November 03, 2004
One Thing's For Sure
After this,
no-one's going to trust exit polls ever again.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
11:52 AM
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1
I never did in the first place...
Posted by: Kathy K at November 03, 2004 07:50 PM (yHz2x)
2
What's all this again stuff??
Posted by: tommy at November 03, 2004 11:37 PM (v0EoW)
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Well, I should hope not. (But even Fox bought it for a while there...)
Posted by: Key at November 05, 2004 03:13 AM (840YO)
4
Oh my god, I just read all this shit and I was amazingly impressed at the amount of drugs you've been smoking. Congratulations, as soon as I can find where and how to nominate you for THAT lifetime achievement award, you'll be receiving it in the mail. Found your block THOROUGHLY entertaining and I will probably bookmark it and watch it read it regularly. (Interestingly enough, I found this site while searching for the lyrics to TISM's "Everyone Else Has Had More Sex Than Me")
Posted by: Andrew at December 02, 2004 11:53 PM (AxEhH)
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Are We There Yet?
Don't look at me! All I know is that Bush is going to win*, so you guys get out there and vote!
If you're after actual information, well then:
The Llamabutchers are liveblogging the whole election. They won't sleep until the deal is done!
Ace is busy as ever. When you see Kim Richards, you know it's good.
* See here.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
08:02 AM
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1
Just a little more time and I can
Posted by: Chase at November 03, 2004 08:56 AM (g+up/)
2
I hope you're right! Ohio/provisional ballots are fast becoming the Florida/hanging chads of this election.
Already a judge has ruled that provisional and absentee ballots are not to be opened until after a 9:30am court appearance by both parties.
Posted by: Michele at November 03, 2004 10:39 AM (ht2RK)
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November 02, 2004
November 01, 2004
Everyone Else Has Had More Sex Than Me
Cool lyrics of the day:
Our lives have to die
Of that there's no help.
My favourite way to end them
Is the orb-weaver spider's whose pedipalp
Enters the female pudendum.
Then dies on the spot
His corpse there still stuck,
Left for his rivals to curse at.
He would rather die than not get to fuck -
Personally I reckon it's worth it.
Explanation
here.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
10:50 PM
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1
on the line, "He would rather die than not get to first", should not the last word be fuc* ?
Posted by: kaos at November 07, 2004 05:14 AM (EHscL)
2
btw, thx for the lyrics cuz I have been wondering what was said in that part.

Posted by: kaos at November 07, 2004 05:15 AM (EHscL)
3
Yep. On listening again you're clearly right. Makes more sense that way too.

Change made.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at November 07, 2004 11:43 AM (+S1Ft)
4
I think it's "my favorite way to end up..."
Posted by: Dustin at November 21, 2004 05:03 PM (zKSX2)
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I don't think so, Dustin - it has to rhyme with "pudendum" to fit.

Posted by: Pixy Misa at November 21, 2004 05:20 PM (+S1Ft)
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I think it should be "All our lives have to die" not just our lives have to die.
Posted by: draco_one at November 26, 2004 12:19 AM (p8hRo)
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how come u didnt put the lyrics of the first verse or second verse in there? i wanna know the lyrics to the part when the bunny puts his face to the screen and when he walks through the line of bunnies. o well, i guess this kinda helps. i really love this flash animation!
Posted by: Evan at November 26, 2004 12:17 PM (moZ8O)
8
what are all of the lyrics to the song please
Posted by: chris at November 28, 2004 03:28 AM (6krEN)
9
This song is awesome but yes, I still can't understand the first two verses. The song is awesome but I still can't seem to understand the song except for "Everyone else has had more sex than me! Ooooh!" And a little bit of the second verse as hes walking by the line of numbered bunnies, prior to the 0 bunny's synth solo (referring to the Flash animation).
As for the verse you gave us, I woulda NEVER gotten that... Female pundendum? Ive only heard that phrase once before and I woulda NEVER understood it had I not read it here.. Thank you for that. Now, all I ask is for the other two verses ^__^
Posted by: Talwar at November 28, 2004 03:41 PM (YX+Ez)
10
yes i agree. please provide us with accurate information as to the identity and/or location of these lyrics. thank you. if you find them, you can email me the lyrics at antibody88@aol.com. thank you again in advance.
Posted by: chris at November 28, 2004 03:56 PM (6krEN)
11
Full lyrics are here, boys and girls!
Posted by: Pixy Misa at November 28, 2004 04:29 PM (+S1Ft)
12
Everyone else has had more sex than me
Does anyone else get that feeling?
Teenagers, naked, couple in threes;
Grandparents swing from the ceiling;
Corporate capers and office amour;
Shenanigans outdoor and in -
Resist, and then later you find out there's more
Regret in not doing the sin.
All loves have to die - of that there's no help;
My favourite way to end em'
Is the orb-weaver spider's, whose pedipalp
Enters the female pudendum,
Then dies on the spot, his corpse there still stuck,
Left for his rivals to curse it.
He would rather die than not get to fuck:
Personally, I reckon it's worth it.
http://www.tism.com.au/
Posted by: osa420 at December 02, 2004 04:42 AM (ngvIf)
13
This is the greatest song I've ever heard. and ebaum's world dancing bunny video just makes it that much more interesting. www.ebaumsworld.com/moresexthanme.html
Posted by: Emily at December 06, 2004 11:53 AM (OtnmD)
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anyone think that we have way too much free time on our hands? i thought so, but i dont matter so bye.
Posted by: chris at December 11, 2004 05:53 PM (ywZa8)
15
Wooooooooo. BEST FUCKING SONG IN THE WORLD! YOU ROCK SINGING BUNNEH!
Posted by: Jessii at January 14, 2005 01:03 PM (BZHuI)
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Day Of Decisions
And so at long last we come to the day when the people must choose, when an entire nation will hold its breath, confident but not certain that they chose right, that the horse they have backed in this most important of races will win.
Yes, it's Melbourne Cup time again.
Meanwhile in America they will be voting for the man who will, effectively, be the leader of the world for the next four years. Or not, in the unlikely event that John Kerry wins.
While I can only really give President Bush a C on domestic policy and a B on foreign policy, for an aggregate B-, Senator Kerry gets a big fat F because no-one, including Kerry himself, can say what his policies actually are. (Though he has assured us that he does in fact have some.)
I do expect that President Bush will win, based on our experience with the polls here in Australia. In many ways the American election is the Australian election writ large. It's not the
same, of course; John Howard here could campaign on his record of nine years of economic growth, low inflation, low interest rates, low unemployment, and budget surpluses (though admittedly not low taxes). President Bush has had to contend with the bursting of the dot-com bubble, the financial aftershocks of September 11, and footing most of the bill for the War on Terror and the reconstruction of Afghanistan and Iraq.
But we do have in common a right-of-centre leader who is solidly committed to the War, and a left-wing challenger who, well, isn't. Mark Latham is something of a thug, where Kerry is an elitist through-and-through, but they share a contempt for the very people they claim to represent. Howard and Bush, on the other hand, share an effective common touch.
The polls in Australia were predicting a very close race right up until the election, many of them indeed giving it to Latham; so much so that even Tim Blair was convinced that Latham was going to win. Of course, in the end, we had if not a landslide then certainly a comfortable victory for John Howard and the Liberals* with an increased majority in the House of Representatives and a new-found majority in the Senate, the first time in over twenty years that one party has controlled both houses. (There's no seperate vote for Prime Minister, incidentally; the leader of the party with a majority in the House becomes the Prime Minister.)
Despite the neck-and-neck polling before the day, in the only poll that really counts John Howard
led by over 5 points, with a final result of 52.61% for the Coalition** against 47.39% for Labour, after votes for the various pathetic losers are distributed.
So if you're seeing a tight race, with Bush ahead by perhaps two points and the Electoral College uncertain, you might be in for a pleasant*** surprise, with a 53-46 win for Bush and a solid 320 in the Electoral College.
Or I could be blowing smoke, of course.
America is, where it counts, the biggest country in the world. By
far. I mean, there's America, and then there's all of Europe put together, and then there's China, and India and Japan...
So the characters of the American elections are larger than life, or have become so through the eyes of the media. There's George Bush, who has either freed fifty million people from death, torture and despair, or who has plunged the world into a war which can never be won and should never have been fought. There's John Kerry, who is either a traitor and self-confessed war-criminal who never made a decision based on anything other than
what is best for John Kerry, or the only hope for achieving peace and restoring America's standing in the eyes of the world.
You know how I feel - rather closer to the former in each case than the latter - but the yawning chasm between how many on each side view their respective candidates gives an air of unreality to the whole event. We had our bit of drama back in 1975, when the Governor-General, John Kerr, sacked the Prime Minister of the day, Gough Whitlam. But that happened, and a new government was formed, and we got on with things as Aussies tend to do: The most recent election lasted six weeks from the start of campaigning to the acceptance speech.****
And so, soon, very soon unless it's close enough that the left can unleash their Dark Army (that is, lawyers), we'll know who will be president for the next four years.
If it's George W. Bush, well and good. The War on Terror will continue, hopefully with less of the fits-and-starts we've seen in Iraq, while we in the saner parts of the blogosphere can turn our attention - at least partly - to the domestic front; to more frivolous issues like anime and computer games; to serious long-term stuff like the continuing decay of Europe and the deadly hold that Post-Modernism still has on our universities. And we'll delight in the gibbering and shrieking arising from the encampments of the demoralised Left.
If it's John Kerry, not so good. If he is elected clearly and cleanly, then America will survive, but I certainly do not trust him to address the critical issues of Islamofascism and Iran and North Korea's nuclear ambitions. With four years of Kerry, and a gloating Left and a mainstream media vindicated in its bias, we'll really have our work cut out for us. It's will be about education, countering disinformation, and watching for trouble we don't trust the government to see.
Far worse if the election becomes one huge legal battle, but America survived the Civil War and will survive this too. Still, suing your way to the presidency is an attack on the electoral process itself and a massive disenfranchisement of the people, and it isn't something anyone should want to see. Even if Kerry wins this way, he will have established a precedent that very likely will ultimately destroy him.
But my girl Trixie
says that it will be Bush, and if you can't trust your own twice-unborn grand-daughter, who can you trust? And my feeble attempts and number-crunching tell me the same. So does the blatant desperation in the Kerry camp, and so does the
smart money.
And however it turns out, one thing is certain: MuNu/Blogosphere: Four more years!
* For those new tho Australian politics, the Liberals are the conservative party down here.
** The Liberals are in a long-term coalition with the National Party, formerly the National Country Party, formerly (I think) the Country Party. The leader of the National Party becomes Deputy Prime Minister under the terms of the coalition.
*** Or, if you are a Kerry supporter (in which case you have come to the wrong blog), unpleasant.
**** Albeit the senate results took another couple of weeks to nail down due to the insanely complicated redistributions of preferences and quotas that are required. Our system allows a party with less than 1% of the vote in a given state to win a seat in the senate by the distribution of preferences through several levels of indirection. Take a look at this page and complain to me about two-party systems.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
08:18 PM
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New Day, New Server
MuNu moved to a new server today, which was as much fun as you could expect from moving a hundred web sites and all their attached files and databases and software. It all seems to be fairly happy on the new server, at least, and we have twice the power of the old server which makes it nice and responsive. Of course, my internet connection is being kind of sucky just now, but I could feel the speed on the forums earlier.
top, the little Unix utility which shows you what's running on your system (it gets that name because it shows the top
n programs by the amount of CPU they're eating up) is kind of amusing on this machine. Because it's a dual hyper-threading-enabled Xeon system, it shows up as four CPUs, and top adds up the
percentage figures for each CPU, so right now it's telling me that the system is 367% idle. I know that feeling!
Oh, and we've gone through five gigs of bandwidth already. Pretty busy for a Sunday.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
12:23 AM
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1
Yay! (Now put up a Pay Pal button, Sweetie, or Amazon Honor System or some other tip jar. Most Munuvians are conservatives or libertarians who like to pull their own weight!)
You don't want to make me angry, do you? You wouldn't like me when I'm angry...

Posted by: Susie at November 01, 2004 02:33 AM (K2RHm)
2
COOL!!! (translation; I really don't understand most of what you are talking about but it sounds good and I'm thankful for all you have done.)
Posted by: Rachel Ann at November 01, 2004 02:34 AM (GglDc)
3
Yay for Pixy!
Seconding Susie's request for some tangible way to show our thanks.
I understood your first paragraph but not the second but if you say something is amusing I'll concur because Pixy Is Always Right.
Posted by: Debbye at November 01, 2004 07:28 AM (wiYkn)
4
Surely there are some intra-processor bandwidth limitations such that a fudge factor should be applied to the first products of that summing.
Posted by: triticale at November 03, 2004 10:27 PM (Ilal3)
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October 29, 2004
More Smart Money
The Aussie punters (and the bookies) had the Australian election picked, so let's hope they're on form again:
Big Aussie bets on Bush: Centrebet
WHEN it comes to punting on the United States election, the big money in Australia is on George W. Bush.
Online bookmaker Centrebet said after its $1.9 million turnover on the Australian election, mainly local punters had now broken through the $500,000 barrier on the November 2 US poll.
The biggest bets so far had come from Australian punters, Centrebet said, with two of $50,000 and another of $30,000 – all on Mr Bush.
Mr Bush was at $1.45 and Democrat challenger John Kerry $2.50, the bookie said today.
Centrebet said unlike most elections it was finding the US poll hard to predict because little money was being wagered by Americans, who were not familiar with the online agency.
The spread in Australia was much wider, at $1.16 for Howard and $4.50 for Latham, but I'll still read this as a good sign.
(Hat tip to commenter JPB over at, uh, yes,
Tim Blair)
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
05:16 PM
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That New Economy Again
The
Palm Software Store is having a 25% off sale (which has the nice effect of turning US-dollar prices into Aussie dollars) so I hopped over there this morning and bought most of the software I been trialling, including
Facer Launcher (an applications manager),
Palmary Clock (a, well, a clock, but it does everything you could imagine needing from a clock, like multiple alarms at different times on different days with different sounds, so you can play
Reveille at 7 on Monday morning but have a gentle
pip-pip-pip at 8:30 on Saturday, plus sunrise and sunset times, phases of the moon, and so on),
Pocket Tunes Deluxe (a good, if not especially remarkable, MP3 player),
Warfare Incorporated (which is Command & Conquer for your PDA - or, if you have a long memory, Dune 2) and of course PDAmill's indispensible
Snails (wherein two opposing snail armies reduce each other to escargot using everything from handguns to nuclear missiles).
Eh. Anyway, in return for my $130, I got a bunch of emails and some links where I could download the full working versions.
Total human inolvement (apart from me, the customer): Zero
Total environmental impact: Well, I leave my computer on all day anyway, so: Zero.
Total irreplaceable resources used: Zero.
And yet I have a collection of wonderful new tools and toys, and a bunch of small companies in America and Europe have my money. I'm happy, they're happy, and all that
happened is some photons went from Australia to America, and some other photons came back the other way.
Economic magic.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
02:21 PM
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Lefty Morons: Barking Mad, Want Sedation
Via
Tim Blair,
this piece from the
New York Times of the Southern Hemisphere:
Trailer trash: fightin' mad, want Dubya
One particularly overlooked group will keep the White House Republican next week, writes Peter Hartcher.
On the face of it, it seems ridiculous that George Bush should have any chance of re-election next week. He is the first president to oversee a net loss of jobs in the US economy since the Great Depression. He has led his country into the most controversial war since Vietnam.
It does get rather better from there, fortunately, with a decent explanation of the Jacksonian tradition. But the sub-editor who wrote that headline either (a) has a very fine-honed sense of irony or (b) is a complete idiot. And I know where
my money would be.
Update: Again via Tim Blair,
Evilpundit shows us that while the sub-editors at the SMH might simply be idiots, the cartoonists are
actively insane.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
12:04 PM
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October 28, 2004
Imagine All The Time You'd Save...
With the American election cycle now nearing the end of its fourth year, it's worth taking a look at how one other country*
handles this sort of thing:
PM set to announce election
Sunday, August 29, 2004. 12:05pm (AEST)
Prime Minister John Howard has left Government House after discussing the date for the federal election with the Governor-General, Michael Jeffery.
The election is likely to be held on Saturday October 9, six weeks from yesterday.
Mr Howard will hold a press conference at 1:00pm (AEST) and Labor leader Mark Latham will respond soon after that.
Six weeks would be a longer-than-usual campaign and it would be the first time since 1984 that a federal campaign would run for that long.
The election is likely to be fought on the domestic front - families, the economy, health, education, environment and truth in government.
But Australia's role in Iraq will also be a major issue.
The Labor Party needs to win eight seats from the Coalition for the Howard Government to lose its majority.
It will be a tightly fought election, with recent opinion poll results showing little difference between the major parties.
I repeat:
Six weeks would be a longer-than-usual campaign and it would be the first time since 1984 that a federal campaign would run for that long.
* Cough cough.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
11:13 PM
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See, that's the thing I don't get about parliaments. If the party in power gets to decide when there is an election, why do they ever have an election at all? The worst thing that could happen is that they would lose, while the best is that they would retain power, which is what they have anyway.
What makes the government voluntarily put itself up for election? Obviously there is something, as you just had an election.
Elections in the States, on the other hand, can be predicted far into the future, for as many thousands of years as our calendar is still valid. For example, there will be an election on 3 November 3096 and 6 Nov 4152.
Trixy/Coward 4152! Get out the vote for the nanotech party!
Posted by: Anonymous Coward at October 29, 2004 01:46 AM (tHoIH)
2
The Australian Constitution specifies that the government must hold elections after three years at most, but doesn't specify a minimum period.
There is an advantage to the incumbent in being able to choose the date, but it's not that big.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at October 29, 2004 08:38 AM (+S1Ft)
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The Fish Have Spoken
The distribution of votes for the Fishing Party in Queensland has handed a fouth Senate seat in that state to the National Party, who together with the Liberal Party* form the Coalition, which is John Howard's party, i.e. the good guys.
You've got to love Australian politics.
* Which is, of course, the conservative party in Australia.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
04:21 PM
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October 26, 2004
Aaaand... I'm Back
Miss me? Wondering where I've been?
Well, let's see:
Picked up some nasty tummy bug the same day our internet connection went out at work and didn't get properly fixed until 8pm (not good when you're setting up to become an ISP, even a virtual one). Went down to Melbourne to visit my nephews, where after a week of mid-Summer weather in Sydney (highs apparently over 40 degrees in some areas) I discovered that warm weather here does not necessarily translate to warm weather there. Survived on toast and vegemite for four days, after which the tummy bug surrendered unconditionally. Bought a bunch of comic books. And some roast chestnuts, which I hadn't had before. Strange things. Came home. Read said comic books (including vol. II of
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, which frankly, I don't think is really all that special). Rebuilt my Linux box (finally) which, despite requiring me to update 405 packages, went
completely smoothly. Linux box now has everything RAID-5 or RAID-1 again, with two independent RAID-5 arrays, one of them hot-swap (at least in theory), and direct fan cooling for every disk drive. (It also currently has the case open and a 30cm fan pointed at it, as used by the Australian Government.) Bought a Palm Pilot (Tungsten T3; I looked at the reviews of the T5 and decided I liked the T3 better). Nice toy; adequate screen, as opposed to my old Pocket PC, which was definitely
inadequate. If you get one, though, you need to be prepared to spend another $50 to $100 to get the software it should come with, as the software it
does come with is crap. It works, it just doesn't actually
do anything. Kind of like MS-DOS, which never crashed because there wasn't anything there
to crash. Discovered that without a memory card the Palm is largely retarded; you can't even put an MP3 on it. In fact, its handling of files is retarded; it wouldn't know what a file was if one bit it. So: ordered a 1GB SD card online. They're cheaper than you think. Went to
Animania on Saturday. I thoroughly enjoyed it last year, when it was held at UNSW, my alma mater if old undergrads can use the term. This year it was at the Sydney Town Hall which despite boasting an impressive pipe organ didn't seem as good a venue. More central, at least, since it has its own railway station. Unfortunately, I sat right up front near the stage for the cosplay competition. Why unfortunately? Because they had this sort of catwalk thing this year, and all the contestants spent their time out on the catwalk, either facing directly away from me or with the host blocking my view. The judges for the event were on the opposite side of the catwalk, so I guess that made sense, but it didn't make for good pictures. Also, the shutter lag on my Sony P85 is a
killer for action shots, unless you like looking at girls' bums. Which I do, but seeing their faces once in a while is nice too. Got my 1GB SD card, and immediately filled it with music. Couldn't find my albums by thingy, whatsername, they're not there! Maybe I never ripped them to MP3s? Oh, Deborah Conway, that's who, maybe if I look under D?* Put those on there too and I have, oh, 11MB left. Battery life, like the screen, is adequate; it doesn't go flat in a typical day's use as an MP3 player and a Game Boy substitute while I'm on the train. (Who buys these things to take
notes?) I found one of the
Seven Magical Fish of Isola, too, but then the
invisible Zinger got me. Deleted a thousand spam comments from all across MuNu. And then a yacht
ran into the Opera House. As Simon knows, I work only a couple of blocks away from there, and there were ambulances and fire engines running about like ants when someone's kicked their nest over. And then the main entrance to Wynyard Station was closed for some reason, so I had to go round the corner, up one block, and in the top entrance on Clarence Street along with 97 million** other people and one of the escalators was closed and the other one was turned off.
And now I'm home.
And you? How have you been?
* Yes, D. Yeah, I know. Shut up.
** Approximately.
Posted by: Froggy at
09:23 PM
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Glad you're back but terribly sorry you had the flu.
I know it's awful but I can't stop giggling about the yacht story (thanks for the link) but Spirit is also a landmark of sorts and how often does one read about two landmarks colliding?
This month just can't get much nuttier.
Posted by: Debbye at October 27, 2004 01:52 AM (kh5lF)
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I bought a Sony Clie J37 not too long ago. Palm OS 5 is great, and I almost went with the Tungsten E. PalmOne makes great PDAs. If you ever find cool programs for free online let me know ;-)
Posted by: Nick Queen at October 27, 2004 07:46 AM (gBeRV)
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Oh, glad the flu is gone too! I blame Bush ;-)
Posted by: Nick Queen at October 27, 2004 07:50 AM (gBeRV)
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I had that nasty bug, as well. It was a monster to throw off, and I wrestled with it for the entire week. I am glad you lived through it as well.
Highs in the 40s in mid-summer, and here is it late in the fall and we are still in the 80s? Oh, wait, ya'll use that Celsius thermometer in OZ!
Posted by: Tig at October 29, 2004 12:41 AM (JCxVY)
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October 14, 2004
Coming Out Of The Woodwork
Richard Dawkins is a moonbat of the first order. And the editors of the Guardian are
insane.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
12:11 AM
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Lord, that's freaking hilarious! It just proves that these Euro-Weenies don't understand the American mindset at all. I was sorry to learn that John Le Carre is a moonbat, though. Where can I get his email address so I can edumicate him?
Posted by: Susie at October 14, 2004 03:21 AM (ELTFA)
2
Pixy Misa, Sir Richard is not a moonbat. (I left this comment at Tim Blair's also)
Sir Richard's antipathy towards President Bush is based on his twenty years' war with the eeevil intelligent design beings. He percieves Bush as supporting Christian Fundamentalists. He projects his anger onto Bush's official capacities.
I think neither science nor religion should be convolved with government. However, I am still voting for Bush, because I want to live.
Sir Richards position is not laudable, but understandable. To me at least.

Posted by: jinnderella at October 14, 2004 10:37 AM (OWsJA)
3
I've been fighting the IDists for twenty years myself, and I can still separate that from other concerns.
Dawkins can't, and that's what makes him a moonbat.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at October 14, 2004 05:46 PM (kOqZ6)
4
Pixy Misa, (sigh) You are correct, of course. I see it is my confirmational bias operating. I seek excuses to rationalize what he says because of who he is.

Posted by: jinnderella at October 15, 2004 01:26 AM (1t+3g)
5
Le Carre is surprising but not Dawkins.
Posted by: J Thomas at October 20, 2004 01:42 AM (PBdpb)
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Man I hate this. I have so much respect for Dawkins, his writings, theories and views on Evolution...but he obviously has no true understanding of our Constitution or the true motivations of our nation and our President. If I read or hear one more person say that Bush says Iraq was responsible for 9-11, I'm gonna scream. It never happened. It just shows the ignorance of the writer/speaker.
I would say to Springsteen "quit campaignin' and sing!"...so Dawkins "stick with what you know."
Posted by: jeg at October 20, 2004 02:44 AM (ZgoAi)
7
pixy
i don't stop by here much, and only because you laid a bomb in joshua's general direction in my neck of the internet. nice job.
this post, and the links make me drink heavily. thank you.
sip.
Posted by: seed at October 21, 2004 03:52 PM (ttTCk)
Posted by: Pixy Misa at October 22, 2004 09:39 AM (+S1Ft)
Posted by: Pixy Misa at October 22, 2004 09:41 AM (+S1Ft)
Posted by: PixyMisa at October 22, 2004 10:04 AM (+S1Ft)
11
Test this! *middle finger raised*

Posted by: evariste at October 25, 2004 05:29 PM (VuG4x)
12
I don't know, Pixy, the more I listen to Bush's supporters, the less I want to vote for him. If only there were an alternative...
Posted by: Kathy K at October 26, 2004 10:53 AM (k7Edd)
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Kathy, I'm not a conservative, and there are many subjects I disagree with President Bush on. And there are indeed certain supporters of the president that I greatly dislike.
But the same is even more true of John Kerry. And there isn't an alternative. Either George Bush or John Kerry will be President of the United States for the next four years, and it's pretty clear which one would be a better choice.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at October 26, 2004 05:06 PM (kOqZ6)
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Posted by: asdfe at June 17, 2011 10:32 AM (mKzDq)
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October 12, 2004
The Downside of Living Downunder
Team America doesn't open here until December 2.
The Incredibles December 26.
Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow not until
February 3.
Bastards.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
01:57 PM
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1
You're right--they're bastards.
Posted by: Susie at October 12, 2004 04:04 PM (ELTFA)
2
Bastards!
(Test test...)
Posted by: Pixy Misa at October 12, 2004 08:23 PM (+S1Ft)
3
I've seen Sky Captain, and I can tell you it's great! Team America's not out here for a while yet, but still before you... *evil*
Posted by: Dominic at October 12, 2004 09:34 PM (pqgq+)
4
Am I the only person in blogdom to have despised Sky Captain? We're still waiting for Shawn of the Dead up here in Appalachia. I think it got bumped for that election-season second run of Fahrenheit 911. And somehow, Sinclair Broadcasting is sui generis in the realm of political propaganda...
Oh, I'm sad to report that Team America isn't very watchable, except for the bits involving Kim Jong Il and the Film Actors Guild. I found myself wishing that they would've let Frank J. take a whack at the script.
Posted by: Mitch H. at October 12, 2004 10:47 PM (iTVQj)
5
Well poot.
I'm sure The Incredibles will be good, at least.
Shaun of the Dead opened here just last week, so maybe I'll go see that in the meantime.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at October 12, 2004 11:05 PM (+S1Ft)
6
How does one reach the person who runs mu.nu?
Posted by: rachel at October 12, 2004 11:09 PM (RSWzT)
7
Well, that's a good way.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at October 12, 2004 11:32 PM (+S1Ft)
8
Right, so how is it that Sky Captain opens later than Incredibles or Team America? Weird.
Shaun of the Dead is great, saw it last week. Team America looks, well, unwatchable, but that might just be me.
Posted by: Chris C. at October 14, 2004 12:41 AM (jb9Ux)
9
Programmer back from vacation in Florida was bragging about seeing Shawn of the Dead. Hurricane-ravaged disaster areas get good movies before we do. Bah!
Posted by: Mitch H. at October 14, 2004 06:31 AM (iTVQj)
10
I expect TA to be available here on copy DVD in the next few weeks. If you've got a multi zone DVD player...
Posted by: Simon at October 15, 2004 07:25 PM (UKqGy)
11
Well.. If you wanted to be illegal I'm sure you could download the movies online.. ^.^
Posted by: Mookie at October 26, 2004 03:36 AM (gBa/X)
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Meltdown Watch
From today's
The Age:
Labor has not had the moral imagination to respond to the conservatives' radical agenda.
The conservatives' radical agenda? Well, in this day when the radicals have become reactionary, that's might not be as silly as it sounds.
The article is the usual pathetic whining of the losing left - the author "lectures in sociology at the University of Melbourne", which should tell you all you need to know.
This item from the same paper, titled "Face it: Latham has failed", is rather more in touch with reality.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
11:58 AM
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1
Comment comment test test...
Posted by: Pixy Misa at October 12, 2004 08:35 PM (+S1Ft)
2
Hey, I just wanted to say what a excellent website. I certainly enjoyed it and found it interesting reading. Anticipating your next post!
Posted by: Web Design Sydney at May 24, 2011 09:26 AM (fIui8)
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The Meltdown Continues
This from the
official blog of the
Australian Greens:
Morons
Submitted by Virginia. on 11-10-2004 10:42 PM, in the category
Apologies for the fact that idiots exist.
Obviously the re-election of the Liberal Party has given some of our redneck pals the guts to come out of the woodwork. Apologies to people who attempted to read and/or post to the comments section of the blog today, and found themselves redirected to boring (and badly-designed) right-wingery.
As I'm sure you know, a redirect script is a terribly impressive and complicated thing to program, and makes you look really cool.
Anyway, comments are off until I can put aside my election hangover for long enough to deal with the minor problem it presents - I guess this is just practice for life under our newly-minted undemocratic democracy.
Right back atcha, guys!
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
09:33 AM
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Yup, idiots do exist - most of them voted Green!
How can a democracy be undemocratic? Let's face it, the majority of Australians have rejected the offerings of Latham and the Greens - whether you support Howard or not, the majority have spoken - that is democracy.
Posted by: Ozguru at October 12, 2004 01:31 PM (AJL/m)
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October 11, 2004
The Meltdown Begins
One of the things I've most been looking forward to once the elections are over and Howard and Bush have been returned to office with increased majorities is the complete screaming meltdown of the left.
Still three weeks to go for the American and global meltdown, but here in Australia it is already under way.
WhackingDay has the goods.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
06:29 PM
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We've all suffered the slings and arrows of outrageous idiots for months, nay, years. Suffered in silence, as you can't argue with some people.
Oh, there have been non-idiots who disagreed with us, people who you could argue with, but at least 50% of the anti-war group were pro-fascist idiotarians.
It's amusing to see them confronted with a bit of reality. I'm actually impressed that they haven't claimed (too much) that the election was rigged, just that it was "stolen" by some UberZionist Mind Control Plan. It gives me hope that they might gain a bit of sanity as they grow older.
Posted by: Alan E Brain at October 12, 2004 10:38 AM (y+c1+)
2
Oh good lord how I hope you're right, Pixy.
Posted by: Sarah at October 18, 2004 08:09 PM (ECh5c)
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October 09, 2004
Darn Internet
With 8.35% of the primary vote and 4.39% of the two-party preferred vote counted, the
Australian Electoral Commission is calling 6 seats for Labor, 14 for Liberal, 5 for National (so 19 for Howard's Coalition) and 2 Independent.
There was a strong early swing against Labor due to the forestry workers in Tasmania, and it looks like the Coalition has picked up one, possibly two seats there.
7:15PM: Click!
9.34% primary, 4.81% preferred counted.
Labor 8
Liberal 18
National 7
Independent 2
7:20 PM: Click!
11.98% primary, 5.96% preferred counted
Labor 12
Liberal 24
National 9
Independent 2
So that's 33 for Howard, 12 for Latham.
Well, early days, early days.
7:25 PM
My DNS server isn't responding. Wah?
7:30 PM
19.10% primary, 9.49% preferred vote counted.
Labor 30
Liberal 40
National 12
Independent 3
They've taken one of the Tassie seats off the Libs and put it back in "doubtful", though.
7:33 PM And remember, it's not just Australia that's voting today.
Afghanistan is going to the polls too. Thanks to, well, you know.
7:35 PM
20.37% of the primary and 10.39% of two-party-preffered votes counted.
Labor 32
Liberal 43
National 12
Independent 2
And remember, the Liberals and the Nationals are in coalition, so it's 55 for Howard and 32 for Latham.
7:40 PM
How do they count these things so fast? It's not like they're particularly simple, and they're
not computer-based or punched cards.
Anyway:
26.57% of the primary and 14.44% of the preferred vote has been counted.
Labor 40
Liberal 49
National 12
Independent 3
7:45 PM
28.67% of the primary and 15.65% of the preferred vote counted.
Labor 41
Liberal 50
National 12
Independent 3
The Coalition has 62 of the 76 seats it needs for a victory, and there are still 44 seats in question. I think it's a pretty safe call for a fourth term for John Howard.
But I'll be back in five minutes anyway.
7:50 PM
31.83% primary and 18.47% preferred counted.
Labor 40 (yep, they went backwards)
Liberal 54
National 12
Independent 3
Looks like a national swing of around 2% to the Coalition, so they will likely be returned with an
increased majority.
7:55 PM
Not only have I lost the CD cases for my original Sims collection - which have the license keys on them - but I've lost the file I created that I put all my license keys in. Poot. Oh, no change on the election in the last five minutes.
8:10 PM
Not much movement now, as the marginal seats won't be called for one side or the other until a lot more votes have been counted. Labor has picked up 1, with 38 remaining undecided.
However, the Coalition need only 9 of those 38 to win, whereas Labor would need 34. I'm seeing the Coalition picking up an extra 5, maybe 7, seats compared to last time. (And they already had an 81-65 majority.)
8:30 PM
While we wait for something to happen (like the votes coming in from Western Australia), the ABC is
predicting 85 seats for the Coalition (up 4) and 62 for Labor (down 3).
9:45 PM
Mark Latham has conceded. John Howard is once again Prime Minister of Australia.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
07:10 PM
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From 'The Truth' (pterry)
"But he doesn't DO anything!"
"Yeah, the hardest thing to do right in politics."
Just thoght it fit.
Posted by: tommy at October 09, 2004 10:55 PM (5xL8B)
2
Congrats. I can only hope we fight back our very own Latham next month. I'm getting ready to go out door-to-dooring in a few minutes here to try to help make that happen.
Posted by: Mitch H. at October 09, 2004 11:21 PM (iTVQj)
3
Yay for Australia! Let freedom reign.
Posted by: Sarah at October 10, 2004 01:12 AM (Jq+qQ)
4
Yay! I always love it when the sensible party trounces the silly party...here's hoping it happens in the US as well...
Posted by: Susie at October 10, 2004 03:23 AM (o7HpO)
5
Congrats to you and your fellow citizens! I see Howard picks up a few more seats in parliament. Here it will be tougher to call unless Bush or Kerry do something as politically stupid as Latham did in supporting the anti-logging environmentalists.
I'm keeping my fingers crossed.
Posted by: Michele at October 11, 2004 02:15 PM (LpVNp)
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All Over Bar The Drinking
Well, today is voting day here in Oz. Voting doesn't finish for a few hours yet, due to Perth, which is always running late. And so, in a few hours, we will know.
Are we in for a fourth term of John Howard's decent and sensible (if unremarkable) leadership? Or will I spend the next four years apologising for my government?
I plan to go to sleep tonight without checking anything anywhere, and then tomorrow morning I'll take a look at
Tim Blair's site. And spend the day re-installing my Linux box, either way.
My Windows box seems to... Work. Yes, I have it booting to a RAID-5 volume. Writing to RAID-5 is rather slow - the benchmark I ran only gave me 12MB/s. But reading from it, I sustained just on 100MB/s, which is all you're going to get from a standard PCI slot. Overall, not unhappy, once I got the BIOS and the drivers sorted out. (Yes, the drivers were also immensely sucky.)
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
04:14 PM
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Time to write Bill Gates a thank you note? If Windows didn't suck so much, you might actually have had a few seconds of boredom! He saved you from that!

Posted by: Susie at October 10, 2004 03:27 AM (o7HpO)
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October 08, 2004
Helpful Household Hints
At least if you live in a house like mine...
If you are the proud owner of a HighPoint RocketRAID 1640, and your BIOS revision (displayed on the configuration screen when you boot at the top right) is anything less than 2.05s, go to the HighPoint site, download the latest BIOS revision, make yourself a boot floppy, copy the BIOS loader program and the loader onto the floppy, reboot, and
update that damn BIOS.
I don't remember what version my card had, but the new BIOS is much much
much better, transforming a uniquely sucky card into one that seems, so far, adequate.
More news as it comes to hand. First I have to get through building a 600GB RAID-5 set. That took 7½ hours before; maybe it will be quicker this time...
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
06:07 AM
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October 07, 2004
Environy
Near my house there are two large plastic signs telling me I should
Vote Greens - which someone has thoughtfully nailed to a couple of trees. The trees were not available for comment at time of publication.
Anyway,
Bernie Slattery has the inside scoop on
what colour the Greens really are. Hint: You might as well call them the Watermelon Party.*
Don't miss their 40-point plan for new and increased taxes. including a 33% surcharge (on top of the current top marginal rate of around 50%) for people-who-earn-more-than-is-good-for-them. And the plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by - wait for it - 100%. Which means that all those cuddly animals will have to go - after all, we can't have them
breathing, now can we?
I've touched on Bob Brown's
insane policies before. This is what Slatts has to say:
They are political extremists whose policies borrow equally from the textbooks of Hitler and Stalin.
Of course, Australians are too sensible to put up with totalitarianism and should the Greens achieve any measure of power it would be short-lived.
But remember Whitlam. Much damage can be achieved in a short time by ideologues and their useful idiots.
* Okay: Green on the outside and red on the inside.**
** And I won't mention that the leader of the Australian Greens is Bob Brown.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
07:48 PM
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Pixy,
Problem is, y'all don't have much of a safety net. Y'all have to rely on being to sensible to elect totalitarians, but once they're in powerr you don't have much recourse. We're not that much better off over here, but we have a bit more of a safety net in case something horrible does happen.
& the safety net I speak of is an armed populace. Y'all's aren't completely disarmed yet, but the capapcity for resitance has been significantly diminished the last decade or two.
So for y'alls sake I do hope the voting thing works out, cause if it doesn't there simply won't be much of a recourse left.
Oh, I hate the watermelon comparison - i think it's demeaning to that form of melon & possibly all produce anywhere.

Posted by: Publicola at October 09, 2004 04:41 AM (dZUTp)
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The Bluebird of Crappiness
So, I finally got around to installing my new SATA RAID controller in my Windows box.
That's why I'm posting this from my Linux box.
Windows box, she no boot no more. Nor can I re-install Windows.
Pfui.
While I'm here: The controller is a HighPoint 1640. The
only brand of RAID controller I've had uniformly good experience with is 3Ware, and they're damned expensive. Does anyone have any recommendations for a cheap(ish) SATA RAID controller that does RAID-5 and doesn't utterly suck? Or do I blow my budget into tiny little pieces and get a controller that will at least
work?
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
02:18 AM
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October 06, 2004
Smart Money
Lately I've been growing more comfortable that George Bush will be re-elected and John Kerry banished howling into the outer darkness, and that all will be right and proper in America again. Not that I'm a huge fan of most of Bush's policies, but I strongly agree with his foreign policy, and have nothing but contempt for Kerry. If the Democrats had nominated Lieberman, it would be a very different story, but that didn't happen in this universe.
Here in Australia I haven't been nearly as comfortable, with Mark Latham, a character nearly as contemptible as Kerry, stubbornly refusing to self-destruct. Until this week, when he signed on to the Green's tree-hugging policies to secure their preferences (Australia uses a preferential voting system, where votes for a losing candidate are directed to one of the other candidates, until only two are left).
Unfortunately for Latham, the traditional constituency of his Labor Party is, well, workers. Including forestry workers. And the trade unions are very influential in the Labor Party as well. And Latham just pissed them off
royally. Smart money says his greenie-grabbing tactics have scuttled his ship.
Which smart money?
This smart money. Click on "Elections" in the left-hand menu.
A dollar bet on the Coalition (John Howard, the good guys) would return just $1.16 for a win (at 10 AM Wednesday October 6, just three days before the election). A dollar on Labor would return $4.50.
By comparison, a dollar on George Bush returns $1.50, against $2.40 for Kerry.
Tim Blair has more.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
10:09 AM
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I hope you and they are right. I would hate to have a world led by the likes of Latham and Kerry! There's already of version of them in Zapatero's Spain and we see the political destruction he's creating in that political landscape. I shudder to think what life would be like being led by these men.
Posted by: Michele at October 06, 2004 11:18 AM (LpVNp)
2
You know, I said the same thing about Leiberman. I also originally thought that Edwards would not have been a bad choice. I am no longer convinced Edwards is worth a vote now though.
I just cannot understand how anyone can vote for Kerry. I knew during the primaries that Kerry was really unelectable, and here we are, just a few weeks out, and there he is, neck and neck, BLEH.
I agree with most of Bush's policies, especially of the tax cuts. I did not agree with how he implemented the medicare changes. I would have prefered to have seen some strong cost controls put into place.
Posted by: Allen Stoner at October 11, 2004 02:57 AM (TFkfJ)
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October 05, 2004
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