Referers Are Back

It appears that there is a newer version of the Top Referers plugin that allows you to filter hosts out.

So I have added all the pr0n spam hosts and re-enabled it.

It will be easier to add hosts to that list than to clean the DB out all the time, so I’ll most likely leave it on.

Take that spammers.

Blog Rage?

A co-worker of mine, Michael Ebeling, has a blog. On this blog he made some commentary about the New Orleans disaster and about what a bad job President Bush is doing handling it. Which I agree with.

However, some guy named Steve Eady, who also has a blog, stumbled across Michael’s blog and took great offense to the comments.

I think it’s pretty funny that he’s gotten so het up about it.

Time for a blogger vs. blogger cage match!

What a GREAT Idea!

From Boing-Boing:

Xeni Jardin: Planned Parenthood in Philadelphia came up with an ingenious way to fight back against anti-choice fundamentalists who block clinic doors and harass workers and patients. The idea: hold a fund drive in which donors give cash for each protestor that shows up. The more there are, the more money Planned Parenthood receives. And, let the harassers know how much their presence is helping the clinic raise funds.


Pledge-a-picket

FEMA, Now and Then

There was a very interesting editorial in the Minneapols Star and Tribune a couple of days ago comparing FEMA during President Clinton’s time in the White House during the Grand Forks flood of 1997 and what is happening now with President Bush and the New Orleans disaster.

Due to a complex mistake in the National Weather Service’s hydrological model, amplified by freakish behavior of the river itself, the city of Grand Forks was nearly destroyed. It was, at the time, classified as the eighth-worst natural disaster in U.S. history. By failing to correctly predict the flood crest, the federal government, many outraged and heartbroken Grand Forks citizens said then, had failed them — and had ruined their lives.

But before this resentment could fester, Bill Clinton, FEMA Director James Lee Witt, and Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala rolled into town. Witt’s team had, in fact, had been in Grand Forks in the weeks leading up to the flood, urging homeowners to enroll in the federal government’s National Flood Insurance Program. FEMA officials were familiar figures in town.

Before arriving in Grand Forks, Clinton had authorized FEMA to provide 100 percent of the direct federal assistance for all of the emergency work undertaken by federal agencies in the disaster zones (the normal reimbursement rate is 75 percent).

The National Guard had been mobilized months earlier — its ranks full and available to the people it served — and was responsible for a huge percentage of preparedness activities before the flood. It was responsible for executing the remarkable evacuation of Grand Forks (until New Orleans, the largest evacuation of an American city since Atlanta in the Civil War) and provided immediate search and rescue support as the floodwaters deluged the city.

and

“You bring us hope,” Grand Forks Mayor Pat Owens tearfully told President Clinton at a press conference soon after the dikes were overtopped.

“It may be hard to believe,” Clinton replied then, “But you can rebuild stronger and better than ever.”

Compare these words to Bush’s comments upon landing in New Orleans, where a disaster of unimaginable proportions had just occurred, where bodies lay rotting outside the convention center because aid had not reached them in time: He joked about his visits to New Orleans during his alcoholic days when he had “sometimes too much” fun in the French Quarter. Dennis Hastert chose to comment publicly on his belief that much of New Orleans would be “bulldozed.” Rep. Richard Baker, of Baton Rouge, was reported by the Wall Street Journal to have said to lobbyists, “We finally cleaned up public housing in New Orleans. We couldn’t do it, but God did.”

The contrast between the indifferent response from the Bush administration in the hours and days after Katrina and the rapid and seemingly heartfelt response of the Clinton administration in Grand Forks could not be clearer.

Read the rest of the editorial here.

The BWCA Trip

I went up to the Boundary Waters Canoe Area this weekend with some friends. It was a pretty fun trip, but more hard work than it should have been.

We all brought too much gear.

The last time this group went, they did one portage and that was a pretty short one, so bringing too much stuff along wasn’t so bad.

This time we did four portages and some really sucked. Plus we had so much crap along that we all had to make two trips.

I’m not doing that again. Hooff.

Anyway, we had a good time all in all, and it’s beautiful up there.

I took a bunch of photos and I’ll try and get them up tonight. And maybe expand this entry later.

Server Crash

My server crashed at about 5:20 this morning with a CPU error:

Sep 12 05:20:17 calvin kernel: CPU 0: Machine Check Exception: 0000000000000004

A power cycle brought it back to life. I hope this isn’t going to mean I need to get a new CPU in the near future.

Referrer Spam

I’ve had to remove the list of referrers from the lower right column. It’s a fun list to look at, but there are people spamming my referrers list trying to generate traffic to their sites and raise their Google rankings.

Unfortunately, most of them are pr0n sites.

I’ve gotten tired of cleaning out the DB, removing the bad referrers, so I have decided to remove the list from the page.

Once again the spammers have won. Fuckers.

Honda Motorcycle Airbag

From webBikeWorld:

Honda Develops World’s First Production Motorcycle Airbag System

TOKYO, Japan, September 8, 2005 – Honda Motor Co., Ltd. today announced it has succeeded in developing the world’s first production motorcycle airbag system.

The new system, which is claimed to help lessen the severity of injuries caused by frontal collisions, is to be made available on the new Gold Wing motorcycle scheduled for release in late spring of 2006 in the US.

Hrm… This could open a whole big can of worms. Anyone remember the leg protectors? And the safety bike?