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Johnny Coli

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Posts posted by Johnny Coli

  1. Speaking of hybrids, I just bought a Toyota Highlander. The Hybrid version was thousands of dollars more but doesn't get better gas mileage! In fact, on the highway, it gets worse mileage! Nice money grab there.

     

    There are a lot of smart things you can and should do to help the environment; locally grown organic food being the one we try to follow (mostly because of all the nasty sh-- they spray on food). But Rk has a good point about Gov't using this as another chance to limit freedoms and steal from the populous -- oops I mean "raise revenue".

    Except it hasn't. In fact, the past eight years have been about as anti-science as any have seen, with respect to the (Bush) Administration's relationship and attitude towards science. People have been yammerring about some intrusion of their rights and a tax blood-bath, yet no where has that been seen. Not even in very science-friendly, non-skeptical of global warming states. In fact, Massachusetts' Green Industry is actually thriving.

  2. To most people there is no difference, which is why it's far more religion than science at this point.

    Wrong. There is a large data set of actual science--a data set that is being added to constantly--suggesting humans are causing global warming. That's not superstition (like religion). That is very real data. You may not like it, or agree with the interpretation. And the handfull of skeptics (who never actually show any data supporting their view, btw) may not agree with it. But the data is out there, published in peer-reviewed scientific journals by scientists who aren't running to Drudge for notoriety, with a very large majority of scientists agreeing with their assessment.

     

    If anything, the cult/religion analogy is more apt for the skeptics who seem to bluster and seek out the spotlight, yet never show any data supporting their views.

  3. You don't accept even the possibility that global warming might be a bit of a scam to raise taxes and make the sudden billionaire Al Gore even richer? Why didn't he run for president? Do you think he would have won?

     

    Meanwhile, he got the Nobel Peace Prize instead of her.

    No. I do not for one second think it is a global scam by thousands of research scientists to make Al Gore rich and raise taxes. That's insanity, really.

  4. Oh I see the opinions and liberal reporting you link to are all valid, but any research, opinions and reporting to the contrary are not link-bombs.

     

    Got it.

    PubMed is a database of scientific research papers. ScienceDaily is a compiler site for science news. ScienceBlogs is a set of blogs from respected academics. I probably looked at many more of the links in Erynthered's list than he did, and even looking at the first ten...the first four are youtube videos (and without looking at the videos I believe some are links to the same one), the fifth link speaks for itself really if you click on it, the sixth is a rambling opinion piece, 7 and 8 are by Lindzen who actually is a scientist but is known more for claiming global warming (and the link between tobacco and cancer, hahaha) is a hoax, the 9th is a Holcomb's Arm-like stat dance that doesn't really do much to dispell anything, and the 10th link crashed my browser. Seriously, if you actually go to the literature on this topic the number of scientific papers crossing a vast number of disciplines will give you a better idea of how on the fringe these people are.

  5. Whoever they bring in should be brought in under this general understanding and this plan:

     

    "We would like you to come in and compete for the starting job. We feel the team can win with you under center. We like our young quarterback Trent Edwards but we feel that if you sign with us that the competition will make both of you better players and there's also a chance that Trent is still a year or two away from being the player that we think he'll eventually be. You'll be given a fair shot at beating him in an open competition and may the best man win."

     

    I think that's how you'd have to approach it.

    Agreed that that is how it should be approached but I don't believe they (Jauron et al) will be bringing in a QB to compete with Edwards. I believe they have handed the job to Edwards, for better or worse, and are looking for a short-money backup to go in when he gets injured. I do not for one second believe they will be opening up any competition in camp, and won't be advertising the job as one that is open for competition. Prepared to be underwhelmed by whatever journeyman clipboard holder they bring in.

  6. Have a link to it?

     

    It's not that I'm too lazy to look it up...just too busy. (I mean, I AM too lazy...but that's beside the point.)

    Just use the link in the OP...she links to all five versions, yet picks the passed house version, for some reason. I didn't use the page numbers because it's easier to just look through the html text. I read the latest version (5 of 5). What is notable is that she didn't provide any full quotes. If she had I believe the "rage" of the opinion piece would have fallen flat. This is clearly an info tech coordination position. At least that is how I read it.

     

    EDIT:

    It not actually being in there as she described is probably what led to Specter's confusion during the Fox interview that was alluded to in a previous post. He didn't know it was in there because its not.

     

    :thumbsup:

  7. The person who wrote the Bloomberg opinion piece in the OP was using the first House bill, and I also think she was reading it wrong. I just read through the section of the version that the Senate actually just procedurally voted on, and I don't think it is saying what she is reading into it.

     

    Specifically, if you read through Section 3001 OFFICE OF THE NATIONAL COORDINATOR FOR HEALTH INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (using the latest Senate version), the job of the National Coordinator looks to be a position that overlooks the standardization and implementation of the technology infrastructure of the electronic healthcare data, not the actual care. It's an info-tech coordinator position, not someone looking over the shoulder of the health care provider in the examination room, and not someone dictating actual care. At least that was what I got out of reading it.

     

    Makes sense, because if you're going to try and implement a usefull national system of electronic health information you don't want multiple platforms that can't cross-talk or share information. You want to incorporate standards based on input from all the relevant parties. That requires a coordinator. We don't want to put into place a clusterfug like they had to deal with in trying to synchronize all the law enforcement databases after 2001. Put down the pitchforks, people. There is no reason for outrage here.

  8. Haven't looked into it much (or the actual suit that was filed) and agree he has every right to defend his land. If I was to hazard a guess, though, he's probably not being sued for the act of defending his land, but probably for detaining them under threat of violence. Like I said, haven't looked into it and am only speculating based on the news clips. The suit is for civil rights violations, though, which I'm sure prolonged detention under threat of physical harm would fall under. I'm guessing they will say he has the right to try and run them off his property and/or call the actual border patrol, but that his actions crossed over some legal threshold for property defense. From the scant articles I can find reporting on it, it looks like a US District Court judge has ruled that the evidence is compelling enough to go forward. Also, it looks like this same individual has lost two other cases, one in which he was found guilty by a jury for falsely imprisoning another family.

  9. Some of you people are naming songs by bands that had multiple hits.

     

    In any event, when I think of a one hit wonder that I could literally listen to all day and not get bored with, it is the 60's garage punk classic 96 tears by ? and the Mysterians. Great bass line bouncing under that signature trashy organ sound, with ? yelling out the lyrics of love lost and revenge. A fabulous song covered by just about everybody, yet never approaching the intensity and emotion packed into the grooves of the original 45". What a great sounding, and feeling, record.

    Still sounds fresh 35 years after its release.

  10. why is there no outrage that this is even public knowledge? these records were supposed to be sealed and subsequently destroyed. it was not against any baseball rules back then....someone at the players union or justice dept has some serious 'splainin' to do..........

    Agreed. They're leaking specific names off a confidential, supposedly sealed list. I have to agree with Schilling (gag) in that they need to release the whole thing. In 2003 MLB had no real policy anyway, so releasing all 100+ names at once would lessen the backlash for all the players involved, and hopefully we'd get past this crap. Wonder how many Red Sux players are on that list? This means you, Ortiz, you piece of garbage.

  11. Talk about making up crap - if you really believe that if she were anti-union then nobody would be saying anything, then dream on. This is about the fourth nominee in a week with a tax issue. It's about blood in the water. It's about whether the Democratic bench thinks it is above paying taxes. A nominee can be Ronald Reagan and people are still going to go over his tax records.

    Blood in the water according to the Party of Failure and the lot that (wrongly) believes they have a grasp on reality. The majority of Americans don't seem to be buying into your faux-scandals.

    In a USA TODAY/Gallup Poll taken Wednesday, those surveyed say by nearly 3-1 that their confidence in President Obama's ethical standards and his ability to manage the government and improve the economy has gone up rather than down since his inauguration last month.

     

    "They're willing to cut him some slack," says political scientist Gary Jacobson of the University of California-San Diego. "They're more interested in things like what's going to happen to their jobs and their incomes and their 401(k)s. This other stuff is just a distraction."

     

    snip

     

    Nearly six in 10 say the controversies over appointees are "just a normal part of the process of filling high-level government jobs in any new administration."

     

    They also think he's on the right track with the economy.

    By 55%-17%, those surveyed say they have gained confidence in Obama's ability to improve the economy since he took office.

     

    So, while you people shout from the rooftops that Obama is packing his administration with tax cheats, the rest of us who don't want America to fail have confidence in the guy who won in a landslide victory on a platform that indicted your heros' economic policies.

  12. For someone who fakes outrage at my post which you claim is "loaded with fabrications", you might want to stop fabricating your own posts. He has not been disputing the taxes owed for the last 16 years, they are caliming that they did not know there were any liens on the business and they were unaware of the taxes owed. Another person claiming ignorance. It is funny though, they paid them off right away when it could affect her nomination. I was incorrect about the lien being on the home instead of the business, but you seem to be fabricating excuses at record pace.

     

    "Solis and her husband, Sam Sayyad, were unaware of liens against his auto repair shop until USA TODAY asked about them Tuesday, White House spokesman Tommy Vietor said Thursday. Vietor said Sayyad went to the Los Angeles County tax office and paid what he was told he owed — about $6,400 — to settle outstanding liens."

     

    http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/20...and-taxes_N.htm

    And the LA Times article says he is disputing them, but paid them anyway to keep it from being an issue. All of which has absolutely nothing to do with Hilda Solis. She doesn't have anything to do with his business, and she didn't know about the lien. Furthermore, if Sayyad didn't know about them (according to USA Today), but paid them off when he found out, then where is the story here, and how does it in any way involve Hilda Solis? The answer is it doesn't and you and your party are grasping at straws to tank a pro-Labor, Labor Secretary nominee because you hate unions. No one gave a crap about a few grand lien (which just got paid, in any event) on an auto shop that either has been in dispute or wasn't known about for sixteen years prior to her nomination.

  13. Call me crazy, but I prefer nominees not to have tax liens on their homes for the last 16 years. I guess I'm just expecting too much from the "most ethical administration ever".

    You are crazy. The tax lien is on her husband's business, and it wasn't paid because he has been disputing whether or not it was properly assessed. So, to review why you are crazy, the lien is not on their home, the lien was not ignored, and lastly the lien has absolutely nothing to do with Solis.

  14. If this were the only case nobody would care. But it is not - it is the fourth to emerge in days. Unpaid taxes going back years, then suddenly they decide to pay right before confirmation hearings.

     

    There is a pattern emerging among these nominees that is very troubling.

    "They" being someone who isn't the actual nominee this time. Is there a particular line of association you are willing to stop at? Perhaps any inadvertent activity by a nominee's high school biology partner? The babysitter of a child the nominee's child plays with? The only troubling thing about this latest "scandal" is how far into the realm of the absurd some of you are willing to travel to to disqualify a nominee.

  15. Let's say your boss puts you up for a pretty important job in the company you work for. Now lets say that someone of the committee looking at the candidates for that job finds out that your wife has an unpaid parking ticket from 16 years ago, and now they question whether you're qualified for the job. That's about the scope of what we're talking here, and it is about as relevant to whether Solis is qualified for Labor Secretary as this new "scandal."

     

    The reason the GOP doesn't like Solis is because she's pro-labor. Imagine that. A Labor Secretary that's pro-labor. Solis will become the Labor Secretary. And the Employee Free Choice Act will eventually pass as legislation. You can only obstruct so long.

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