This is My Blog, dealing greatly in Politics, Social Codes and Opinions, the Running of Our Country, Government Corruption and Control, and Religion.

Down with the fascists!
Death to tyrants!

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Not dead

Hey, im not dead! here's a quick sit-rep of whats up and whats going down.

  1. Finished my first year of college, will be returning for a second
  2. as a second year student, i have been accepted into the Game Design area of the T.I.M.E department. This is awesome
  3. I shall also be serving as a Resident Assistant in order to cut down on the costs of going to college. It also cuts down on my free time
  4. I've gotten a job as a Genetic Research Assistant. My tasks include data entry, formatting, website design, maintenance, and Administering a private Wiki.
My summer has been busy and chaotic, in a few short weeks it will be over and i shall return to college for 2-3 weeks of R.A. training. This helps cut costs, but you can still help out this artist by donating via paypal! expect more life stuff, some political stuff in the weeks to come

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Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Chanology Project



More to come.

Expect us.

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Tuesday, February 05, 2008

The End of the Internet as we know it




By Steven Levy
Wednesday, January 30, 2008; Page D01

If you are an Internet-crazy movie lover in Beaumont, Tex., life may soon take a miserable turn for you.

Time Warner Cable, which also sells broadband via its Road Runner service, has chosen your city for a pricing experiment. If you have plans to sign up and watch lots of high-definition flicks using, say, the new iTunes digital rental program announced last month, start saving now, because Time Warner is going to tally up those gigabytes. You know that feeling that mobile phone users get when they exceed their allotted minutes and get a heart-stopping tariff for overage charges? Some Beaumont cinephiles could get the same infarction from their Road Runner bills.

The experiment doesn't necessarily mean the rest of us will soon see a dramatic change in the way we pay for our broadband Internet; cable giant Comcast says it's also evaluating the concept, but other broadband providers aren't indicating they'll adopt the scheme. (They all have their own ideas, though, about getting returns on their broadband investments.) But Time Warner's move illuminates some of the troubling issues facing the United States in the Internet era, where, in terms of penetration, we are in 24th place -- behind Estonia -- in the international broadband competition.

The news broke about Time Warner's plan from a leaked internal memo that company spokesman Alex Dudley confirms as genuine. The Beaumont trial will be a test of "consumption-based billing." The reason for the change, he says, is that some users are unfairly piling up gigabytes of goodies on their digital plates. "As few as 5 percent of our customers use 50 percent of the network," he says, adding that these bandwidth hogs are commonly denizens of seamy peer-to-peer file-sharing networks; one of these gluttons downloaded the equivalent of 1,500 high-definition movies in a month.

It sounds reasonable for Time Warner to ask big-time freeloaders to pay their way. But talking to Dudley, I get the impression that it won't just be flagrant over-indulgers who wind up paying more. Indeed, he acknowledges that TW hopes such a plan will get all its customers thinking about how much media they consume on the Net. TW envisions offering plans capped at 5, 10, 20 and 40 gigabytes. Five gigs gets you barely two movies and a couple of TV shows, not counting the normal Web surfing, music streaming and e-mail. Clearly it won't just be inductees to the LimeWire Hall of Fame who are hit with excess charges.

Those penalties could be rough. Bell Canada, which meters service in some plans, charges customers who go over the limit $7.50 per additional gigabyte. (The Canadian dollar is worth about as much as the U.S. version these days.) That would jack up the $2.99 iTunes rental fee for "The Magnificent Seven" by 10 bucks. A high-def movie, typically 4 gigs, could cost you $30 more. (Bell Canada offers an Unlimited Usage Insurance Plan for $25 a month.)

You would think that consumer activists would be lining up against this idea, but some are holding their fire, largely because the experiment will measure how many bits a customer uses but doesn't care where those bits come from. This is in contrast to behavior that violates the principle of "net neutrality," which asserts that providers shouldn't be able tilt the digital playing field to favor their favorite Internet services (i.e. their partners or those who pay them). Digital populists are more concerned with pressuring the FCC to enforce its principles that ban companies from selectively blocking Internet content. In the wake of one possible violation -- Comcast slowing traffic involving certain peer-to-peer transmissions -- several groups have petitioned the agency to adopt and enforce more specific regulations. Metering isn't seen as part of that problem.

There is, however, a net neutrality angle to the Time Warner Cable experiment. As its name implies, this operation's main interest is cable television. An increasingly important component of that business is distributing video on demand. TW's competitors in that arena are Internet companies that intend to do the same thing. The TW plan tilts the field in its own favor. Let's say I want to watch the indie film "Waitress." I may have the choice to order it on my cable box or rent it from iTunes. Each might cost me $3. But if I'm metered, renting it from iTunes might mean that I exceed my monthly limit, perhaps incurring a penalty that's more than renting the movie.

A more profound problem with the metering scheme, however, doesn't involve corporate competition but international competition. In the United States, where the Internet was born, we pay higher prices (seven times what they pay in South Korea) for slower speeds. (Japan's users surf 13 times faster.) Though President Bush promised affordable broadband for all by 2007, tens of millions are still stuck with dial-up.

Fast, cheap, abundant broadband is a fantastic economic accelerator, enabling breakout businesses and kick-starting new industries. Unless we move quickly, these will spring from foreign soil. Instead of testing systems that discourage people from vigorously using our overpriced, underpowered systems, government and industry should be working overtime to figure out how to get faster service for less money and make sure that all users, no matter where they live, have affordable access to the high-speed Net. Maybe then we'll get out of 24th place.

Steven Levy, a senior editor atNewsweek, can be reached atsteven.levy@newsweek.com.


#142934

docsigma2000: jesus christ man
docsigma2000: my son is sooooooo dead
c8info: Why?
docsigma2000: hes been looking at internet web sites in fucking EUROPE
docsigma2000: HE IS SURFING LONG DISTANCE
docsigma2000: our fucking phone bill is gonna be nuts
c8info: Ooh, this is bad. Surfing long distance adds an extra $69.99 to your bill per hour.
docsigma2000: ...!!!!!! FUCK FUCK FUCK
docsigma2000: is there some plan we can sign up for???
docsigma2000: cuz theres some cool stuff in europe, but i dun wanna pauy that much
c8info: Sorry, no. There is no plan. you'll have to live with it.
docsigma2000: o well, i ccan live without europe intenet sites.
docsigma2000: but till i figure out how to block it hes sooooo dead
c8info: By the way, I'm from Europe, your chatting long distance.
** docsigma2000 has quit (Connection reset by peer)

The pricing plan at the top of the page is the only thing that is fake. thus far. Those that control the internet, at least who has access to it, have once again become greedy little money grabbers and have decided that it would be a good idea to charge still more for internet access. This spells trouble for all citizens of the internet, but what's more, it spells trouble for freedom. Freedom of speech, of expression, and of information. The very corner stone of this country, the freedom to say what you want to anyone at any time, is again in jeopardy. This time it's not the government with such things as THE PATRIOT ACT, but these conglomerates that feel that several billion in profits just aren't enough.
Now is the time to get upset, not later when it may be too late to make a change. Write to your Senators, Representatives, and most importantly, the FCC. What is being proposed by these businesses is immoral, if not illegal.

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Tuesday, December 04, 2007

"Doomsday Seed Vault"

This interesting article cites the near compleation of a new seed vault (think the Ark in Titan AE). What makes this particularly interesting is the people and companies that sponserd it. Bill gates, of microsoft, the Rockefeller foundation, from the oil company, and the GMO (Group Member Oganization). here's an exerpt, follow the link for the rest of the artical.


The seed bank is being built inside a mountain on Spitsbergen Island near the small village of Longyearbyen. It’s almost ready for ‘business’ according to their releases. The bank will have dual blast-proof doors with motion sensors, two airlocks, and walls of steel-reinforced concrete one meter thick. It will contain up to three million different varieties of seeds from the entire world, ‘so that crop diversity can be conserved for the future,’ according to the Norwegian government. Seeds will be specially wrapped to exclude moisture. There will be no full-time staff, but the vault's relative inaccessibility will facilitate monitoring any possible human activity.

Did we miss something here? Their press release stated, ‘so that crop diversity can be conserved for the future.’ What future do the seed bank’s sponsors foresee, that would threaten the global availability of current seeds, almost all of which are already well protected in designated seed banks around the world?

Anytime Bill Gates, the Rockefeller Foundation, Monsanto and Syngenta get together on a common project, it’s worth digging a bit deeper behind the rocks on Spitsbergen. When we do we find some fascinating things.

Link

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Where Have I Heard that Tune Before?


A political cartoon about American propaganda and the Middle East. You can't fool us again. Or can you?





read more | digg story

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Italy Lay Plans to Resurrect the Axis of Evil

It would seem that Italy has gone back to the days of the Third Reich and is choking free speech.

Ricardo Franco Levi, Prodi’s right hand man , undersecretary to the President of the Council, has written the text to put a stopper in the mouth of the Internet...The Levi-Prodi law lays out that anyone with a blog or a website has to register it with the ROC, a register of the Communications Authority, produce certificates, pay a tax, even if they provide information without any intention to make money.


Now, doing a little digging, i found these pictures, and i must say, i was stunned.


It seems that this man has a history of oppression, and should be stopped at all costs.

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Dear Censors in Asia:


Fuck You
Seriously, you Chinese Censors can't shut down my blog, and you can't stop me, short of sending ninjas or something. And I'm a pirate, so I'll win anyway. Just knock it off already.

For the rest of you however...
Ko-Htike Blog
Free Burma

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

For NM Furries, life is more than lions, tigers and bears­—oh my!

A well written and unbiased article on the subject of furries. It offers up a clear picture of your typical furry, something that has been terribly distorted in the past. Props to David Maass.

read more | digg story

Tuesday, October 09, 2007

What America Can Look Forward to Before the 2008 Elections

Vet questions why lost nukes sent to Middle East staging area
A retired lieutenant commander in the Navy Reserve who served with the Navy's Supervisor of Salvage questioned in a little-noticed editorial Sunday why six active nuclear armed cruise missiles were being transferred to an active bomber base that "just happens to be the staging area for Middle Eastern operations."

"The United States also does not transport nuclear weapons meant for elimination attached to their launch vehicles under the wings of a combat aircraft," Navy veteran Robert Stormer wrote in the Texas-based Star-Telegram. "The procedure is to separate the warhead from the missile, encase the warhead and transport it by military cargo aircraft to a repository -- not an operational bomber base that just happens to be the staging area for Middle Eastern operations."

Six nuclear W80 nuclear-armed cruise missiles were flown to Minot Air Force Base in North Dakota to Barksdale AFB in Louisiana where they sat for ten hours undetected.

"Press reports initially cited the Air Force mistake of flying nuclear weapons over the United States in violation of Air Force standing orders and international treaties, while completely missing the more important major issues, such as how six nuclear cruise missiles got loose to begin with," writes Stormer.

"Let me be very clear here: We are not talking about paintball cartridges or pellet gun ammo. We are talking nuclear weapons."

Stormer doesn't buy reports that the missiles were simply lost. The title of his piece is "Nuke transportation story has explosive implications."

"There is a strict chain of custody for all such weapons," he said. "Nuclear weapons handling is spelled out in great detail in Air Force regulations, to the credit of that service. Every person who orders the movement of these weapons, handles them, breaks seals or moves any nuclear weapon must sign off for tracking purposes."

"All security forces assigned are authorized "to use deadly force to protect the weapons from any threat. Nor does anyone quickly move a 1-ton cruise missile -- or forget about six of them, as reported by some news outlets, especially cruise missiles loaded with high explosives.

"This is about how six nuclear advanced cruise missiles got out of their bunkers and onto a combat aircraft without notice of the wing commander, squadron commander, munitions maintenance squadron (MMS), the B-52H's crew chief and command pilot and onto another Air Force base tarmac without notice of that air base's chain of command -- for 10 hours."

At the end of his editorial, he poses the following questions.

The questions that must be answered:

1 Why, and for what ostensible purpose, were these nuclear weapons taken to Barksdale?

2 How long was it before the error was discovered?

3 How many mistakes and errors were made, and how many needed to be made, for this to happen?

4 How many and which security protocols were overlooked?

5 How many and which safety procedures were bypassed or ignored?

6 How many other nuclear command and control non-observations of procedure have there been?

7 What is Congress going to do to better oversee U.S. nuclear command and control?

8 How does this incident relate to concern for reliability of control over nuclear weapons and nuclear materials in Russia, Pakistan and elsewhere?

9 Does the Bush administration, as some news reports suggest, have plans to attack Iran with nuclear weapons?

10 If this was an accident, have we degraded our military to a point where we are now making critical mistakes with our nuclear arsenal? If so, how do we correct this?

The last 2 points are what are particularly frightening for me. Looking at the presidents ability to issue Executive Orders, he has the potential to suspend or postpone the 2008 elections indefinably.

The Scenario as I see it:
  • Early to mid 2008. A nuclear device is detonated in the middle east. Executive and media spin point fingers at Iran or a terrorist device.
  • 48 hours after the mushroom cloud, the United States declares War with Iran.
  • One to three weeks after a Declaration of War, US Troops invade Iran
  • The President of the United states suspends the 2008 presidential election, using an executive order.
  • Late 2008 to mid 2009: Civil unrest in the US is on the rise, the national guard is mobilized around the country. There are resolutions for a draft, 'political dissidents' are arrested and disappear from public view.
Things begin to get hazy after the elections are canceled, the international response will play a major role in public response in the United States.

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Thursday, October 04, 2007

Free Burma!

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Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Ko-htike.blogspot.com

A blog keeping updates on the situation in Burma. Thousands detained, scores dead, and no end in sight. The internet within the country has been disabled, cutting off the bloggers that were putting out videos and information. In fact, those bloggers are now being hunted, and they fear for their lives.

read more | digg story

Monday, October 01, 2007

High School Security Guards Attack Teen With Cell Phone Camera

read it, digg itIs it just me, or is there a very very serious problem with the state of our police and security forces in this country? There are far far too many violent assaults on students and ethnic minority's, be it racially motivated or motivated by a desire to control the flow of information. You surly know of the University of Florida student that was tasered while Sen. John Kerry gave a speech, amidst the screams of pain and terror. Or countless assaults of blacks and Latin Americas by police forces. This country is fast becoming a police state, and if things do not change soon, it may be to dangerous to leave your home because of roaming gangs of police.

read more | digg story

Sunday, September 30, 2007

Unseen footage from ground Zero on 9/11

Unseen footage from just a few streets away from the WTC before it collapsed on 9/11. You can hear pieces of the second plane hitting the street and cars just after it hits the tower. Thoughts? Diggs?

read more | digg story

Friday, September 28, 2007

The Warrent is Out! Arrest George W. Bush!

[Taken from "http://www.roguegovernment.com" via digg.com]

As George Bush made his appearance and speech today at the United Nations in NYC, 1,000 people issued a citizen's arrest warrant against him for war crimes and crimes against humanity.

The day began with twelve separate feeder marches converging from across the city, consisting of perhaps several hundred protesters. The people carried 20 large coffins with them and marched from all five boroughs toward Dag Hammarskjöld Plaza and the UN Building where Bush was speaking. The feeder marches were organized by Arrest Cheney First, the War Resister's League, Witness Against Torture, Movement for a Democratic Society (MDS-NYC) and others.

1,000 Attempt Citizen's Arrest of Bush at UN; Blocked by Police, 10 to 12 Arrests

9/25/07

A citizen's arrest warrant has been issued! Please do your duty and see that it is served!

As George Bush made his appearance and speech today at the United Nations in NYC, 1,000 people issued a citizen's arrest warrant against him for war crimes and crimes against humanity.

The day began with twelve separate feeder marches converging from across the city, consisting of perhaps several hundred protesters. The people carried 20 large coffins with them and marched from all five boroughs toward Dag Hammarskjöld Plaza and the UN Building where Bush was speaking. The feeder marches were organized by Arrest Cheney First, the War Resister's League, Witness Against Torture, Movement for a Democratic Society (MDS-NYC) and others.

Police had already set up a protest pen outside of the UN for a rally called by the vanguardist World Can't Wait, and quickly moved to herd the marchers into the pens. When members of the War Resister's League exited the pen to deliver the arrest warrant, police arrested 8 of them and grabbed three or four unaffiliated protesters from the pen as well, at approximately 10:30 am.

Eventually, the original contingent of marchers and several hundred others got tired of the pens and began to march south on Second Avenue toward Washington Square Park. A few attempts were made to march in the street, but police reacted violently, shoving and pushing marchers back onto the sidewalk. In the process, police also seized any megaphones they saw. Several protesters sustained injuries in these encounters, but no arrests were made. In all, about 500 people made their way to Washington Square Park.

The idea of citizen's arrest has its roots in common law, and allows for any citizen to execute an arrest on someone who they witness committing a felony offense. All states in the United States allow for citizen's arrest, except for North Carolina, which follows different statutes. Those undertaking a citizen's arrest can still be held liable in civil or criminal court for any damages they inflict in the process. However, they have full rights to detain and arrest a suspect who they witness in commission of a felony.

Applicable felonies in this case include, but are not limited to: treason, conspiracy to pervert the course of justice, conspiracy to obstruct justice, perjury, conspiracy malfeasance in office, fraud, embezzlement, and kidnapping.

Under established international and military law, also, the commission of war crimes and crimes against humanity, for which, as commander in chief, Bush bears command responsibility for the actions of those under his command as well as for his own policies.

Under the principles of the Nuremburg Trials at the end of World War Two, Bush would be indictable for all four counts established back then:

1. Participation in a common plan or conspiracy for the accomplishment of crime against peace;

2. Planning, initiating and waging wars of aggression and other crimes against peace;

3. War crimes;

4. Crimes against humanity.

While the efforts of citizens today to serve an arrest warrant on Bush failed, be advised: the warrant stands. Please do you duty, and try at every opportunity to bring this criminal to justice.


More need not be said. Do your duty! fulfill this warrant!

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How your lawmakers vote (unbelievable video)

[Via Dig]WTF. I am truly at a lose for words, perhaps you have some that i lack.

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