HorsesAss.Org

  • Home
  • About HA
  • Advertise
  • Archives
  • Donate

Somebody Should Introduce the Seattle Times Editorial Board to the Other Side of the Financial Ledger

by Goldy — Monday, 3/24/14, 9:41 am

Huh. I’ve got this nagging feeling that there’s something missing from the Seattle Times editorial board’s list of things we need to do to attract and retain corporate headquarters:

Support and fund education for students ages 3 to 23. Raise the quality of and reduce inequity of access to pre-K, K-12 and higher education. Protect and enhance the area’s vaunted quality of life and make strategic investments in transportation. Continue to promote a civic culture that values innovation, diversity and tolerance.

Oh. Yeah, that’s right. They forgot to mention the money it takes to pay for all these great things.

It doesn’t take much courage to argue for expanded funding of pre-K, K-12, higher education, transportation, and other public investments that improve our collective quality of life. I do it all the time. But what’s consistently missing from the editorial page of our state’s paper of record is support for raising the taxes necessary to pay for these things. It’s as if there is only one side to the financial ledger—the spending side—and it would be absolutely crazy to even mention the topic of revenue.

I mean, if attracting corporate headquarters provides the strange logic you need to put you over the top in support of universal preschool, fine by me. Whatever floats your pre-K boat. But then what’s so wrong about taxing the incomes of highly paid executives in order to help pay for all the public investments that draw them to the region? Washington does have the most regressive tax structure in the nation, after all.

Without the mention of revenue, the editorial comes off as scolding the rest of us for stingily refusing to invest in the things corporate executives refuse to pay for. Weird.

Share:

  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
  • Print

Open Thread 3/24

by Carl Ballard — Monday, 3/24/14, 8:02 am

– I usually like it when national and international orgs mention Washington, but boo to having disasters bad enough for that in Snohomish County.

– What would you like to see from the next SDOT director?

– The video above shows the strange procedure that takes place on Sunday mornings in Father Nary’s church in Carnot. The Muslim refugee families clear out of the sanctuary so that area Christians — many of whom may share the anti-Muslim sentiment of the “Christian” Anti-Balaka militias — can come to celebrate Mass.

– Don’t turn off Twitter, national leaders.

– Purity culture needs to be exposed for everything that it is, everything it teaches, and everything that it does to the women and men growing up in it. I understand the you have GOT to be kidding me reaction, but this is not something that can be so easily dismissed.

– They are taking a lot of handouts in the financial districts of various cities.

Share:

  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
  • Print

Bird’s Eye View Contest

by Lee — Sunday, 3/23/14, 12:00 pm

Last week’s contest was won by wes.in.wa. It was Lake Worth, FL, the location of this disturbing Florida news story.

This week’s contest is related to something in the news from March, good luck!

Share:

  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
  • Print

HA Bible Study: Leviticus 25:44-45

by Goldy — Sunday, 3/23/14, 6:00 am

Leviticus 25:44-45
And as for your male and female slaves whom you may have—from the nations that are around you, from them you may buy male and female slaves. Moreover you may buy the children of the strangers who dwell among you, and their families who are with you, which they beget in your land; and they shall become your property.

Discuss.

Share:

  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
  • Print

Friday Night Multimedia Extravaganza!

by Darryl — Saturday, 3/22/14, 1:10 am

Truth Mashup: Glenn Beck’s crazy defense of anti-gay bill .

John Green: Is the American Dream real?:

Sam Seder: Poor Mitt Romney doesn’t want to be remembered as a loser.

Spying on the Senate:

  • Desk to Desk: Explaining the CIA search allegations.
  • Sen Feinstein’s double standard.
  • Mark Fiore: Bestest Friends.

Thom: What do cancer and Reaganomics have in common?

Mental Floss: 21 mind-blowing now-extinct life forms.

Is this World War III.

Obama Nation:

  • Obama calls Putin.
  • Barely Political meets the President.
  • Obama between two O’Reillys.

    Pap and Thom: Another week, another GOP voter suppression bill.

    The Prosecution of the Uber-rich:

    • Sam Seder: Another demented billionaire says addressing inequality is Nazi talk.
    • Sam Seder: Why do crazy rich people keep talking about Nazism?
    • Sam Seder: Billionaire Home Depot founder apologizes for calling us Nazis.

    Ann Telnaes: The high cost of the Iraq war.

    The Law and Lesbians:

    • It’s hard for a lesbian to get a proper stoning these days!
    • Young Turks: So, a lesbian knocks on a church door….

    Newsy News: CPAC, Crimea & Masturbation.

    AC370—Breaking News:

    • Young Turks: A freaking psychic?!?!
    • Matt Binder: Rupert Murdoch’s insane Malaysia airplane conspiracy theory.
    • Young Turks: What Noah’s Ark tells us about Flight 370.
    • Sam Seder: CNN W.T.F?!?
    • Young Turks: Chuck Todd rips CNN.
    • Young Turks: FAUX News host blames flight 370 disappearance on Muslims.

    David Pakman: Harry Reid, “Republicans are addicted to Koch”.

    Things to do in your 20s: Get Covered:

    Republicans Target Millennials in New Ads:

    • Paycheck–The Original
    • Paycheck with Last Week Tonight goodness
    • All of the Above–The Original
    • All of the Above with Last Week Tonight goodness
    • Sam Seder: The G.O.P.’s bizarre millennial advertisement.
    • Young Turks: GOP launches ad campaign courting minorities.

    Sam Seder’s moving rememberance of Fred Phelps.

    Maher: New Rules (via Crooks and Liars).

    White House: West Wing Week.

    Republicans Say the Darnedest Things:

    • Richard Fowler: Paul Ryan is really convinced poor people are lazy
    • Paul Ryan: The inner city expert.
    • Richard Fowler takes on Paul Ryan’s stupid, racist comments
    • Sharpton: Republicans still obsessed with Black “cheats”.
    • Pap and Sam Seder: Why Republicans should not use Twitter.
    • Truth Mashup: Watch Republicans dodge Ted Nugent questions.
    • Sam Seder: Nutjob Chicago Republican, “gay rights are responsible for natural disasters, mental disorders”.

    Last week’s Friday Night Multimedia Extravaganza can be found here.

    Share:

    • Facebook
    • Reddit
    • LinkedIn
    • Email
    • Print
  • Initiative Filed to Repeal Caps on Lyft, Sidecar, and uberX

    by Goldy — Friday, 3/21/14, 7:25 pm

    Seattle’s Tim-Eyman-wannabe Elizabeth Campbell, has filed an initiative that would repeal recently imposed caps on popular Transportation Network Companies (TNCs) like Lyft, Sidecar, and uberX. Initiative 111 (pdf) would also eliminate the $50,000 annual license fee per TNC that was intended to fund enforcement of the remaining regulations, while removing any reference to “the stability of the market for taxi and for hire transportations services” from consideration for subsequent regulatory review. If passed, the initiative would pretty much gut the work of the city council, freeing up the TNCs to operate at will and virtually unrestricted, while leaving the taxi industry capped and heavily regulated. So much for the “level playing field” the TNCs have been clamoring for.

    Of course, Campbell is a bit of a self-serving pro-business crackpot with a habit of filing initiatives on spec and then hoping the corporate contributions roll in. She’s already filed a faux $15 minimum wage initiative that would not in fact raise the minimum wage to $15 for most workers, while lavishing tax cuts on business. No contributions thus far. So it’s not clear whether Lyft, Sidecar, and Uber were even aware of this initiative before it was filed, let alone whether they would lend it financial support.

    That said, my sense is that a well-crafted initiative lifting the caps on the popular TNCs could very well pass. Everybody loves to hate on the taxis. So it wouldn’t surprise me to see the TNCs fund such an initiative, if not this particular one.

    I’ve emailed Campbell and other parties for comment. I’ll update when I know more.

    Share:

    • Facebook
    • Reddit
    • LinkedIn
    • Email
    • Print

    Our Islamo-Fascist Conspiracy Is Working Exactly as Planned!

    by Goldy — Friday, 3/21/14, 9:09 am

    Great news!

    According to a poll released Thursday by PEMCO Insurance, more than half of area drivers — 58 percent, to be exact — say that if a toll is put into place across Lake Washington on I-90, they will drive across the bridge less often. … A toll would propel 28 percent of drivers to choose greener commuting options, such as taking the bus, carpooling, or telecommuting.

    Then, with consumers unwilling to drive across the lake to save 20 cents on a burger, we can raise the minimum wage even higher in Seattle. Because location, location, location!

    God forbid we should be willing to pay for the public infrastructure we use, and all that, but if tolling I-90 not only helps eliminate unnecessary trips (and the climate-changing carbon emissions that go with them), it also helps support a more livable minimum wage here in Seattle, then I’d call that a win-win!

    Share:

    • Facebook
    • Reddit
    • LinkedIn
    • Email
    • Print

    There are Plenty of Awful Editorial Boards

    by Carl Ballard — Friday, 3/21/14, 8:01 am

    Since he’s been back Goldy has, rightly, taken The Seattle Times’ editorial board to task for all sorts of nonsense. It’s a target rich environment, and it’s the largest paper in the state. But there are other editorial boards spewing other nonsense. And I think it does the Trib a disservice not to mention things like this.

    Governor should veto overreaching drone bill

    No, he should sign it into law.

    Precious little got done in Olympia this past session on some truly important, much-needed issues, from transportation funding to teacher evaluations.

    We’re $2 Billion short on McCleary, and the state only managed to pass a tiny addition to that in the supplemental budget, but teacher evaluations is the education thing they’re pissed off about? That isn’t even the main thrust of the piece, and I agree with them that the session was pretty well wasted. But holy shit. Anyway:

    But somehow legislators found time to pass House Bill 2789, an overreaching mishmash of several measures. It would regulate drone use by state and local agencies in a way that could have unforeseen effects on public access to government documents.

    All regulation “could have unforeseen effects.” That’s why we have a process to repeal laws. If this is too restrictive, future legislatures can revisit it. I realize this legislature is pretty dysfunctional, but it doesn’t have to be that way in the future. But the idea that law enforcement, or other government agencies, should have a blank check with this type of surveillance until we have the perfect plan seems unhelpful.

    The issues at stake are too complicated to address without more study, and Gov. Jay Inslee should veto HB 2789. What’s needed is a task force composed of stakeholders to recommend a clear and more comprehensive proposal that would address all future uses of drones, from private to regulatory and law enforcement.

    Governor Inslee could sign the law into place and then we could still have that task force. But it would be coming from a place where our rights not to be watched by state and local governments is the default position. I mean unless you think the drone issue requires immediate action.

    It’s not as if this is an issue requiring immediate action. State and local governments have no plans in the near future to use drones, but this highly restrictive bill threatens their ability to someday take advantage of an important emerging technology.

    So, OK. There’s more, it’s mostly just a list of stuff the government could theoretically do with drones. If local governments want to do that in the future, I’m sure future legislators will take it up, task force or no task force.

    Share:

    • Facebook
    • Reddit
    • LinkedIn
    • Email
    • Print

    Commenting Policy

    by Carl Ballard — Thursday, 3/20/14, 10:07 pm

    Just a reminder to the regulars and an FYI to the new people: there is, in fact, a comment policy here. It’s pretty loose anyway, and it’s sometimes enforced more in the breach than in actual fact. But, you know, stay on topic and if you want to say something, there are 3 open threads as well as the Drinking Liberally and Friday Night Multimedia Extravaganza act as open threads that are basically unmoderated (other than spam and copyright violations).

    Now, I realize that pointing to the comment policy means that I’m somewhat committing myself to more moderating. Fortunately, the page is loading quicker, so it won’t take as long to do. But try to behave.

    And feel free to use this as an open thread.

    Share:

    • Facebook
    • Reddit
    • LinkedIn
    • Email
    • Print

    Teach the Controversy: Seattle Times Kicks Off Coverage of Metro-Funding Measure by Featuring Its Only Opponent

    by Goldy — Thursday, 3/20/14, 3:37 pm

    King County voters will soon receive their ballots for an April 22 special election in which they will be asked to approve or reject Proposition 1, a $130 million hike in local car tabs and sales tax. At stake is an additional $50 million a year desperately needed to maintain county and city roads, along with the $80 million a year Metro needs to stave off a devastatingly regressive 17 percent cut in bus service. So of course the Seattle Times chooses to kick off its coverage of this very important issue with a front page article featuring the views of the one organization opposing Prop 1!

    An early face-to-face over King County’s proposed car-tab-and-sales-tax measure to fund transit and roads took place in front of one of the few organizations opposing the measure, the pro-highway Eastside Transportation Association (ETA).

    … [ETA member Dick] Paylor and audience members complained about how Metro King County Transit is managed, voiced concerns about seeing some virtually empty buses on some routes and suggested having bus passengers themselves pick up a larger share of the service’s costs.

    “The problem isn’t on the revenue side, it’s on the expense-control side,” said Paylor, arguing that Metro is operating under a “broken financial model.”

    Jesus. ETA is just a who’s-who of old, pro-roads white guys (like the bitterly anti-transit Jim Horn), while the Yes side is a coalition of business, labor, transportation, environmental, and social service groups that enjoys endorsements from 19 mayors. So this is the equivalent of kicking off your climate change coverage by talking to the owners of a coal-fired power plant!

    And of course, Paylor is totally wrong. The remaining problem is almost entirely on the revenue side of the equation. Through 2014, Metro will collect $1.2 billion less in sales tax revenue than previously projected, thanks to the Great Recession. Meanwhile, through a series of cuts, efficiencies, and fare hikes, Metro has lowered expenses or increased revenue by $148 million a year—$798 million from 2009 to 2013 alone. The only way for Metro to balance its budget without raising additional tax revenue would be to cut service and raise fares. Which, let’s be honest, is exactly what ETA advocates.

    But wait… the stoopid doesn’t stop there. For the Seattle Times insists on citing Paylor citing the Washington Policy Center, a right-wing “think” tank best known for climate-change denial and its close ties to the stand-your-ground promoting ALEC:

    Citing data from the conservative Washington Policy Center, Paylor said that from 2000 to 2012, Metro’s operating costs increased 83 percent, while the inflation rate over that span was 33 percent.

    Uh-huh. And you know what else has increased over the past decade? Everything!

    King County’s population has grown by 16 percent since 2000, while Metro’s service hours have grown 4 percent since 2008 alone, despite a 2 percent reduction in service from its least efficient routes. Costs for providing Metro’s paratransit services—federally mandated under the Americans with Disabilities Act—have grown by 25 percent since 2008, while security costs have grown by 80 percent, due to fare enforcement, increased policing, and enhanced tunnel security. To offset its revenue shortfall Metro shifted capital funds to operations, delaying the purchase of new buses that would have been less expensive to operate and maintain. Meanwhile, pension contributions—at a rate set by the state legislature—have increased by more the 40 percent.

    And on and on and on. I won’t even bother fact checking the Washington Policy Center, because only an idiot or a liar would pit the CPI against Metro’s operating costs over a 12-year span and presume that there was any meaningful contextual relationship between the two numbers.

    And yet there it is, totally unchallenged, in black and white on the front page of the Seattle Times. Next stop no doubt: a credulous citation on the paper’s anti-tax editorial page.

    “As bus ridership rises, battle over funding measure heats up,” the Seattle Times headline reads in the teach-the-controversy tradition of climate deniers and Intelligent Design bamboozlers. Except there is no battle. It’s every other transportation stake-holder in the county versus the anti-transit ETA. And, I suppose, the Seattle Times.

    Share:

    • Facebook
    • Reddit
    • LinkedIn
    • Email
    • Print

    What’s the Deal with (or Between) Mayor Ed Murray and SPOG?

    by Goldy — Thursday, 3/20/14, 12:02 pm

    To be certain, police misconduct and the political storm surrounding it were never my beat, but I know enough about the subject to know that the Seattle Police Department’s handling of the issue these past few months has been more than a little bit weird.

    Misconduct findings have been summarily reversed, with not much in the way of a rational explanation (and no, arguing that the appeals were handled in “a manner consistent” with a process with “serious flaws” is not a rational explanation for a troubled department under a federal consent decree). Reformers like former interim chief Jim Pugel have been disappeared, replaced by one-time Seattle Police Officers Guild (SPOG) vice-president Harry Bailey. And while actual misbehaving street cops get their records expunged, the SPD’s most effective and accessible public information officer, Sgt. Sean Whitcomb (who irked some SPD insiders for not being sufficiently devout in his defense of the thin blue line), remains exiled to lands unknown on a trumped up ethics complaint related to the department’s wildly successful Hemp Fest Doritos giveaway.

    And of course, then there was the reversal of the reversal of the discipline to the officer who threatened Dom, an astounding fuck-up on both a policy and a communications level, that left Bailey looking weak, unserious, and uninformed.

    So, how to explain the apparently anti-reformist behavior at SPD during the first few months of Mayor Ed Murray’s administration? Well, one bit of rather obvious speculation that I keep hearing is that Murray cut a deal with SPOG in order to get their campaign endorsement.

    Now, I have no idea if this is true. And there’s no real point in asking Murray, as he’d be absolutely crazy to say anything but an emphatic “No!” So let’s just assume that’s his answer. But regardless, at this point the truth isn’t nearly as important as perception, and fair or not, three months into his first term Murray is beginning to come off as a toady to SPOG—and while that may win him points within SPD ranks, it won’t help him build the consensus he’ll need from the broader community in order to push through the reforms he ultimately proposes.

    SPD’s cultural issues are just too ingrained to be solved simply by cultivating buy-in from the rank and file. Most officers are courteous and professional, yet few are willing to break the code and turn against the bad apples who ruin the reputation for all. Thus true reform can only come from outside the ranks. So if Murray is to be an effective reformer, he’s going to need to be perceived as leading the department, rather than as acceding to the demands of SPOG.

    Share:

    • Facebook
    • Reddit
    • LinkedIn
    • Email
    • Print

    Open Thread 3/20

    by Carl Ballard — Thursday, 3/20/14, 8:01 am

    – Like we should be protecting parking lots from the evil expansion of multistory housing.

    – Someone will be president after Obama, and I wish I shared Oliver’s optimism that it won’t be any of these people.

    – The pay gap for women working at King County is much better than the City of Seattle. More work needs to be done on the pay gap by race.

    – Maybe not having the CRC was good for Oregon?

    – A Stillborn Child, A Charge of Murder and the Disputed Case Law on ‘Fetal Harm’ [h/t]

    – Why is there nutrition info for unpopped popcorn?

    Share:

    • Facebook
    • Reddit
    • LinkedIn
    • Email
    • Print

    Inconceivable!

    by Goldy — Wednesday, 3/19/14, 7:15 pm

    Who could have predicted?

    An experiment in bipartisanship that began with so much promise a year ago totally crumbled in the final hours of this year’s legislative session.

    I don’t know a single Olympia press corps veteran who believed that Rodney Tom’s faux-bipartisan senate Majority Coalition Caucus held any promise of delivering results, while I don’t know a single daily newspaper editorial board that didn’t.

    These people really need to get out more.

    Share:

    • Facebook
    • Reddit
    • LinkedIn
    • Email
    • Print

    Yet Another Reminder: Washington Is a Low-Tax State!

    by Goldy — Wednesday, 3/19/14, 9:19 am

    WalletHub

    Personal finance social network WalletHub ranks Washington the 6th best state in which to be a taxpayer.

    Apropos to yesterday’s post on the proper context in which to put proposed local tax hikes, I’d just like to mention for the umpteenth time in my decade of political blogging that, on average, Washington is not a high-tax state.

    We’re just not. There’s no debating it. Even here in tax-happy Seattle.

    Is our sales tax high? Absolutely. But then, we don’t have an income tax. Are our gasoline, alcohol, and tobacco taxes some of the highest in the nation? No question. But then, we don’t have an income tax. Are our property taxes abnormally high compared to other states? Um, no. Measured by either percentage of home value or percentage of household income, our property taxes are actually quite middling. And, we don’t have an income tax!

    Everybody uses a different methodology, but no matter how you look at it, Washington’s state and local taxes are consistently found to be below the national average. The Washington State Department of Revenue ranked our state and local taxes as a percentage of personal income 35th nationally in 2011, the last year for which full US Census data is available. Personal finance social network WalletHub recently released a report that finds Washington to be the 6th best state in which to be a taxpayer. Even the conservative Tax Foundation—the “think” tank Tim Eyman used to love to cite—ranks Washington 6th in favorable business tax climate and only 27th in state and local tax “burden”:

    Washington’s 2010 tax burden of 9.29% ranks 23rd lowest out of 50 states, and is below the national average of 9.9%.

    Of course, Washington shamefully tops the nation in regressivity, thanks to our lack of an income tax and our subsequent over-reliance on high sales and excise taxes. If you earn over a million dollars a year you pay less than 2.8 percent in state and local taxes, but if you earn less than $20,000 a year you pay an exorbitant 16.9 percent. That is outrageously indefensible. But our mildly regressive property taxes play only a minor role in tilting our tax structure onto the shoulders of the poor, while funding much of the public services on which they rely.

    Look, nobody likes to pay taxes. Not even me. But when I hear parks district and Metro funding opponents cry out that our state and local taxes are already too damn high, I tell them to go try out another state! We’ve been living on the cheap the past decade and a half, deferring maintenance on the infrastructure we have and refusing to invest in the infrastructure we need. Our tax “burden” is already on par with states like Mississippi—and if we don’t start spending a little more on roads and transit and parks and schools, our infrastructure and our economy will soon be on par with Mississippi as well.

    Share:

    • Facebook
    • Reddit
    • LinkedIn
    • Email
    • Print

    But Other Than That?

    by Carl Ballard — Wednesday, 3/19/14, 8:03 am

    Governor Inslee isn’t happy with the state of the Federal Government’s plan for Hanford cleanup.

    After meeting with U.S. Energy Secretary Ernie Moniz, Inslee said the federal department’s “draft cleanup plan” was inadequate on two respects. It doesn’t address what the federal government will do in the near future with leaking tanks of hazardous waste from decades of making parts for nuclear weapons. It doesn’t have an adequate long-term plan for containing the waste and shipping out of state to a permanent storage facility.

    Inslee said the plan Moniz provided was merely a draft, not a completed plan, but doesn’t give Washington the predictability the state needs. The governor said he is consulting with state Attorney General Bob Ferguson, who said his office would hold the federal government “legally accountable for environmental cleanup at Hanford.”

    You know, other than the sort term and the long term, things are looking just fine. Looking at it from Western Washington, Hanford feels like a problem that never gets any better. Democratic or Republican administration, the Feds don’t know how to deal with it.

    Share:

    • Facebook
    • Reddit
    • LinkedIn
    • Email
    • Print
    • « Previous Page
    • 1
    • …
    • 254
    • 255
    • 256
    • 257
    • 258
    • …
    • 1037
    • Next Page »

    Recent HA Brilliance…

    • Friday Night Multimedia Extravaganza! Friday, 5/30/25
    • Friday Open Thread Friday, 5/30/25
    • Wednesday Open Thread Wednesday, 5/28/25
    • Drinking Liberally — Seattle Tuesday, 5/27/25
    • Friday Night Multimedia Extravaganza! Friday, 5/23/25
    • Friday Open Thread Friday, 5/23/25
    • Wednesday Open Thread Wednesday, 5/21/25
    • Drinking Liberally — Seattle Tuesday, 5/20/25
    • Monday Open Thread Monday, 5/19/25
    • Friday Night Multimedia Extravaganza! Friday, 5/16/25

    Tweets from @GoldyHA

    I no longer use Twitter because, you know, Elon is a fascist. But I do post occasionally to BlueSky @goldyha.bsky.social

    From the Cesspool…

    • Make better choices next time on Friday Night Multimedia Extravaganza!
    • Roger Rabbit on Friday Night Multimedia Extravaganza!
    • Roger Rabbit on Friday Night Multimedia Extravaganza!
    • EvergreenRailfan on Friday Night Multimedia Extravaganza!
    • EvergreenRailfan on Friday Night Multimedia Extravaganza!
    • Roger Rabbit on Friday Open Thread
    • Elijah Dominic McDotcom on Friday Open Thread
    • FKA Hops on Friday Open Thread
    • The 60s man Peace Love Dope on Friday Open Thread
    • Roger Rabbit on Friday Open Thread

    Please Donate

    Currency:

    Amount:

    Archives

    Can’t Bring Yourself to Type the Word “Ass”?

    Eager to share our brilliant political commentary and blunt media criticism, but too genteel to link to horsesass.org? Well, good news, ladies: we also answer to HASeattle.com, because, you know, whatever. You're welcome!

    Search HA

    Follow Goldy

    [iire_social_icons]

    HA Commenting Policy

    It may be hard to believe from the vile nature of the threads, but yes, we have a commenting policy. Comments containing libel, copyright violations, spam, blatant sock puppetry, and deliberate off-topic trolling are all strictly prohibited, and may be deleted on an entirely arbitrary, sporadic, and selective basis. And repeat offenders may be banned! This is my blog. Life isn’t fair.

    © 2004–2025, All rights reserved worldwide. Except for the comment threads. Because fuck those guys. So there.