“Is my son gay?” is apparently a burning question in France. So much so that a new smartphone app there promises to let moms know after they answer 20 questions, reports Radio France International in a post spotted by the Awl . Sample questions on the app sold by Android Market…
Continue reading …Welcome to my website PC vs MAC EP 196 art 2 : Yet Another Xoom F$%# Up : Fixing Search? : Gmail Down? Twitter gets banned, a Gaming Prophecy, and Gmail is Down Naytttt says: RT @ xerocube : OH THE HUMANITY!!! RT @ thisisjendoll : GMAIL DOWN GOD HELP US ALL
Continue reading …Michael Moore wants all his fans to boycott “the murderous state of Georgia” because of the Troy Davis execution . “I encourage everyone I know to never travel to Georgia, never buy anything made in Georgia, to never do business in Georgia,” he writes on his website . Moore pledges to have…
Continue reading …It's probably not much of a stretch to believe that Barack Obama and his speechwriters frequently peruse the New York Times in print or online. Their likely affinity for the Times may explain why the President referred to the “intercontinental railroad” in his speech yesterday in Cincinnati near the Brent Spence Bridge: Now, we used to have the best infrastructure in the world here in America. We’re the country that built the Intercontinental Railroad, the Interstate Highway System. Of course, ” intercontinental ” means “between or among continents; involving two or more continents.” The railroad to which the President referred was actually the ” Transcontinental Railroad .” It turns out that the President's gaffe is one which New York Times writers have committed frequently enough that one can believe that Team Obama picked it up from them, as seen in the results of this Times search on “intercontinental railroad” (in quotes). Four of the five erroneous uses of the term have occurred since Barack Obama took office: In February 2009 at the Economix Blog (“Revenge of the Rust Belt”), Harvard professor Edward L. Glaser wrote: “As the Rust Belt declined, the Sun Belt grew. An intercontinental railroad, the Panama Canal and then the highway system made the West Coast accessible, and people flocked to warmer weather.” In June 2010 in an Artsbeat column, Allison Amend, who took pride in being an NPR listener, wrote of “the construction and subsequent development of the intercontinental railroad.” In November 2010 (“One Way to Trim Deficit: Cultivate Growth”), Times Economics writer David Leonhardt (who, as an aside, imagined that the manufacturing sector of the economy was in recession in February 2007 when it wasn't) wrote that “Federal science dollars, meanwhile, led to the creation of the intercontinental railroad, the airline industry, the microchip, the personal computer, the Internet and numerous medical breakthroughs.” By the way, the “federal science dollars” which Leonhardt says led to the transcontinental railroad came from “high- caliber engineering training programs funded by the United States Army” — presumably provided by colleges. That's like crediting the government for inventions developed by students benefiting from the GI Bill. Give me a break, David. Finally, in a role reversal, on January 26, 2011 (“After Detour, a Map of America’s Journey”), Matt Bai described the President's State of the Union speech — “Mr. Obama delivered a narrative of American life that evoked images of Depression-era murals and cold-war newsreels, rather than hammering away at specific laws he had passed or planned to propose. He harked back to sputnik, the Apollo project and the intercontinental railroad.” Trouble is, in the actual SOTU speech ( text ; video ), Obama correctly referred to the “transcontinental railroad.” In this case, the Times made a correction. Remember these examples the next time liberal elites at the Times, in academia, or in the Obama administration try to pretend that they are presumptively better than their readers, students, and the governed, respectively. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .
Continue reading …football cards for sale/trade mixture of cards part 1 Beanie Wells 2 Yard td Run Week 1 Round Up: Hyt Hyt HYAAAAAH FBALL_Andrea says: Declined the trade. Would rather have Dez and my stable of No. 2 backs than DeAngelo Williams and Beanie Wells , I decided. Phew.
Continue reading …The figures spell it out clearly: Violent crimes and property crimes reported in Kalamazoo County dropped in 2010 to their lowest levels in the past five years.
Continue reading …He still gets points for delivery, but Gary Johnson’s well-received joke at last night’s debate—”My neighbor’s two dogs have created more shovel-ready jobs than this president”—goes back even further than thought, notes Daily Intel . For starters, Rush Limbaugh used it before the debate on his show. “I guess…
Continue reading …Who’s looking sleek in angled corners? Why, it’s the Motorola Xoom 2 — at least it might be, according to Droid-Life and the folks that leaked it the above image. The outfit’s informant tells them that the pictured device is flaunting micro-USB and HDMI ports, a SIM card slot and a few large, flush buttons on its back. Is it the real deal? Well, we can’t say it looks much like Verizon’s door-destroying tablet , or even the shy slate that we spied on Motorola Mobility’s leaked website redesign — but we wouldn’t put too much stock into ambiguous renders and inconclusive advertisements anyway. There’s one more image after the break for those of you that are into rear-facing cameras and “confidential” engravings. Continue reading Is this the Motorola Xoom 2? Is this the Motorola Xoom 2? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 23 Sep 2011 23:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
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