Thursday, December 27, 2007
Monday, November 26, 2007
Friday, November 23, 2007
Friday, November 2, 2007
Road Trip Review
More pictures can be found here
October 19: Trip began around 9:00pm, drove straight to Toledo, Ohio. At the border crossing which happened around midnight, the customs guy actually took a look into the cooler, but otherwise didn't bother us.
October 20: Mostly a driving day. They have Tim Horton's in Toledo, Ohio! Felt at home, except that our medium size drinks, were their small, and our large, their medium, and so on. Drove all the way to Knoxville, TN this day stopping at the US Air Force Museum in Dayton Ohio. Ate at P. F. Chang's.
October 21: Drove the tail of the dragon. Twice. And then David drove it, and then route 28, and then the blue ridge parkway scenic route up to the 6000+ ft high peak. The sun set there and we realized we were pretty far from our booked hotel on the Florida/Georgia Border. Solution: Speeding like crazy. I think I drove almost to Georgia, averaging 140 km/h. And while these were now interstate highways, they still wove through some fairly significant hills and mountains.
October 22: Drove from Georgia to Titusville, just outside the Kennedy Space Center. Went into the Kennedy Visitor Center, an almost theme-park sized facility.
October 23: Saw the shuttle launch in the morning, drove into Disneylando (disney + orlando). Got lost in disneylando (3 or 4 times I think). Walked around downtown disney, then went to eat at P F Chang's.
October 24: Went back to Kennedy Space Center to do the tour which we hadn't had time to do before. Drove up to St. Augustine.
October 25: Had breakfast/lunch at the Conch house, then rented a boat, then got my car stuck on the beach.
October 26: Went swimming in the Atlantic Ocean in the morning, then left St. Augustine and drove 1100 km to Richmond Va. Speeding 20 miles an hour over the limit in Virginia is actually a crime, which they can apparently drag you off to jail for or at least a fine of over $2000 and as I'd rather gotten used to speeding over 20 miles an hour, it really sucked.
October 27: Drove into Washington and walked the national mall. White House, Capitol, Memorials and so on. Drove back into Virginia to get a hotel near Dulles International Airport. Ate at PF Chang's.
October 28: Went to the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum at Dulles International Airport. Drove to Pittsburgh.
October 29: Drove to Buffalo. Just before crossing from Pennsylvania into New York, stopped to get Fireworks, which I had to sign a release form for. Had to show ID just to get into the building. Anyway then shopped for clothing at the Walden Galleria, then drove home to Toronto. Waved through customs, wait was only 10-15 minutes.
Saturday, October 27, 2007
Saturday, October 20, 2007
Road Trip - Day 1
Friday, October 12, 2007
Tuesday, October 9, 2007
Thursday, September 13, 2007
Friday, September 7, 2007
Presidential Candidate Series - John McCain
That he needs a miracle is actually a bit sad. His breadth of personal experience and strength of character is far and away above any of the other candidates. As a prisoner of war in Vietnam he was tortured brutally, (including having both his shoulders dislocated). Yet when his father became the Commander of American forces in the pacific, and McCain was given a chance at early release he refused, rather than face the dishonor of abandoning his fellow prisoners.
Yet knowing personally the complete depth of the horrors of war, his position on Iran is hawkish. I don't think any of the other candidates were as clear as McCain, when he sang "bomb, bomb, bomb, Iran."
Sunday, August 26, 2007
Understanding John McCain
http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200708u/kaplan-vietnam
Monday, August 13, 2007
Alligators Aren't Green
Saturday, August 4, 2007
Presidential Candidates
"I think you have totally and absolutely misinterpreted the law, because there's something deranged about you. The excessive concern that you have for ferrets is something you should examine with a therapist. Not with me. I'm not insulting you. I'm being honest with you. Maybe no one in your life has ever been honest with you. This conversation is over, David. Thank you. There is something really, really, very sad about you. You need help. You need somebody to help you. I know you feel insulted by that, but I'm being honest with you.
"This excessive concern with little weasels is a sickness. I'm sorry. That's my opinion. You don't have to accept it. There are probably very few people who would be as honest with you about that. But you should go consult a psychologist or a psychiatrist, and have him help you with this excessive concern, how you are devoting your life to weasels."
Tuesday, July 31, 2007
Flushing books down toilets. Crime or not?
Before me is a recent report that a student at Pace University in New York City has been arrested for a hate crime in consequence of an alleged dumping of the Quran. Nothing repels me more than the burning or desecration of books, and if, for example, this was a volume from a public or university library, I would hope that its mistreatment would constitute a misdemeanor at the very least. But if I choose to spit on a copy of the writings of Ayn Rand or Karl Marx or James Joyce, that is entirely my business. When I check into a hotel room and send my free and unsolicited copy of the Gideon Bible or the Book of Mormon spinning out of the window, I infringe no law, except perhaps the one concerning litter. Why do we not make this distinction in the case of the Quran? We do so simply out of fear, and because the fanatical believers in that particular holy book have proved time and again that they mean business when it comes to intimidation. Surely that should be to their discredit rather than their credit. Should not the “moderate” imams of On Faith have been asked in direct terms whether they are, or are not, negotiating with a gun on the table?The Pace University incident becomes even more ludicrous and sinister when it is recalled that Islamists are the current leaders in the global book-burning competition. After the rumor of a Quran down the toilet in Guantanamo was irresponsibly spread, a mob in Afghanistan burned down an ancient library that (as President Hamid Karzai pointed out dryly) contained several ancient copies of the same book. Not content with igniting copies of The Satanic Verses, Islamist lynch parties demanded the burning of its author as well. Many distinguished authors, Muslim and non-Muslim, are dead or in hiding because of the words they have put on pages concerning the unbelievable claims of Islam. And it is to appease such a spirit of persecution and intolerance that a student in New York City has been arrested for an expression, however vulgar, of an opinion.
This has to stop, and it has to stop right now. There can be no concession to sharia in the United States. When will we see someone detained, or even cautioned, for advocating the burning of books in the name of God? If the police are honestly interested in this sort of “hate crime,” I can help them identify those who spent much of last year uttering physical threats against the republication in this country of some Danish cartoons. In default of impartial prosecution, we have to insist that Muslims take their chance of being upset, just as we who do not subscribe to their arrogant certainties are revolted every day by the hideous behavior of the parties of God.
It is often said that resistance to jihadism only increases the recruitment to it. For all I know, this commonplace observation could be true. But, if so, it must cut both ways. How about reminding the Islamists that, by their mad policy in Kashmir and elsewhere, they have made deadly enemies of a billion Indian Hindus? Is there no danger that the massacre of Iraqi and Lebanese Christians, or the threatened murder of all Jews, will cause an equal and opposite response? Most important of all, what will be said and done by those of us who take no side in filthy religious wars? The enemies of intolerance cannot be tolerant, or neutral, without inviting their own suicide. And the advocates and apologists of bigotry and censorship and suicide-assassination cannot be permitted to take shelter any longer under the umbrella of a pluralism that they openly seek to destroy.
Sunday, July 22, 2007
The new Harry Potter Book Launch
Saturday, July 21, 2007
Friday, July 20, 2007
1997 Mazda Millenia S Review
The comfort of the car was also excellent. Good quality leather seats (if a bit worn by the time the car got to me), and the car did a decent job over rough pavement with its way too soft suspension.
Handling on the other hand was horrible. Go around a corner, and the car tilted like a boat. This was a sports sedan in name only. The brakes, while decent were not terrific for spirited driving. The suspension was tuned for comfort and was too squishy.
Reliability was atrocious. The car broke down routinely with the oddest problems, I especially remember the TCS light blinking, which put the transmission into safe mode, and the supercharger (probably) problems near the end, plus tons of other stuff.
Its a bad idea to own one of these cars with high kilometers. They all die when the supercharger seals weaken and leak oil into the engine. This will eventually kill your catalytic (making passing emissions difficult) then dirty your spark plugs etc, then of course the supercharger itself might die.
Wednesday, July 4, 2007
Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Global Climate Change.
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Saturday, June 9, 2007
Spooky Action at a Distance
Quantum cryptography, which could replace current cryptography, has distance limits, and is based on a property of quantum mechanics that Albert Einstein called "Spooky Action at a Distance".
New Record for Quantum Cryptography: Researchers take a big step toward their goal of spy-proof communications via satellites. Link
Thursday, June 7, 2007
LTC Doug Crissman arrests General Hamid in Iraq
Wednesday, June 6, 2007
Segregation or Apartheid?
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia — THE hem of my heavy Islamic cloak trailed over floors that glistened like ice. I walked faster, my eyes fixed on a familiar, green icon. I hadn't seen a Starbucks in months, but there it was, tucked into a corner of a fancy shopping mall in the Saudi capital. After all those bitter little cups of sludgy Arabic coffee, here at last was an improbable snippet of home — caffeinated, comforting, American.Read the rest here.
I wandered into the shop, filling my lungs with the rich wafts of coffee. The man behind the counter gave me a bemused look; his eyes flickered. I asked for a latte. He shrugged, the milk steamer whined, and he handed over the brimming paper cup. I turned my back on his uneasy face.
Crossing the cafe, I felt the hard stares of Saudi men. A few of them stopped talking as I walked by and watched me pass. Them, too, I ignored. Finally, coffee in hand, I sank into the sumptuous lap of an overstuffed armchair.
"Excuse me," hissed the voice in my ear. "You can't sit here." The man from the counter had appeared at my elbow. He was glaring.
"Excuse me?" I blinked a few times.
"Emmm," he drew his discomfort into a long syllable, his brows knitted. "You cannot stay here."
"What? Uh … why?"
Then he said it: "Men only."
He didn't tell me what I would learn later: Starbucks had another, unmarked door around back that led to a smaller espresso bar, and a handful of tables smothered by curtains. That was the "family" section. As a woman, that's where I belonged. I had no right to mix with male customers or sit in plain view of passing shoppers. Like the segregated South of a bygone United States, today's Saudi Arabia shunts half the population into separate, inferior and usually invisible spaces.
At that moment, there was only one thing to do. I stood up. From the depths of armchairs, men in their white robes and red-checked kaffiyehs stared impassively over their mugs. I felt blood rushing to my face. I dropped my eyes, and immediately wished I hadn't. Snatching up the skirts of my robe to keep from stumbling, I walked out of the store and into the clatter of the shopping mall.
Update: to read without registration use this link and follow the google news link to read the story.
Makes me wonder how politically correct or real the movie "The Kingdom" will be.
Sunday, June 3, 2007
All facts on this blog are correct
- does this information look true?
- do we care if it looks true?
- do we care enough to edit wikipedia to make it true?
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
Greg asked me why Handguns should be legal.
Sunday, May 27, 2007
Saturday, May 26, 2007
Friday, May 25, 2007
The Garden of Eden and Foreign Policy
Victim Politics and Foreign Policy
Unfortunately this analogy can be applied to how the West reacts to fighting in the non-Western world. Just substitute dogs for non-western people. For example each time Israel kills a Hamas operative and accidentally takes the life of a civilian, it draws massive media and human rights groups outrage. When Palestinian on Palestinian violence kills 200 in a single month, the same people and organization that routinely criticize Israel are largely silent. Thats just the most obvious example.
When Syria killed 20,000 of their own citizens, when Iran and Iraq spent 8 years at war with each other left somewhere around 500,000 dead, when North Korea killed 2,000,000 of their own people through a state-created famine, was Western outrage a 10th of what it is against Israel for its fighting with Arabs, or America for fighting in Iraq?
It might be understandable for Americans to be more concerned about what their country is involved in then what other countries are doing, but what excuse does Europe have? Do the lives of Arabs or North Koreans not matter when a westerner isn't doing the killing? Or do we expect such behavior from Non-Westerners? Or is it becuase the West is strong, that automatically makes any opponent a victim who its morally right to side with?
Blog transition...
Tuesday, May 8, 2007
Monday, May 7, 2007
Sunday, May 6, 2007
Day 1 of the trip! We left at 1:10 which is fantastically early for those involved. Even after taking a detour onto the 1000 Islands Parkway for a more Scenic route we arrived in Montreal just after 7:30. Passed two speed traps/police cars waiting at the side of the road without getting a ticket. David was driving as we were entering Montreal, and got us a little lost, but we found our hotel fairly quickly regardless.
1000 Islands Parkway had great views of the Saint Lawrence river, however the camera battery ran out before some of the best views came into site. It would probably also look a lot better once the trees have leaves. Dinner was at Reuben's, an upscale restaurant on Rue Ste-Catherine. Great Food, portions were huge, very filling. Our waitress recommended the Gogo Lounge Club.
Saturday, May 5, 2007
Fuel
Confusing my Friends
Again, sorry for any confusion!
A Montreal Thing To Do
link:
http://www.comedyworksmontreal.com/
http://www.thecomedynest.com/
Another Scenic Route
Links:
http://realtravel.com/ivy_lea_ontario-reviews-a2220620.html
http://www.ontournet.com/area_pages/area7.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thousand_Islands_Parkway
Sunday
Friday, May 4, 2007
Scenic Drive Detour
wiki on loyalist parkway
Sunday
May not find out until Saturday morning.
Thursday, May 3, 2007
CAA
Update: Have now been to CAA this morning, and picked up maps for Montreal and from here to there, and also a tourist type guidebook.
Best Irish Pub
Hurley's, 1225 rue Crescent (metro Lucien-L'allier or Guy-Concordia), ☎ 514-861-4111, [71]. Probably the best Irish pub in Montreal, with live traditional music every night and excellent food at fair prices. There's an upstairs as well for the busy nights, and a part of the pub is non-smoking, in addition to outdoor patios in the front and back. Very cozy with a highly authentic feel, and friendly professional staff... unless you ask them for a glass of water (because you're pregnant)
I'm definitely of two minds about going to French-Canada but then going to an Irish pub. On the other hand I can't say I'm a fan of French cuisine apart from poutine.
Bar Scene
Montreal has three main strips for bar-hopping. rue Crescent, in the western part of downtown, caters mostly to Anglophones and tourists. It tends to be trendy and expensive. Extremely busy when McGill and Concordia students are back in town for a new session. boulevard Saint-Laurent, especially between rue Sherbrooke and avenue des Pins, has trendy clubs and bars with more of a Francophone clientele. Farther up St-Laurent it's relatively downscale and linguistically mixed. rue St-Denis between Sherbrooke and de Maisonneuve is the strip with the strongest Francophone feel. There are also many good bars away from the main strips — you should never have to line up to go have a drink, because there's virtually unlimited choice.
Poutine
Maamm Bolduc!, 4351 de Lorimier, (514) 527-3884. Quebecois food include what just may be the best poutine in town, served in a dozen different varieties ranging from traditional to bourguignonne (with mince, mushrooms and red wine sauce). The portions are huge and the misnamed $7.50 petit is plenty for most ordinary mortals.
I'll have to find out.
Montreal Trip
La Banquise, 994 rue Rachel Est (metro Mont-Royal), ☎ 514-525-2415. Open 24 hours. La Banquise consistently tops locals' lists for best poutine in town (perhaps because it's open for post-bar-hopping munchfests when judgment is slightly impaired). The clientele is hip and clubworn, and the staff is friendly. Poutine makes up most of the menu, but if you insist there are hamburgers and other fast-food fare, as well as a bar. $6-10.