Liquor, beer, and wine…

3 07 2008

Have a mint julep, son!

Another reason why the American Political Science Association won’t move the 2012 meeting: the soon-to-open Museum of the American Cocktail in New Orleans.  Why Mayor White and the Houston City Council didn’t make a pitch for this thing in the name of economic development is beyond us…

What does your cocktail say about you?  Find out here.

For enlightenment and mixology ideas, visit the Science of Drink Blog

And finally… we can’t end a post on booze without a link to the Reverend Horton Heat’s “Liquor, Beer, and Wine.”

Heh. ;-)





NBA on it’s way to OKC: Sonics move to Oklahoma

3 07 2008

The now-former Seattle Supersonics will move to Oklahoma City immediately and play in OKC’s Ford Center this season under terms of a settlement announced on Wednesday.

The SuperSonics name and colors will remain in Seattle.  A new name and new colors for the Oklahoma City team will be announced soon.

I know that my friends in Norman, Edmond, and OKC are already trying to figure out how to get their businesses and/or law practices to pay for their PSLs and season tickets — even though it will likely be baaaaaaad basketball for a while.  In a few years they may wish that the New Orleans Hornets had decided to permanently move to OKC.

For the Seattle perspective, click here… Ouch.

For my Oklahoma friends, I have two things to say: Welcome to the NBA and Go Rockets! ;-)





Humor Aside: Previewing the fight over UST’s Core Curriculum reform…

3 07 2008

The PoliSci Department in action…

This clip reminds us how some university committee meetings turn out…  Heh. ;-)





Intel nixes Microsoft Vista…

3 07 2008

According to Steve Lohr of the New York Times, Intel has decided not to upgrade its own computers to Windows Vista.  Heh.  What a wonderful parting gift for Bill Gates that the other half of the Microsoft-Intel partnership refuses to use MS Vista.  Ouch.

As a member of the Cult of Apple, I’ll be smug here and note that my 2.66 GHz Apple iMac has been error free since the day that I bought it.

OS X Leopard rules, baby!  8-)





Nota Bene: Today’s Reading Assignment

3 07 2008





Tyranny of the Old: Are senior citizens hurting politics?

2 07 2008

An interesting video discussion from the New York TImesReason Magazine Senior Editor Kerry Howley talks with The Cato Institute’s Will Wilkinson about how elderly voters are distorting American politics.  Click the image above to watch.





Nota Bene: Today’s Reading Assignment

2 07 2008





Happy Canada Day!

1 07 2008

Parliament Hill in Ottawa…

Happy Canada Day to you all! it’s Canada’s 141st birthday today.

We particularly wish a happy Canada Day to our friend and colleague, Dr. Patrick Malcolmson at St. Thomas University in Fredericton, NB as he begins his duties as STU’s new VP Academic!

Food Court Lunch Blog offers some helpful facts about Canada.  Heh.

Party on, eh?





Dog Surfing

1 07 2008

Enjoy!





Pajamas Media Veepstakes Contest

1 07 2008

From Pajamas Media.  For those of you who have a problem with it’s political ideology — set it aside. This is an opportunity to win something… 8-)

Win an Asus Eee PC mini notebook or an Amazon Kindle from Pajamas Media!

It’s been a long and heated battle to the White House and it’s not over yet! Here’s your chance to make your prediction for who will snag the vice presidential nominations.

If you correctly choose the V.P. nomination for both the Democrats and the Republicans, you will be entered into a grand prize drawing to receive an Asus Eee PC mini notebook; one lucky runner-up will receive an Amazon Kindle. Twenty-five entrants will be chosen randomly to receive a Pajamas Media hat or t-shirt. Contest ends August 1, 2008.





Nota Bene: Today’s Reading Assignment

30 06 2008





Humor Aside II: Statistics

30 06 2008

From the good folks at the always humorous “Stuff White People Like” Blog.  As statisticians, we enjoyed it because the probability that it would peeve everyone approaches 100%…  Heh.

White people hate math. If you want to befriend white people, mention “that weird Asian calculus teacher who drew perfect circles” and how much you hated his class (bonus points if you mention how your parents made you get an even worse tutor who was more clueless than you and smelled bad). However, white people are fascinated by “the power of statistics” since the math has already been done for them. Some magazines, like TIME, have a section in each magazine that has some interesting statistics ($80 trillion: the amount spent by the US in the Iraqi war) followed by absurd, barely related ones (4,317 yards: the distance covered if you were to take all the ammunition shells fired by US soldiers in Iraq since the war started). White people who read TIME will quote these statistics, but even non-TIME reading white people will throw in stats they read in a less-than-credible study. It’s not unusual to hear such things as “I don’t mind this neighborhood since I’m not Republican. 80% of them are anti-minority, you know” or “I don’t think you should let Sally play softball because 70% of softball players are lesbians”.

White people  love sounding smarter than their peers and will jump at any chance to use a statistic if it’s applicable to the conversation in any way. The more absurd the statistic, the more clever and original you will seem. Stats can also hide negative feelings. If you meet a white person who wishes went to a school that they refer to as the “Harvard of the (Region where the university they attended is), they may say something like “Good thing I didn’t go to an Ivy since 35% of their graduates reported being unhappy with their lives”. It is considered rude to laugh and you should instead smile or throw in another appropriate statistic if handy.

The only time you should not use a statistic is to ask a white person if they knew “that (random number) % of statistics aren’t true”. You will be seen as being unoriginal, not funny, and will get stared at.

Disclaimer: 100% of these statistics were made up





Humor Aside: Mullets

30 06 2008

Mullets.

Do they ever really go out of style?

Vegas says no.

Hat tip to Jay Louis at his always entertaining blog… semi-NSFW!  ;-)





Nota Bene: Today’s Reading Assignment

30 06 2008




Mexicans and Machines: Why it’s time to lay off NAFTA

29 06 2008

Thoughts to ponder from Drew Carey at Reason TV. Yes, that Drew Carey.  He’s definitely not your usual Hollywood liberal:

Campaign season is just getting warmed up, but looking back on the primaries we’ve already seen plenty of the usual fare: candidates shaking hands, hanging out at diners, and scaring voters about foreigners who are taking your jobs.

Sometimes the threat comes from China, Japan, or outsourcing to India. Today, it’s NAFTA, the North American Free Trade Agreement—you know, all those Mexicans taking our jobs.

Senator Barack Obama joins the likes of CNN’s Lou Dobbs in decrying NAFTA. So many free trade foes fret about cheap foreign labor, yet they rarely holler about competitors who will work for far less than any foreigner. Politicians don’t pay much attention to it, but—from Terminator to Ice Pirates—Hollywood films have been warning us about humanity’s inevitable war against the machines.

“Now, think about it,” says Reason.tv host Drew Carey. “How are we supposed to compete against something that doesn’t get paid, doesn’t get health insurance, and never goes on breaks?”

Today, we don’t need human workers to book our travel, do our banking, or file our taxes. From factory workers to symphony conductors, countless workers are locked in battle with soulless job stealers known as computers, websites, and robots.

“No job is safe from the robot threat!” warns Carey. Of course, the warning is more than a little tongue-in-cheek. There’s no need to take a sledgehammer to a robot, because, although technology shakes up the labor market, it ends up giving us higher living standards as well as more and better job opportunities.

Like technology, trade gives us more good stuff than bad—yet Americans are likely to cheer technology and fear trade. No doubt TV talkers and White House wannabes will keep stoking our fears of foreigners until voters and viewers stop buying it—or until robots snag their jobs, too.

Related: Why Are These People So Ashamed of NAFTA? The Democratic myths about free trade – Steve Chapman, Reason Magazine