Here is a link to a nice little diddy that may provide some soothing comfort as you endure the April 15th radioactive rainfalls.
Soothing comfort music for Tax Day Radioactive Rainfalls.
Showing posts with label bailout. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bailout. Show all posts
Friday, April 15, 2011
Tax Day Radioactive Rain 9X background in Saint Louis Missouri
All rights reserved, please no copying or mirroring without express written permission.
Stay out of the rain! If you have to drive through the radioactive rainfall, make sure your vehicle's environmental controls are set to re-circulate. Turn on your defroster or air conditioner, if possible. Selecting "recirculate" would be my primary action. If "defrost" is not an option with recirculate, turning on the air conditioner would also work. The purpose of the air conditioner/defroster is to dehumidify the air in the car, and to reduce the possibility of off gassing. Of course from a driving safety point of view, don't let your windshield get fogged up!
The readings from the Tax day rainfall here in Saint Louis are roughly 9 times greater than background radiation. The sample is a few paper towel sheets which were used to wipe the rain water off of a piece of sheet metal located in my front yard. The sample max'd out at 0.09 mR/hr. The sample was taken at approximately 7:45am, during the trailing edge of a squall line that moved in a few hours earlier. In previous thunderstorms, samples taken using the same methodology have read as high as 0.228 mR/hr, roughly 20x background.
Despite the high readings of 20x background some people have ridiculously claimed that these readings could be coming from naturally occurring Radon washout. Previous studies done by Klemic in 1996 show max peaks from Radon washout at 0.012 mR/hr. Throw in that fact that the highest readings I have observed have occurred at the tail end of storms after over an hour of rain, it becomes obvious how ridiculous any claims of Radon washout really are.
Sunday, February 15, 2009
Affirmative Asininity
There is a stupid new idea circulating, that says corporate boards, executive positions, Wall Street should be forced into greater gender equity. Because, you see, if *women* had been in charge, the credit bubble would never have burst.
I could write a book on the stupidity of this, but it's not the type of book I'd prefer to write. So I'll just highlight a few major issues.
1) The financial woes of the US was fueled in large part by deplorable lending practices, where banks gave out credit to people who didn't deserve it. Now. Think for a minute. Is this charitability a MALE problem?
"She" is the pronoun commonly used to refer to Sec. of State Hillary Clinton.
2) Affirmative action is a terrible concept especially when it comes to employment statistics. I would argue that there are just as many women ceo's right now as there should be. And there are probably just as many stay-at-home husbands as there should be.
I know one who preferred the late hours and the travel, and when her son complained about his mom never being home, she countered "how many of your friends' parents call the principle from Japan?" Nice trade, huh?
3) Pot calling the kettle...
I can't let this pass. In April 2005 20/20 ran a sweeps week special called "Inside the Lives of Strippers". The show had one memorable quote. One of the featured women looked straight into the camera and said "We're Executives too".
Case closed.
"Clearly, something needs to change," said Howard Archer, the managing director of European Forecasting and Analysis at IHS Global Insight in London. "You can argue that the men have made a right mess of it, and now the ladies should have a go."
I could write a book on the stupidity of this, but it's not the type of book I'd prefer to write. So I'll just highlight a few major issues.
1) The financial woes of the US was fueled in large part by deplorable lending practices, where banks gave out credit to people who didn't deserve it. Now. Think for a minute. Is this charitability a MALE problem?
"She" is the pronoun commonly used to refer to Sec. of State Hillary Clinton.
"The Community Reinvestment Act is essential to ensure that banks and other financial institutions provide access to capital to everyone -- from small business loans to low-income mortgages. Access to financial capital for low and moderate income families is critical to the future of our communities and our economy," Senator Clinton said [in 2004].
2) Affirmative action is a terrible concept especially when it comes to employment statistics. I would argue that there are just as many women ceo's right now as there should be. And there are probably just as many stay-at-home husbands as there should be.
[Warren Farrell] argues: women commonly prefer jobs with shorter and more flexible hours to accommodate the demands of family. Compared to men, they generally favor jobs that involve little danger, no travel and good social skills. Such jobs generally pay less." - Why Men Earn More by Wendy McElroy
I know one who preferred the late hours and the travel, and when her son complained about his mom never being home, she countered "how many of your friends' parents call the principle from Japan?" Nice trade, huh?
3) Pot calling the kettle...
Harriet Harman, the minister for women and equality, blasted the banking world for "discrimination and harassment" against women, including using lap-dancing clubs for corporate entertainment.
I can't let this pass. In April 2005 20/20 ran a sweeps week special called "Inside the Lives of Strippers". The show had one memorable quote. One of the featured women looked straight into the camera and said "We're Executives too".
Case closed.
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