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Random Stupidity (Read 436736 times)
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #720 - Oct 24th, 2006 at 4:50pm
 
Here's something you don't see very often.  The entire Internet is going straight down the tubes today...

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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #721 - Oct 27th, 2006 at 10:10am
 
Quote:
Snoop Dogg arrested at SoCal airport

BURBANK, Calif. - Snoop Dogg was arrested on suspicion of illegal drug and gun possession, police said.

The rapper, whose real name is Calvin Broadus, was arrested at 3:45 p.m. Thursday at Bob Hope Airport, police said. Snoop Dogg posted $35,000 bail and was scheduled to appear in court Dec. 12.

Airport police officers stopped Snoop Dogg at a loading zone for a vehicle code violation. When officers searched the vehicle they found a gun and marijuana, police said.


Why does Snoop Dogg carry an umbrella? 

Fo' drizzle!

-b0b
(...hardy har har!)
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #722 - Oct 30th, 2006 at 9:37am
 
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #723 - Oct 31st, 2006 at 9:32am
 
I'm not posting the entire story because it's a boring article about basketball.

http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=aw-stern103006&prov=yhoo&type=lgns

However the article is about how this guy's making more rules for basketball.  And as a person who hates the game, and wanted a good rant, I found the article aggravating.

I played soccer for most of my life.  It's a contact sport but you had to do it with finesse or you got penalized.  So I thought it would be fun to play for a church basketball league.   Briney and Ironman can attest to this fact as they were on my team.  Every game but one or two, I got kicked out of...for penalties.  I didn't do this on purpose because I thought, hey this will be like playing ball with my friends at home, just with a few more enforced rules.  As my record shows, I was wrong.  This "sport" as some would call it has more rules than cricket, and no one understand cricket.  The object of the game, as I understood it was to but a ball in a basket more than your opponent and to stop your opponent from doing likewise by taking the ball away from them.  Well there were a lot of penalties to stop you from doing that.  For example, you couldn't reach around the person and try and swat the ball away.  You couldn't use your body to stop the person from moving forward w/o planting your feet.  You couldn't jump when they jumped to stop their shot if you fully extended their arm.  You couldn't jump into people as you're moving forward to make a basket, a hard concept seeing as there's this thing called inertia that's hard to get over.  And more and more.  4 penalties got you out...and I got out a lot.  This is the panziest sport I have ever played, and haven't since...in anything.  I find it hard to even try and cheer for the games on TV.  I don't understand the reaction of people who go "ooooo dangggg you see that?!" when someone makes a layup or what have you.  I don't understand how the pros get away with taking 35 steps to make a basket where there is such a thing as traveling (Michael Jordan did it all the time and never got called and when it is called it makes ESPN's Top Plays list).  These rules also bring down the WNBA, also the inability for women to dunk (which also makes ESPN's Top Plays list).

So this yahoo is trying to add even more rules.  This just pushes me further and further away from the sport.  Although I do find it funny that he's trying for more of a dress code on the court.  I see more b-ball players looking like Mr. T with all their jewelery they have on them.  I think some of the people in the stands get blinded from reflections of the lights off players diamond earrings.  And come on!  Those full face guards made out of plastic!!!???  What do those do besides make you look like a Hannibal Lecture reject?  Guess what?  It the ball hits you in the nose and you're wearing that...it's not going to do anything.

So to stop this tirade that is prob boring to the rest of you, my resolve is that basketball has too many rules and therefore is not a sport worth watching or playing.

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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #724 - Oct 31st, 2006 at 3:33pm
 
I agree completely about the rules, Stewie.  I played Basketball with a bunch of friends at a church lock-in down in Ohio last weekend, and I found myself hindered by all the arbitrary rules.  I realize basketball isn't a full-contact sport, but wow...  too many rules!

-b0b
(...had more fun playing HORSE.)
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #725 - Oct 31st, 2006 at 5:01pm
 
HORSE is the best use of a basketball there is.
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #726 - Nov 1st, 2006 at 9:47pm
 
http://www.automobilemag.com/multimedia/video/0610_lexus_ls460_auto_park/index.h...

The new richy-rich Lexus LS460 has an automatic parking feature that supposedly will park your car for you.  This quick video shows how well it doesn't work.

-b0b
("...dude, you hit that minivan.")
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #727 - Nov 3rd, 2006 at 3:36pm
 
Quote:
Explosions Reported At eBay PayPal Building In San Jose

(BCN) SAN JOSE San Jose firefighters are responding to reports of explosions from within a four-story building in San Jose that has also drawn responses from a bomb squad and a hazardous materials team.

The fire department responded to the building at 2211 North 1st St. at 7:31 p.m. after being contacted by the building's private alarm company that some windows were broken and several explosions may have occurred inside, according to San Jose Fire Department Capt. Jose Guerrero.

The firefighters report no obvious signs of fire, but it appears there is a haze coming from inside of the building and several windows have been blown out, Guerrero said.

Firefighters have ordered the evacuation of the building and members of the bomb squad and the hazardous materials team are going through the structure, according to Guerrero.


cbs5.com/local/local_story_305004735.html



Wow, it couldn't happen to a worse company...

-b0b
(...didn't do it.)
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #728 - Nov 5th, 2006 at 1:14am
 
Wow this stinks.

Quote:
Pensacola evangelist convicted of tax fraud

PENSACOLA, Florida (AP) — An evangelist who founded Pensacola's defunct Dinosaur Adventure Land theme park is behind bars.

Jurors convicted Kent Hovind on 58 counts of tax fraud last night. The founder of Creation Science Evangelism is accused of failing to pay $845,000 in employee taxes at the dinosaur theme park, an amusement park that exposed visitors to Hovind and his followers' view that human and dinosaurs coexisted and that evolution did not occur.

Hovind, who faces a maximum of 288 years in prison, was taken into custody after the jury read its verdict.

Hovind's wife, Jo Hovind, was convicted on 44 of the counts involving evading bank-reporting requirements. She faces up to 225 years in prison but was allowed to remain free pending the couple's sentencing. That is January ninth.


Thinks something fishy is going on.

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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #729 - Nov 5th, 2006 at 9:52am
 
I wonder what Hovind has to say about "structuring" his bank transactions to avoid reporting?

Personally, I think the $10,000 reporting limit is ludicrous.

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(...doesn't miss banking at all.)
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #730 - Nov 5th, 2006 at 10:48am
 
Ya know, I don't think anything fishy is going on Pat.

Hovind bent some rules that he knew were going to be risky (Right or not), and the people who didn't like him and his views made him pay for it.  He should have known it would happen sooner or later.
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #731 - Nov 5th, 2006 at 1:03pm
 
Well that's what I meant by fishy.  People who didn't like him or his views went after him.  It just seemed odd that he would get the attention of anyone, esp the IRS.  I wonder what types of weaponry they used to bring him in.  Also, I don't understand how that penalty, the 1,000 years in prison is at all a) legal b) justified.  That would mean he can kill about 100 people and still get the same sentence.

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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #732 - Nov 5th, 2006 at 4:07pm
 
The thing I found unusual was the speed of the trial.  He was just arrested a couple months ago, right?  Usually, tax trials drag out for months.

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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #733 - Nov 7th, 2006 at 9:33am
 
A hilarious tale from SomethingAwful.com...


Quote:
A buddy of mine used to do tech support for a school district in the Chicago area. Back in 2004 he was pulling a late night shift cleaning up after one of those nasty viruses that showed up in emails as playboy.scr and inevitably got passed around the office by dimwitted staffers. He was having a lot of trouble on a computer in an elementary school classroom so he created a hotmail account, installed MSN and started talking to me to kill time. When he finally finished up for the night and bid me adieu he forgot to uninstall MSN. Over the next few months I periodically noticed the MSN account he had created would come online during the day and then log off in the middle of the afternoon. I mentioned it to him and he said he must have just left it on there and he assured me he would get around to uninstalling MSN.

After a quiet summer in 2005, the account started coming back online just in time for the school year. I ignored it for a few months, but around September of 2005 it started messaging me. Once or twice a week I would receive the occasional "eat a butt" or "shitshitshitshit". One of my favorite head-scratchers was, "LANKIN BULLET 2 i said allready". I mentioned these messages to my friend even as they became increasingly cryptic, but he had moved on to greener employment pastures and any hope of uninstalling MSN on that elementary school computer had evaporated.

When it started again this August I resolved to put a stop to it the only way I knew how: become a nuisance to the school teacher until he or she got the new tech support guy to uninstall MSN. That meant somehow making the teacher think leaving MSN installed on the computer was a bad idea. I didn't really want to get arrested for exposing the kids to porno links or, god forbid, just ask them to uninstall it. I decided on the much more patriotic course of changing my MSN name to Sergeant Haymaker and posing as a particularly unethical recruiter for the United States Marine Corps.

In retrospect, that's probably illegal too, so I would like to apologize to the Marines. I specifically do not apologize to Marine Corps recruiters, who were absolutely annoying ****ers back when I was in high school and there wasn't even a war going on. I can only imagine what they're like these days. For everyone else, I hope you enjoy the prank.


Tekwarz: hello

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Oorah! How are you doing today?

Tekwarz: hi

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Have you considered the opportunities we can offer you in the United States Marine Corps?

Tekwarz: my name is caleb

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Caleb, let me ask you, have you ever wanted to see a 500 pound JDAM drop down a cave entrance and frag a pack of terrorist scum plotting to destroy America?

Tekwarz: i dono

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Caleb, could I talk to your teacher?

Tekwarz: miss barons

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Oorah. You got it, kid. Let me talk to her.

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Are you still there?

Tekwarz: One of my students said he was speaking with you.

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Hey yeah, my name is Staff Sergeant John J. Haymaker, United States Marine Corps oorah! wanted to ask a quick question or two.

Miss Barons: Alright.

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: When do you think I could come down and have these kids take some ASVABs?

Miss Barons: I'm sorry, what are those?

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery. It's a test that'll help them pick their MOS and serve the forces of democracy.

Miss Barons: Sir, this is a fourth grade class.

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: I think you're way underestimating your students' abilities and that's tragic.

Miss Barons: Sir, I appreciate your interest, but these kids are learning fourth grade level earth science.

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: I wasn't talking about getting them to join tomorrow, ma'am.

Miss Barons: Oh, excuse me, I misunderstood.

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: No problem, oorah. We test them now, offer them some career options, and let them finish out the school year. Then we give them their signing bonus, or in the case of these kids give it to their parents, and then ship them off to Parris Island for boot. Then it's on to the school specific to their MOS to learn how to take part in the War on Terror.

Miss Barons: You're talking about fourth graders. That's unreasonable!

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Between fourth and fifth, and no offense ma'am, but I think you're the one being unreasonable.

Miss Barons: How is that?

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Ma'am, I'm just trying to give these kids the opportunities they deserve in life. A chance to serve their nation and become a real Marine. Oorah!

Miss Barons: How could a fourth grader possibly become a real Marine?

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: There are so many ways, ma'am. This is part of the Early Advantages Program we just started last year. It has been a resounding success. I've got almost 95 signups that will be shipping out to their units in two to four weeks depending on their MOS.

Miss Barons: What job could they possibly do?

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Oh, anything under the sun, ma'am. You'd be surprised. Some things the little rascals are better at than regular Marines. They have trouble humping an 80 pound ruck uphill but in hand-to-hand they will put an e-tool right through a coccyx, oorah!

Miss Barons: They're fighting?!

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: One of those little guys scored an expert on rifle and went straight to sniper school. Little dude has a wagon he carries the gun around in, but he can head shot a terrorist from 900 yards over open sights.

Miss Barons: That is ridiculous.

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: I know it sounds like it, but America has a proud tradition of youth induction into the Armed Services. Did you know that during the Civil War both sides employed drummers and buglers as young as seven? We're not going that young. Right around ten.

Miss Barons: Ten?

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: That's the sweet spot. Very fast learners and at the same time they don't have to forget any garbage they might have picked up in civilian life. Drug abuse is almost a non-issue with them, just have to watch them around sweets or they'll be off the walls.

Miss Barons: I really don't know what to say. This is frankly disturbing to me.

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: I am really sorry to hear that, ma'am. All I ask is the opportunity to come talk to you and the class about the opportunities available in the Marines.

Miss Barons: I think some of the parents would have a real problem with that.

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Heck, invite them too! I have a pamphlet I can talk about how the EAP can provide tax incentives and credits to parents. Did you know that if you have two children ages 10 and 11 and you send both of them to the Marines you get almost 1500 apiece back on your next filing? Plus 50% combat bonus if their kid's unit is deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan.

Miss Barons: You're paying the parents?

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: We tried toys for the kids at first but the parents complained a lot in our test program. Once we switched over to giving the money directly to the parents they were happy to cooperate.

Miss Barons: Staff Sergeant, this all sounds inappropriate. I am going to say firmly no to you and ask you to please leave my students alone.

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Fair enough, but you're passing up on a sizable referral bonus.

Miss Barons: What?

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Yeah, if we get a kid to sign up the person who refers them, in this case you, gets a bonus equal to 25% of the signing bonus. So say, if I get a kid to sign up and send him to field artillery school then you get 350 dollars. Another one hundred if he speaks Arabic.

Miss Barons: This is disgusting and it's like selling these kids into slavery!

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Ma'am, I'm offended. Would slavery pay for them to go to college? Will it cover their braces when they turn 12? Would it provide three squares a day, free juice boxes and a fruit snack in the afternoon? The United States has a volunteer military and I would not even want a kid who is not 110% behind making the world a better place.

Miss Barons: I don't want you to ever contact my kids again.

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Caleb messaged me and he seemed very interested in joining the Marines. I think you just need to let them find their own way in the world. I bet Caleb would like to drive a big green tank all over and make it shoot its big gun at the bad guys. Why don't you ask him?

Miss Barons: He's a child, I'm not asking him that.

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Do you think that's what a terrorist teacher says when she straps a bomb to Al Calebbi? Do you think she underestimates her students so much that she thinks they can't walk into a checkpoint and blow themselves up trying to destroy freedom?

Miss Barons: I don't think what you're saying really happens.

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: It does too happen. I read a report about it. They're killing us with their children so it's time we kill them with ours.

Miss Barons: You're joking.

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: I'm more serious than a Hitler shirt. I am wake-up-next-to-a-dead-hooker serious. Oorah! If you don't believe in America and Freedom, and you don't believe in your kids, then I will park our big Hummer outside your classroom and put up a sign for free mini-Snickers. Then they'll come to me.

Miss Barons: I'll call the police.

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Go ahead. Marines beat police. It's like asking paper to throw scissors out of the parking lot.

Miss Barons: They'll throw you off school property. This is morally repugnant.

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Oorah. Well, you just take your high-and-mighty morals and your three-dollar words and you see how well they do against our interactive videogame kiosk. You've got, what, high ideals? We've got puffy American flag stickers and free bracelets. Do you really think your text book of science can hope to compete with our brochure about the Harrier? It's four-color glossy on 110 card stock. CARD STOCK! Oorah!

Miss Barons: Don't ever contact any kids in my classroom again.

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: As long as they message me with questions I am empowered by the President of the United States of America and God to answer them.

Miss Barons: We'll see about that.

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Yeah, right, what are you going to do? Uninstall MSN? Right, like a teacher could do that.

Staff Sergeant Haymaker: You're not trained for MOS 432224 Instant Messaging Technician, but I bet I could turn one of your kids into a dadgum expert. I will teach those little dudes to tear the throat out of a shark with their teeth. Oorah!

Miss Barons did not receive your message because they are no longer logged in to MSN
Staff Sergeant Haymaker: Oorah!



-b0b
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Re: Random Stupidity
Reply #734 - Nov 7th, 2006 at 12:12pm
 
Quote:
ourth Grader Suspended After Refusing to Answer Exam Question

By David Evans

Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) -- Tyler Stoken was a well-behaved fourth grader who enjoyed school, earned A's and B's and performed well on standardized tests.

In May 2005, he'd completed five of the six days of the Washington State Assessment of Student Learning exam, called WASL, part of the state's No Child Left Behind test.

Then Tyler came upon this question: ``While looking out the window one day at school, you notice the principal flying in the air. In several paragraphs, write a story telling what happens.''

The nine-year-old was afraid to answer the question about his principal, Olivia McCarthy. ``I didn't want to make fun of her,'' he says, explaining he was taught to write the first thing that entered his mind on the state writing test.

In this case, Tyler's initial thoughts would have been embarrassing and mean. So even after repeated requests by school personnel, and ultimately the principal herself, Tyler left the answer space blank. ``He didn't want them to know what he was thinking, that she was a witch on a broomstick,'' says Tyler's mother, Amanda Wolfe, sitting next to her son in the family's ranch home three blocks from Central Park Elementary School in Aberdeen, Washington.

Because Tyler didn't answer the question, McCarthy suspended him for five days. He recalls the principal reprimanding him by saying his test score could bring down the entire school's performance.

``Good job, bud, you've ruined it for everyone in the school, the teachers and the school,'' Tyler says McCarthy told him.

`He Cried'

Aberdeen School District Superintendent Martin Kay ordered an investigation. ``My suspension was for refusal to comply with a reasonable request, and to teach Tyler that that could harm him in the future,'' McCarthy told an investigator. ``I never, for a second, questioned my actions.''

Tyler, who's 4 feet (1.2 meters) tall and weighs 70 pounds (32 kilograms), hasn't been the same since, his mother says.

``He liked the principal before this,'' she says. ``He cried. He didn't understand why she'd done this to him.''

Now, Tyler blows up at the drop of a hat, his mother says. ``They created a monster. He'll never take that test again, even if I have to take him to another state,'' she says.

Tyler's attitude about school changed. He became shyer. He's afraid of all tests and doesn't do as well in classes anymore, his mother says.

`Blatant Defiance'

McCarthy's May 6, 2005, letter to Tyler's mother detailed her son's suspension. ``The fact that Tyler chose to simply refuse to work on the WASL after many reasonable requests is none other than blatant defiance and insubordination,'' McCarthy wrote.

In the letter, she accused Tyler of bringing down the average score of the other 10 students in his class. ``As we have worked so hard this year to improve our writing skills, this is a particularly egregious wound,'' McCarthy wrote.

Her accusation was wrong, state regulations show. There is no averaging of the writing scores. Each student either meets or fails the state standard.

Tita Mallory, director of curriculum and assessment for the Aberdeen School District, says school officials feel tremendous pressure because of the high-stakes tests.

While there's no academic effect on elementary school children taking the exams, there can be repercussions for school administrators. When schools repeatedly fail to show adequate yearly progress, as defined by No Child, the principal can be fired.

``In many ways, there's too much emphasis on the test,'' Mallory says. ``I don't want that kind of pressure on our kids.''

Out of 74,184 fourth graders taking the WASL test last year, 42.3 percent failed to meet the state standard for writing.

Juanita Doyon, director of Mothers Against WASL and author of, ``Not With Our Kids You Don't! Ten Strategies to Save Our Schools'' (Heinemann, 144 pages, $14.95), says Tyler's experience is representative of what's wrong with tests like the WASL.

``They took a student who loved his school and crushed his spirit,'' Doyon, 46, says.

``We've elevated test scores to be the most important part of school. The principal and teachers are so pressured by the test that they've lost good sense in dealing with children.''


Ok, now we all know I'm paranoid, I think with good cause but what insane person thinks they're not sane?  However I have a few problems with this story...not the story itself but what happened in it.

1)  What kind of test was this?!  Tell us how you feel.  Doesn't that sound to anyone else like it was a psychological test and not a regular one?  Are we going to mark kids down if they don't think of the proper imagery?  All I know was that the waste of the time MEAP, which has finally been done away with and will soon be replaced with another, wasn't like this.  At least with the MEAP the math teachers helped up cheat by saying "I really think you should go back over your answers".

2)  So when kids get an answer wrong we're going to SUSPEND them for doing so and make them cry?  Suspension seems rough, esp for 5 days of it!  The kid was even afraid to ask if it was ok to leave it blank from a teacher...what does that tell you about that school.  I weep for kids whose parents don't help them learn and expect the school to do it all by themselves.

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