Search






Jeff's Amazon.com Wish List

Archive Calendar

January 2006
M T W T F S S
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
3031  

Archives

January 3, 2006

My shelves are full, 5

Ended up getting all three of the DVDs I spoke of earlier, which means I have to clear some space.  DVDs for sale below.

Rethinking the Holocaust, Middle East Style

A discussion about the Holocaust, which aired December 27 on the Iranian News Channel (IRINN), revealed what we’ve all secretly known all along:  the wholesale slaughter of Jews in concentration camps in WWII is, in fact, a “myth,” and the crematoria and gas chambers used by the Nazis were really just public health tools—the crematoria “used to burn the bodies of those who died of typhus or contagious diseases” and

“The Schrödinger’s cat downloads some porn post” (from the protein wisdom conceptual series)

Schrödinger:  “Don’t think I don’t know what you’re doing in there, cat.  I mean, Kleenex boxes don’t just suddenly disappear, you know.”*

Advice

I’m heading out to Best Buy once my son wakes from his nap and am thinking of picking up the following flicks, none of which I’ve yet seen.  Advice? Broken Flowers—Bill Murray in a Jim Jarmusch film.  Can I go wrong? Wedding Crashers—Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson The Exorcism of Emily Rose—recommended by several people, but having been burned by Paul Schrader’s Dominion, I’m a little wary…

Autobiography of an ex-Colored Man (UPDATED)

Los Angeles homeless activist Ted Hayes, in Monday’s WSJ, American blacks who are affiliated with the Republican Party are vigorously vilified by Democrats, especially black Democrats. Uncle Tom, sell-out, Oreo–the list of slurs is long. But it is not only insults. I am the founder and director of a unique, progressive homeless facility in downtown Los Angeles, known as the Dome Village. Yet the 35 men, women and children and

“Iran closes women’s publication”

From Reuters, by way of Dhimmi Watch and Tom Pechinski: The Iranian Government has ordered the closure of a daily newspaper and banned a new women’s bi-weekly from publication in the first media crackdown since President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad took office in August. “The Supervisory Board on the Press agreed to the temporary closure of Asia newspaper and Nour-e Banovan and ordered their cases sent to court,” said the Culture Ministry