This is a combination of multiple themed blogs throughout the years. Now it's just a catch-all. Enjoy.
Thursday, May 31, 2001
Tuesday, May 29, 2001
As part of a secret project for work (secret because they don't know I'm doing it), I'm identifying some print industry and marketing magazines which I can potentially write articles to about our products.
Print Industry Magazines:
Marketing Magazines:
- American Demographics
- Cahners
- epm communications, inc.
- Bank Investment Marketing
- International Journal of Bank Marketing - scholarly journal for Bank Marketing
- Bank Marketing
- Business Marketing Association
- B-to-B - Magazine for Marketing and E-Commerce Strategists - formerly Business Marketing magazine (no longer published)
- Chemical Market Reporter
- Direct Marketing - published by Hoke Communications, Inc. 224 Seventh Street, Garden City, NY 11530
- PR News
- American Marketing Association
- Marketing Click Network
- mad.co.uk
- Marketletter
- Sales & Marketing Management
- Spray Technology & Marketing
PC Magazines
- Laptop: Mobile Solutions for Business and Life
- Mobile Computing
- Business & Technology Wireless
- Pocket PC
- Internet Advisor
- Handheld Computing
- PC World
- PC Magazine
- Ziff-Davis Smart Business
- iSource
- Upside
- Web Technologies
- Technology Review
- Internet Works
- Online
- Linux Journal
- Maximum Linux
Okay, I dug alittle deeper, and found that Mr. Rajotte is a retired selectman from Northbridge, who's hobby is taking advantage of a loophole in Massachusetts politics, which allows him to petition the legislature for just about any law he can think of. So many, he claims, that he's forgotten the details of some of them. See this article from SouthCoast Today for more info.
Rosaire J. Rajotte, who had a bridge named after him in 1998, apparently submitted a petition on behalf of the city of Northridge, MA, requiring that people be given two warnings after a $5 fine if they're caught driving without a seat belt. Now why is it that the state has to care whether I'm wearing a seat belt or not? I wear one all the time, but shouldn't this be my choice?
- Here's the bill, "Senate, 1239."
- Mr. Rajotte's name is associated with another bill involving property and liability insurance.
- The Massachussetts General Court homepage, where you can look up bills in the Massachussetts House and Senate.
- The Index of Massachussetts Legislators
- My representatives:
Choke
I got a hold of Chuck Palahniuk's Choke. The book isn't as good as I thought it would be. I think I'd rather read Fight Club. I guess I was expecting more poetry in the fiction. The book reads very quickly, and the characters are drab. The topics seem recycled from Fight Club, at least from the movie. The main character's mother is an anarchist, there are scenes of her doing some of the same things Tyler Durden trained his Project Mayhem group to do. Victor Mancini is a sex addict who attends a support group for other sex addicts, so that he can regularly get laid. He works in a dead end job in Colonial Dunsboro, where it's always 1734. His life seems stuck in the same rut. His mother suffers from Alzheimer's, and every time he goes to see her, he's a different person. An then there's the Jesus thing. I won't get into that yet. So far I just want to finish it so I can move on to Time Travel in Einstein's Universe, by J. Richard Gott, or A Confederacy of Dunces. Here's a review I agree with.
Monday, May 28, 2001
I wonder if there will be any others.
Exposure to airborne concentrations above 0.1 parts per million (ppm) can cause irritation of the eyes and upper airway. A 30-minute exposure to 100 ppm can be fatal, and pulmonary edema has been diagnosed after exposures of 50 ppm. These levels can be generated by small formaldehyde spills of only one pint or less, even in ventilated areas.(15) Blindness can result from splashes in the eyes, and dermal contact causes various degrees of reactions, including sensitization.(16) For these reasons, formalin should be stored and dispensed carefully in a centralized location. Individual specimen containers can be filled under controlled conditions and stored at the central location, close to eye wash, cleanup, and decontamination facilities in the event of an accidental spill or injury.3
1 Science News, Jan 9, 1999 v155 i2 p22(1)
2 The University of California, Berkeley Wellness Letter, Oct 1994 v11 n1 p4(2)
3 AORN Journal, March 2000 v71 i3 p688
Research for a forthcoming article on the "does formaldehyde cause cancer" controversy.
Thursday, May 24, 2001
Wednesday, May 23, 2001
Also, check out this lecture transcript. It was sent to me by an Indian friend. I wouldn't be surprised if some of the concepts are similar to Buber's.
To summarize:
This is what the president had to say when asked about the acts of vandalism:
"I'm so happy to be here -- (laughter) -- that I'm looking forward. There might have been a prank or two, maybe somebody put a cartoon on the wall -- that's okay. It's time now to move forward. It's time to focus our attention on what's possible and how to get children educated. I'm excited about what this week has brought. I'm excited about my job."
Here's what Ari Fleisher had to say:
Q Ari, how dismayed is the President about the vandalism, and what does he want you to do with the cataloging once it's completed?
MR. FLEISCHER: You know, I think we really dealt with that question. His focus is on governing. He's not focused on any of the things that took place as we arrived here. The cataloging that I mentioned, frankly, that's one person in their administrative offices who is really just keeping track in his head about things that may have taken place. So we've moved beyond it.Q But, Ari, this is a President who has come in here, expressed from the very beginning how honored he is to be here, how he wants to restore honor and dignity to this office. Doesn't he consider it a personal affront that taxpayer money must go to replace the vandalized property here?
MR. FLEISCHER: He does not consider it a personal affront.
Here's where it gets interesting...
Q Ari, are there -- just a follow-up, please, on the vandalism. Could you at some point get us a figure, because people are using wild figures -- $90,000 -- just give us some general ballpark idea?
MR. FLEISCHER: We're not. We're just going to focus on doing our jobs here. Any of the things that took place upon our arrival here are not in our focus. And I understand it is in the focus of some others, but it's not in ours. And we're just going to put our heads down and do our jobs and go to work. It's in the past.Q But Ari, the President says this is the people's house. I mean, don't you folks owe a duty to the people to tell them what's been done to their house?
MR. FLEISCHER: I think that whatever took place is passed, and our focus is going to be to just do the job that the American people elected President Bush to do. And I can understand -- sometimes in Washington people want others to fight, and this is part of changing the tone. We're just going to do our jobs.Q Ari, some Clinton folks that we've talked to said, wait a minute, there's sort of a double standard here. No one says from the Bush White House exactly what happened. There's this word cataloging, but there's no specifics ever given. And they're saying in many respects, they don't think these things ever happened in the first place. And we don't even know how to respond to allegations that are as amorphous as these are. And when you say cataloged, is this a catalogue that's going to be kept within the White House forever, or at some point are you going to tell the American people in some sort of way --
MR. FLEISCHER: Well, as I said, it's one person in an administration who is just keeping track in his head of the different things that people have said took place to their desks or offices, and as far as we're concerned, it's over.Q Is there going to be an effort to confirm these things?
Q Can we download the mental catalogue for the reporters to look at?
MR. FLEISCHER: It's just not our focus.Q Ari, did the President specifically give instructions that no kinds of criminal charges or legal charges should be pursued with respect to any vandalism or mischief that might have taken place?
MR. FLEISCHER: It is the White House's position, it is our focus, and obviously that's what we're doing.Q No. Did the President give instructions that there should be no pursuit of this in terms of legal or criminal charges of the vandalism or mischief, or whatever --
MR. FLEISCHER: My information comes from Andy Card. If Andy got it from the President, I'm not aware of it. That's our position.
To see the larger context of the transcripts, hit [CTRL]-F on your MSIE browser and search for all occurrences of the word 'vandal' .
*research consisted of going to Yahoo!News Advanced Search and searching articles with the keywords 'white house vandalism' from 01/23/01-01/30/01.
One of my favorites (which I should visit more often) is Adbusters.
If you'd like to learn more about culture jamming, check out The Culture Jammer's Enclyclopedia, the Theory of Culture Jamming, or this link.