Wash: So, two days in a hospital? That's awful. Don't you just hate doctors? Simon: Hey. Wash: I mean, present company excluded. Jayne: Let's not be excluding people. That'd be rude.

'Ariel'


Natter 41: Why Do I Click on ita's Links?!  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


tommyrot - Jan 09, 2006 5:55:03 am PST #8738 of 10002
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Besides, people who take their vitamins have skin that makes better book binding material.


Jessica - Jan 09, 2006 6:16:01 am PST #8739 of 10002
If I want to become a cloud of bats, does each bat need a separate vaccination?

Dude! Today's Woot is a Roomba Discovery. $119 + shipping.

[eta: And in the time it took me to post this, it's sold out. Drat!]


tommyrot - Jan 09, 2006 6:16:09 am PST #8740 of 10002
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Crap, I seem to be running out of outrage again....

[link]

WASHINGTON - The Bush administration has illegally stopped making public detailed tax enforcement data, which has been used to show which kinds of taxpayers get the most and toughest audits, a noted tax researcher says.

...

Long, who has researched and written about federal tax administration for more than 30 years, used the Freedom of Information Act to win the court order in 1976 directing the revenue agency to provide her regularly with its data on criminal investigations, tax collections, the number and hours devoted to audits by income level and taxpayer category and other enforcement records.

Since 1989, her FOIA requests have been submitted by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, a data-research organization at Syracuse of which she is co-director.

TRAC has used the records to report in 2000 that the Clinton administration was auditing poor people at a higher rate than rich people and in 2004 that business and corporate audits were down substantially and criminal tax enforcement was at an all-time low. TRAC also reported that in fiscal 2002-2004 IRS audited on average only a third of the largest corporations, which control 90 percent of all corporate assets and 87 percent of all corporate income.

OK, lets stop going after wealty individual and corporate tax cheats, and then lets illegally refuse to disclose that we're doing that.

Reminds me of a few years back - there was a conservative editorial in the WSJ advocating increased auditing, etc. of the poor, in order to get them to hate the government and thus not complain when funding benefitting the poor was cut.


brenda m - Jan 09, 2006 6:25:52 am PST #8741 of 10002
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

Damn. I'm oosting over the Roomba hardcore right now.

Hee. From the site:

According to iRobot, "world-class roboticists created Roomba" and then "experts tested it." We take this to mean that the Roomba will almost certainly not massacre your entire family in a death orgy of inscrutable machine rage, but we regret that we cannot offer refunds in the event that it does. Hey, if you want a plantation full of robot slaves, you have to accept the risk of a bloody uprising.


Vortex - Jan 09, 2006 6:28:47 am PST #8742 of 10002
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

I've starting taking a Calcium supplement because I hate drinking milk, so I know I don't get enough calcium in my diet, and because both my grandmothers had osteoporosis.

I worried about that, but my doctor told me that my love of cheese was taking care of my not drinking milk. Do you eat other dairy products?


Rick - Jan 09, 2006 6:28:51 am PST #8743 of 10002

A Buffista New Years resolution in today's Get Fuzzy [link] .


Beverly - Jan 09, 2006 6:35:22 am PST #8744 of 10002
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

The whole time I was reading that article about the old man and the mouse, I couldn't stop thinking, "You know, if he'd only heeded the cautionary tale of the Squirrel Cop, this never would have happened."

The first thing I thought of, reading about the mouse-house fire.


ChiKat - Jan 09, 2006 6:36:34 am PST #8745 of 10002
That man was going to shank me. Over an omelette. Two eggs and a slice of government cheese. Is that what my life is worth?

I take a crap load of calcium every day. I take 2000 mg of calcium plus 800 mg of magnesium and a very potent synthetic vitamin D to help me absorb the calcium. This is all under a doctor's supervision, so it's not something the average person has to do. But it gets annoying taking all those pills every day.


Topic!Cindy - Jan 09, 2006 6:39:55 am PST #8746 of 10002
What is even happening?

Besides, people who take their vitamins have skin that makes better book binding material.

Exactly. People should also wash those vitamins down with lots of water.


flea - Jan 09, 2006 6:40:31 am PST #8747 of 10002
information libertarian

These are cool: [link]

Also, check out her lamps.