27.May.2004 at 20:26 (+0000) by Robin S.
People who buy Hybrid vehicles for the wrong reasons annoy the heck out of me.
According to reports I’ve heard, it’s pretty much split down the middle between people who buy the cars for savings on improved gas mileage, and people who buy them for environmental concerns.
To group 1, I say buy a regular small car. The savings in the car’s price will give you enough money to pay the difference in gasoline prices for several years. To group 2, buy a bicycle.
Anyone not buying the Toyota Prius for valid reasons should immediately get off the waiting list, so that those of us who know the real reason that one should buy this vehicle can purchase it. (The real reason being, of course, an addiction to cool gadgets, which includes the nice touchscreen panel in the dash.)
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27.May.2004 at 20:16 (+0000) by Robin S.
In what may be a historic first, I actually agree with the British on this.
I’m not one of these people who constantly preaches that all mental illness is exaggerated, but I do believe that, especially in children, mental health professionals (and teachers and parents) are way too quick to deem that a child needs drugs.
For that matter, I tend to think that our entire society is a bit too quick to turn to drugs. When drug commercials don’t even tell you what the medication is for, things are bad. Some commercials simply show people having a good time, then a quick shot of the name of the drug, with a voice-over telling the viewer: “Ask your doctor if this drug is right for you.”
I see this in much the same vein as the Honor Roll story from a week or so ago. When we start diagnosing every quirk as a medical illness, and drug people so that it goes away, aren’t we taking away a lot of what makes people individuals? I know that all psychiatrists don’t jump straight to drug therapy, but in general, I think psychiatrists (or doctors in general, for that matter) are a lot like lawyers, in that 99% of psychiatrists (doctors) give the rest of them a bad name.
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25.May.2004 at 17:35 (+0000) by Robin S.
21.May.2004 at 22:57 (+0000) by Robin S.
Thanks to Alvaro for pointing this out. I’m doing my best to meet the UNofficial challenge, man. Even if I am a bit late. (I’ve not read anyone else’s blogs yet, just in case they’ve commented).
It might be that I’ve had a very frustrating week (Which is part of the reason I didn’t read it when he first pointed it out), but this has me seeing red. How much does anyone want to bet that not a single one of these schools is thinking of doing away with their athletics programs. Not one of them will refrain from singing the praises of someone who can run fast, or jump high, or tackle hard.
Here’s a newsflash for all of those out there who think that “Everyone is Equal” means “Everyone is the same.” We’re not the same. While we should be equal in the eyes of the Law, we’re all individuals. (“I’m not!”) As much as it irks the liberals, there are some people who are (*gasp*) smarter than others. Typically, we call those people Conservatives.
Seriously, though, does it really hurt one kid to see that another kid did well on a test? For all of the high ideals that say that we should keep competitiveness out of school, competition is a way of life. You compete for jobs. You compete for love. You compete for EVERYTHING. Some people are better than others at some things. It doesn’t make the “others” lesser people — they have their own strengths.
I half expect to hear that there are people lobbying to break the legs of those who’re more athetic than others, and find ways to cripple the minds of those who’re smarter. Our strength, after all, doesn’t come from letting each person find their own strengths, it comes from being completely mindnumbingly uniform.
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17.May.2004 at 18:22 (+0000) by Robin S.
There are a lot of serious things I want to write about, but I just don’t have time to do enough research to do them justice, so I’m just going to post this joke that I got in the mail today.
The Pope is visiting DC and President Bush takes him out for an afternoon on the Potomac… sailing on the presidential yacht, the Sequoia.
They’re admiring the sights when, all of a sudden, the Pope’s hat (zucchetto) blows off his head and out into the water.
Secret service guys start to launch a boat, but Bush waves them off, saying, “Wait, wait. I’ll take care of this. Don’t worry.”
Bush then steps off the yacht onto the surface of the water and walks out to the Holy Father’s little hat, bends over and picks it up, then walks back across the water to the yacht and climbs aboard. He hands the hat to the Pope amid stunned silence.
The next morning the topic of conversation among Democrats on the Hill, CBS News, NBC News, ABC News, the New York Times, Hollywood celebrities, and in France and Germany is:
“Bush Can’t Swim.”
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