Monthly Archives: August 2004

BME farked again

Extremely uncreative entries, but…

In scientia veritas, in arte honestas

I really love x-ray photos of piercings. Steve even has some great X-ray photos of his earlier metal implants as well (and even the silicone ones would have to show up). Ever since seeing those, I always wanted to publish a book of photos of people with piercings, implants, and so on that would combine a portrait page with a transparent X-Ray page over it. I don't know if that's too “gimmicky”, but maybe one day I'll publish it.

BME/Extreme Newsletter #3

I've just posted a bunch more stories to BME/extreme. Thank you so much to the people who are supporting this venture by sending in their stories and pictures. It's not hard to do, and submitting this way your story gets edited for you as well. Please consider taking the time to do so if you've got heavy mods. Anyway, click the picture to jump to it now:


“Tattoos are like stories. They're symbolic of the important moments in your life. Sitting down, talking about where you got each tattoo and what it symbolizes, is really beautiful.”
- Pamela Anderson

(Original forum unavailable, sorry)*

How do you spell sedition?

It's a given that if it stays on its current course America will become a communist nation within fifteen years. It's already well on its way – if you consider just the people who are employed by the military, the education system, and civil servants of every kind, you've already got a huge percentage of the population gaining their salary via the government (especially if you include the seemingly inevitable government absorption of health care, and the draft or some equivalent if war expands). If you then consider the five hundred biggest companies in America (which merge more and more every year), you've got the majority of the US population… As these companies meld into singular mega-corporations which work closely with the government to determine both law and the path of the nation, boom, you've got a strange sort of democratic yet not-so-democratic corporate communism.

There are two paths that America can take right now… The first and more obvious one (if you're a TV believer) is “deciding” in an election which überclass of ultra-rich people you'd like to have as your kings. After all, even though it was left out of his Steven Spielberg documentary, Kerry does come from a very wealthy family, and those with a conspiratorial minds could easily convince themselves that the Skulls at Yale chose to send Kerry to Vietnam as part of a leadership long game that he's been playing his part in since birth. Edwards as well, as much as he can play the “I'm just the son of a poor mill worker” populist card, is also incredibly wealthy. I've said it before, but if you want to know who to vote for, just vote for the person who makes the same amount of money as you do – however, most Americans live in poverty in comparison to their extremely financially successful politicians. In any case, these elections are simply about choosing who rules over the proles. So basically a case of the slaves getting to decide who their master is, but never breaking the bonds of slavery.

The other option of course is to reject communism and to reject slavery. Unfortunately this option is favored only by that tiny minority of real Americans left that give a damn about liberty and freedom. The government is terrified of them though, and the media plays along, keeping stories about “domestic terrorism” (a far greater threat to corporate sovereignty than any Islamists) off the television so as to keep sympathies from growing… when they are mentioned, even by “anti-government” (but still ultra-rich) people like Michael Moore, they are written off as militia wackos and survivalist kooks.

If you don't buy into my “freedom counts” spiel (I realize that most people don't, hey, it's a lot easier to just be a slave), there's one other very important reason to embrace real American values, and that's survivability. While a distributed system built around individual empowerment (and everything that goes along with it like localized food and ethanol production) will have micro-failures all the time (as it should), it is extremely unlikely for it to experience the cataclysmic system-destroying failures that immense monolithic systems can have. We are currently facing a plethora of ecological, microbial, military, economic, and other apocalypses. We don't know what will happen, but it would be optimistically foolhardy to assume that none of them will play out. Any of these can be a system destroyer. If we all are relying on local system, we survive. If we all rely on a single central system, we don't.

The American worker – the American individual – continues to rank as the most productive worker on the planet. There is literally no country that is able to create as much finished product per worker as the United States. USA really is Number One. Sure, some other countries can produce more per dollar since they underpay their workers and violate environmental law and so on, but that's a losing game and it doesn't do the people in those countries any good. I point this out because it illustrates that Americans still have what it takes to handle the burden of being free.

What? You want to know how? If you don't know how to be free, you don't deserve freedom any more than an Iraqi does. Here's a hint though – the path to freedom is soaked is diesel fuel and fertilizer… and only some of it is for tractors and fields.


DISCLAIMER: THIS ENTRY WAS FOR ENTERTAINMENT PURPOSES ONLY.
BELIEVING OR ACTING ON ANY OF THE ABOVE IS A VIOLATION OF US LAW AND IS PUNISHABLE BY DEATH.
GOD BLESS AMERICA.

This is no $20 million entry

Today I want to go to TransVision 2004 (here's what's going on, check it out Torontonians), head up to the daVinci unveiling, and do a site update as well… Hope I can fit it all in!


While Russia denies it provided any assistance (more), according to Jane's Defense Weekly, North Korea is currently deploying a new set of missiles based on the old Soviet R-27 submarine missile with a range of 4,000 km (more, more). While the range isn't quite enough to drop nukes onto the US mainland, these missiles can be ship launched and North Korea does have a Navy of about 60,000, and could easily use them to strike at mainland US cities (more). More importantly though, while a very small arms dealer ($100 million) in comparison to the US ($33 billion; more), North Korea's “sell to anyone” policy and connections with organized crime and the drug trade make this particularly dangerous (more). Thanks a lot Bush for making every nation feel like they're about to be attacked, forcing them to arm desperately themselves.

Of course, maybe we'll see nuclear war between former Soviet states first… The Georgian government (who were just awarded a civil rights award by the US) just threatened to kill Russian tourists in Abkhazia (more), and Georgian civilians have already been opening fire on Russian groups entering the country (more). To put this into context, Russia and Georgia are now on war footing (more), and with US bases in Georgia and the US training Georgian troops (more), it once again puts Russia and America at each other's throats. High stakes dead pool deciding where the mushroom clouds are first sighted!

Other than that, back at home the US has had to admit that not only was their well timed “DNC-distracting terror alert” (more) based on information from many years ago, but now they're admitting that they don't even think that an attack is imminent from that information (more). So basically they're admitting that they're making fake terror alerts to try and influence the election… At this point, if another terrorist strike does happen in America, do you still trust the government enough to believe they didn't actually just do it themselves to swing the election?

Today in history

Today isn't just a good day for getting rid of Popes (St. Sixtus II, St. Hormisdas, and Constantine all ended their reigns today). Here's some other stuff that happened:

August 6, 1861
The US passes the Confiscation Act, which lead up to the Emancipation Proclamation, which allowed the Union to seize the property of rebels, and freed all slaves which stayed loyal to the Union. Lincoln objected to the act on the basis that it could cause more states to seceed than already had.

August 6, 1890
After first killing thousands of animals in public demonstrations in the battle of AC versus DC power, the US executes its first prisoner using an electric chair at New York's Auburn Prison. The prisoner, William Kemmler, survives the first electrocution and does not die until electrocuted a second time. George Westinghouse commnents, “they would have done better with an axe.”

Augst 6, 1945
The largest terrorist attack in human history is committed by the US as they drop an atomic bomb on the civilian population of Hiroshima, Japan, killing aproximately a hundred and forty thousand men, women, and children, with tens of thousands dying later from the radiation. President Truman descrbes it that day as “the greatest thing in history”. Three days later, another nuclear bomb would be dropped on Nagasaki, killing 70,000 more civilians.

August 6, 1965
President Lyndon Johnson signs the Voting Rights Act, allowing blacks in America the right to vote. Over the years the rights were expanded, although because many jurisdictions ignored the Act, in 1982 provisions were added in an attempt to get blacks the right to vote everywhere in America. However, since then black voters have continued to be disinfranchised and illegally scrubbed from voter's lists, and further clarification of this act will still be required before blacks in America have equal voting rights.

August 6, 1985
The USSR independently commits to stop all nuclear testing, while the US responds by conducting more underground nuclear explosions. The USSR ceases its moratorium 19 months later in the face of continued US nuclear escalation that persists to this day.