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03 July, 2007

Ah, summer...

Ok, the picture was taken back in '04, but wtf, you get the idea.

Calm

BBC NEWS | Europe | Stressed Spaniards smash up hotel

Fscking A.

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BBC NEWS | Europe | Stressed Spaniards smash up hotel

A group of stressed-out people in Spain have been given a chance to let off steam by demolishing a hotel in Madrid.

The 30 winners of a contest run by NH Hoteles were given sledgehammers to smash up the bedrooms and bathrooms of the 146-room hotel in the capital.

The participants of the "roomolition" were selected by psychologists from more than 200 stressed applicants.

The winners included top executives and a working mother who said she simply wanted to hit something.

High school teacher Pablo, another participant, said he really enjoyed letting off steam.

"I don't need to smash my classroom now, not anymore - I'm already relaxed," Pablo was quoted as saying by Reuters news agency.

The group were allowed to destroy the interiors on one entire floor of the hotel before builders move in to start a refurbishment.

Happy B-Day wishes...

And it's belated (yes, I feel like an @ss) birthday wishes to Sheena, Queen of DOCS.

I've known Sheena now for ... gawd, over 8 years now. It just FEELS like more. Many, many more...

*does shot of tequila, thinks about it, does another shot of tequila*


What I've learned from Sheena, over the years:

1) Life is too short to surround yourself with ugly shit.
2) High-end brand-name goods have their own unique charm and shouldn't be thrown away, even if they are broken and hidden in the back of your closet.
3) When you're going through a monetarily-challenged phase of your life, almost nobody will know that the stuff you pick up in a NYC alleyway is not real haute-couture.
4) Vegas and Glocks; not just for the police, anymore.
5) Friends don't let friends buy expensive sun-glasses, they get Harry Rosen to personally write you an email to berate your fashion sense.
6) Hong Kong on Remembrance Day... props girl... this alone would make you a minor-goddess, even if nothing else did.
7) Cult followings are a fashion accessory, use them accordingly.
8) You never can find too many uses for whole-roast suckling pig.
9) CN Rail and the dummy corporations used to track graffiti all over North America.
10) Good top-ten lists are harder to write than it would initially appear.

Happy Birthday Sheena; am I forgiven for not sending you a card?

Regards,

Impious One.

globeandmail.com: Canadian was shot in back, U.S. Army confirms

Fire-fight in the night... which they do not go into in any detail (no surprise).

While one expects these things to happen, it doesn't do anything for our common cause when it does. :-(

I've highligted a section below, however.

Ciao.

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globeandmail.com: Canadian was shot in back, U.S. Army confirms

Canadian was shot in back, U.S. Army confirms

Long-awaited report points to friendly fire in Pte. Costall's death

From Tuesday's Globe and Mail

Canadian soldier Robert Costall was shot to death from behind in Afghanistan last year by American troops, who opened machine-gun fire on him and then another friendly position during an insurgent attack, a newly released U.S. army report says.

Private Costall, 22, and Vermont National Guard Sergeant Tom Stone were killed during a prolonged and fierce gun battle in southern Afghanistan on March 29, 2006.

Pte. Costall was part of a 38-member Canadian quick-reaction force dispatched to assist a convoy under Taliban attack. During a larger battle that ensued, as Taliban forces attacked a forward operating base, two soldiers lost their lives.

In the weeks following Pte. Costall's death, Canadian and U.S. forces would not rule out friendly fire as a possible cause. A month after the Afghanistan battle, both forces launched an inquiry into the incident. The newly released U.S. army report, given to the Associated Press yesterday, all but confirms that Pte. Costall was shot and killed from behind by his allies.

However, the report does not include any statements from the Canadian soldiers present at the fight, nor does it say whether anyone has been disciplined as a result of the deaths.

In the version of the report made public, all names other than those of the two dead soldiers are blacked out.

Also apparently missing from the report is a statement from the soldier believed to have fired the M240 machine-gun that killed Pte. Costall and Sgt. Stone.

According to witnesses cited in the report, a unit at the forward operating base began firing on a Canadian position during an early morning firefight with the Taliban.

Warned that it was hitting friendlies, the unit appears to have switched targets, only to hit a group of American soldiers instead.

A first sergeant referred to as "Witness 1" in the report says:

"When the majority of the firefight took place [at] approximately 02:15, the [special forces] security element in the northeast corner began shooting out toward the perimeter, I immediately realized the s.f. was shooting at the Canadian position."

Witness 1 said he whistled to signal the special forces soldiers to stop firing.

"The s.f. security then turned his weapon 100 to 140 degrees from its original position and began firing in the direction of the American ETT compound," the witness said -- referring to the location where Sgt. Stone, an embedded tactical trainer, was hit.

According to the report, Americans and Afghan soldiers at Forward Operating Base Robinson were expecting to be attacked that night in retaliation for a coalition attack on enemy forces in the area.

The Canadian military has launched a separate investigation into the incident.

That inquiry has not been completed yet, but is expected to address some of the details not covered - likely for reasons of jurisdiction - by the U.S. army report.

Reached at the British Columbia family home last night, Pte. Costall's father, Greg, said he had heard about the U.S. Army report, but that he wanted to wait until the findings from the Canadian inquiry were released before he or his wife, Bonnie, would comment further.

Pte. Costall, himself a machine-gunner, was born in Thunder Bay, Ont., but grew up in Gibson, B.C.

He had been married just a year when he died.

He left behind his wife and a one-year-old son.

With a report from Associated Press

Quotation from Edward Chilton

I'm worried that the universe will soon need replacing. It's not holding a charge.

--Edward Chilton


Pretty much the same as my laptop battery. :-\

Yes, it IS malignant.


02 July, 2007

In the flowers...

Every early-summer, there is this flowering, vine type plant that takes over the back-wall of my garage. Normally, it's only good for attracting bees and such, but once in a while, something else shows up...



It's probably a good thing that she didn't get stung.

Ciao beautiful peeps... go out and smell the flowers.

Quotation from Henry Adams

No one means all he says, and yet very few say all they mean, for words are slippery and thought is viscous.

--Henry Adams

01 July, 2007

Happy C-Day. 140


iMute? is there an iMute for the freakin' MSM?

I mean, it's not like we can even get an iPhone up here in Canuckistan yet... or even network content for the video iPod.

Not that I would get an iPhone right away. I'm a firm believer in waiting for x.1 with almost all releases... call it a hazard of working in the software industry... ;-)