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Archive for July, 2011

Bogota Colombia is now one of the top 15 new business cities

by Phantom Ace ( 5 Comments › )
Filed under Columbia, Economy, Headlines at July 12th, 2011 - 9:33 pm

Colombia has come a long way since the Anarchy of the 1990’s. It’s capital Bogota has been listed by Fortune magazine as one of the top 15 new business cities.

The presence of multinational companies, such as Citibank and McDonalds, as well as a the availability of a skilled workforce, solid infrastructure and potential customers, has led to Bogota’s new ranking.

According to a review on the magazine’s website, “A World Bank study recently ranked Colombia No. 2 in Latin America for entrepreneurs (it takes just days to incorporate a company) but large multinationals like Bogota too: Citibank and McDonald’s have set up there, and call centers serving the world are proliferating in the city. Why? Colombians speak clear, unaccented Spanish.

As some who has Colombian relatives and Spaniard relatives, I can confirm. Colombians speak the best Spanish in Latin America. In fact some of the regions in Colombia sound identical to Spain Spanish.

Congrats to Colombia, they are a rising nation and will be a regional power house in the future. We should cultivate this relationship.

Game Over! Furiously Smoking Gun Found, Rather Fast, I Might Add.

by Flyovercountry ( 172 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Breaking News, Crime, Progressives, Second Amendment at July 12th, 2011 - 8:00 pm

Via Big Government, a video resurfaced which aired on C-Span in December of 2009. Watch the video in which the Assistant Secretary of the Department of Justice ties Barack Obama directly to Operation Gun Runner and Fast and Furious.

 

***COLDWARRIOR UPDATE****

 

COMBINED THREAD: This From Huckfunn:

 

Representative Darrell Issa and Senator Charles Grassley sent a letter yesterday (released just this afternoon) to AG Eric Holder demanding discovery of all emails, memoranda, briefing papers and hand written notes from the following (alleged..heh) perps regarding the criminal enterprise known as Fast & Furious:

1. David Ogden, Former Deputy Attorney General;

2. Gary Grindler, Officer of the Attorney General and former Acting Deputy Attorney General;

3. James Cole, Deputy Attorney General;

4. Lanny Breuer, Assistant Attorney General;

5. Kenneth Blanco, Deputy Assistant Attorney General;

6. Jason Weinstein, Deputy Assistant Attorney General;

7. John Keeney, Deputy Assistant Attorney General;

8. Matt Axelrod, Associate Deputy Attorney General;

9. Ed Siskel, Former Associate Deputy Attorney General;

10. Brad Smith, Office of the Deputy Attorney General;

11. Kevin Carwhile, Section Chief, Capitol Case Unit; and

12. Joseph Cooley, Criminal Fraud Section.

Read the whole thing here from the good folks at Sipsey Street Irregulars.

Former Lebanese PM: Hizballah is the problem

by Phantom Ace ( 2 Comments › )
Filed under Headlines, Hezballah, Islamic Invasion, Islamic Supremacism, Islamic Terrorism, Israel, Lebanon, Sharia (Islamic Law) at July 12th, 2011 - 6:58 pm

This totally took me by surprise. Former Lebanese PM Saad Hariri states that Hizballah and its weapons are at the root of Lebanon’s problems. The reason this is shocking is becasue he’s Muslim. Now granted he’s a Sunni, but like their Shiite cousins, they aren’t natives to Lebanon unlike the Maronites. So for him to speak out against fellow Arabs is huge.

BEIRUT – Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri made a verbal attack on Hezbollah on Tuesday and said its possession of arms was at the root of conflict in Lebanon.

Hariri, raising the intensity of his opposition to Hezbollah, which with its allies toppled his government in January, said indictments issued by the UN-backed tribunal seeking the killers of his father, Rafik Hariri, and which accuses four members of Hezbollah of involvement, would never be changed.

The weapons (of Hezbollah) are the cause of the problem in Lebanon. Hezbollah does not know what to do with its arms. It is our problem with Hezbollah and also it is a problem for Hezbollah,” Hariri told a local television channel.

“What is it going to do with them? Is it going to continue pointing them at the Lebanese?” he said, speaking from Paris.

Of Course he speaks bravely from Paris and not in Lebanon. But regardless, this once again proves, Israel is not the problem in the region.

Are you listening Barack Hussein Obama?

Does Sturgeon’s Law Apply To People? I’d Say So!

by 1389AD ( 54 Comments › )
Filed under Food and Drink, Humor, India, Open thread, Turkey at July 12th, 2011 - 5:00 pm

Atlantic Sturgeon: Acipenser oxyrinchus oxyrinchus

No, I am not claiming that anybody is required by law to supply me with caviar. (Don’t I wish!) We’re not talking about that type of sturgeon at all.

Instead, we’re talking about a rule of thumb, to wit…

Sturgeon’s Law

Sturgeon’s Revelation, commonly referred to as Sturgeon’s Law, is an adage derived from quotations by Theodore Sturgeon, an American science fiction author. While Sturgeon coined another adage that he termed “Sturgeon’s Law”, it is his “Revelation” that is usually referred to by that term. Commonly cited as “ninety percent of everything is crud” or “ninety percent of everything is crap”, the phrase was derived from Sturgeon’s observation that while science fiction was often derided for its low quality by critics, it could be noted that the majority of examples of works in other fields could equally be seen to be of low quality and that science fiction was thus no different in that regard to other art…

More here.

Theodore Sturgeon knew a thing or two about identifying crud:

Theodore Sturgeon vividly recalled being in the same room with L. Ron Hubbard, when Hubbard became testy with someone there and retorted, “Y’know, we’re all wasting our time writing this hack science fiction! You wanta make real money, you gotta start a religion!” Reportedly Sturgeon also told this story to others.

I just now happened upon a blog called India Uncut by the libertarian blogger, columnist, and poker player, Amit Varma. Among other thought-provoking essays, including a fine paean to the blogosphere, I found this:

Does Sturgeon’s Law Apply To Human Beings?

Sturgeon’s Law states that “ninety percent of everything is crud”. This is certainly true in many fields, and I myself have invoked it in the context of blogging, but today I’m wondering, is this true also of human beings? Are 90% of us stupid? Like, really stupid? Consider this news story by Reuters in Istanbul:

Turkish police donned white coats and stethoscopes (stethoscope review) to disguise themselves as doctors, then knocked on people’s doors to see how easily they would fall for a confidence scam.

The undercover police officers told residents of the southeastern city of Gaziantep they were screening for high blood pressure and handed out pills, according to Turkish media.

They were alarmed when residents at 86 out of 100 households visited on Tuesday swallowed the pills immediately.

Apparently this was the actual modus operandi of a gang that got people to pop sedatives and then robbed them. But this isn’t all.

Officers in Adana in southern Turkey last week called at houses, announcing through the intercom: “I am a burglar, please open the door.”

Police said they were stunned at the number of people who opened the door, the Radikal daily newspaper reported.

Read the rest; it’s funny.

I can imagine what some of you are thinking:

“1389’s nom de guerre recalls a date in history when the Serbs fought the Ottoman Turks to a standstill. Old 1389 is just taking another cheap shot at the Turks by showing how stupid they can be.”

Guilty as charged. But then, considering that everybody, including the Turks, takes cheap shots at the Serbs, I claim the right to take them at everybody else.

And I do mean everybody. If you think you’re so much smarter than those human fish who eagerly took the bait in Amit Varma’s article, then take a long and careful look at Wikipedia’s List of cognitive biases. See how many of them apply to you!

Yeah, I thought so. Welcome to my world!