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July 28, 2007

I’ve Got to Get Some Sleep Some Time This Week Man

Filed under: PPN EXCLUSIVE,Politics — Mark Wentz @ 9:26 am

Last week, George W. Bush had surgery so Dick Cheney was put officially in charge of the country for a few hours. This week, Cheney is having surgery. Does that mean, for a few hours, Bush will get to run the country.

I know. I know. Too easy.

How about this?

Dick Cheney is having surgery to replace the battery in his ticker. Say all the bad things you want about Cheney (I’ll wait … still waiting … waiting some more … okay, that’s enough), but he, in his personal life, seems very green. The reason I say this is because he’s balding. Why not install a solar panel on top and run his ticker on solar power?

September 8, 2006

Vomit then Laugh

Filed under: For the life of me,Politics — Mark Wentz @ 8:09 pm

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=6805063692754011230

August 29, 2006

Today’s Quote

Filed under: PPN EXCLUSIVE,Politics — Mark Wentz @ 9:07 pm

In today’s Minneapolis Star Tribune, there’s a story with the headline “Kline flier slings more mud at Rowley campaign aides.”  It’s about how Rep. John Kline of Minnesota has released campaign literature questioning his opponent’s competency.

Here’s a quote from Kline’s spokesman Marcus Esmay:

“To accuse us of calling her crazy is just wacky.” 

It would appear that Mr. Esmay doesn’t get it.  If you’re going to suggest that you’re not calling a person crazy, try not to call the person crazy in the process of saying you’re not calling her crazy.  Who’s lost control of his or her campaign now?

 

July 1, 2006

News of the Nation

Filed under: For the life of me,Politics — Mark Wentz @ 9:03 pm
 
Let’s take a moment to catch up on the news.Pat Robertson claims to have leg pressed 2000 pounds. I didn’t actually read the article on this one. I actually don’t care if he can or cannot leg press a ton. If he can, good on him. If he cannot, well, I’m past the point of being surprised by his claims. You want to impress me? Let me know when he’s strong enough to pull his head out of his ass. Thank you.

Republicans in congress won’t raise minimum wage, but will increase their own pay and slash taxes for the wealthy. Just in time to run around campaigning that they’re fighting for America’s workers. Hopefully, one or two will stop by my house so I can ask why Republicans want to tax you inversely proportionate to how hard you worked to get your money. If you work full time or more, you pay the income tax. If you take money you’ve earned and but let the market increase it (capital gains), they want you to pay less in taxes. If you inherit someone else’s money (no work necessary), they don’t want it taxed at all. Gotta love those Richpublicans.

The Toddler of Action has been with us for a year. No hyperlink. You’ll have to trust me on this one. It’s fun to watch him grow and learn. It’s tiring to try and keep up with him. It’s educational to learn what upsets him and calms him. The more I know about what upsets kids, the more fun I can have when I see parents and kids in public places.

“The Mosquito” will keep kids out of malls. It’s a device that emits a pitch which most adults can’t hear but most youth can hear. Shopkeepers are using it to annoy kids enough to keep them away. I’m always surprised by shop keepers who want to keep people away from the stores. But, then, I don’t have a business degree, either. Still, using noise pollution doesn’t seem ethical to me. If I ever own a shop, I’m going to pour nuclear waste outside my door to keep teenagers out. You pick your pollution; I’ll pick mine.

But the youngsters fought back. The pitch can be used for cell phones and text messaging. They took a swing at shopkeepers and hit their teachers in the collective mouth. You see, the students could use the ring tone to pass answers back and forth in class, which means that teachers will have to be ever more vigilant in class. Also, parents may be less likely to keep track of their children’s phone calls: which means that parents may not know when kids are planning to go to the mall. Still, it is a very good “If life hands you a lemon, make lemonade” moment.

Rochester held its annual fest last week. The only event we attended, although we had hoped to attend more, was the Mayor’s Cup Hot Air Balloon race. Brother, when they tell you it starts at 6:00, be there at 6:00. It doesn’t take very long for those balloons to fill up and take off. Surprisingly, it also doesn’t take long for everyone else to take off. Have you ever stopped to watch a hot-air balloon float by? It’s a pleasure to see. Watching it glide gracefully across the sky. Wondering what the view would be from up there. It’s peaceful just thinking about it. However, the moment the balloons got off the ground, spectators packed up and left. They didn’t bother to watch the balloons float away. In fairness, some of the folks were crew and had to hightail it to the end line to catch the balloons, but that didn’t include everyone. It’s a little like going to a restaurant and ordering, but leaving before the food gets there. For shame!

One last bit on the race. There was a Target stores balloon. Yep, slowing floating over NRA-lovin’ Red-Staters was a large balloon with concentric circles. That, my friends, is a hoot.

Moron, . . . er . . . more on Rochester. Rochester has a new slogan: “Rah, Rah, Rochester.” I don’t care for it, but I don’t see that it is any worse than any other city slogan. I’m not a big city slogan fan. The funny part of this was that the local newspaper did a poll to see if people thought the new slogan was “lame” or “sassy.” Sassy was doing well in the poll until a programmer at the paper discovered that 221 of the votes came from an ip address in Milwaukee. Milwaukee happens to be the home of the consultants Rochester used to recommend the new slogan. I’ll go with lame on that one.

A little further back in time, the hot news topic was immigration, illegal. I have nothing new to add here except for one thing. I find it humorous that, if everything had gone the Republican’s way over the past 6 years (and most of it has), the Republicans would now be sending Elian Gonzalez back to Cuba as an illegal immigrant. Good luck to anyone trying to make common sense of politics while having an attention span of over 5 minutes.

Consider yourself caught up on all the news.

 

The opinions expressed here are solely those of the writer and do not neccessarily reflect those of the rest of the family.

 

© 2006, Mark Wentz

 

February 23, 2006

What Goes Around

Filed under: PPN EXCLUSIVE,Politics — Mark Wentz @ 5:07 pm

What was it, 3 years ago? Was that when George W. Bush wanted us to believe that Saddam Hussein’s Iraq was linked to the September 11, 2001 attacks? You see, the terrorists were from the Middle East and Iraq is part of the Middle East. Ergo, Iraqi folks, by Bush Administration logic, are terrorists just itching to attack us.

Granted, that wasn’t the whole rationale (or even the major rationale) for overthrowing Hussein, but it was part of it and the pro-war folks certainly didn’t correct letter-to-the-editor writers when the letter writers repeated that logic.

Now, the United Arab Emirates, another Arab nation, wants to take control of some the United States’ ports. And there are plenty of people who are giving this the old raised eyebrow. You see, the terrorists were from the Middle East and the UAE is in the Middle East. Ergo, UAE folks, by the Bush Administration’s previous logic, are terrorists just itching to attack us.

Bush, for reasons unknown to me, supports the UAE in this endeavor and is stumped as to why Americans would have security concerns over this. While there has been no verified connection between Iraq and the September 11 terrorists, CNN.com notes that there are 2 connections between UAE and the attacks: the money was funneled through a banking center in Dubai and two hijackers were from the UAE.

My preference is that the ports were U.S. owned. If the ports are not under US control (the ports in question are currently owned by British firm Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Co.), then it doesn’t matter to me who owns them. Bush stoked the flames of bigotry in 2003 and is now being burned by those very flames. Do you think he’ll learn?

February 15, 2006

Huntin’ for a Softball Interview

Filed under: PPN EXCLUSIVE,Politics — Mark Wentz @ 2:18 pm

Dick Cheney shot a guy. You already knew that. What you may not know is that Cheney is scheduled to make his first public statement about the incident via an interview on the Fox News Channel.

Boo! Hiss!

Now, to be fair, I don’t care what Cheney has to say about it. That’s between him, the guy he shot, the parties’ families, and law enforcement officials. As long as he gets the same treatment anyone else gets after they shoot a person, I feel justice has been served.

However, if you’re going to do an interview, be serious about it. Shooting a person is a serious thing. Doing a joke interview on the network known for being a Republican propaganda network isn’t accepting the gravity of what happened. I half expect him to shift the responsibility of what happened to the quail.

There are people who are going to defend Cheney no matter what he says, people are who going to condemn Cheney no matter what he says, people who don’t care, and people who are care and are open minded. It’s that last group who deserve better than an interview on Fox News.

Maybe they can get James “Jeff Gannon” Guckert to conduct the interview.

February 11, 2006

Today’s Award Winner

Filed under: PPN EXCLUSIVE,Politics — Mark Wentz @ 12:06 pm

I read in this morning’s Minneapolis Star-Tribune that the medical device industry lobby, AdvaMed, wants the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to stop using the term “recall.” As in, “That baby carriage you are using can be dangerous and they have announced a recall.” They feel there is a negative reaction when the word “recall” is used. Instead, the industry wants the FDA to use the phrase “field corrective actions.”

I suppose next the industry will want to replace the word “death” (as in “can cause death”) with “funeral preparation acceleration.”

There might be terms that, by definition, would be better than “recall”- – although “field corrective action” is not one of them. However, recall has been used for so long that changing it would probably cause confusion. Everyone knows what a recall is. Changing it to an unfamiliar word would only cause hesitation or non-action.

The obvious solution to all of this is for the medical device industry to test the products better and to manufacture the products at a higher standard. If the industry didn’t produce the devices on the cheap, there’d be no need to use any term for a recall.

Still, I do admire AdvaMed’s moxie in this endeavor. That’s why they get an award.

AdvaMed, Blogatron 3000 at Wentzmania names you
Today’s Award Winner!

Congratulations!

© 2006, Mark Wentz

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