Linkety-Linkety
Sep. 4th, 2010 11:25 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
When Hillary McLaughlin found out she was pregnant, she was unable to legally obtain the service she needed. So she looked for an underground contact. She got a woman's name--just a first name--and a phone number from a friend who advised her to destroy the evidence as soon as she made the call. When McLaughlin reached the woman, however, the woman told her she no longer "did that" and that she wasn't willing to risk going to jail for it anymore. Turned off by all the "whisper, whisper, cloak-and-dagger stuff," McLaughlin decided to "jump state lines" from Illinois to Missouri to find a legal provider.
Forty years ago, you might have assumed McLaughlin was looking for an unlawful abortion. Rather, what the small-business owner, 33, sought was a certified midwife who could deliver her baby at home in Edwardsville, Ill.
Inside the Great Reptilian Conspiracy: From Queen Elizabeth to Barack Obama -- They Live! -- I really do wonder what these folks think about V (either the original or the modern version, really).
Queering SFF: Where’s the Polyamory? (the comments partially answer the question)
Wow -- the Eyewear Industry Is an Incredible Ripoff, But There Are Alternatives -- My uncorrected vision is about 20/1200; issues of vision correction are rather near and dear to me.
6 Ways Religious Frauds Try to Make Gays and Lesbians Straight
Farewell, Craigslist Adult Services Section -- I'm vehemently in favor of legalization of sex work, so I'm unsurprisingly irritated about this.
Related: Craig Newmark: What I Should Have Said to CNN’s Amber Lyon When She Ambushed Me
2 abortion Drs. ordered to stop after Md. injury -- I'm damned glad to see them busted for this. Dangerous providers need to be removed, regardless of the speciality.
A glut of acorns, or a bad case of The Plague?
Sailing the Northwest Passage at night
Five Workplace Reforms to Fight for This Labor Day
Note to Jay Leno: Marijuana Is Not "Essentially Legal" -- More Than 800,000 People a Year Are Arrested for It
Pentagon Ignores Child Porn in its Ranks
Canada may send flight data to US Homeland Security
Great moments in collegiate marketing: Drake University’s ‘D+’ campaign
The best run-down of the details of the new LJ changes, and how they affect you.
Hawking: God did not create Universe
David Yost who played Billy Cranston the original Blue Ranger, broke his silence and revealed the reason he left the hit series was because he was harassed about being gay
At West Point, Hidden Gay Cadets Put in Spotlight
W Magazine Pokes Fun at Curvy Girls and Eating Disorders
BD Wong: William's Doll
How To Respect Sex Workers
Police exonerate selves in report on entrapment of gay men
Cookies by Douglas Adams (author: "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy")
7.1 magnitude earthquake in Canterbury, New Zealand
Mary Roach: Death In Space
Adorable baby octopuses, living happy and free
The Imp, a great journal about comic books, now as free PDFs
Resignation cake sender has invoice cake delivered to People.com
Cannabis Catering
The Student Loan Scheme: gateway drug to debt slavery
The physics of breaking stuff with your fists
Skepchick Quickies, 09.02.10
Smeagol! (the Aye-aye)
L.A. Celebrates the Hatching of 22 Dragons!
Blackpool Otter Time
Cleveland Rhino Mom Delivers 100 Pounds of Joy
Rare Crocodile Breeding Success in St. Augustine!
Hour-long goat attack sends man to ICU
German "secure" ID cards compromised on national TV, gov't buries head in sand
Kids' Rube Goldberg machine
White tiger turning black
Another oil rig explosion, and the science of dispersants
HOWTO: Organic, erratic gears
Laser cut and 3D printed decorative objects derived from geography
Homeroom Security: book about the insanity of zero-tolerance classroom policies
Neil Gaiman's Sandman coming to TV at last? -- appropriately skeptical of how this will go.
A syllabus and book list for novice students of science fiction literature -- lots of critique and other suggestions in the comments
What science fiction writers can learn from the flood of SF lit novels
Max Headroom predicted my job, 20 years before it existed
Supernovas could be directing the development of life throughout the universe
Could self-aware cities be the first forms of artificial intelligence?
Ask a Physicist: What ever happened to magnetic monopoles?
Forty years ago, you might have assumed McLaughlin was looking for an unlawful abortion. Rather, what the small-business owner, 33, sought was a certified midwife who could deliver her baby at home in Edwardsville, Ill.
Inside the Great Reptilian Conspiracy: From Queen Elizabeth to Barack Obama -- They Live! -- I really do wonder what these folks think about V (either the original or the modern version, really).
Queering SFF: Where’s the Polyamory? (the comments partially answer the question)
Wow -- the Eyewear Industry Is an Incredible Ripoff, But There Are Alternatives -- My uncorrected vision is about 20/1200; issues of vision correction are rather near and dear to me.
6 Ways Religious Frauds Try to Make Gays and Lesbians Straight
Farewell, Craigslist Adult Services Section -- I'm vehemently in favor of legalization of sex work, so I'm unsurprisingly irritated about this.
Related: Craig Newmark: What I Should Have Said to CNN’s Amber Lyon When She Ambushed Me
2 abortion Drs. ordered to stop after Md. injury -- I'm damned glad to see them busted for this. Dangerous providers need to be removed, regardless of the speciality.
A glut of acorns, or a bad case of The Plague?
Sailing the Northwest Passage at night
Five Workplace Reforms to Fight for This Labor Day
Note to Jay Leno: Marijuana Is Not "Essentially Legal" -- More Than 800,000 People a Year Are Arrested for It
Pentagon Ignores Child Porn in its Ranks
Canada may send flight data to US Homeland Security
Great moments in collegiate marketing: Drake University’s ‘D+’ campaign
The best run-down of the details of the new LJ changes, and how they affect you.
Hawking: God did not create Universe
David Yost who played Billy Cranston the original Blue Ranger, broke his silence and revealed the reason he left the hit series was because he was harassed about being gay
At West Point, Hidden Gay Cadets Put in Spotlight
W Magazine Pokes Fun at Curvy Girls and Eating Disorders
BD Wong: William's Doll
How To Respect Sex Workers
Police exonerate selves in report on entrapment of gay men
Cookies by Douglas Adams (author: "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy")
7.1 magnitude earthquake in Canterbury, New Zealand
Mary Roach: Death In Space
Adorable baby octopuses, living happy and free
The Imp, a great journal about comic books, now as free PDFs
Resignation cake sender has invoice cake delivered to People.com
Cannabis Catering
The Student Loan Scheme: gateway drug to debt slavery
The physics of breaking stuff with your fists
Skepchick Quickies, 09.02.10
Smeagol! (the Aye-aye)
L.A. Celebrates the Hatching of 22 Dragons!
Blackpool Otter Time
Cleveland Rhino Mom Delivers 100 Pounds of Joy
Rare Crocodile Breeding Success in St. Augustine!
Hour-long goat attack sends man to ICU
German "secure" ID cards compromised on national TV, gov't buries head in sand
Kids' Rube Goldberg machine
White tiger turning black
Another oil rig explosion, and the science of dispersants
HOWTO: Organic, erratic gears
Laser cut and 3D printed decorative objects derived from geography
Homeroom Security: book about the insanity of zero-tolerance classroom policies
Neil Gaiman's Sandman coming to TV at last? -- appropriately skeptical of how this will go.
A syllabus and book list for novice students of science fiction literature -- lots of critique and other suggestions in the comments
What science fiction writers can learn from the flood of SF lit novels
Max Headroom predicted my job, 20 years before it existed
Supernovas could be directing the development of life throughout the universe
Could self-aware cities be the first forms of artificial intelligence?
Ask a Physicist: What ever happened to magnetic monopoles?
no subject
Date: 2010-09-05 04:02 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-09-06 08:06 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-09-05 11:16 am (UTC)I've bought several pairs of glasses from zennioptical.com and recommend them highly. Takes a couple of weeks but when you're only paying fifteen bucks, it's worth it.
no subject
Date: 2010-09-06 08:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-09-07 10:19 pm (UTC)I absolutely love Zenni Optical. I order a new pair whenever I get bored of the ones I have. I've had a couple of pairs that I didn't quite like the look of, but heck, when you are only paying eight bucks, you can afford to just keep them for a backup. I generally don't get a tint unless I am getting sunglasses, but I like an anti-reflective coating and that's 5 bucks, as opposed to the forty I paid out of pocket last time.
With your prescription, they'd probably cost a little more than mine, but certainly cheaper than what you have been paying!
no subject
Date: 2010-09-07 10:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-09-12 01:02 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-09-05 03:52 pm (UTC)The problem with the abortion doctors cases is that this will become yet another rallying cry to shut down all providers because this 'shows' that they're all 'evil'. I wish it had been done more quietly (though it certainly had to be done).
Sadly, I was considering Drake for my post baccalaureate work, but this makes it hard to take them seriously.
It's that quoted text which bothers me the most. Just as a general rule I would prefer comments not be able to transfer. I don't want mine showing up there, and I don't really care for the idea of private responses to my private posts showing up on other people's social media for world consumption. Another annoyance about this? The additional repost settings have meant that I can't change log in names here without logging out completely and then logging back in. I noted this the other day when I tried to log in to post a comment to a community (which I do under my alternate name). Stupid Farcebook, DO NOT WANT!
I've tried using the CSS code to disable the facebook/twitter repost option, but it won't accept it. It's probably the style I'm using, though it reads as if it were set to S2, so I don't know why it hasn't worked.
I hate double word standards, where one segment of the population uses it as an insult and the other uses it as an identifier, and the use of it by a non-member of the community is an insult while completely acceptable within community. (This rant brought to you by the word "whore").
Self-investigations are about as useful as the average lottery ticket. They cost money, get you nothing, and you still think it was a 'good investment'. Bullshit.
Don't remind me about student loans. I'm $40,000 in debt, and I'm hardly alone in that. On a ten year plan, that's $11,000 in interest and that's considered a relatively low amount. The average is actually about $26,000 (private) and $18,000 (public) as of 2008, but that's going up not down. Oh, and that's federal student loan debt numbers, not the private loans which constitute a huge amount of the debt out there.
Most of that about board breaking I knew already. Seeing as I can bend steel with my fist, which isn't a typical martial arts trick, I don't make a practice of wasting time with pine boards.
The dragon article is wrong. Komodo's are one of a number of venomous lizards. Linky Linky. Fry's work has shown that venom systems exist in both the monitor family (30 species) all the way to the iguana family. Probably more than 1,500 species all told with at least rudamentary venom glands. Nature Article
I hate data encryption "secure" cards. I refuse to be party to it because the data is NOT safe, and the more of it that is out there digitally the easier it is to get screwed, tracked, or otherwise subjected to the whims of malcontents, government, and vigilanties. Think what the idiots outside a porn store would do if they could get more than your license plate, but rather your entire data? Or the data of one of the abortion providers just by using a hand held scanner. Big brother bothers me less than next door neighbor, and I trust neither.
no subject
Date: 2010-09-06 08:11 pm (UTC)I think the sites give instructions for taking these measurements at home, actually.
The problem with the abortion doctors cases is that this will become yet another rallying cry to shut down all providers because this 'shows' that they're all 'evil'. I wish it had been done more quietly (though it certainly had to be done).
*nod* I'm quite certain it will, and I certainly had a "well, fuck!" reaction when I saw the article. This is the problem with politicizing health care -- it changes motivations for enforcement or lack thereof into political statements, instead of purely public protection.
I hate double word standards, where one segment of the population uses it as an insult and the other uses it as an identifier, and the use of it by a non-member of the community is an insult while completely acceptable within community. (This rant brought to you by the word "whore").
I don't find it a problem, because I think that all of language and life is pretty contextual, and this is just one example.
Big brother bothers me less than next door neighbor, and I trust neither.
Amen.
no subject
Date: 2010-09-07 10:14 pm (UTC)If you mean the pupillary distance measurement, they won't write it down unless you ASK them to. If you do, they will. If that's all you need, most places will either do it for free if you walk in and ask or they'll have you pay a small fee.
I had to get it myself when I ordered mine and all I did was ask for it when I got my eyes checked. They literally took a small ruler and held it between my eyes. Took 2 seconds.
no subject
Date: 2010-09-11 07:45 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-09-12 01:02 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-09-12 04:24 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-09-13 12:34 am (UTC)