Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Prop 19 (CA)

So Prop 19 (California Initiative to legalize marijuana) didn't pass.  Oh well, the Democrats have next election to catch on to something the youth care a lot about.

We could have easily seen a way to tax something society seems it can't do without.


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Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Autolux Live Review 9/17 - Glass House (CA)

So, the band Autolux has made it through town again and I had to check them out after this new release "Transit Transit".



The band has changed (not thinking for the better) in eclectic terms and maybe to some people this band didn't really seem to portray a mellow style as much as they do now. The new release's songs are a very diverse set of styles (although it was mixed well to not suggest this), which is very mellow and electronic. Is this what we were hoping from a band that has a great driving rock sound? Not at all and this is what you would need to expect when you go out to see them live.

Overall we give this live set (9/17/10 in Pomona) a 7 out of 10, the show was good but we hope to see Autolux release a new album that truly rocks soon!


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Saturday, September 4, 2010

The Obama "Presidential Review"

So, it's been just over a year now and it is time for a review Mr. Obama.

We appreciate your efforts in the most trying times (since the Great Depression) this country has seen. To follow a person who created (Bush Jr.) a lot of problems (had some of the worst Presidential ratings in U.S. history) for the Middle Class is asking for some major changes, and not just ending the shady "tax cuts" for the rich.

Each area is graded between a score of 1-10.

1) International Ties- (Points 6) The big question that many had was how the U.S. would leave Iraq and how soon. Well, obviously you can't please all the people all the time. We have barely begun to leave Iraq, but we have increased the troop count in Afghanistan (not good if the economy is supposed to get any better). So we still have the major problem of a continued economic burden going abroad to the Middle East. NOTE: Of course if you don't give a lot of attention to a very aggressive country like Israel you will get your economy going by staying out of a war with Iran. Good job on this one Mr. Obama (maybe this is the reason he won the Nobel Peace Prize).

2) Economy- (Points 5) This economy has seen a lot of the same (although we saw a historic bailout for the U.S. banks). We have a public sector that has not grown enough to inspire the private sector yet. Yes, we need to leave the Middle East completely during this dark time. As we all know, wars will kill any hope of a growing economy.

3) Domestic Emergencies- (Points 7) Responding promptly is key to an emergency and no one can score brownie points without showing up to the scene fast. So We have to give Obama a 7 in the department of the BP Oil Spill.

4) U.S. Social Issues- (Points 9) This topic is one that needs to be taking into account the cultural times we live in and at this point, Obama has lived up to his expectations with his tone on Gay Marriage and Stem Cell Research.

5) Bonus Points- (5) Heck, none of us that put this review together have been alive to witness a President win the Nobel Peace Prize while they were still in office.


FINAL GRADE- 80%

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Saturday, August 28, 2010

LaRussa Now Against The MLB Mainstream...

by Dan Fogarty |

Tony LaRussa said he supports the Tea Party and the controversial Arizona Immigration Law yesterday.

LaRussa was asked about the law during a local St. Louis TV station’s report on Tea Party demonstrators at the Cardinals game. The Tea Partiers were there because the Arizona Diamondbacks were in town, and Tea Party members wanted to “show their support for the state of Arizona.”

While all of the other members of the Cardinals refused to comment on the immigration law, LaRussa came out in support of it.

“This is America, right? You’re supposed to have opinions…I’m actually in support of what Arizona is doing,” he said. “The national government doesn’t fix your problem then you’ve got to fix it yourself.”

Baseball is a sport that relies heavily on Hispanic players, and on the whole, MLB players and teams have opposed to the law. Some have even called for a boycott of the 2011 All-Star Game, which is scheduled to be in Arizona.

While the Cardinals have a lot of white guys on their team, their best player (who also happens to be the best player in baseball) is Hispanic. Albert Pujols doesn’t strike me as the type to come out in opposition to his coach, but it makes you wonder how LaRussa’s comments could affect their relationship behind closed doors.

Courtesy of SportsGrid-

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Sunday, July 25, 2010

"9500 Liberty" - New Documentary On A Similar Anti Immigration Law Gone Wrong In Virginia

9500 Liberty

A documentary on how a similar Anti Immigration law (later repealed) in Virginia increased crime and hurt an economy has been been attracting (who may had been convinced otherwise) people to the theater (now that Arizona is being sued by the U.S. government for wrongfully trying to pass another anti immigration law).  Xenophobia may be the main reason for this law,  aside from being political move by the Republicans (due to new worries of the upcoming elections).


Remaining Screenings for "9500 Liberty"-


Phoenix, AZ
Tuesday, July 27 at 7pm
Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Phoenix
4027 East Lincoln Drive
Phoenix, AZ 85253
Directors Annabel Park & Eric Byler with Sam Coppersmith (former Member of Congress, 1st District, Arizona) to join panel discussion following screening.
Dallas, TX
Wednesday, July 28 at 7:30pm
Asian American Film Festival of Dallas
Angelika Film Center Dallas
5321 East Mockingbird Lane
Suite 230
Dallas, Texas 75206
214-841-4713
Director Eric Byler, panel discussion w/ Dallas/Fort Worth Greater Hispanic Chamber.
Fort Worth, TX
Thursday July 29 at 6:30pm
Special Screening and Panel Discussion Hosted by Texas State Rep. Lon Burnam
Rose Marine Theater
1440 N. Main St.
Fort Worth, TX 76106
(817) 624-8333
Director Eric Byler in person.
Dallas, TX
Friday, July 30
Angelika Film Center
Show Times TBA
5321 E. Mockingbird Lane, #230
Dallas, TX 75206
(214) 826-3300
Director Eric Byler in person Opening Night, July 30.
Green Valley, AZ
Sunday, August 1 at 1pm
Green Valley Library
601 N. La Canada Dr.
Green Valley, AZ 85614
(520) 594-5295
Director Eric Byler in person for Q&A.
Atlanta, GA GEORGIA THEATRICAL PREMIERE!
Friday, August 13
Plaza Atlanta
Show Times TBA
1049 Ponce De Leon Avenue
Atlanta, GA 30306
(404) 873-1939
Boston, MA
Friday, September 10
The Coolidge Corner Theatre 
Show Times TBA
290 Harvard Street
Brookline, MA 02446
(617) 734-2500
Q&A with Producer Chris Rigopulos on Fri. 9/10 and Sat. 9/11.
Pleasantville, NY
Tuesday, September 28
Jacob Burns Film Center
Show Times TBA
364 Manville Road
Pleasantville, NY 10570
(914) 747-5555

Screenings are being planned for Los Angeles, CA • San Diego, CA • more to be added soon.



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Saturday, July 24, 2010

Better Days Ahead- Obama

U.S.A...  Keep on moving/looking forward, look he extended your employment benefits (unless you have other reasons to not qualify), we have see our economy grow the most since (2007) before he was elected and finally we can see the richest 4% take a break on where the middle class was feeling the strain.

Here is the article of Obama's push for the Democratic assistance to the hurt the Middle East Wars have created:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_democrats_liberals

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Tuesday, July 13, 2010

FYF Fest- The Rapture/!!!/Panda Bear 9/4/10


fyffest2010flyerI’m not sure whether it’s more a 2003 dance-punk blowout, a tribute to influential 1990s artists or a nod to hipster flavors of the minute, but the lineup for this year’s FYF Fest was announced today.
The one-day affair, Saturday, Sept. 4, at Los Angeles State Historic Park downtown, features dance-music faves the Rapture and!!!, ’90s stoner-rock kings Sleep, punk veterans Unbroken and 7Seconds, and a host of emerging locals who are making their mark — Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti,Warpaintthe Soft PackAbe Vigodathe Growlers and Best Coast.
Even with the memory of last year’s sweltering, glitchy FYF Fest fresh, there’s a lot to recommend (and, of course, some things to avoid) — especially for the ticket price. Early-bird tickets are currently going for $20 on Ticketweb (VIP tickets are $65). Once the early tickets are gone, tickets go up to $25. [click to continue…]

Courtesy of Buzzbands.la
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Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Chuck D (Public Enemy) Lashed Out On AZ Governor & Tells Billboard, "The governor is a Hitler"!

Public Enemy's Chuck D Lashes Out at State of Arizona With New Song "TEAR DOWN THAT WALL".
Chuck D told Billboard, "The governor is a Hitler"
Chuck D and the state of Arizona just don't mix. As Billboard points out, "Tear Down That Wall" is a new track by the Public Enemy MC in which he harshly criticizes the state's new controversial immigration laws, likening them to "Gestapo border control."
HEAR IT HERE:

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Monday, May 31, 2010

Where In The Hell Is There A Benefit For The BP Oil Spill?!

So where in the hell is any benefit for the BP oil spill being arranged?  This spill has been going on since April.  There is no end in sight (at least after July) for this oil spill.  We have googled if any benefit has been organized and (let us know if you know of one) have not come across any.


We will continue to ask this question and will work on arranging one ourselves if we need to.


Zine Scene Blog
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Saturday, May 29, 2010

Immigration rallies drawing crowds to Phoenix AZ today

Immigration rallies drawing crowds to Phoenix


We hope you will show your support against the Arizona law (about to begin in July) that seeks to alienate American born Mexican Americans.


For more information go here: http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2010-05-29-immigration-rally-phoenix_N.htm
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Friday, May 14, 2010

Los Angeles City Council Boycotts Arizona!

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The Los Angeles city council has asked all municipal employees to boycott Arizona -- and that's the last thing the hard-hit border state needs.



The Los Angeles city council voted 13-1 on Wednesday to boycott the state of Arizona, in protest of the state's controversial new immigration law. This could mean a loss of up to $56 million worth of business that the city conducts with Arizona each year, according to Gerry Miller, chief legislative analyst of Los Angeles.


This boycott includes suspending all travel to Arizona by municipal employees, as well as $7.7 million worth of city contracts with Arizona-based companies, such as Taser International (TASR).  "It's not going to cripple the economy, but when your economy is weak, you don't want to be losing any contracts," said Jim Rounds, senior economist with Elliot D. Pollack & Co., a real estate and economic consulting firm based in Scottsdale, Ariz.


He said that in reality the city council's boycott will probably only deny Arizona about $10 million worth of business. But he said that this, combined with an existing boycott on Arizona tourism, is an extra strain on a state that has already lost 10% of its jobs since the beginning of the recession.


"This thing is coming at a time when we're already struggling," said Rounds.


Arizona lost 82,200 jobs over the course of the year ending in March, according to the most recent figures from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. It's also the second-worst state for foreclosures; more than 163,000 properties there received foreclosure filings in 2009, according to RealtyTrac.


Gov. Janice Brewer of Arizona, who signed the immigration bill into law on April 23, called the boycott "thoughtless and harmful." "An economic boycott against innocent people just adds to the massive economic burden Arizonans have sustained for years due to the federal government's failure to secure our borders," she said. "One example alone -- the unreimbursed costs paid by Arizona taxpayers to incarcerate convicted criminal aliens -- has cost Arizona taxpayers over $750 million just since 2003."


Paul Senseman, a spokesman for the governor, said the practicality of the boycott is "questionable," since the Constitution "specifically prohibits economic blockades by a state or city against another."


The Arizona legislation requires law enforcement agents to "determine the immigration status" of anyone under "reasonable suspicion" of being an illegal alien. In other words, the law provides state police with the power and responsibility that is normally accorded only to federal immigration authorities.


The Los Angeles city council said that the bill, which goes into effect in July, will "promote racial profiling, discrimination and harassment." The cities of San Francisco and Oakland, Calif. are also boycotting Arizona.


The bill's proponents are concerned about the increasing lawlessness of the border region, where a rancher was murdered in March. Rounds said that Arizona is being unfairly punished for trying to pick up the slack for the federal government, which hasn't done enough to deal with illegal immigration.


"I'm in support that border states need to do something, [though] it's unclear if the specific language in this bill was the best way of doing it," said Pollack economist Rounds. "Whether you're opposed to it or in favor of it, there's no denying that there's going to be economic consequences for Arizona in the next year." 


Courtesy of MoneyCNN.com


www.money.cnn.com Article on the AZ boycott

We support the work San Francisco, Oakland and Los Angeles have done to boycott doing business with Arizona.  San Diego and Sacramento where are you?

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Saturday, May 1, 2010

You can now purchase T Shirts for "NO on SB 1070", Arizona's new illegal immigration law...

Go here to purchase your 'No On Arizona's SB 1070!' TShirts... Starting at $22.99


Go here: http://www.cafepress.com/ZineSceneBlog
BOYCOTT AZ!!!
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Thursday, April 29, 2010

Boycott the 'LA Weekly'! And Anyone Else Poking Fun At The Hispanic Musicians Touring Arizona!


Boycott the LA Weekly! And Anyone Else Poking Fun At The Hispanic Musicians Touring Arizona!


The LA Weekly has decided to write an article placing racial humor at the expense of (hispanics) the impending 'Illegal Immigration' law in Arizona... Are we dreaming?!

Should the ('LA Weekly' magazine) youth-reading culture (Although LA is a heavily Mexican populated region of the U.S.) be apart of this humor during these sensitive times?  See the article here (hmm, it seems their link is even proving their racist views by leaving out a 't' on the last word- arizona-'racist':
http://blogs.laweekly.com/westcoastsound/b-side-stories/musicians-papers-arizona-racis/


Also- When we brought the up our discontent with article and as not actually being very funny (considering it being race sensitive) they forwarded this article (Costa Mesa mesa placing an anti immigrant crackdown) on twitter.  Thus, pouring 'salt on the wound'?!:
http://blogs.laweekly.com/ladaily/community/costa-mesa-immigrant-crackdown/

Shame on you and your racist sentiment LA Weekly, we are openly boycotting you now too.






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Inspirational Tweets-


By: ThaLegacy
"To those who hate. Hate is only a form love that hasn’t found a way to express itself logically." - Lil Wayne...genius


Email us here if you'd like to share an inspirational tweet: ZineSceneBlog[at]gmail...

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Wednesday, April 28, 2010

San Francisco Leads Charge to Boycott Arizona- Leave AZ! (Zine Scene Supports The AZ. Boycott!!!)


San Francisco Leads Charge to Boycott Arizona, But Calls Could Spark Backlash

FOXNews.com

Sanctuary city San Francisco is leading the charge in pressing municipalities and groups to consider a boycott of Arizona over its law that will allow police to ask people their immigration status.

Mayor Gavin Newsom this week suspended all non-essential travel for city employees going to Arizona, meaning no conference in Scottsdale next weekend for members of the city's housing authorities. The city's Board of Supervisors also has taken the first step toward an economic boycott, a move that could result in the suspension of existing contracts with Arizona-based companies and a ban on new ones.

But Newsom also has formed an "Arizona Boycott Workgroup” to analyze if and how an economic boycott could backfire on San Francisco businesses. For instance, the city does business with a company that accepts and processes payments in Arizona. There's concern if the boycott is made uniform, 2,500 San Franciscans could lose their jobs.

Groups like the San Francisco Convention Bureau and the city's restaurant lobby also worry about a reciprocal backlash.

"Would Arizona and other states that are more conservative than San Francisco retaliate and stop sending conventions to San Francisco?" asked Kevin Westly of the Golden Gate Restaurant Association. "Certainly in a recession, we don't want any retaliation."


Boycott talk is moving beyond San Francisco to other cities, like Los Angeles, where City Councilwoman Janice Hahn, who is running against Newsom for the California lieutenant governor's seat, is organizing against Arizona.

And California State Senate President Darrell Steinberg is suggesting the state end contracts until the Arizona law is repealed. But California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has expressed concern about the impact of a boycott, which would affect one of the state's biggest contracts -- a deal with a private firm that houses thousands of California inmates in Arizona. The deal is worth millions of dollars, and Schwarzenegger is looking to expand it.

Boycott supporters also seek to encourage major sports organizations, like the NBA and NFL, to move their games out of Arizona.  Arizona-Boycott.org has launched online targeting prominent companies like GoDaddy, PetSmart and U-Haul, all based out of Arizona. The group is also organizing rallies around the country against the Arizona law.

Opponents of the legislation say Arizona has put itself in this position because it wants to go back to the era of slavery.

"We cannot go back to the slave trade, slave patrol era, where ... free men or African Americans that were free were arrested, put in jail and then sent back to the plantations," said Juan Carlos Ruiz, advocacy director of the Latino Federation of Greater Washington.

But Arizonans – even those opposed to the legislation, like Phoenix Mayor Phil Gordon – say a boycott is not in anyone’s interest. The Arizona Hotel and Lobbying Association launched a Facebook site noting that Arizona's tourism industry had nothing to do with enacting the law and is experiencing a fragile recovery that could be devastated by a boycott.

"The Tourism Industry was not part of the development of this legislation, but unfortunately is certain to experience the unintended consequences of the economic backlash," reads a talking points paper produced by the association. "Instead of driving our state’s economy even further into decline and punishing the 200,000 families who rely on tourism for their livelihoods, we proudly ask all Arizonans’ to support the diverse and global workforce that comprises the Tourism Industry and to invite friends, family, associations and businesses to visit and experience Arizona firsthand."

It won the backing of the American Hotel and Lodging Association, which reportedly will not cancel its June meeting in Scottsdale, although the Conference of Immigration Lawyers did cancel its August meeting in Scottsdale.

Arizona state Sen. Ron Gould, a Republican, said he doesn't think a boycott will have any effect.

"You're already seeing the governor of California rethink his position because it's beneficial to the taxpayers of California to do business with Arizona," he told Fox News.

Proponents on both sides of the issue acknowledge that Arizona was hurt by a boycott in the 1980s when the state declined to honor the Martin Luther King Holiday. It lost the Super Bowl at that time.

The issue was resolved when voters went to the ballot to weigh in on the decision. Opponents of the law may not like that option, however, since 70 percent of Arizonans support the legislation, polls show.


Couresty of Fox News' Claudia Cowan


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Friday, March 26, 2010

4/5/10 Benefits ending, but one Republican isn't extending employment benefits- KICK THEM WHILE THEY'RE DOWN!

By ANDREW TAYLOR, Associated Press Writer Andrew Taylor, Associated Press Writer – Thu Mar 25, 6:58 pm ET

WASHINGTON – Once again, a stubborn Senate Republican is blocking speedy passage of a stopgap bill to extend jobless benefits, saying its $9 billion cost should not be added to the national debt.

This time it's Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., who's insisting that the measure be "paid for" so as not to add to the nation's $12.7 trillion debt.

"What we are doing is stealing future opportunity from our children," Coburn said Thursday.

The clash comes less than a month after Republicans abandoned a similar battle that led to an interruption in unemployment benefits eligibility for some people and a two-day furlough for about 2,000 Transportation Department employees.

A stopgap law enacted early this month extends though April 5 unemployment insurance for people who have been out of a job for more than six months, provides health insurance subsidies for the jobless and protects doctors from a sharp cut in Medicare payments.

But another short-term extension of the jobless benefits is needed while House and Senate Democrats work through negotiations on a long-term measure that would provide them through the end of the year. Those talks have slowed, prompting Democrats to move to extend benefits for an additional month.

Last month, Sen. Jim Bunning, R-Ky., blocked a similar extension of jobless benefits, but Republicans ended up on the losing end of a public relations battle and Bunning backed away.

Unlike the prior battle, this time there's no immediate danger of jobless people becoming ineligible for benefits. The unemployment benefits don't expire until April 5, leaving time to work through the problem. But lawmakers are also antsy to go home for a two-week spring recess.

The House passed the stopgap bill last week by a voice vote.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky tried to move to legislation to extend the jobless benefits and other provisions, but the move was immediately quashed by Democrats. Democratic leaders say that jobless benefits are an emergency and don't need to conform to the new pay-as-you-go budget law, which requires new benefit programs to be offset with spending cuts or tax increases so they don't increase the deficit.

"We really believe that the unemployment situation is an emergency economic situation. Republicans do not accept that," said Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., the majority whip. "They want to cut off unemployment benefits or pay for it with stimulus funds that are creating jobs."

"I understand that Republicans are upset they didn't get their way on health care," said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev. "But Republicans should not take out their anger on the least fortunate, which is exactly what they are doing. They should not kick the unemployed while they're down."



(This version CORRECTS that unemployment benefits expire on April 5, not March 31.)

Courtesy of Yahoo.com & Andrew Taylor, Associated Press Writer


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Sunday, February 21, 2010

ChatRoulette- The Future Of The Internet Is Here


The Human Shuffle

Is ChatRoulette the future of the Internet or its distant past?

The first time I entered ChatRoulette—a new website that brings you face-to-face, via webcam, with an endless stream of random strangers all over the world—I was primed for a full-on Walt Whitman experience: an ecstatic surrender to the miraculous variety and abundance of humankind. The site was only a few months old, but its population was beginning to explode in a way that suggested serious viral potential: 300 users in December had grown to 10,000 by the beginning of February. Although big media outlets had yet to cover it, smallish blogs were full of huzzahs. The blog Asylum called ChatRoulette its favorite site since YouTube; another, The Frisky, called it “the Holy Grail of all Internet fun.” Everyone seemed to agree that it was intensely addictive—one of those gloriously simple ideas that manages to harness the crazy power of the Internet in a potentially revolutionary way.
The site activates your webcam automatically; when you click “start” you’re suddenly staring at another human on your screen and they’re staring back at you, at which point you can either choose to chat (via text or voice) or just click “next,” instantly calling up someone else. The result is surreal on many levels. Early ChatRoulette users traded anecdotes on comment boards with the eerie intensity of shipwreck survivors, both excited and freaked out by what they’d seen. There was a man who wore a deer head and opened every conversation with “What up DOE!?” A guy from Sweden was reportedly speed-drawing strangers’ portraits. Someone with a guitar was improvising songs for anyone who’d give him a topic. One man popped up on people’s screens in the act of fornicating with a head of lettuce. Others dressed like ninjas, tried to persuade women to expose themselves, and played spontaneous transcontinental games of Connect Four. Occasionally, people even made nonvirtual connections: One punk-music blogger met a group of people from Michigan who ended up driving eleven hours to crash at his house for a concert in New York. And then, of course, fairly often, there was this kind of thing: “I saw some hot chicks then all of a sudden there was a man with a glass in his butthole.” I sing the body electronic.
I entered the fray on a bright Wednesday afternoon, with an open mind and an eager soul, ready to sound my barbaric yawp through the webcams of the world. I left absolutely crushed. It turns out that ChatRoulette, in practice, is brutal. The first eighteen people who saw me disconnected immediately. They appeared, one by one, in a box at the top of my screen—a young Asian man, a high-school-age girl, a guy lying on his side in bed—and, every time, I’d feel a little flare of excitement. Every time, they’d leave without saying a word. Sometimes I could even watch them reach down, in horrifying real-time, and click “next.” It was devastating. My first even semi-successful interaction was with a guy with a blanket draped over his lap who asked if I wanted to “jack of” with him. I declined; he disconnected. Over the course of an hour, I was rejected by what felt like a cast of thousands: a teenage girl talking on her cell phone, a close-up of an eyeball. It started to feel like a social-anxiety nightmare. One guy just stared into the camera and flipped me off. Another stood in front of his computer making wave motions with his hands, refusing to respond to anything I typed. One person had the courtesy to give me, before disconnecting, a little advice: “too old.” (I’m 32.) A girl with heavy makeup looked terrified when my image popped up on her screen—I actually felt guilty, a few rounds later, when the engine of randomness threw us back together and she had to look at my face for another excruciating half-second. My longest exchange was with a guy who seemed to be wearing one of those protective cones you put on a dog after surgery. “LICK YOU ELBOW,” he typed. “Why?” I asked. He disconnected.
I got off the ChatRoulette wheel determined never to get back on. I hadn’t felt this socially trampled since I was an overweight 12-year-old struggling to get through recess without having my shoes mocked. It was total e-visceration. If this was the future of the Internet, then the future of the Internet obviously didn’t include me.
Although ChatRoulette feels radically new, it’s built entirely out of recycled parts—it's just a potent combination of programs we’ve all been familiar with for years. Web chat has been around since the beginning of the Internet. Skype made the Star Trek–like experience of instant synchronized video communication an everyday reality back in 2003. But these experiences were almost always curated: The point was to chat and Skype with co-workers and friends, or at least with strangers who shared your interests. The internet has always been defined by (and drawn much of its energy from) the tension between chaos and control—and over the last ten years, web culture has skewed heavily toward control. Our most popular new online tools—Google, Facebook, Tumblr, Twitter, Digg—were designed to help us tame the web’s wildness, to tag its outer limits and set up user-friendly taxonomies. ChatRoulette is, in this sense, a blast from the Internet past. It’s the anti-Facebook, pure social-media shuffle. It arrived quietly last November, with no fanfare. (Given the nakedness of the ChatRoulette-user experience, it’s interesting that the site’s founder is unknown; web searches lead back to a Netherlands-based anonymity service.) Once you dive in, there’s no way to manage the experience—to filter users, search for friends, or backtrack and reconnect with someone you chatted with an hour ago. There’s only the perpetual forward motion of “next.” It’s the Wild West: a stupid, profound, thrilling, disgusting, totally lawless boom. If ChatRoulette catches on, it might even swing our collective online pendulum back toward chaos.


Read more: Is ChatRoulette the Future of the Internet or Its Distant Past? -- New York Magazine http://nymag.com/news/media/63663/#ixzz0gCym4azT


Courtesy of NYMAG.COM and Sam Anderson.

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Thursday, February 18, 2010

Republicans are not denying they are evil- the "Tea Party" is now "Hanging" people?


So, let's imagine a Democrat saying something as evil (context here is not even relevant) as "hanging" a Republican.  Article courtesy of Yahoo.com

Tea party planner says she made 'hanging' remarks


SPOKANE, Wash. – An organizer of a weekend "tea party" gathering in eastern Washington said Thursday she was the speaker who drew applause from the crowd by calling for one of the state's Democratic U.S. senators to be hanged.
But Dianne Capps of Clarkston said her remark about Sen. Patty Murray was taken out of context, and what she meant was that Murray should be voted out of office in November.
"Nobody had a rope to hang Patty Murray," she said.
Capps' comment Saturday at the Lewis & Clark Tea Party Patriots meeting at the county fairgrounds in Asotin, Wash., were captured by television station KLEW of Lewiston, Idaho. While speaking to the crowd from the podium, Capps said Murray should suffer the same fate as the character Jake in the western "Lonesome Dove."
"What happened to Jake when he ran with the wrong crowd?" Capps asked. "He got hung. And that's what I want to do with Patty Murray."
The crowd erupted in laughter. Organizers estimated about 500 people attended the event.
Capps, who initially denied to The Associated Press that she was the speaker, said Thursday night that the rest of the statement was that she wanted to "hang Patty Murray, by vote."
She contended the television news report edited out part of her statement. But KLEW news director Greg Meyer told The Lewiston Tribune newspaper that the unedited footage from the rally contains no statement from Capps about hanging Murray with votes.
Earlier Thursday, Murray's campaign manager said the comments were unproductive.
Carol Albert said Murray shares the frustrations of many people at the slow pace of the economy and partisan gridlock in Washington, D.C.
"But positions like that taken by the Tea Party spokesperson have never solved a problem," Albert said in a statement. "What people want right now is for people to come together to find solutions, not more rhetoric that drives us apart."
Murray, a liberal senator from the Seattle area, is seeking a fourth term. Among the Republicans who have announced plans to challenge her are two small-government conservatives: Clint Didier, an eastern Washington farmer who formerly played football for the Washington Redskins, and state Sen. Don Benton ofVancouver.
Didier has participated at previous tea party events, but it was unclear if he attended Saturday's gathering. His spokesman did not immediately return a call seeking comment.
The meeting also featured signs that read "Geld Obama" and "B.O. Stinks."
The tea party movement has brought together a broad coalition of retirees, stay-at-home moms, small-business owners, corporate executives and others who are frustrated about the direction of the nation and want to take back control.
The coalition is decidedly conservative and libertarian, and has spoken out harshly against President Barack Obama and the Democratic-controlled Congress. They have also been critical of Republicans.
Asotin sits near the Idaho border and is about 100 miles south of Spokane.
___
On the Web:
The video can be seen at http://www.klewtv.com


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