Huckabee on immigration bill

Presidential candidate Mike Huckabee had this to say about the recent immigration bill that Congress failed to pass this week:

“I was pleased to see Congress recognize the will of the American people against this amnesty bill. Illegal immigration is a serious problem. Unfortunately, now we’re hearing the excuse that politics will make immigration a dead issue until after the ’08 election. Instead of shirking their responsibility, I urge the Administration and Congress to roll up their sleeves and spend the next year-and-a-half productively doing what the American people expect them to do – seal the border. It’s not a political issue – it’s a national security issue. If our government could just show competence on this threshold issue, the American people would feel more confident about moving forward on a national immigration policy.”

Surge in Iraq brings more U.S. casulties

Hmmm… more soldiers = more casualties?
That wasn’t supposed to happen was it?
Commanders point to some early successes. They’ve captured or killed dozens of insurgent leaders and more.
Commanders are pointing to moderate successes.” 50% of Baghdad is now in the control of U.S. or Iraqi forces.
330 soldiers however have been killed since April.
NPR has the story.

Bottled water – a symbol of U.S. commerce


Charles Fishman of Fast Company magazine talked about his article “Message in a Bottle” with Robert Siegel on All Things Considered Yesterday.
Fishman writes that when an industry that supplies something people don’t need — an industry “built on the packaging and the presentation” — grows and thrives like the bottled-water industry, it’s important to ask how that happened and what the impact is.
Funny how as Americans we pay for something we can get for free while millions around the world don’t have access to clean, safe drinking water.
And I’m not pointing fingers – we have a case of bottled water in the fridge – as well as a Brita filtering pitcher.
Oh and here’s a great fact: 24% of the bottle water market is simply tap water repackaged by Coke and Pepsi. Dasani and Aquafina are the #1 and #2 brands of water and it’s simply re-purified tap water.

(picture above & below – a water drinking well outside Jos, Nigeria – notice the used paint bucket. it’s used to pull water from the well and to drink out of)

Does Wikipedia entry offer insight into Benoit tragedy

CNet has the scoop

An anonymous edit to Wikipedia could provide a clue about the deaths of former professional wrestler Chris Benoit, his wife and 7-year-old son. Or it could simply be random Wikipedia pranksterism by a University of Connecticut undergraduate.
The changes were made to the Wikipedia article on Benoit, a former internationally recognized athlete who participated in World Wrestling Entertainment, hours before police discovered the bodies in the family’s suburban Atlanta home.
At 12:01 a.m. ET on Monday, the entry was changed to say he missed a championship match because of personal issues “stemming from the death of his wife Nancy.”

Quite interesting. Someone’s gonna get subpoenaed.

Ireland elects Nigerian refugee as first black Mayor

A Nigerian man who arrived in Ireland as an asylum seeker seven years ago has become the country’s first black mayor.
From the BBC:

Rotimi Adebari has been elected as first citizen of Portlaoise in County Laois.
The 43-year-old fled from Nigeria in 2000 because of religious persecution. After a few weeks, he and his family settled in the County Laois town.
In 2004, he was elected in the local elections as an independent councillor and on Thursday he became mayor.

Awesome. Congratulations! Think he’s regretting his decision to move?

If I were a cussin’ man

If I were a cussin’ man I’d say, “*&^*! That’s awesome!”

A couple Modest Mouse fans built up a huge kinkos bill and decided to make a music video using stop action photography and 4133 pictures of their favorite band.

“Myself and a couple have friends have entered the above into the Modest Mouse video competition. Using green screen footage provided by the band we cut a simple music video. We then degraded the images and printed out each frame sequentially. (all 4133 of them) We then nailed each “shot” of 50-100 posters to various structures and posts. Then using a digital SLR camera with a long exposure we frame by frame shot each poster. Oh, and theres a little video projection (again, frame by frame on the SLR) just to mix it up. There is no compositing, no shortcuts, just lots of blood, sweat and tears, and a huge Kinkos bill!”…. Max

PhotoJojo passed along the link as well as some tips on how to make your own stop action video.