Off the wagon

This past weekend I ended my ‘No TV’ experiment after 2 months. Wasn’t exactly planned, but I saw that Discovery Channel was showing “When we left Earth: The NASA Missions” (Discovery Channel web folks: TV show pages + Firefox = FAIL. Fix please.).

Being a bit of a space geek, I just had to watch it and wasn’t disappointed. The first two episodes covered the Mercury and Gemini missions with historic footage and recent interviews with astronauts and Mission Control staff.

There wasn’t anything really new from a historical perspective, but there was a lot of cool archival footage. I enjoyed watching the first two parts of the series. People who only know the space program through shuttle launches will probably be impressed once they realize how much technology has changed between the early missions and now.

Dog hooks

I had been planning on using some of the scrap pieces of wood in the garage to fashion a rack to hang the dog collars and leashes on.

At the meet & greet at Lucia’s Premium Pet, I saw these and just had to have them.

Two dog butt hooks mounted on the wall.  The hook is shaped like the hind end of a dog with the tail pointed up.  The hook on the right has a blue leash hanging from it.
A dog butt hook with several collars hung on it.

Lucia’s sells them for $4.99, but you can find them at IKEA for less. Unfortunately IKEA doesn’t sell them online though. Since the closest IKEA is in Atlanta and with gas prices the way they are, it’s a lot cheaper to just make the trip out to Daniel Island and pick them up at Lucia’s.

Still need to find a place to put the third one I bought.

Puppy overload

Some of the puppies that were at the WHLR meet & greet over the weekend at Lucia’s Premium Pet







Standing against Doomination

One of the reasons I like reading Bad Astronomy Blog is The Bad Astronomer‘s (aka Phil Plait) penchant for calling out states, school boards, educators and who-not trying to push alternative “scientific” theories into schools (which for the most part are fairly thinly veiled attempts at pushing a creationist teaching agenda). Phil does this really well.

I find it all quite amusing, ironic and sad all at the same time (the politicians and their bills, not Phil).

Consider this. You can hardly go a day without hearing someone bashing or criticizing the state of public education, or reading about the latest study on how kids in the US fare so poorly in compared to other countries. Everybody complains about the sorry state of public education in the US (despite the efforts of all the good teachers out there). Yet just about everywhere you turn, there is some politician out there who insists on dumbing down the curriculum even more. They create bills or rules that supposedly allow educators the ‘freedom’ to teach ‘alternative scientific theories’ (we all know what that means) at the expense of the real science.

It’s the Doomination of America I tell you. Doom! DOOM!

Think about it. Instead of letting teachers give kids a real education or trying to improve the state of public education in the country, they want to fill the curriculum with crap. I mean really, what are you thinking! The only thing kids are learning these days is how to pass those stupid standardized tests (and most of them aren’t even doing that!). You want to replace what little science they’re learning with crap and expect more students to pass??!!

Seriously, doesn’t that just make you want to go WTF?

WTF! WTF!

Don’t even get me started on the endless standardized testing and the idiocy that is “No Child Left Behind” either.

I like The Bad Astronomer. Phil’s my hero.

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