky sold in Sobeys, imported from New Zealand by a Toronto company.  I can understand importing lamb meat from NZ, but what in the heck is beef coming from overseas for?

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Semans, Quinton, Willowbrook, Saskatchewan photos

Friday, April 28th, 2006

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I was in the small town of Semans Friday. I ate lunch at My Place restaurant; it was yummy seafood alfredo, with potato soup, and butterscotch mouse dessert. The town’s library moved into the old school building, and I pulled cable for a while and checked the LAN was still working like it was at the old building. Askivision was going to be there when I was, but they were late so I left and went to Kelliher, stopping for a photo at Quinton along the way.

Quinton is the tiny village which Officer Quinton on CTV’s Corner Gas is named for.

Photobucket - Video and Image HostingFurther on, I took a picture of Willowbrook’s church on #47 Highway:

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It was a beautiful day outside, and I missed hitting at least two garter snakes warming up on the blacktop highway.

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Organ Donation awareness week ; Softwood Sellout ; United 93

Friday, April 28th, 2006

It’s Organ Donation Wareness Week, so please tell your loved ones that you want to donate your organs in the unlikely event you die suddenly and can help one of the many people waiting by the phone for a second chance at life. There are a lot of myths regarding organ donation, so I encourage you to learn some facts from reliable sources and tell your family today. When you die, you have no use for your organs, so why not turn your last act as a human being into a gift that saves and improves many lives?

One common question listed on the organ donation site I linked to is:

  • If I sign a donor card, will it affect the quality of medical care I receive at the hospital?

No - every effort is made to save your life before donation is considered. What would the sense be in taking the donor’s life for just creating a chance at saving another’s life. Sales of human tissue is illegal in Canada, you don’t have to worry about organs being stolen from your body.

Consider if everyone who died in an accident became an organ donor. There wouldn’t even be a market anywhere in the world for people to sell organs since there would be enough for everyone with failing organs. There are few things easier in life than giving up your organs after you die. You have to give them up anyway, so tell your family not to bury or burn them if they’ll save a life.
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On the radio today I heard that the provinces in Canada need to “seek USA approval” to harvest more lumber, or something like that. This clause which was overlooked at the signing of this week’s bad deal with the USA over the softwood lumber tariff dispute, is just another thing wrong with the costly deal.

The idea of NAFTA is dead - Stephen Harper’s government has now put the nail into NAFTA’s softwood coffin. Free Trade is supposed to mean that the Canadian, American, and Mexican markets will not have artificial barriers to trade put up unilaterally by one or two governments against the other(s). This deal the Conservatives have signed with Bush’s government leaves Canadian choices in the hands of American politicians, and leaves $1 Billion dollars collected illegally [according to the NAFTA agreement the States signed], in the hands of the Americans who illegally collected it.

Some people, including me, see some benefit to getting $4 Billion back now, and assume that the USA would never return all of the money it stole. 4 birds in the hand is worth 5 in the Bush country after all. However, now that the USA is apparently able to break international agreements without penalty, that means we might as well too, right? What’s to stop Canada after we have the $4 back in our banks, to go back to Washington and demand the $1 Billion that remains missing? Canada is an honourable country, and our first duty is not to break the word of an international agreement, but when left to deal with “trade terrorists” like the Bush government, what other option do we have than a costly trade war?

Conservatives like to say that terrorists can’t be dealt with at a diplomatic level, and the Bush government has proven that to be the case with themselves, on many occasions. Despite numerous rulings in Canada’s favour, the USA still denied the letter and spirit of the law in NAFTA. Can you imagine them letting Canada get away with breaking a trade agreement, without punishing us? In fact, some people have suggested that the softwood lumber stalemate came about as a punishment devised by the US government against Canada for not joining in the illegally initiated US/Iraq war.

Does that make you wonder too where Harper is gearing up to send Canadian troops to fight the phoney-phrased “war on terror”? And I hope the USA can reclaim respectability by electing a government that won’t steal from weaker countries, especially ones that are their closest ally and provider of a great deal of their resource strength.
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United 93 is a movie depicting the struggle on board United Airlines flight 93 which was hijacked and crashed on September 11, 2001 by terrorists planning to crash it into, most likely, the White House. The radio was non-stop chatter about it, and I might go to see it, but what concerns me is the intention behind making it. Will it be used by some as an argument for sending soldiers to Iraq? Undoubtably, even though Iraq had nothing to do with September 11, 2001 other than the prominent figure in charge of the States at the time of both events was George Bush in both cases.

The key thing to remember is that you cannot fight terrorism with the military alone. You fight terrorism by killing both terrorists and the conditions in which they are created. You improve education, peace and security for all people of the earth, and bring equity to nations that have almost nothing to bargain with but the threat of bringing death to others.

In Afghanistan in 2001, there was a country rife with terrorist training camps, and it was fair for the USA to attack the government and places that set the September 11 attack in motion. But one has to draw a line of distinction between the situations in Afghanistan and Iraq. Iraq, although ruled by an enemy, was not a country devoted to training people destined to kill Americans or Canadians. There were other motivations than “protecting Americans from terrorism”, when Bush ordered Saddam overthrown. There were many good reasons to get rid of Hussein, but one of them was not Bush and Blair’s claimed Weapons of Mass Destruction, or terrorism used against the USA.

Let’s remember the victims of United flight 93 as heroic people who fought terrorists with their bare hands. Please, don’t let anyone use their deaths as an excuse to justify the phoney-phrased “war on terror” in Iraq. It may not be a coincidence that Neil Young’s Let’s Impeach the President song is being released [Edit] the day before United 93. About 35% of Americans need to be reminded that Bush is using the lives of those people lost on September 11th, to justify an unrelated war killing thousands of civilians and American soldiers.

Update: I’ve listened to Let’s Impeach the President, and it’s a catchy song of the protest variety.  I’m sure it’ll be banned by Clear Channel stations across America.

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