PICTURE PICTURE PICTURE
    PICTURE
    • Template based on a design by Thur
    •       
      Marriage is love.
    www.flickr.com
    This is a Flickr badge showing public photos from cambolah. Make your own badge here.
    Join the People Over Profits Grassroots Network.
      CURRENT MOON
      moon info
        The WeatherPixie
          NaJuReMoNoMo
              Winner
              PICTURE PICTURE PICTURE PICTURE
                Save the Internet: Click here

                Powered by Blogger

                Friday, April 08, 2005

                Tom Delay: JackAss

                Contravening his oath to uphold the constitution, Tom Delay told his supporters "of faith":
                I believe the judicial branch of our government has overstepped its authority on countless occasions, overturning and, in some cases, ignoring the legitimate will of the people.
                I thought that was the idea behind an independent judiciary, jackass &*#$%&$^#. Call me quaint or old-fashioned, but I thought there was a process for amending the constitution that involved slightly more than congressmen blowing hot air out their arses.

                Though I hate conspiracy theories, I'm sensing this attack is not meant for the here and now. I think it's meant for the next illegitimate onslaught on our judiciary, and by extension our democracy, which is right around the corner, up and coming and soon . . .

                Thursday, April 07, 2005

                And I thought all I had to worry about was the heart attack or stroke risk!

                Today, Bextra was taken off the market, due to its propensity to maim the people who take it. This is the second time in less than a year that a drug I've taken has been recalled.

                I used to take Vioxx, a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory COX-2 inhibitor which is used by folks with rheumatoid arthritis, among other things. It was marketed as a super-powerful one-tablet-a-day easy-on-the-stomach painkiller. Because the FDA did a lousy work-up and let it on the market even though data showed it had a tendency to kill a significant number of the people who took it, the drug was withdrawn in September 2004 once the FDA put it all together. Good thing it only took a few heart attacks, strokes and deaths before the story got out, eh?

                At the time, a good substitute to Vioxx was Bextra. Today, it is not considered such a good substitute. According to the FDA:
                Bextra gives no added advantage as a painkiller and can cause a potentially life-threatening skin condition called Stevens-Johnson syndrome, an allergic reaction that usually begins as a blistering of the mouth and lips and can spread to the rest of the body.
                Oh, boy. Now, instead of a heart attack or stroke, I can look like I've got herpes on my entire body! What will they suggest next?

                Wednesday, April 06, 2005

                April is National Poetry Month

                I'm not a poet, so check out someone who is:

                Chicago Review: http://humanities.uchicago.edu/orgs/review/index.shtml

                Denvery Quarterly: http://www.denverquarterly.com/

                For a fascinating discussion of the subject, check out: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4575085

                Tuesday, April 05, 2005

                Disclaimer

                This is my personal blog. On it, I express my personal opinions. I do not intend to speak for the Ypsilanti Board of Education through this blog in any way, shape or form. Nothing on this blog should be construed as coming from the Ypsilanti School Board.

                Additionally, nothing on this blog should be considered legal advice. I do not intend to provide legal advice on this blog. Unless you have a signed fee agreement with me or my office, I am not your lawyer. Legal decision-making is very personalized, situation-based, and it requires a comprehensive analysis of the facts underlying a particular situation. It is risky and dangerous to generalize the law and apply it without consulting a lawyer on the particulars of your own personal situation. The things I say on this blog are merely expressions of my opinion, and you should not rely on them when making your own personal legal decisions.

                Saturday, April 02, 2005

                101 things 'bout me

                1. My true passion is songwriting
                2. But I'm not terribly good at it
                3. Which doesn't deter me
                4. My best songs are the ones that star my daughters
                5. And my next best songs are the ones in which my friends guest-star
                6. I have done 4 CD’s to date, with artwork and all
                7. My daughters are the *most* important people in the world to me
                8. They are the focus of my life, and they take up all of my time, and all my money
                9. But I don’t mind at all - in fact, I like it
                10. I love to camp in the backcountry
                11. But I hardly ever get to anymore
                12. And I miss it
                13. I have two tattoos
                14. One of which is a color drawing of Jimmy Page's 1959 Les Paul Sunburst
                15. And the other which is a musical note with a flame for a flag
                16. I don't like to drink beer I can see through
                17. But I will if that's all that's around
                18. I prefer tubes to solid state
                19. But most of my gear is digital, 'cause it costs less and still works pretty well
                20. I have watched every episode of BtVS and Angel at least once
                21. I once had the honor of working (for just a couple days) with Tori Amos on the first version of her Little Earthquakes record
                22. Which was rejected by her record company the first time around
                23. *But not because of anything I did or didn't do!*
                24. I find women who are smarter than me to be very attractive
                25. Which will probably be my undoing
                26. I am a trial lawyer, but I'm not evil (or greedy)
                27. Well, okay, maybe I'm a little greedy, but I'm really *not* evil
                28. I own 8 electric guitars
                29. One of which is a Japanese made, Squier Venus I got on eBay
                30. That I refer to as the “George Bush Memorial Tax Cut Guitar”
                31. Because I bought it with my $300 tax refund check that the feds sent me a few summers ago
                32. And (back to my 8 electrics) 2 of which I assembled and finished myself to my own specs
                33. And I own 2 acoustic guitars
                34. I *love* heavy metal music, but I'm a total sucker for a catchy pop tune
                35. My undergraduate degrees were in Music Composition and Philosophy
                36. Which were also the two least marketable degrees offered at the college I attended
                37. Which was Oberlin College
                38. Which is in the middle of nowhere in Ohio
                39. Which was good for me, 'cause if there had been anything else to do, I never would have studied or shown up for class
                40. I graduated college in 1990
                41. After completing what I fondly refer to as "the five year plan"
                42. I drive a 1998 black Infiniti Q45, which I refer to as the "lawyermobile"
                43. But until recently I drove a 2001 silver PT Cruiser with flames on the side, which I consider an homage to my adolescence
                44. I once drove Susanna Hoffs (of the Bangles) to a restaurant in West Hollywood
                45. And I did not like her personality at all
                46. And apparently neither did her producer, who declined to drive her, leaving me with the task
                47. I have jumped out of perfectly functioning airplanes 3 times
                48. I'm licensed to practice law in two states, Michigan and Colorado
                49. But I have also been admitted pro hac vice in Federal Bankruptcy Court in Baltimore, MD
                50. And I don't even practice bankruptcy law -- in fact I know almost nothing about it
                51. I graduated from law school in 1997
                52. I was an exchange student in Germany when I was 16
                53. Which is where I learned to drink beer you can't see through
                54. My house was built in 1884
                55. It's in a federally recognized historic district
                56. And I have been working on it for years
                57. And I will be working on it for years to come
                58. I am a publicly elected official on a Board of Education
                59. At least 'til someone recalls me
                60. I love to bungee jump every time I make it to Las Vegas
                61. And go to the spas
                62. And ride the roller coasters
                63. And eat good food -- like at Nobu
                64. But I don't like to gamble at all
                65. I once had lunch with Michelle Shocked
                66. At a Mexican Restaurant in L.A.
                67. Where all the waiters appeared to be gay, Hispanic men
                68. I liked her personality
                69. But I was really glad that I wasn't the person who accidentally erased a portion of her master multitrack tape after she took it to another studio to mix
                70. 'Cause, boy, was she mad . . .
                71. And had to come back to re-record the entire song in just one day
                72. I used to star in children's youth-theater plays as a kid
                73. I am a card-carrying member of the A.C.L.U.
                74. And I don't understand why some people think that's a bad thing
                75. I once worked a recording session at which Barry Manilow sang Silent Night, Holy Night to an entire string orchestra
                76. It was surreal watching a Jewish man make a Christmas album in Hollywood in the middle of summer
                77. I am one of the unlucky few who suffer from rheumatoid arthritis
                78. But for me it is considered mild and treatable with prescription drugs
                79. The first of which was Vioxx, which worked very, very well
                80. Until it was pulled from the market
                81. So I started taking Bextra, which worked equally well
                82. Until it was pulled from the market
                83. So I went back to the Vioxx I had left over, ‘least ‘til I ran out
                84. And now I take Mobic, which is nowhere near as good, but it works *okay*
                85. But I would really prefer to have my Vioxx back
                86. I recently went through a painful, but otherwise amicable divorce
                87. Which means that I am a “single parent”
                88. Of “at risk” kids, who live with me
                89. And worst of all, I am apparently supposed to start dating
                90. Which kind of terrifies me
                91. ‘Cause the last actual date I went on was with my soon-to-be-ex-wife sometime in 1986
                92. And I can’t even recall the last actual date I went on prior to that
                93. I have three real vices
                94. The first is heavy metal music
                95. Which I can’t get enough of
                96. The second is fine Scotch
                97. Which I *never* drink too much of
                98. ‘Cause it leaves a terrible hangover
                99. The third vice I have is cigars
                100. Which many people think are gross
                101. But hey, that’s life :) I like ‘em

                Friday, April 01, 2005

                You can't believe everything you read . . .

                Let's set the record straight:

                Lately, both the A2 News and the Courier can't seem to get the key facts right. Last BOE meeting, according to the Courier, the BOE apparently laid off 17 administrators:

                Administrators get pink slips for 2005
                UPDATED Mar. 30, 2005 3:10 PM EST
                A capacity crowd of upset parents and concerned administrators filled the board room at Ypsilanti High School as the Ypsilanti Board of Education laid off 17 administrators. The administrators currently fill positions that might be cut due to the district's financial crisis. The district has a $5.5 million deficit.

                I was at the meeting. I'm on the Board. We didn't lay anyone off. What gives? Doesn't the major local newspaper know what what a pink slip is?

                According to the A2 Snooze, we are drowning in "red ink." Last time I checked the list of terms in the acccounting manual, "red ink" meant debt. That's when the liabilities exceed the assets. We are not in debt. Our assets exceed our liabilities. There is no "red ink." What's the story?

                Did you know . . .

                That Merriam-Webster OnLine teaches us that a 'trusty' is:

                a convict considered trustworthy and allowed special privileges