↓
 

Fierce Planet

  • Home
  • Abortion resources
  • Info

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Delay drops out

Fierce Planet Posted on April 3, 2006 by jnfrApril 3, 2006

From Time magazine:

Tom DeLay Says He Will Give Up His Seat

The embattled former Republican leader tells TIME that he will leave Congress and not seek reelection.

This has to mean he’s in further legal trouble…

Share/Bookmark
Posted in Corruption

The Well turns 21

Fierce Planet Posted on April 1, 2006 by jnfrApril 1, 2006

Twenty-one years ago today The Well opened for logins. In Internet time that was eons ago. The Well was one of the earliest bulletin boards in existence, and one of the best-known. It mostly hosted conversations by people in northern California. Orginally, “Well” stood for “Whole Earth ‘lectronic Link”, and for a long while it was run by the same folks who published the Whole Earth Review and Co-evolution Quarterly.
I spent a lot of years living and working in the alternative culture, and I read about the Well more than once. I wrote the dial-up number on a notebook and I carried it around for years. But I didn’t have a computer back then, and I didn’t live in California, so the early years of the Well passed me by.
When I finally did settle in with my own computer and a place to dial from, it was October of 1993. I logged into the Well, and I’ve never left. I didn’t like it at first. The Unix-driven environment was hard to understand, and like any long-standing community it had many in-groups and out-groups, its own mores and language and shared understandings that I didn’t share.
But it was also full of really smart, funny people, talking about dozens of interesting subjects, and brimming over with new things to learn. So by the time I’d been there a few months, I was hooked.
I learned how to use the message board software. I even learned a little Unix. I got to know the people, and eventually met some of them in the flesh. I started playing online in Muses, where I met the stranger who never seemed like a stranger who eventually became my husband. I made a few fast friends, and learned to cope with the people I disliked. I learned and learned and learned. And to this day I still do.
There’s never a day that goes by where the people of the Well fail to amuse me, teach me, or astound me with their brilliance. They also annoy me, shock me, and dismay me with stupidity. In every way they mirror the human condition, and they mirror myself, and I love them all intently, even the ones I really dislike.
The Well also led me to the Internet, via a gateway which made me promise, every time I used it, that I would never use the Internet for commercial purposes.
Yes, it’s true. I didn’t use the Internet to get to the Well. That wasn’t really possible for ordinary people back in the day. I dialed in long-distance, paying by the minute and paying the Well by the hour. And I have never made a lot of money, so you know it was important. Eventually I signed on via the Compuserve Packet Network, which charged me by the hour but cost much less than AT&T. And then came netcom and my first flat-rate dial-up ‘net access.
Boy, these years have gone by fast. I loved using gopher to rummage around the Smithsonian databases. I never quite figured out WAIS searches. Everything back then was text-based, and the web pages we visited were all in ASCii, rendered by lynx. But the first time a Well friend invited us over to his T1-connected computer at NOAA and showed us video from a space shuttle streaming from out of nowhere, the World Wide Web had me hooked. I used the Well to get to the Internet, and it led me to an even wider virtual world.
Today most people think that the web is all there is, and the Well is home to only a few thousand dedicated talkers. It remains one of the few for-pay message board systems in existence. The software (called picospan) runs rings around anything you’ve seen in web forums or commenting systems. We also have a web interface now, and I use that a lot but the web seems sluggish in comparison. The people are still smart and funny and irritating as ever. Still mostly from California too, though we have a lot of members around the U.S., and even a few from the rest of the world.
I’ve seen the Well go through a couple of different owners since I joined. Currently we’re a subset of Salon, and they’re trying to sell us off, so the future is uncertain. But then, the future usually is uncertain.
This afternoon, when I was with a couple friends toasting the Well’s 21st birthday, we asked ourselves if there was any chance it could last another 21 years. Who knows? People have been predicting the imminent demise of the Well nearly forever, and we’re still here, so maybe there’s a chance. I hope so. The Well is a small treasure of the ‘net, and in its own way it is irreplaceable. At least, I’ve never found anyplace I liked so well, and I’ve seen a lot of communities in my life, online and off.

Share/Bookmark
Posted in Culture

The New Colossus

Fierce Planet Posted on March 28, 2006 by jnfrMarch 28, 2006

A sonnet by Emma Lazarus

Not like the brazen giant of Greek fame,
With conquering limbs astride from land to land;
Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall stand
A mighty woman with a torch, whose flame
Is the imprisoned lightning, and her name
Mother of Exiles. From her beacon-hand
Glows world-wide welcome; her mild eyes command
The air-bridged harbor that twin cities frame.
“Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!” cries she
With silent lips. “Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!”

Share/Bookmark
Posted in Culture

Bush lies

Fierce Planet Posted on March 27, 2006 by jnfrMarch 27, 2006

Recently Bush had a press conference, which is unusual for him, and he called on Helen Thomas, which is even more unusual. While side-stepping her actual question, he declared:

BUSH: I think your premise — in all due respect to your question and to you as a lifelong journalist — is that, you know, I didn’t want war. To assume I wanted war is just — is just flat wrong, Helen, in all due respect —

THOMAS: Everything —

BUSH: Hold on for a second, please.

THOMAS: Everything I’ve heard —

BUSH: Let me — excuse me, excuse me. No president wants war. Everything you may have heard is that, but it’s just simply not true.

And in the New York Times today, following up on a story in the Brtish press, we find that Bush most definitely did want war, and intended to have a war in Iraq no matter what he had to do to get it.

But behind closed doors, the president was certain that war was inevitable. During a private two-hour meeting in the Oval Office on Jan. 31, 2003, he made clear to Prime Minister Tony Blair of Britain that he was determined to invade Iraq without the second resolution, or even if international arms inspectors failed to find unconventional weapons, said a confidential memo about the meeting written by Mr. Blair’s top foreign policy adviser and reviewed by The New York Times.

“Our diplomatic strategy had to be arranged around the military planning,” David Manning, Mr. Blair’s chief foreign policy adviser at the time, wrote in the memo that summarized the discussion between Mr. Bush, Mr. Blair and six of their top aides.

“The start date for the military campaign was now penciled in for 10 March,” Mr. Manning wrote, paraphrasing the president. “This was when the bombing would begin.”…
The memo also shows that the president and the prime minister acknowledged that no unconventional weapons had been found inside Iraq. Faced with the possibility of not finding any before the planned invasion, Mr. Bush talked about several ways to provoke a confrontation, including a proposal to paint a United States surveillance plane in the colors of the United Nations in hopes of drawing fire, or assassinating Mr. Hussein.

Please let’s not pretend any longer that Bush told the truth when he forced this war on Iraq.

Editor & Publisher addresses the memo.

Share/Bookmark
Posted in Bush

Surprise Plot Twist!

Fierce Planet Posted on March 25, 2006 by jnfrMarch 25, 2006

Recently South Dakota passed a law forbidding abortion in all cases except when the mother might die. The law hasn’t been tested in court yet, and there are aspects of it that don’t make sense, but it certainly gives notice that the war on abortion has begun.
But in a surprise twist, I read on ginmar’s livejournal blog last week, the Oglala Sioux Tribe, which holds tribal lands inside of S.D. and is led by a woman, is considering opening a Planned Parenthood clinic on sovereign native lands.

Napoli suggested that if it was a case of

Share/Bookmark
Posted in Health

Hello army.mil!

Fierce Planet Posted on March 5, 2006 by jnfrMarch 5, 2006

machinet.jackson.amedd.army.mil
192.138.77.36
You’ve visited a lot in the last week or two. I hope you’ve found what you’re looking for.

Share/Bookmark
Posted in Military

Ignoring another warning

Fierce Planet Posted on March 1, 2006 by jnfrMarch 1, 2006

Just as Bush didn’t respond to that PDB warning that Osama Bin Laden wanted to attack inside the U.S., it appears he also was warned before Katrina hit about the terrible devastation ahead. And we all know how that worked out.

In dramatic and sometimes agonizing terms, federal disaster officials warned President Bush and his homeland security chief before Hurricane Katrina struck that the storm could breach levees, risk lives in New Orleans’ Superdome and overwhelm rescuers, according to confidential video footage of the briefings.

Bush didn’t ask a single question during the final government-wide briefing the day before Katrina struck on Aug. 29 but assured soon-to-be-battered state officials: “We are fully prepared.”

Six days of footage and transcripts obtained by The Associated Press show in excruciating detail that while federal officials anticipated the tragedy that unfolded in New Orleans and elsewhere along the Gulf Coast, they were fatally slow to realize they had not mustered enough resources to deal with the unprecedented disaster.

CNN is showing the video.

Share/Bookmark
Posted in Uncategorized

Stand Up for Women’s Rights

Fierce Planet Posted on February 24, 2006 by jnfrFebruary 24, 2006


Amanda at Pandagon has some thoughts on how.
Jane at firedoglake is thinking smart on this issue, too.
Oh, and as she also asks, when are we going to ban in-vitro fertilization?

Share/Bookmark
Posted in Health

It takes the British media

Fierce Planet Posted on February 19, 2006 by jnfrFebruary 19, 2006

…to honestly discuss poverty in the United States.

From the article:

37 million poor hidden in the land of plenty

Americans have always believed that hard work will bring rewards, but vast numbers now cannot meet their bills even with two or three jobs. More than one in 10 citizens live below the poverty line, and the gap between the haves and have-nots is widening…

An America divided

Share/Bookmark
Posted in Economy

Speaking of Elmer

Fierce Planet Posted on February 13, 2006 by jnfrFebruary 13, 2006


Quoting another friend:

“What I have gotten from this so far is that it is probably a good time to be a quail in Texas.”

Share/Bookmark
Posted in Random

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Blogroll

  • ACLED
  • Activate America
  • ALEC Exposed
  • alicublog
  • Athena – Delivering Democracy
  • Balloon Juice
  • Ballotpedia
  • Campaign Money
  • Colorado Pols
  • Colorado Sun
  • CREW
  • DailyKos
  • EFF
  • Electoral-Vote.com
  • emptywheel
  • EPIC
  • Eschaton
  • Field Team 6
  • Hullabaloo
  • Indivisible
  • Lawyers, Guns, and Money
  • March for Our Lives
  • No More Mr Nice Blog
  • Not Too Late
  • Nuclear Diner
  • Open Congress
  • Open Secrets
  • Postcards to Voters
  • ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
  • Protect Democracy
  • Protect the Vote
  • SCOTUSBlog
  • Source Watch
  • Stonekettle Station
  • Sunlight Foundation
  • Swing Left
  • Talking Points Memo
  • The Things We Love
  • Unicorn Riot
  • Vote Forward
  • Vote Riders
  • Vote Save America
  • Zandar Versus The Stupid

Tags

2022 abortion biden bts civil rights climate colorado Congress corruption covid culture democrats economy elections environment equality feminism food healthcare history insurrection international iran justice labor legal marijuana obama philosophy picture politics putin race random republicans resistance roe v. wade taxes trump ukraine violence voting war wildlife women

Archives

©2026 - Fierce Planet - Weaver Xtreme Theme
↑