2 | dropping names | 5 | chris who? | 5 | words with... |
7 | the IPU visits | 7 | tip top tips | 11 | phil inn |
14 | justice danni writes... | 14 | eurosong 101 | 16 | justice henna |
16 | FQA | 18 | places to live | 20 | justice shobi |
20 | more music | 22 | real beats mun | 22 | road rages |
22 | married in the morning | 22 | eurosong 151 | 28 | a week away |
29 | self defence | 29 | together forever | 30 | and justice for some |
dropping names |
Paulo |
chris who? |
Sara My whole problem with them in the first place was that they were never themselves, they always had to fit one stereotype. ps who is Chris Tarrant? Things go orange on the screen. Weaver draws breath between his teeth. "Sara, you had a reputation for hating the Spices, and not knowing much about popular British culture." It's a long pause. It's a nasty pause. "Sara, you just lost your reputation for hating the Spices. The correct question was: which part of Regis' anatomy will Chris kick when he hosts the US edition of Millionaire later in the year? Never mind, you've had a good run." [UK Millionaire continues on ITV 2215 today, 2000 tomorrow. Late-night repeats on ITV2, too.] |
words with... |
Angela or the N.I.V. which is written in much more easily understood format. they're both the same - the passages mean the same thing. Context is everything when reading scripture. Whenever you see a "ministry" screaming about knowing when the earth is going to end- disregard. It clearly states in scripture that nobody will know if and when such an event occurs. |
the IPU visits |
Sara because if you invent yourself, you are already there... Tell you what, let me refer this matter upstairs, to the Invisible Pink Unicorn. |
tip top tips |
"Pure Shores" - All Saints. European readers will know this one by heart, but there's no license for US release. When it's sorted, watch this cool groove fly. From "The Beach OST". |
phil inn | Yes! It's time for that great space-filling feature, What Companies Have Paid Carlton Oodles Of Money To Be The Subject Of Fake Questions On Their "Natural Language" Search Engine! Look in amazement as our panel of experts (Dr Hans Boompsadaysi of the University of Neasden, Professor Grammar of the BBC and Bill Bingham, the voice of the Channel Four Daily) answer those oh-so-tricky modern conundra. Such as, what is the plural of conundrum? "Carol Vorderman und Richard Viteley" - HB Shall we get on with it? How much does a new car from the manufacturer Mazda cost? Where can I find tourist information for Italy? Where can I find official census data for employment? Where can I find a local directory listing for bed & breakfast in Derby? Where can I find the newspaper (England) London Evening Standard? Where can I find the dog of the day? Where can I find ferry information? What time is it in Lisbon, Portugal? Where can I find cycling magazines in the UK? Where can I find a restaurant in London? What does the financial term renounceable documents mean? How can I find secret, hidden airfare bargains? Our thanks to our panel, and the under-employed scriptwriters at Carlton United for the plausible but silly questions. More of this when traffic on the list is so low it becomes a good space filler. |
justice danni writes |
Shobi Once a "natural" baby is in its 3rd trimester, it has rights, so the father could probably enjoin the mother from an illegal abortion on the baby's behalf. Moral Q: At what point should a foetus be seen as being a discrete individual in its own right? When it is actually born (40 weeks after conception), at the point where it could be sustained if born (around 25 weeks), the point where it has a 50% chance of survival (circa 31 weeks), or somewhere else? I have no doubt that many people feel that a man persuasive enough to get a woman to sleep with him will also be persuasive enough to get her to see his point of view regarding an unplanned pregnancy & if he's not, then that is his own problem. Hopefully that isn't why the law is the way it is however. Well the law would require John to pay child support regardless of what he wanted Janet to do re: childbirth or abortion. Moral questions arising from this tend to return to the old "should it be legal to cause abortions" within a short space of time. if John can't have his point of view honored in the law, why can't he get out of child support? This is just a nicer version of the question "is it fair to assign legal & economic responsibilities to parents of a child regardless of their factual circumstances?" The moral answer is one that each person has to give for themselves. he two parents have control of their bodies and that they are in the *exclusive* position to stop children from being born by not having sex. If this type of parental responsibility for offspring were a new thing, Mark could have a point about this being sprung on men. As a for instance of the speed of change, clinics in some areas of England handed out "morning-after" pills to young girls before last New Year. The tabloid press, traditional reactionary guardians of moral conservatism jumped on the back of the clinics. Their "crimes" The old-fashioned press vilified what I thought was a reasonable preventative move, far better than the potential consequences. there is no argument that this is ex post facto or retroactive application of a "new" legal responsibility. a portion of Shannon's paycheck goes right *to the state* according to the divorce order and then the state passes it along to her ex-husband. I understand that they do it this way for two reasons: (1) to make enforcement easier by making a whole agency to deal with this & (2) by stressing to child-support-paying parents that it is *the state* that requires child support & it is the state's interest that is served by it rather than the ex-spouse, so the anger about amounts of child-support will be directed at the state rather than the ex-spouse. the trend seems to be towards the harsher enforcement of Wisconsin, where a delinquent parent can lose their driver's license, have their wages garnished, and (in extreme cases) lose their freedom & be sentenced to jail. So, back to Bailiff Shobi. Is it me, or does he look like H from Steps? If someone would pass me the dodgy make-up and low-cut dress, tonight, I'm going to be - Judge D! [this is a private joke. Sade might get it, given time. I have no evidence to suggest Shobi looks like any member of Steps. Nor any to suggest he doesn't.] what, if any, criminal charges do you bring against Jake? What about against Mary? As a judge conducting a trial how would you rule on the Cruelty to Animals count? As for sentencing: though the intent was there, I see no evidence that this is going to happen again. In the absence of evidence to convince me otherwise, I'm putting this down to a spur-of-the-moment, out-of-character act. The sentence would be slightly less had the dog died instantly, it would not have suffered so much. Four months jail - free in two months on good behaviour. Assuming the traffic charges are proven; $1000 fine and license suspended for six months. Mary sued Jake for (b) the cost of Woofer's vet bills resulting from the injuries ($475) (d) intentional infliction of emotional distress for having to watch her dog & long-time companion run over (Mary asks for non-economic damages of up to $30,000 for her pain & suffering and for an additional $30,000 in punitive damages) Pain and suffering would not have arisen had the incident not taken place, so something should be awarded. Awarding the sum claimed would be the equivalent of criminal injury compensation for the loss of a finger on the writing hand. This seems an unreasonably high amount. Award $4000. Total $4800. All above awards would be reduced if Mary is convicted of culpable failure to prevent the original collision, by around 35%, to total of $3120. Jake counter sued Mary for the damage to his car ($1,300) his medical bills for a slipped disk caused by the crash ($5,700). These awards are not subject to reduction in the way Mary's was, as they relate to something that was not originally Jake's fault. Next case?
do you bring animal cruelty charges against Sam? However, once Sam had killed Rufus, retaining the corpse was a clear theft of the animal's body. Consider theft charges on that basis. Do you pursue a case against Mary for violation of the zoning laws and/or the leash laws? Mary sued Sam asking for: (a) the original cost of Rufus ($200); (b) the cost of replacing Rufus ($325); (c) infliction of emotional distress for having to find out that Rufus was killed and served to her neighbors Sam counter-claimed for his medical bills related to the pig-bite ($1,750); non-economic damages (covering the pain and suffering of the bite, the pain & suffering caused by the rabies shots; & the permanent scar Rufus left) of up to $30,000. Sam also countersued both the City and the Police alleging that they were negligent in following up his complaints about the roaming pig Given three complaints, it appears City Hall should have made some further investigation. If City Hall records show no such investigation took place, the court holds them 15% liable for the damages. If City Hall took reasonable steps to try to find the owner of the pig, but failed, it will pay nothing. |
eurosong 101 |
Over to Eurosongland, and Dunja has staked a claim Try something a littel bit more serious next year, like we do... :) Courtney Because i don't really consider croatia part of europe, but they're entered. btw, out of curiosity, what's italy's song? I have a fondness for that country in my heart... |
justice henna |
Henna In my point of wiew Jake and Sam are heartless, cruel bastards. I know that some people say that the difference between people and animals is that people can feel animals don't. Maybe, but somehow I still believe that they can feel too. The question arises, can animals feel emotional pain in the same way that humans can? That, ultimately, is a matter of opinion. I believe that these two animals had a huge part in Mary's life, and they were just like kids to her, so they were no just animals, they were part of her family. it would be a warning example to other people that you just can't do whatever you want to animals. She crushed to Jake's car, but not badly, damages weren't big. Maybe she should've paid the bill for repairing the car and that's it I think that car is not so important that you kill other's dog for that. And that pig was a harmless pet to Mary, and most of her neighbours didn't probably even recognise that the pig existed, So that Sam-person was just an evilevilevilevil person. Sam clearly over-reacted - contacting the police on discovering a stray pig would be good, using reasonable force to drive it away if it attacked him would be fine, killing and eating it is not. Yet I don't see how this describes him as evil. Misguided, perhaps, but not evil. |
FQA |
Courtney Can anyone suggest some good techno to me? Does anyone like Ani DiFranco? Should Cameron Diaz and Jared really be dating? why is the sky blue? |
places to live |
Victoria we stayed in a hostel there next to a cult leader type guy that said he is from another planet and is choosing a few people to go back to the spaceship with him and the bad people will be sent to the police station, then he said some stuff about the evils of women (all to Brendan, he wouldn't look at me) and how he started a riot. He was from Canada. Craig, do you know him? The One World Leader, if that rings a bell. :) Ireland has a Sirens Goth shop! I'd like to live in Dublin, but it seems too pricy right now. We'll see. we've joked about taking off to London. Oh, and Brendan says I drink like a man. Woo-hoo. Bronwyn again he was the one i was talking about (and constantly emailing) from ShimCity2. we go to school together. we're both in celtic studies and have a bunch of the same interests (music, movies, books etc.) we have scads of fun together, have lots to talk about, my family and friends love him to pieces and think that we're perfect together, and he smells really good. so we're getting married in june and then going abroad to grad school together, after a honeymoon for the month of august. when david is in grad school i'm going to work and when i'm in my masters he's going to work. this is unless we both get in and go to university of wales at aberystwyth. i don't know yet if that's where i'm going to go. i'll see who else wants me!!! |
justice shobi |
Shobi very few civil cases, much less criminal cases are tried before a judge. Almost everyone (for very different reasons) insists on exercising their right to a jury trial. The pig was contraband & can't be "stolen". But I digress already. Even if the pig were unlawfully held, it's perfectly legal for Mary to hold a pig carcass. Once the pig was killed, surely the animal ceased to be contraband, and became someone's legal property. Would that be Mary, the keeper of the live pig; or Sam, the butcher? IMO, it's Sam's intent to permanently deprive Mary of her pig's body, hence that's theft. It's a sneak, it's probably a loophole, but if there's a loophole in the law it must be a badly-written law. |
mighty music | Mark, let me talk about your all-time favourite singer. Mutterings on the wires from Camp Birtney, where a top exec has said what I pointed out in January, that the UK release "Born to Make You Happy" was far superior to the US promo "From the Bottom of my Broken Heart." Remember where you heard it first (: The annoying voice over in the middle of the newie is producer Max Martin, who (gasp!) speaks. He might be spoken of in the same breath as Phil Spector in thirty years. Or he might not. Who can tell? What I can say is that she's still not tried any grilled cheese. Else we'd know about it. [rant] Radio: show two fingers to the reticent listener panels, follow your guts, and play the damned tune. Woolies: this is a single that will race out of your stores if only you would take the gamble to sell it in the first place. Do you want me to start boycotting all your outlets? In ten years time, "Amazed" will be a classic, mentioned alongside "We've Got Tonight" or the original "American Pie." It would be foolish in the extreme not to make something out of that promise right now. I don't want to point to this post in ten years time and say "I told you so," but I will do. [/rant] Randi It's a shameless rip-off of the music of Bryan Adams's "Please Forgive Me". Honestly, try to hum one without ending up with the other coming out! It's amazing! I'm telling you, if you haven't already, go get the Bryan Adams cd "So Far So Good", and listen to "Please Forgive Me". (And everything else! *bg*) You'll love it, I'm tellin; ya. *g* hopes everyone won't hate her after this particular popular band/song bashing rant |
real beats mun |
Henna Paulo, not celebrating quietly. THE MOST HYPED, THE SPICE BOYS' TEAM, THE TREBLE WINNERS, AT OUR FEET!!! WE SCORED THREE GOALS IN OLD TRATTFORD!!!!! WE ROCK!!!! |
road rages |
Allan, welcome. Another Brit (: theres a lot of road rage in the UK caused mainly by crap roads, That said, it is a fact that transport in general has been woefully underfunded for around 25 years. The roads are over-crowded, but so are the train systems. There needs to be an integrated, coherent, sensible transport strategy in place. After three years of The Party rule, I'm still waiting... Since Blair toadied up to the Greenies to use them to get in in 1997, he is shit scared of losing their support, and therefore the main road that links Brighton to the Channel Tunnel is little more than a cart track! There are some horrific accidents too due to neglected roads. |
married in the morning |
Shobi The embedded question here is: why hurry? do others find it strange that Shannon & I are *not* married, when so many couples who got together after we did have already tied the knot? Mark I only wanna get married once, so I'm damn well gonna do everything I can to make sure I only have to do it once. Bronwyn pressures be damned - this feels right. my parents dated for three months before marriage. david's dad popped the question after three weeks. both couple have been married over thirty years. ymmv, baby. i'm not you. there are no guarantees. marriage is a risk. you have to make a guess essentially, albeit an educated guess for most of us! and i want to take this risk now. YMMV. So, speaking of marriage, Ali i know that a prop was recently passed (to my dismay) in cali which basically said 'only heterosexual marriages are recognized in california'. Christy, welcome Assuming he succeeds to the throne, Charles will become head of the Church of England. That will, in theory, make him the representative of the Anglican God on Earth. Some argue that it's inappropriate to have their church headed by someone who disregards the conventions on marriage. Others suggest that the conventions themselves are outmoded, and Charles might be encouraged to follow his heart. |
eurosong 151 |
Paulo, replying to my Eurosong definition Besides, I can post about events at Eurosong on this list the next day and be sure that at least half the Europeans will have caught something of the contest. This may not be much to you United Stations, but Europe is made up of 50 different countries, with 50 national television networks, 50 stations, and 30 languages. It's a major achievement. I don't know about other countries, but at least in Spain, the Eurovision song contest (as it's also called) is seen as something so completely cheesy, dated and generally "out" (of fashion, not of the closet) that few people actually care about it. It's also becoming a far more mainstream event in the UK. Winning the contest, and having some massive hits off the back of the contest (Gina G? UK 96.) helped no end. I remember that, up to the mid-80s, Eurovision used to be quite big here, and there were even cases of people going out to the streets to celebrate the spanish triumph, as if it was a football match. Eurovision fell slowly from popular favor, and the last time I remember people actually caring about the contest was around 1993-94, when Sergio Dalma participated (then again, that year's song was actually good, and it stood serious chances of winning...). |
a week away | I've been in North Wales, working at an annual gathering of teachers. We've had visits from Theresa May, David Blunkett and television journalists. I've met exciting people, who introduced me to the character that is Mae Jemison with an infectious enthusiasm. People with a chip on their shoulder the size of Gibraltar, who must have picked up a lack of self-esteem from their pupils. And people whose daily highlight is to spend three hours looking at microbiology reports from Nature, oblivious to the hordes of interesting people who would like some time. Three things stand out as having a certain relevance to certain contributors. First came the Top Nobs' Gathering. For reasons that were never quite explained, I got an invite to spend an evening with the people presiding over the week's proceedings. As is my wont, I asked for a glass of lemonade, and attempted to add some ice from the container. Only I'm not accustomed to handling ice scoops, and exactly one ice cube made it in. On a second attempt, a falling cube dislodged the slice of lemon poised on the side of my glass and fell into a jug of water. See, I can klutz with the rest of you. Remember the pigeons in Regent's Park last autumn? They're nothing compared to the seagulls. Those gulls are lethal. If you're ever visiting North Wales, do not attempt to eat your sandwiches on the sea front unless the bread is indistinguishable from concrete. The gulls will swoop down and whip away any sandwiches not tied down with lead weights. A plastic rain mac and hat might also be advisable, even in any fine weather. Not that I'd know much about that, given that it rained pretty much all week. And finally, those of you who got the Mark Town tape last Christmas will know of the Steinman / Loud-Webby composition "No Matter What." Originally written for Meat Loaf, the song became a massive hit in these parts for Boyzone, back when they were. Their version was nowhere near as good as Mr Loaf's. But right through the week, I couldn't get away from the track. My hotel was visited by a singer who looked a lot like Dana International, though without the obvious sex change. She sang a very poor version before trying - and failing - to turn into Shania Twain. Then the hotel's piped music system clicked in, inflicting a version involving pan pipes. To cap it all, there was an organist one night who kept putting his fingers on the wrong keys. That was by far the worst version of the week. Where's my copy of the decent one? Ah, no-one can perform Steinman like Loaf. |
self-defence |
Allan Martin and his villagers had been terrorised by thugs for some time and warned that they would take the law into their own hands if the police did not improve things. It seems British law is now here to protect the criminal and not the victim. The case of Bob Observe supports this. Bob was stabbed to death by a particularly nasty little thug who, due to a good brief, got off on self defence, There seems to be a total break down in law & order in the UK. Dunja gets to the nub of the question Back to Allan here in England the law is there to protect the criminal, the victim gets a really hard time. For Example: If I was being attacked and pulled a knife on my attackers to defend myself, then I would be the one in trouble. The law is not there to protect the criminal, it is there to protect everyone. |
together forever |
Vic Since they can't talk to me like they used to, they act like it's easier to cut me out completely. I can't even descibe what this is doing to me. they don't want us to talk to her very much since she's finally stopped asking about us so much. I think, hope, that once we're on our own it will be better. Because Brendan and I are getting...I can't think of a word for it. Closer than I ever thought possible. I've been so emotionally screwed up and distrustful that I've been waiting for all of you to turn on me. any decision I make about the religion now would be out of anger and bitterness and I don't want that. Mrs M is telling everyone else that I'm just Brendan's girlfriend, not his wife. Which makes me afraid of saying anything that would uncover her lie. his oldest brother asking if it gave me 'the longing'. Ugh. But hey, they seem to appreciate my sarcastic reply. I've found that singing to the cows across the road is very relaxing. And it's definitely worth the smile on Brendan's face.:) Since November my typing has greatly improved. |
and justice for some |
Shobi's scene setting Case 1: Ms C Phillips. The background: The appeal: Those conditions in full: Now, it may be icky to imagine living in a messy place, but would it be damaging to the children's welfare? I think it would, based on potential damage to health; but I'd defer to the opinion of health professionals. Seek expert opinion from the health service as to the minimum standard that would not damage the children's health. Should that standard be higher than the flat was at when Social intervened, Jules is recommended to set this as condition. (2) file official guardianship applications for the children that are not hers & have been effectively abandoned by her sister; (3) show with pay stubs or with social services papers that she can afford to care for all five children either with a salary or with help from the government or both; Therefore: if condition (1) is met, Chynna's own children to be returned. I view the other children as adoptees, albeit on a temporary basis, and uphold the financial requirement for those children. (4) that she get a norplant contraceptive implant to ensure she would not herself have any more children within the next 5 years. Should Chynna have further children of her own, this would force a review of the financial situation under condition 3, owing to a material change of circumstances. Next case. Sister Wendy? Sidebar to consider a locale issue Wendy could not get any further benefits because she had a 4th kid. And we're here because... The rules have not changed. Wendy knew the rules, decided to chance her arm, got it burned, and now comes to court looking for a loophole. I'd be happy to review the case looking for gross errors in the handling, but I assume Jules would have found them. In the wider sense, this is one of the perils of not having clearly devolved government. Is it national, regional, or city money that should foot the bill? The current system is a hybrid, and they do tend to cause a lot of problems. However, given the unsatisfactory nature of the problem, and assuming good intent by all concerned, the appeal is denied. It is not for the judiciary to attempt to impose its will on the legislature. Judges can't make primary legislation. And finally, Ms Wilson. Furthermore, a blanket refusal to cover the contraceptive pill leaves the company open to negligence lawsuits. There are conditions for which this drug is the recommended treatment, and failure to fund those leaves a huge gap for trouble. I can hear the lawyers counting their money from here... Returning to the US... Carnie argues that Jules' ruling gives the HMO an easy out by allowing them to just stop covering Viagra. Carnie argues that it is (or should be) the public policy to discourage excessive procreation & that the government should force all insurance companies to cover birth control because it is in society's interest to keep birth rates down. |
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