Aug. 13th, 2004

kyburg: (WTF)
Dude, cross check this one for me.

Are they serious?

"The First Holy Communion made by 8-year-old borough resident Haley Waldman in April is considered invalid in the eyes of the Roman Catholic Church since the Holy Eucharist she received did not contain any wheat. The young girl's mother, Liz Waldman, said this week she had just recently learned of the ruling made by the church.

I'm not catholic. Stuff like this literalism is a very good way to convince me that's a good thing.
kyburg: (WTF)
Dude, cross check this one for me.

Are they serious?

"The First Holy Communion made by 8-year-old borough resident Haley Waldman in April is considered invalid in the eyes of the Roman Catholic Church since the Holy Eucharist she received did not contain any wheat. The young girl's mother, Liz Waldman, said this week she had just recently learned of the ruling made by the church.

I'm not catholic. Stuff like this literalism is a very good way to convince me that's a good thing.
kyburg: (Default)
Dude, cross check this one for me.

Are they serious?

"The First Holy Communion made by 8-year-old borough resident Haley Waldman in April is considered invalid in the eyes of the Roman Catholic Church since the Holy Eucharist she received did not contain any wheat. The young girl's mother, Liz Waldman, said this week she had just recently learned of the ruling made by the church.

I'm not catholic. Stuff like this literalism is a very good way to convince me that's a good thing.
kyburg: (loser)
ABC News story on Cryptome.org
John Young's Cryptome-- an online repository for publicly available information -- has long been on my short list of essential 'Net bookmarks. The site archives "material on freedom of expression, privacy, cryptology, dual-use technologies, national security, intelligence, and secret governance -- open, secret and classified documents," among other things. This ABC News story details a recent incident in which Department of Homeland Security officials paid Young a visit, expressing concern about some of the content he'd posted online. It's not the first time he's been visited by federal authorities over that issue, and I'd wager it won't be the last.

Officials questioned Young about information he had posted about the 2004 Democratic National Convention, including satellite photos of the convention site and the location of specific police barricades referred to on the site as "a complete joke." In response to a complaint, two special agents from the FBI's counterterrorism office in New York City interviewed Young in November 2003. "They said, 'Why didn't you call us about this? Why are you telling the public?' And we said, 'Because it's out there and you can see it. You folks weren't doing anything,' " Young told ABC News.

The agents, according to Young, stressed they knew that nothing on the site was illegal. Young added: "They said, 'What we'd like you to do, if you're approached by anyone that you think intends to harm the United States, we're asking you to let us know that.' "


Emphasis mine.

Excuse me, but - they couldn't be bothered to come to the same conclusions one guy with a computer can come to - so, yanno - if you would, so very kind please, do our thinking/our work/take responsiblity for us? OKTHANX.

*face palms* And I paid good money for this.

(BTW, the guy's site is available as a syndicated feed at [livejournal.com profile] cryptome.)
kyburg: (loser)
ABC News story on Cryptome.org
John Young's Cryptome-- an online repository for publicly available information -- has long been on my short list of essential 'Net bookmarks. The site archives "material on freedom of expression, privacy, cryptology, dual-use technologies, national security, intelligence, and secret governance -- open, secret and classified documents," among other things. This ABC News story details a recent incident in which Department of Homeland Security officials paid Young a visit, expressing concern about some of the content he'd posted online. It's not the first time he's been visited by federal authorities over that issue, and I'd wager it won't be the last.

Officials questioned Young about information he had posted about the 2004 Democratic National Convention, including satellite photos of the convention site and the location of specific police barricades referred to on the site as "a complete joke." In response to a complaint, two special agents from the FBI's counterterrorism office in New York City interviewed Young in November 2003. "They said, 'Why didn't you call us about this? Why are you telling the public?' And we said, 'Because it's out there and you can see it. You folks weren't doing anything,' " Young told ABC News.

The agents, according to Young, stressed they knew that nothing on the site was illegal. Young added: "They said, 'What we'd like you to do, if you're approached by anyone that you think intends to harm the United States, we're asking you to let us know that.' "


Emphasis mine.

Excuse me, but - they couldn't be bothered to come to the same conclusions one guy with a computer can come to - so, yanno - if you would, so very kind please, do our thinking/our work/take responsiblity for us? OKTHANX.

*face palms* And I paid good money for this.

(BTW, the guy's site is available as a syndicated feed at [livejournal.com profile] cryptome.)
kyburg: (Default)
ABC News story on Cryptome.org
John Young's Cryptome-- an online repository for publicly available information -- has long been on my short list of essential 'Net bookmarks. The site archives "material on freedom of expression, privacy, cryptology, dual-use technologies, national security, intelligence, and secret governance -- open, secret and classified documents," among other things. This ABC News story details a recent incident in which Department of Homeland Security officials paid Young a visit, expressing concern about some of the content he'd posted online. It's not the first time he's been visited by federal authorities over that issue, and I'd wager it won't be the last.

Officials questioned Young about information he had posted about the 2004 Democratic National Convention, including satellite photos of the convention site and the location of specific police barricades referred to on the site as "a complete joke." In response to a complaint, two special agents from the FBI's counterterrorism office in New York City interviewed Young in November 2003. "They said, 'Why didn't you call us about this? Why are you telling the public?' And we said, 'Because it's out there and you can see it. You folks weren't doing anything,' " Young told ABC News.

The agents, according to Young, stressed they knew that nothing on the site was illegal. Young added: "They said, 'What we'd like you to do, if you're approached by anyone that you think intends to harm the United States, we're asking you to let us know that.' "


Emphasis mine.

Excuse me, but - they couldn't be bothered to come to the same conclusions one guy with a computer can come to - so, yanno - if you would, so very kind please, do our thinking/our work/take responsiblity for us? OKTHANX.

*face palms* And I paid good money for this.

(BTW, the guy's site is available as a syndicated feed at [livejournal.com profile] cryptome.)
kyburg: (hungry)
One stick of butter at a time.

Goodbye, Julia Child. Give 'em all my regards and tell them I'll see 'em later.

I thought about finding one recipe to post as a memorial - but found something better.

365 days. 536 recipes. One girl and a crappy outer borough kitchen.

Yes, someone took on a project to cook one (or more) recipe(s) of Julia's a day - every day - for an entire year. And blogged it.

Now that, folks, is a blogathon.

*sigh* And yes, I was a dope and sent Emeril an email, expressing condolences.
kyburg: (hungry)
One stick of butter at a time.

Goodbye, Julia Child. Give 'em all my regards and tell them I'll see 'em later.

I thought about finding one recipe to post as a memorial - but found something better.

365 days. 536 recipes. One girl and a crappy outer borough kitchen.

Yes, someone took on a project to cook one (or more) recipe(s) of Julia's a day - every day - for an entire year. And blogged it.

Now that, folks, is a blogathon.

*sigh* And yes, I was a dope and sent Emeril an email, expressing condolences.
kyburg: (Default)
One stick of butter at a time.

Goodbye, Julia Child. Give 'em all my regards and tell them I'll see 'em later.

I thought about finding one recipe to post as a memorial - but found something better.

365 days. 536 recipes. One girl and a crappy outer borough kitchen.

Yes, someone took on a project to cook one (or more) recipe(s) of Julia's a day - every day - for an entire year. And blogged it.

Now that, folks, is a blogathon.

*sigh* And yes, I was a dope and sent Emeril an email, expressing condolences.

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kyburg: (Default)
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