The US sends its "experts" to Chile for what? To offer not so much technical advice about the rescue operation but something that has the ring of moral advice:
"We've been very impressed with the organisation of the team and the quality of the medical care that's been provided," Nasa's team leader, Dr Michael Duncan, said at a news conference on Wednesday.Don't drink, don't smoke, what do you do?“We've been very impressed... with the courage and the organisation that the miners have provided themselves”
"And we've been very impressed also with the courage and the organisation that the miners have provided themselves in this very difficult circumstance," he added.
He recommended that the miners did not consume alcohol or smoke cigarettes.
With its survey of Washington voters released this morning, Rasmussen Reports says that our senate race now "moves from Leans Democratic to Toss-Up":
The latest Rasmussen Reports statewide telephone survey of Likely Voters in the state shows Republican challenger Dino Rossi attracting 48% of the vote while Democratic Senator Patty Murray earns support from 46%. Three percent (3%) prefer a different candidate, and three percent (3%) are undecided.
Rossi's two-point lead today follows a poll two weeks ago, when Rasmussen found Murray with a four point lead. It's impossible to read too much into these numbers given the poll's 4 percent margin of error, except to say that Murray lacks anything resembling the lead that ensures reelection. And Murray could be losing support. Lots of policy strategists are concerned that Democrats—specifically progressive Dems who live in cities—are so resigned to a red wave this fall that they just won't vote. And that Dems are disillusioned after a progressive Congress didn't fulfill promises, like vows to reform health care, pass finance reform, end the combat in Iraq... wait a second. They did do all that stuff. My thinking: Dems aren't scared enough of a red wave. So Senator Dino Rossi. Yikes.
It's online dating for farmers, complete with red rhetoric:
There are basically two groups in America. Group one: their lives revolve around four dollar cups of coffee, taxi cabs, blue suits, high heels, conference rooms and getting ahead at all costs in the corporate world. If you fall into this group you're probably on the wrong online dating site. Group two: they enjoy blue skies, wide open spaces, raising animals, appreciating nature and truly understand the meaning of Southern hospitality, even if they don't live in the South. This group makes up America's Heartland. This is not a geographic area, this is a slice of America with good old fashioned traditional values, values that were never lost by the farmer.
There's a section called "Barnyard Buzz." No one wants to know.
But: "City folks just don't get it!™"
Thanks—I think—Jill.
Seattle Times Blows Dale Chihuly: Calls him the bees knees, ponders whether a Chihuly museum is the answer to Seattle Center's financial woes.
Scandal at Dick's: A poll to help decide the location of the next Dick's Drive-In was hacked, says a spokeswoman. The poll has been fixed and voting will continue.
Alleged Rape and Sodomy: New Mariners player comes with baggage.
Bush's Tax Breaks for the Rich: May be sticking around, thanks to moderate democrats.
Botox Settles for $600 Million: After illegally promoting the face-freezing drug up until 2005 for unapproved uses like treating headaches. (Although now, five years later, the FDA is seriously considering authorizing Botox for the treatment of chronic migraines.)
The Mideast Talks Peace: Israeli and Palestinian leaders gather today with leaders from Jordan and Egypt, under the watchful stare of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, to find a regional solution to decades of conflict. (Israel is even willing to divide Jerusalem in order to reach peace, says one Israeli cabinet member.)
"Sedated, drooling and overweight from the side effects": Six-year-old Kyle Warren was prescribed with the antipsychotic Risperdal, the antidepressant Prozac, two sleeping medicines and one for attention-deficit disorder, all before his third birthday. More than 500,000 children and teens in the U.S. are now on antipsychotic drugs, according to the FDA.
You Love Reading About Sedated Children, Don't You? New study finds that older people enjoy reading negative news stories about younger generations because it boosts their self esteem. (Monsters.)
God Didn't Create the Universe: So says Stephen Hawking.
Hurricane Earl Followed by Fiona and Gaston: Storm warnings issued from North Carolina to Massachusetts.
39 days till the October 15th HUMP! deadline! Need an idea? Um, I got two words for you: PORN PARODY. It's the hottest thing since sliced frickin' bread.
Video SFW. Clicking "Porn Parody" NSFW.
And this time you won't have to drive/bus/fly to Redmond!
Seattle Times sez:
Traffic Alert | King County Metro buses are exiting I-5 at Spokane Street and running on surface arterials through downtown due to severe traffic on Northbound I-5 near the convention center.
We're getting unconfirmed reports of a jumper off the Olive overpass (photo unavailable).
UPDATE: Dear Grim Reaper: Please stop catching up to people within a block of my apartment building.
...Obama couldn't go to Reverend Wright's church for twenty years "and not share the same ideology." Except for Christianity. You can go to a Christian church for 20 years and not adopt your pastor's Christian ideology.
The stupid never stops.

I wrote about this project a month ago, but tomorrow is the deadline for the project and Woodring has only raised about half the necessary money. Watch the video again; I guarantee you have never seen a grown man get so excited about a giant pen the way this grown man gets excited about a giant pen. Let's help make his dream come true.
(Image of a giant ballpoint pen comes from PerpetualKid.com. Woodring's proposed pen is bigger, and cooler.)
...unless you consider eating them to be mistreatment. Associated Press:
Costco Wholesale Corp. has condemned a veal producer's treatment of calves after seeing footage shot by an animal rights group.The group, Mercy for Animals, released video this week that it said was taken by hidden recorders at Buckeye Veal Farm in Apple Creek, Ohio. It shows calves chained inside small stalls where they are unable to lie down or turn around and are covered in feces...
Costco's CEO Jim Senegal said the company was not aware of the issue before it saw the video.
"We are extremely disappointed, not only with the performance of our supplier in this instance, but with our own performance as well," he said in a statement. "We hold ourselves to a high standard, and in this case, we plainly did not perform to that standard."
The supplier declined to comment, while the farm allegedly shown in the video disputes the matter.
Here's the video (narrated by 1,000-year-old Bob Barker):
Good for Costco, and any farm that chains up baby cows ought to be ashamed of itself. Ditto any grown human who drags a baby cow around like that.
I attend so many readings that I often forget that there are people who have never attended an author reading. That's why I'm glad Questionland exists. Danno Davis asks:

What should I expect at one of these readings at Elliott Bay?I'm pretty interested in this reading on Milosevic tonight, but I've never been to one before. I'd kind of like to get a better idea of what to expect. Is the format something like the following: Intro; Reading of a snippet; Question time? How long does the whole thing last? Thanks.
My response:
Hey Danno,Thanks for asking.
Well, every reading is different, but most single-author readings do generally follow a template. The introduction, hopefully, will be brief; just a welcome, a short mention of upcoming events the audience might find interesting, and a little context about the author.
The author will usually read from his or her book—-that usually takes anywhere from ten to twenty minutes. Sometimes they prefer to speak about the subject without reading from the book. If there are slides or the author loves the sound of his or her own voice, it could go a half an hour, but that's rare.
Then the author will take questions from the audience. Sometimes that can go on for a while, if the questions are good and the audience is particularly inquisitive. Often, the questions can be the longest part of the night. (I think that might be the case tonight.)
And then it's time for the signing. If you want, you can take off. Or you can buy a book. And you're not obligated to buy a book, either—if you'd like to just wait in line and say something to the author, you should feel free to do that.
Usually, they go for about an hour, maybe a little more, sometimes a little less. And they're almost always free (except for readings at Town Hall, which cost five bucks to pay for the rental of the space). They're a great way to learn more about a subject without committing to the price of a book.
Have fun!
Seriously, people: Readings Are Your Best Double-Dip Recession Entertainment Value™. Danno is going to his first one tonight; you should go to your first one sometime soon.
Inside:
Young People vs. Bob Dylan! ("I think I'm being pretty generous to the guy. He's got some great songs, but these days, whatever he's doing, not very many people seem to be hearing about it.")
Courtney Love vs. Courtney Love! ("Having perused several pages of Google search results for "Hole 2010 concert review," I can surmise that there are three basic flavors of Courtney-Love-on-tour-in-2010: 1. Inexhaustible Psycho Mess Courtney, 2. Boring Botox Robot Courtney, 3. Crazy Lightning-Rod of Brilliance Courtney")
Weezer vs. No Longer Young People! ("If Cuomo had gone into hiding for good, he would've been revered as a god, worshipped on a par with Neutral Milk Hotel hermit Jeff Mangum or the late recluse J. D. Salinger. Instead, Weezer returned with 2001's self-titled "Green Album.")

I am in a contest to become Seattle's United Colors of Benneton model. It would be greatly appreciated if you were able to help get me some more votes.Thanks so much,
Bianca.
This is a Facebook voting thingie. All you have to do is go to the Seattle United Colors of Benneton page and vote for Bianca at #8. As you can see from her photo to the left, there, she is smoking hot. I guess you could vote for one of the other models, too, if you're into clean-cut boys in sleeveless shirts or something. But Bianca is clearly the hottest model and so deserves your vote. That is all.
Posted by news intern Matt Luby.
Do you remember that scene in "Mulholland Drive" that featured a mysterious, creepy man hanging out next to a dumpster? In case you missed it, imagine a scene so uncomfortable and bizarre that it has managed to crowd out discussion of the film's initially more famous Naomi Watts lesbian sex scene even in crowds of hormone-addled teenage boy movie buffs.
On August 26, witnesses in the 400 block of N 36th Street reported seeing an even weirder scene. According to the filed police report, a property owner in the area saw a guy shitting in the alley behind his property and asked him to stop or at least shit somewhere "more discreet." According to the report, the shitter became angry at the suggestion and broke a bamboo stick over the property owner's head (perhaps because he was in the middle of a really satisfying dump and didn't appreciate the interruption).
After the ka-pow moment, the report states that the shitter took off running. A witness saw the assault and took off after him, eventually catching him. When officers arrived, the victim requested that the suspect "be warned for what he did today and to stay away from his property." In turn, the suspect "apologized for defecating on [the victim's] property," and was released at the scene.
Thousands of people waiting in line just to sit across from the Serbian-born artist, stare at her, and have, you know, feelings and experiences. Christiane Amanpour and Lou Reed, Abramovic was looking at you!
And a cast of re-performers was hired to stage highlights from Abramovic's past works, including, most famously, the performance in which Abramovic and Ulay stood naked in an Italian gallery doorway people had to pass through in order to see the rest of the art.
People called the whole thing alternately wondrous, life-changing, problematic, and narcissistic. But nobody ignored it—and it caused lots of minds to wonder about the continuing future, and continuing past, of performance art in museums.
How was it being one of those re-performers? When did MoMA exercise too much protectiveness, and actually change the nature of the work? What was the interview to get the job like?
Heather Kravas, a performer who lives part of the year in Seattle, tells about it in this week's online-only version of the paper, here.
That's Jamie Herrera, Republican candidate for Congress in Washington's 3rd District, who recently told KING 5:
Her opponent: Democrat Denny Heck.
My partner of two years just broke up with me. We were living together at his place and after the breakup we decided that I could live with him until I found a job (I was laid off last year and still haven't found anything). I was pretty depressed because of my failure to find a job; the breakup made the depression worse. I was in an obvious state of grief over the end of the relationship. I'm assuming he had been thinking about breaking up with me for a while, so he was emotionally prepared for the post-breakup phase. Living with my ex was tough, since my status was downgraded from boyfriend to roommate, even though we were still sharing the same bed.We also hadn't ironed out details of our breakup—would we bring dates home? would we still have sex? would we have sex with others?—and when I tried to have this conversation with him he dodged. He did, however, say that if I wanted to know anything all I had to do was ask. I had no plans for sex or dating, especially not when I was grieving, though I hoped my ex and I would continue having sex.
A couple of weeks after the breakup I tried to have the post breakup conversation again, I learned from him (and boy did he not want to tell me!) that a week after our breakup he participated in an orgy with mutual friends while I was camping with my brother. I was not emotionally prepared for this news. I got very upset and angry, left, and now I'm living with a friend. My ex can't understand why I was so upset, since we were broken up and his affairs were no longer any of my business, as he said. I was furious. I realize that a lot of my anger comes from not getting what I want, but I also feel that having an orgy with mutual friends one week after our breakup, and not being honest about it, was ill-advised at best and unnecessarily hurtful. He thinks that there wouldn't be a problem if I weren't so immature and selfish. I think there wouldn't be a problem if he had been honest about about his intentions to go wild so soon after we broke up. Of course, it hurt me that he was able to move on so quickly, without going through any apparent grief about the end of the relationship.
This wouldn't be a problem but we have many friends in common and hang out regularly, so we're sure to interact at least once a week. I feel terrible about how this happened and think it could have been avoided with honest and open communication. What do you think, Dan?
Exes And Orgies
My response after the jump...
The Native American man fatally shot by a Seattle police officer in a confrontation Monday—after the officer spotted him on the street with a knife—was deaf in one ear. More details on the confrontation here.
And via Seattlepi.com (emphasis mine):
The man fatally shot in confrontation with a police officer Monday afternoon after he refused to follow police orders was deaf in his left ear, the man's brothers said Wednesday.John T. Williams, 50, was shot about 4:15 p.m. at Howell Street and Boren Avenue after police say Officer Ian D. Birk's yelled three times for him to drop a knife and Williams did not.
... Williams lost hearing in his left ear eight years ago after an ear infection, his brothers said Wednesday. He caught the infection after sleeping outside... The siblings do not know if Williams had his headphones at the time of the shooting, but believe he had difficulty understanding the officer's command.
Williams was also an eighth-generation wood carver.
Street artists are in demand because it turns out they may be the best weapon against... street artists. They're being commissioned by private property owners and government agencies—the same authorities that would look to punish them for "night" work rather than "day" work.
Here's the whole piece.
What prompted me to write it is this weekend's 2010 Seattle Street Art Biennale, which I caught a preview of yesterday at Seattle Center. There's great stuff in there—freestanding walls, painted-up newspapers stands, dumpsters, tagged panel paintings. It's not the usual show. I'm told there'll be videos of Seattle graffiti going back to the '80s, too. Get there. (And if you want to see a bunch of photos from the show, FB friend me already.)Will the Mayor's Arts Awards, to be held right next door to the street biennale, be tense this time around? Hmm...
I don't care how many Ken Mehlmans come out of the closet or how little gays and lesbians have to show for helping to elect Barack Obama: I can't see myself voting Republican. Because I'm not—despite what you may have read in Slog's comments threads—a single-issue voter. I care about my rights, of course, but I also give a shit about reproductive rights, climate change, the rights of immigrants, the free exercise of religion (look what this "Ground Zero mosque" bullshit forced me to type!), and I much prefer reality-based solutions to the reality-based problems our nation faces. I suspect I'm not the only gay person who feels this way. So these fears seem way overblown to me...
The notion that the gay rights community would abandon the Obama White House over its unwillingness to fully embrace their legislative priorities may seem absurd to the casual political observer. But the recent embrace of same-sex marriage by prominent conservatives, most notably former RNC Chair Ken Mehlman, has some Democratic operatives concerned.On Monday, former McCain campaign manager Steve Schmidt argued that there was a "strong conservative case to be made in favor of gay marriage" and that more and more Republicans are dropping their opposition to the cause. Shortly thereafter, a prominent Democratic consultant got in touch with the Huffington Post to make the case that the Obama administration risks losing the gay rights community (or at least depressing their votes) with its tepid embrace of their priorities.
"I think they have been put in a tough place by these conservatives and they should be," the consultant said. "There are a whole group of people who are to the left of them on gay rights. And they are Republicans. It should make them feel uncomfortable."
But honestly... I am a lot less enthused about voting for, and giving money to, Democrats these days. Still going to vote for 'em, just not enthused. Feeling pretty tepid. And I suspect that I'm not alone. Backing way the hell up for a moment...
Here's what happens to the gays and our issues when Republicans win the White House or control Congress: not a whole hell of a lot. There's no progress on our issues under Republicans—all forward momentum ceases—but things don't get appreciably worse.* We have to endure small outrages and insults, put up with slights, and be vigilant about legislative malice, but we don't see a big rollback of previously secured rights. The Bush administration got everything it wanted out of Congress but it didn't get the FMA or a ban on same-sex couples adopting. Eight years of Bush meant no progress at the federal level on our issues—lots of bullshit at the state level in the form of anti-gay marriage amendments (most of them orchestrated by some straight guy named Ken Mehlman)—but no ground lost.
When we open our wallets for Democrats—and vote for them—the hope is that electing a Democratic president and Congress will result in significant progress on our issues. That's not just our delusional hope; that was an explicit promise made to us by Democrats. Once the Democrats were in power, everyone from Obama on down promised us, we would see real and significant progress on our issues: an end to DADT and DOMA, action on ENDA, a president willing to use the bully pulpit to aggressively defend our rights. But if, as we've seen, working to elect a Democratic president and give Democrats control of Congress results in no progress on our issues—no action on DADT, ENDA, or DOMA—then why the fuck should we bother?
If we get no progress under Democrats (just empty promises meant to excite their base), but no regress under Republicans (just empty threats meant to excite their base), why should we waste our time—and our money—worrying about who's in charge?
Still, I don't think Ken Mehlman going public with his cocksucking and his regrets and the Democrats refusal to make good on a single significant campaign promise made to the gay community during the elections of 2006 and 2008 will result in gays and lesbians abandoning the Democratic party in favor of the GOP. Being reminded that DOMA and DADT were signed by a Democratic president—thanks again, Bill—didn't move us into McCain's camp in 2008. We know who our friends are—our pathetic, ineffectual, useless friends—and we know who our enemies are. But the uselessness of the Dems has resulted in gay checkbooks snapping shut and it's definitely contributing to the "enthusiasm gap" that threatens to hand control of Congress to Republicans.
And here's the most hilarious thing about Democratic cowardice where our issues are concerned: voters who hate the gays don't hate Obama and the Democrats in Congress one iota less for breaking their promises to gay and lesbian community. Just going by the action alerts sent out by rightwing Christian groups—I get all their emails—you would think Obama ("the most radically pro-homosexual president in our history") had legalized same-sex marriage, ended DADT, enacted ENDA, and sent federal troops into suburban mega-churches and forced conservative Christian pastors to perform gay weddings at gunpoint.
So here's where we're at: everyone who cares about gay issues is mad at the Democrats. The homophobes are angry because the Democrats suggested that they might do something about gay rights; gays and lesbians are furious with the Democrats for failing to do something—failing to do anything—about gay rights. Since doing nothing pisses off the gay haters just as much as doing something, perhaps the Dems should've have done something and won the enthusiastic support of someone.
Heckuvajob, gang.
* I'm setting Reagan and AIDS aside, and that's one great, big, enormous, huge set-aside, I realize. But that was a pretty exceptional circumstance (that's why we called it the "AIDS crisis"). The Reagan administration failed to act and allowed gay people to die—with an invaluable assist from a gay sex culture bent on suicide and self-destruction—but Reagan "revolutionaries" didn't undo what few rights we enjoyed when they were swept into office.
The King County Prosecutor's office announced today that it won't be filing charges against Detective Shandy Cobane, who told a Latino suspect in April that he would “beat the fucking Mexican piss out of you, homey," while investigating an incident at the China Harbor Restaurant on South Lake Union. Officers later released the man after realizing he was not the offender they were after.
"We have determined that Detective Shandy Cobane did not commit the felony crime of malicious harassment, the state's 'Hate Crime' law," stated Prosecuting Attorney Dan Satterberg in a statement and legal analysis released today (.pdf). Prosecutors say Cobane didn't target and harass the suspect because of his race, as stipulated under the law.
Video footage surfaced in early May showing Cobane yelling at the suspect and apparently stomping the man's head against the concrete, and another officer stomping the man’s kneecap against the pavement.
UPDATE: Police Chief John Diaz releases a statement on the prosecuting attorney's decision via the SPD Blotter, which says among other things, "I have contacted City Attorney Peter Holmes and asked him to review the case. The Office of Professional Accountability (OPA) investigation has yet to be completed and remains a very high priority."
Today, I began reading Stephan Jay Gould's collection of essays on natural history, Ever Since Darwin, and came across this passage in the book's fourth essay, "Darwin's Untimely Burial":
One might think that the first chapter of such a revolutionary book as Origin of Species would deal with cosmic questions. It doesn't. It deals with pigeons.The passage tunneled me to a passage in a book I completed the day before, Steven Weinberg's The First Three Minutes [of the Universe]. This passage concerned the discovery of the cosmic microwave background, the relic radiation from the birth of the universe.
To their surprise, Penzias and Wilson found in the spring of 1964 that they were receiving a sizeable amount of micro-wave noise at 7.35 centimetres that was independent of direction. They also found that this 'static' did not vary with the time of day or, as the year went on, with the season.The "decisive means" involved a rifle. And after the pigeons were killed and their shit completely removed from the antenna, the strange noise coming from everywhere was correctly connected to our young, hot, small, and purely glowing universe.Clearly it was necessary to reconsider whether the antenna itself might be producing more electrical noise than expected. In particular, it was known that a pair of pigeons had been roosting in the antenna throat. The pigeons were caught; mailed to the Bell Laboratories Whippany site; released; found back in the antenna at Holmdel a few days later; caught again; and finally discouraged by more decisive means.
However, in the course of their tenancy, the pigeons had coated the antenna throat with what Penzias delicately calls 'a white dielectric material', and this material might at room temperature be a source of electrical noise. In early 1965 it became possible to dismantle the antenna throat and clean out the mess, but this, and all other efforts, produced only a very small decrease in the observed noise level. The mystery remained: where was the microwave noise coming from?
Thefrisky.com—a site devoted to female troubles and powered by raw estrogen—recently polled their audience and found that 48.6 percent of women would drink while pregnant. The poll didn't mention whether these pregnant women would drink in public or not—just that more women are open to the idea of drinking while pregnant.
I have never been pregnant, but if you've got a built-in drinking buddy, it sounds pretty rad. But here's the thing: all the pregnant ladies I know say that if you're pregnant and you drink in public, you get nervous, pitying looks from people—as if you are actively killing your fetus's one brain cell.
"The only way to enjoy yourself is to drink alone, in the bathroom, like your alcoholic uncle does," one pregnant friend told me. Now I'm feeling confused and judgmental. Maybe my friends are hysterical and paranoid that society is judging them. Maybe society is judging them. Maybe my friends are pregnant alcoholics.
Help me out. Is it now socially acceptable for pregnant ladies to drink?
After yesterday's puppy-throwing debacle, I think we should all watch this video and remember there *is* still some kindness in the world...