do these people realize how they sound?

Jane Galt Seems Displeased With Advocates Of Redistribution:

Beauty, like wealth, is relative–it benefits its possessor only insofar as they are lovelier than the women, or handsomer than the men, around them. Presumably, if we disfigured all the good looking actors in Hollywood, and the models in New York, and . . . well, heck, let’s slash the faces of everyone who’s better looking than I am. I am younger and slimmer than the average American, and have good teeth, long thick hair, and all the other accoutrements of an upper-middle-class upbringing. So we know that this would bring happiness to far more Americans than it would distress. We don’t have to turn them into quasimodo–just make them no more good looking than I am. Just think how happy America could be made if Cindy Crawford had saddlebags and a squint.

Wonder if she has ever read Harrison Bergeron? And does she realize how much she sounds like this twit?

one more reason why we don’t eat meat

picking some shit up for lunch:

with Uncle Procrustes

As you may recall, I’ve occasionally ranted about Republican willingness to allow Americans to eat feces tainted meat in order to save their corporate johns a few bucks. The problem, besides the yuck factor, is that this tolerance also means we’re eating live listeria bacteria; which can (and occasionally do) kill us. It’s not like banning fecal listeria from food won’t work; the EU allows 0 live listeria per test sample, and it works fine for them. The Republicans simply refuse to do it; so we allow up to 4 live bacteria per sample. It’s a filthy business. But now it’s changed a bit…

The FDA, we hear, has finally decided to deal with Listeria. Will they roll back the meat handling rules to pre-Reagan days? Replace all the fired meat inspectors? Uniformly enforce food safety rules? In fine, re-ban raw feces in cold cuts? Not exactly. Our Republican brethren in the FDA have just authorized the spraying of live viruses onto cured meat products, in order to kill some of the live bacteria that same FDA tolerates on said meat products. Now leaving aside any other consideration, what kind of idiot would trust a political party, which tolerates live fecal bacteria in the U.S. meat supply, with ensuring the purity of this viral treatment?

You might like to keep in mind that only a small percentage of food is ever tested, and that the plants are warned ahead of time.

And what does listeria cause?

fever, chills, and other flu-like symptoms; headache; nausea; vomiting; diarrhea; infections of the blood (septicemia); inflammation of the brain (encephalitis) or membranes of the brain or spinal cord (meningitis); spontaneous abortion or stillbirth

and how bad is it? Well, the column headed “How soon it ends” offers this advice: “get treatment immediately.” Others with the same prescription include e.coli, Clostridium botulinum, and Vibrio vulnificus. These others are somewhat harder to come by (eating raw shellfish is not something one does by accident).

Listeria can come from some of my favorite foods (soft-ripened or blue cheeses) but I’ve either been lucky or the concentrations, if any, have been within my body’s tolerance. But for our alleged government to opt for weaker standards, with a body of evidence about the health risks, is irresponsible. Not that that’s breaking news . . .

this old house

losing phone jacks here, one at a time. the Internets were offline earlier until I tried plugging the DSL interface (no, I won’t call it a modem since it doesn’t do what modems do) into a phone jack in another room. It stayed online, so now I have a snake of Cat5 cable running through a couple of rooms to get everything working again.

Lost the phone jack in the bedroom ages ago, but didn’t care all that much. Now I think it may be time to call in some professionals. The spaghetti-tangle/spider-web I can see looks too messy for my rusty telco skillz. I don’t even have a set of punch tools anymore.

So if your DSL connectivity gets squirrelly, that’s one diagnostic step you can try.

technological progress: not to be confused with more perfect civilization

Making Light: Making Light, Your Source for “Total Eclipse of the Heart” Blogging:

This is what you have to compete with. Presented with revolutionary, world-spanning communications technology, and the ability to instantly retrieve information from an astonishing array of sources, and send it to any of a truly mind-boggling number of people, this is what we use it for.

Futurism never stood a chance.

Robertson Davies, in his guise as Samuel Marchbanks, said something similar 40-odd years ago, as did Thoreau. Can’t put my finger on the Marchbanks quotation, but the others may prove edifying or amusing.

dammit

Anyone have recommendations on a good messenger bag?

I just realized this morning that I left some things behind at my son’s baseball game two days ago — a really nice 7 Cycles messenger bag and one of my modified Holgas. The game ended badly and it was the last game of the season, so we all kinda left in a hurry. I grabbed his stuff and forgot all about my own.

Dammit.

Posted a Craiglist notice and left word at two offices in the park, so hope is not lost. I don’t expect anything to come of it all, but I sure would like to see those pictures.

monthly roundup of pinhole news

This is the monthly news roundup from a pinhole photography site I frequent:

GENERAL COMMUNITY NEWS
*f295 member marinoel posted a “Call for Entry” for a pinhole exhibition to take place at The André Malraux Cultural Centre (CCAM) of Le Bourget (France)
Deadline for submission: 30 December 2006
Exhibition Dates: 25 March – 29 May 2007
for more information:
http://www.f295.org/Pinholeforum/forum/Blah.pl?b-ce/m-1152799645/

*WELCOME NEW MEMBERS! we look forward to your participation in the discussion! AND a BIG THANKS to all old members for being kind and receptive hosts to these new members. It’s wonderful that a new members first post generally results in an outpouring of support and reception from the current membership! THANKS!

*Jules has left Idaho and is headed for Minnesota. We look forward to hearing from both Tom Miller and Earl Johnson when the camera reaches them. For up to the minute information on the travelling camera, check this forum:
http://www.f295.org/Pinholeforum/forum/Blah.pl?b-jules/

*I’m continually looking for ways to enhance the forum/f295 site. If you have an idea feel free to contact me, or post it here (not all suggestions will be implemented):
http://www.f295.org/Pinholeforum/forum/Blah.pl?b-sugg/

———————————-
LENSLESS IMAGING NEWS
*Ralph Y. does it again. Another brilliant use of reclaimed material. Check out his camera here:
http://www.f295.org/Pinholeforum/forum/Blah.pl?b-cm/m-1152569798/

*If Waiting is the hardest part, UNITOLs model has mastered it perfectly. Check out this interesting portrait:
http://www.f295.org/Pinholeforum/forum/Blah.pl?b-cc/m-1152827680/

*New member Sergio dives in with a couple of wonderful shots:
http://www.f295.org/Pinholeforum/forum/Blah.pl?b-CP/m-1152302434/s-0/

*Though I’m generally partial to mountains, this sure looks nice:
http://www.f295.org/Pinholeforum/forum/Blah.pl?b-foot/m-1152363612/s-new/

*If you’re new consider reading through this thread on “Why pinhole, why you, why now?”
http://www.f295.org/Pinholeforum/forum/Blah.pl?b-Isalon/m-1138044985/

———————————-
ALTERNATIVE & ADAPTIVE PROCESS NEWS
*Though it’s long over, the self made film holder project appears to have found an answer. I haven’t validated the design, but I’ll assume that it works. Check out retroshooters info here:
http://www.f295.org/DIYforum/cgi-bin/forum/Blah.pl?b-filmHolder/

*More interesting information has been posted in the DIY Darkroom area:
http://www.f295.org/DIYforum/cgi-bin/forum/Blah.pl?b-diyDark/

*What interesting self made or adapted project are you working on? Let’s see your current project or ideas…

———————————-

The lensless imaging forum is just over 2 years old now. It’s great to see the influx of new participants and to have a bunch of the charter group still actively participating. Thanks to everyone for your contributions to the site.

pinholga notes

Time to document the various modifications I had added to my Holga.

This is the way it looks now with wirenut-based cable release affixed. If you do this, be careful not to glue the wirenut so close to the shutter release. As it is now, I have to use a cable release all the time, until I glue or screw something to the shutter release that I can use.

Dscn0014-2

The white stripe on the lens is my poor man’s macro setting: unscrewing the lens past that point means it comes off in your hand. But it should give an additional margin of close-focus capability.

I added a pinhole insert today, with a bit of foamcore and square of brass shim stock.

Dscn0018-1

My plan was to cut a circle to fit the lens opening, but that was before I tried cutting foamcore with a utility knife. I rejiggered it to use a tightly fitting strip, anchoring it to the little bump where the lens stop screw used to live.

A view of the pinhole insert from the back side, showing the brass shim.

Dscn0016-2

Observant Holga fans will wonder about the light area inside the center of the lens opening. I added a real f/16 aperture to the camera when I saw that the aperture selector is meaningless in stock Holgas. A little bit of a pop can, a 1/8 inch hole and some glue is all you need.

why transparency in food production would be a Good Thing

Theyre trying to ban foie gras in New York:

Animal Rights Groups Ask New York to Ban Foie Gras. Of course this was coming. After what’s happened in California and Chicago, they’re just going to keep going after everyone else. The more they push, the angrier I get about this issue.

Here’s the core of what “they” are claiming:

Animal Rights Groups Ask New York to Ban Foie Gras – New York Times:

In a novel legal strategy, animal rights advocates demanded yesterday that state regulators in Albany help decide the fate of foie gras, made from the engorged livers of ducks and geese. It is a buttery but costly staple of four-star restaurants everywhere, especially those in New York City.

Advocates have long criticized the production of foie gras for pâté or another use, calling it cruel to the fowl because they are force-fed, usually with long plastic tubes, for four weeks before slaughter. Their livers grow in size by at least six times.

In a 16-page petition, the Humane Society of the United States and others, including New York residents, asked the state’s Department of Agriculture and Markets to use a law ordinarily applied to food like rotten or mislabeled beef.

The groups want foie gras declared an “adulterated” food within the meaning of Article 17, Section 200 of the Agriculture and Markets Law. The agriculture commissioner would then have the option of banning foie gras.

New York State law, in part, defines adulterated food as “diseased, contaminated, filthy, putrid or decomposed.”

Carter Dillard, director of farm-animal litigation at the Humane Society, based in Washington, said in a telephone interview that the petition “doesn’t speak to whether there’s a health risk or not” in foie gras itself.

The arguments go on and on: the animals are not diseased, it’s a natural occurrence in which fowl store fat reserves in their livers, it doesn’t affect human health so it can’t be an issue, it’s no worse than farming other animals. I have no opinion on (a), see below for more on (b), (c) misses the point, and (d) may well be true, which is why I don’t eat them either.

Mr. Ginor likened force-feeding to the treatment of confined cattle, which reach 400 pounds after two years, he said, compared with grass-fed cattle, which reach that weight after four years. He also said that foie gras ducks were 16 weeks old at the time of slaughter, compared with 8 weeks or less for ducks roasted or grilled in restaurants.

But Mr. Ginor acknowledged that it was unlikely that the liver of a duck in the wild or on a free-range farm, which typically has a liver weighing three ounces, would grow to restaurant-quality levels of 19 ounces or more without force-feeding.

Unlikely? Yes, I expect so: a six-fold increase in the size of one organ seems improbable. I suspect the goose or duck is not feeling 100% at the end of their 16 week life.

It’s simple. Don’t ask someone to do something you wouldn’t do. If you can’t slit a chicken’s throat or wring it’s neck, don’t ask someone else to do it just for your own convenience. If you can’t even watch a cow go through the chute to the killing floor with it’s non-zero chance of not having been stunned before it gets there, don’t pay someone else to do it. Be conscious. Be aware of your impact.