magid: (Default)
[personal profile] magid
  1. Buy large cans of crushed tomatoes in the fall.
  2. Put cans in car.
  3. Move cans to trunk in process of clearing car for multi-person use.
  4. Forget about cans until in the midst of the second (or third) arctic cold snap of the winter.
  5. Retrieve cans.
  6. Admire frost patterns on lid.
  7. Run briefly under hot water.
  8. Open can.
  9. Observe tomato sludge: thicker than regular crushed tomatoes (since still mostly frozen), and mostly lacking texture.
  10. Use somewhat thawed edges of tomato mass on pizza.
  11. Observe and hear ice crystals still in tomato sludge an hour later.


It was hard to get the car started this morning (heck, if I'd slept outside last night, I'd be more than just sluggish this morning), and it took a while until the gear shift moved as usual. It's odd to feel the difference in the shifting, the difference between a quick, crisp move and a slower-than-molasses one requiring more force. (No comments about the molasses flood necessary, thanks.)

I tend to like non-traditional sentences, when they make sense (er, in the court system; no comment on writing style). A drunk driver talking on a cell phone who killed a guy and put his pregnant wife into a coma she hasn't come out of (the kid is being raised by relatives), was sentenced to 30 days in jail, and probation, and she has to carry a picture of the deceased for five years. Makes it harder to ignore the consequences of one's actions. (I assume there will be a civil suit as well. That poor kid.)

Does it bother anyone else when Shrub says that his proposed 3-year work-visa program is so we can treat people with dignity, while still not only detaining people without charge after 9/11, but not letting their names be given, or anything? I don't trust his government with any of the powers they've managed to grab, at all.

And I'm not even going to start on unfunded mandates, like the No Child Left Behind Act. He still believes it's not a problem if all teachers do is teach to the (standardized) test. Gah.

Date: 2004-01-14 10:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] infinitehotel.livejournal.com
>And I'm not even going to start on unfunded mandates,

This is one of the real talents of the Bush administration. They're masters of the bait and switch. You think they've actually done something, but most of the time it's just a pretty box with nothing inside it. (The AIDs funding for Africa is a good example of this.) As far as education, it's interesting to note that the Bush family was historically very tight with one of the major test-prep companies and Kaplan for example stands to make billions off the new legislation. Makes you think, eh?




Date: 2004-01-14 11:12 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] magid.livejournal.com
Texas was supposed to be this educational miracle, with kids doing well on the TAAS (the TX test). And there are articles coming out now about how incredibly easy this test is, and Texan kids are not doing well on national tests, etc. But he was already elected on the strength of his TX educational miracle (well, among other things). Bah.

Tons of money going to a war I disagree with, taxes cut, unfunded mandates pushed onto the states, but it's ok, 'cause we're going to Mars!

Date: 2004-01-14 10:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hammercock.livejournal.com
Dubya wouldn't recognize dignity if it came right up to him and mooned him.

Date: 2004-01-15 03:57 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] magid.livejournal.com
Or bit him. Yeah.

I just want whoever turns out to be the Democratic candidate to defeat Bush. Really, is that too much to ask?

Profile

magid: (Default)
magid

February 2026

S M T W T F S
12 3 4567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Feb. 9th, 2026 03:14 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios