Lincoln Rocks
By: Mr. Wilson on
January 16, 2006
Yesterday the temps were in the 60's. Now it's snowing. I love it.
"We assume this [mutation, which allows the virus to bind to a human cell more easily than to a bird cell] could be one small step in the virus' attempt to adapt to humans," said WHO virologist Mike Perdue.What the heck kind of virologist is this guy? Viruses don't attempt to do anything, and they certainly don't "attempt to adapt to humans". Viruses don't even know humans exist. A virus's job, it's only goal, is to make copies of itself. Along the way, some of those copies are imperfect. We call those imperfections "mutations". But mutations are accidental, not guided by some diabolical plan to take over the world. (Unless, of course, they are diabolical, in that the Devil himself is guiding the mutation process.) When a mutation a) doesn't kill a virus, and b) allows it to reproduce, that mutation sticks around. Otherwise, it disappears. That's all there is to it. It is unforgivable for a scientist to engage in this sort of pandering to the public's paranoia about and ignorance of the mutation process.
[Ed Caudill, a 21-year North Bottoms resident and neighborhood activist] said two encounters with police — who rebuked him for calling the police so frequently — were the last straw.I see two problems there. First, and most obviously, Lincoln's police officers cannot be rebuking citizens for calling the police to report crimes. If Mr. Caudill's accusation is true, it should be investigated and the officers involved should be punished. Second, one wonders why Mr. Caudill has to call the police so often in the first place. If there really is that much crime in the neighborhood, LPD needs to step up its patrols and its enforcement of the law. Granted, the offenses committed in Mr. Caudill's neighborhood are probably mostly nuisances, not violent or dangerous crimes. But they are, nonetheless, crimes against others, and therefore they need to be squashed. On a very minor point, the notion that it takes "a gallon of gasoline and a razor blade" to remove the signs also bothers me. The police should not be damaging citizens' homes. If they're going to be causing damage, why not just spray paint a giant letter A (for "assholes live here") on the side of the house? I have other niggling concerns about the proposal, but ultimately I think it's an inefficacious solution to only a portion of the problem. Nuisance houses are a problem, but there are better and more complete solutions available. I won't settle for short-term feel-good ordinances.
Streetcars ride on rails embedded in existing streets and are usually powered by overhead electric wires. They move with the traffic flow. Streetcar systems tend to cost less to construct and require less disruption than light-rail projects.Well, yes, but you know what costs even less? A bus, or any other vehicle that doesn't require substantial changes to the downtown infrastructure. If Omaha goes with streetcars, I fear that Lincoln will feel even more compelled to get streetcars of its own. But Omaha has a lot more money and opportunities for economic expansion than we do. I hope we don't follow suit just to keep up with big brother.
Doug Meffert, co-chairman of the sustainability subcommittee, said it also will be essential that homeowners can be bought out at fair market value. The subcommittee will recommend that the corporation buy out properties at full value minus what insurance pays out.Fair market value for many, if not most, of the damaged and destroyed properties is about six bucks. But that's not what Mr. Meffert means. He doesn't want property owners to be bought out at "fair market value", he wants them to be paid the replacement value for their property. And not the current replacement value, but the replacement value as it existed prior to the storms. In other words, he wants to free property owners from all responsibility for their property and to pay them many times more than what their property is actually worth. Ironically, Doug Meffert is co-chairman of the sustainability subcommittee. There ain't nothin' sustainable about a government that frees property owners from all responsibility for adequately insuring their property. It gets better:
Commission members were invited to think big when dreaming up ideas, with little regard for the price tag. That will be dealt with later, when New Orleans and other parts of the Gulf Coast divvy up the $29 billion in federal aid designated for hurricane recovery and reconstruction. Some audacious ideas being considered are re-creating a long-gone jazz district, building a network of bike paths and commuter rail lines, and establishing a top-flight school system.You can't make up this sort of bizarro thinking. Irresponsibility first, responsibility later is not the way to plan a city, and it's certainly not the way to plan for the use of $29 billion in other peoples' money.
Another idea is to use tax credits to re-create Storyville, the city-backed red-light district that operated for 20 years until it was shut down in 1917. It was later razed. The idea is not to bring back the sex trade, but rather reclaim the district's musical legacy. Many jazz pioneers -- Jelly Roll Morton, King Oliver and Manuel Perez among them -- played in the district's bordellos.They're not rebuilding New Orleans, they're building Disneyland -- a quasi-authentic artificial version of reality that can never replicate the charm and character of the original, like those Cheers bars in airports. Rebuilding New Orleans based on a longing for the past, rather than on an honest assessment of the present and future, is likely to be the one disaster that will cause more damage to the U.S. than the hurricans.
Whoever...utilizes any device or software that can be used to originate telecommunications or other types of communications that are transmitted, in whole or in part, by the Internet... without disclosing his identity and with intent to annoy, abuse, threaten, or harass any person...who receives the communications...shall be fined under title 18 or imprisoned not more than two years, or both.Sweet.
First, I went to schools that did not have air conditioning and managed to survive somehow as did most people my age. [Emphasis added.]See what I mean about him coming across as unserious?
Well, this lady just walked in, right? And she says, "I'll take whatever's free." I said, "Excuse me?" And she repeated, "I'll take the free drink." I told her I was sorry, but that we didn't give away free drinks. She says "Your sign outside says you have a free drink." I said, "I'm sorry ma'am, but I'm not sure what you're talking about." She was agitated at this point. She insisted I give her the free drink that the sign promised. Finally I said, "Ma'am, you're going to need to show me this sign, because I'm not sure what you're talking about." So we walked outside, and she pointed to the sign. Sure enough, there it was... "Free WiFi"
We know many retailers build stores of that size and all grocery stores in Lincoln are less than that size.Her statement is true, but it's also beside the point. First, it doesn't matter what "many retailers" do. Many retailers aren't Wal-Mart; they don't have the same resources, they don't offer the same goods and services, and they don't draw the same customer base. Second, the size of existing grocery stores in Lincoln is all but irrelevant. Is it really Seng's position that a business can never grow larger than pre-existing, competing businesses? Third, the proposed Wal-Mart is both a retail store and a grocery store. It is incredibly misleading to compare the size of a dual-role store to a single-role store. It's not so much comparing apples to oranges as it is comparing one apple to an apple and an orange. Mayor Seng and some council members object to any individual store in a neighborhood center exceeding 100,000 square feet. That is ridiculous. What makes a neighborhood center a neighborhood center are the types of services offered, and the combined square footage of the property and the businesses operating on that property. Why would it be OK for a developer to build a single-building, 200,000 square foot strip mall containing 10 businesses, but not a single-building, 200,000 square foot store containing all of the goods and services of those ten businesses? The only substantive difference between the two is the presence of separating walls and individual entrances. Is that what Seng wants? A separate entrance to and walls dividing each of Wal-Mart's departments? Clearly not. Seng is being sizeist, plain and simple. Whether that bigotry is rooted in an anti-Wal-Mart ideology or something else is uncertain. What is certain is that basing one's approval or disapproval of a large commercial development on the square footage of a single proposed business -- while agreeing in principle with the square footage of the development as a whole -- is absurd. The suggestion that more and smaller businesses are better than fewer and larger businesses is nonsensical when the sum of the businesses (in size and scope) are equal. Mayor Seng is either mired in illogic, or a fear or hatred of Wal-Mart. Neither is conducive to sound policy decisions.