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edited by: Mike Landfair, Oregon Editor

The Grich

  • Using geography to find Osama bin Laden

    Geographers at UCLA have been busy using GIS analysis to narrow down where bin Laden might be hiding.
    Here's the analytic synopsis:
    Essentially, the study generates hiding-place location probabilities. It starts with "distance decay theory," which holds that the odds are greater that the person will be found close' [...]
    Posted: February 18, 2009, 1:48pm EST
  • Sealand

    All I know is, when is the movie about this guy going to come out.
    In 1967, Paddy Roy Bates was just another run-of-the-mill Army major-cum-fisherman-cum-pirate radio operator, minding his own business and blithely disregarding British broadcasting law. But the British - sticklers for things like laws (especially [...]
    Posted: February 18, 2009, 1:40pm EST
  • Living the Map

    Check this cool website out.  This guy’s site is called “Living the Map.”  He’s on task to take a job in each of the 50 states of our great nation.  And he’s learning very interesting things about the various people’s who live around the country.  He’s going to get [...]

    Posted: October 24, 2008, 3:45pm EDT
  • Election maps 2008

    Usually I look in vain for good maps of the election cycle, but with the proliferation of on-line mapping these days, you knew we’d run into some.  There’s a litany of KML regarding the election this year, but what I wanted was some nice maps showing distributions that you don’t [...]

    Posted: October 24, 2008, 3:40pm EDT
  • Big Brother Tech

    Lately I’ve been seeing many articles and blog posts talking about more and more technology being used to track and pinpoint you and aspects of your life.  I work in an industry that when the technology is being applied to businesses and government, the thought pattern is that the more [...]

    Posted: October 02, 2008, 4:40pm EDT
  • Paul Newman, enabling GIS for disadvantaged communities

    I had heard that Paul Newman had died this last weekend, and was reflecting on his vast career as an actor.  Many of you know how active he was as a philanthropist and an entrepreneur (Newman’s Own brand of whatever).  However this one surprised me because his generosity enabled [...]

    Posted: October 02, 2008, 10:20am EDT
  • Google road network change

    Beware the road network on Google Maps!  So says Jonathan Crowe, who lives in Canada and has noticed that since Google has switched it’s contract for road network data from Navteq to Tele-Atlas, the road network has gotten a little more inaccurate.

    But there’s a problem: Chad complains [...]

    Posted: September 25, 2008, 11:11am EDT
  • Badger Creek Wilderness

    No, that other Badger Creek. Yes there are many creeks and rivers in the United States with that name. In researching our hike this summer I had to remember to insert "Oregon" or Mt Hood National Forest" in my query or I would get some po-dunk creek in the" [...]
    Posted: September 16, 2008, 10:26pm EDT
  • Hurricane coverage

    The Map Room has some links to sites that are following the hurricanes using mapping technology.  On the tail end of Gustav is the tropical storm Hanna, which could be a hurricane by as early as tomorrow.

    Of interest is whether or not the RNC convention will be adversely [...]

    Posted: September 02, 2008, 1:22pm EDT
  • Invade Canada!

    Many people are aware that the border between the U.S. and Canada is the longest unprotected border between two nations in the world.  In politics and foreign policy, trade and the like, Canada and the U.S. are viewed as friends and partners (for the most part, there are squabbles as [...]

    Posted: August 29, 2008, 3:33pm EDT
  • Solzhenitsyn is dead

    Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Russian dissident and author.  1918-2008.  Stalin couldn't kill him.  The Russian Gulags didn't end him.  Cancer had no hold on him.  But time finally caught up with him.

    I remember reading the Gulag Archipelago in my early 20s.  It was a daunting book (and that was just [...]

    Posted: August 18, 2008, 4:01pm EDT
  • Repose on political economics

    I’ve been busy at work and home over the past week, but I thought it was time I responded to a commenter last week on this post about Obama and the politics of change (or not so much change).

    The comment is in response to this part of my [...]

    Posted: August 13, 2008, 11:43am EDT
  • Ossetia, Georgia and Russia

    If you haven’t been watching the Olympics or the news you might not be aware that the spirit of international cooperation and brotherly love hasn’t caught on in some parts of the world.  Specifically the area of Southern Ossetia in the country of Georgia. 

    Georgia has had trouble from [...]

    Posted: August 11, 2008, 1:54pm EDT
  • Imus map of Oregon

    If you are into maps, as I am, and you live in Oregon (or Alaska by the way) you need to know this guy’s name.

    Imus' original Oregon map, which has sold 45,000 copies, won "best of show" in an American Congress on Surveying & Mapping contest. The' [...]

    Posted: August 11, 2008, 1:16pm EDT
  • Gas and hot air

    Are gasoline prices too high?  Certainly oil and gas have risen in price quite a bit over the past few years, and politicians waste no time pointing fingers for personal advantage.  However there isn’t much our government can do without making life worse for us, and even less the President [...]

    Posted: August 06, 2008, 5:35pm EDT
  • Who is Obama anyway?

    American election for President of this great country, episode number 44, seems to be underway, and I find myself actually thinking of, yes, voting for someone.

    Anyone who has read this blog in the past will no doubt assume that I’m voting Republican based on my viewpoints.  And you’re [...]

    Posted: August 05, 2008, 4:31pm EDT
  • Brazilian, the language

    How about this, folks.

    Portugal may have to recognise the inevitable by bowing to the economic and cultural predominance of Brazil, its former colony. The once proud imperial power is considering reforming its language to accommodate recent linguistic developments in the South American economic powerhouse, with which it [...]

    Posted: May 20, 2008, 3:45pm EDT
  • Reading the Post is torture

    What can I say about coercive interrogation techniques that hasn’t already been said a million times.  I could tell you that I’m not sure about military detainee torture and it’s value in war-time.  I’m sure there are studies out there, and some will say that it’s necessary to save lives, [...]

    Posted: May 20, 2008, 2:05pm EDT
  • Violence in South Africa

    There’s been a rash of Xenophobia in South Africa.

    The spate of violent attacks targeting foreigners in South Africa has caused an estimated 13,000 people to flee from their homes to police stations and other havens, local Red Cross officials said.

    At least 22 people have been killed [...]

    Posted: May 20, 2008, 2:04pm EDT
  • Perspective on economics

    Here’s an interesting statement about economics.

    There is nothing complicated about finance. It is based on old people lending to young people. Young people invest in homes and businesses; aging people save to acquire assets on which to retire. The new generation supports the old one, and retirement [...]

    Posted: May 19, 2008, 3:59pm EDT
  • Early Gaelic discovery of America

    Hi.  Me again. 
    If you’ve read stuff I’ve put here before, you know that I have some affinity toward geography.  And as such, the study of explorers is particularly interesting, although I admit I haven’t sailed that westerly much in my academic or private life.

    Sometime in the past I [...]

    Posted: May 19, 2008, 3:17pm EDT
  • PDOT bike commuter month

    The Portland Dept of Transportation is having an entire month of events in May for bike commuters or potential bike commuters.  Suck it up and get on that pedal machine.  Portland is commonly known as one of, if not the, most bike-friendly cities in the nation.  I’ve been riding [...]

    Posted: April 25, 2008, 8:46am EDT
  • Photos of galaxies

    As if yesterday’s photo gallery of cities at night weren’t enough, check out the largest gallery of Hubble telescope photos I’ve seen in a while.  Galaxies Gone Wild!

    [...]
    Posted: April 24, 2008, 11:49am EDT
  • Cities at night

    For your viewing pleasure.  Cities at night from space.

    [...]
    Posted: April 23, 2008, 9:47am EDT
  • McCain, the fighter pilot

    Another perspective on John McCain.

    Some say John McCain's character was formed in a North Vietnamese prison. I say those people should take a gander at what John chose to do--voluntarily. Being a carrier pilot requires aptitude, intelligence, skill, knowledge, discernment, and courage of a kind rarely found' [...]

    Posted: April 23, 2008, 9:46am EDT
  • Riots in Egypt

    There’s rioting in the streets.  In Egypt in a town called Mahalla, but it’s starting to reach out to other parts of the country.

        It all started two days ago, when a nationwide strike was called by a number of political parties and worker movements to protest [...]

    Posted: April 08, 2008, 5:19pm EDT
  • Political Power

    I’ve often thought about this as the source of real problems in our political/social system in this country.  There’s a general sense that we need to solve the problem of special interests using money to improperly influence the government, or at least the legislative process.   At the same time, there’s [...]

    Posted: April 07, 2008, 3:04pm EDT
  • McCain, Hillary and the economy

    Here’s an interesting piece on the stability of Switzerland.  I’ll quote the same section that Instapundit did.  

        They have one of the world’s most stable economies, a skilled workforce, internationally recognized export companies, a sound currency, and renowned banking and financial services. All this is combined with [...]

    Posted: April 03, 2008, 4:54pm EDT
  • The McCain factor

    OK. A while back I promised that I would take a look at John McCain as a Presidential candidate. I've been paying some attention, and it's truly been entertaining to watch him work while the two Democratic candidates go at each other, but other things have been bothering me.
    [...]
    Posted: March 08, 2008, 1:30am EST
  • Settle down on the playground

    I know I’m supposed to get livid over things like this, but I find myself strangely philosophical about it.  I’ve heard of kids shows in Palestine approaching on the bizarre when it comes to indoctrinating kids to hate other people.  If you don’t think there’s something screwed up about that [...]

    Posted: February 27, 2008, 4:44pm EST
  • Power grab by the DEA

    I’ve been interested lately in the way that government agencies attempt to grab power for themselves above and beyond what their actual mandate accounts for.  For instance an agency who attempts to get power from Congress over an arena that traditionally belongs to another agency.

    This just whisked across the [...]

    Posted: February 27, 2008, 4:29pm EST
  • I'm getting behind

    For the past few months I’ve been absent from this blog much of the time.  I’ve been busy, or in many cases I’ve been doing lots of reading and unsure what I wanted to write on.  Lately, I started briefly with the intention of scrutinizing the platforms of the candidates [...]

    Posted: February 20, 2008, 2:59pm EST
  • Alas, the Republican is gone

    I made a quick reference in that last Romney post about Fred Thompson, and how the last real conservative had departed the race, leaving us with Romney and McCain, both of which have been accuse of being Republican in Name Only. Before you start drenching me in comments extolling either [...]
    Posted: February 03, 2008, 12:19am EST
  • Mit Romney: Social issues

    I always start these posts with a bit of ambivalence. It's hard to start, knowing that you want to do a good and thorough job and knowing that it's going to have to take a bit of research and a bit of writing. Which takes a bit out of your [...]
    Posted: February 03, 2008, 10:46pm EST
  • Romney: Domestic/Economy

    Mitt Romney, in the area of government administration and finance, sounds like a typical conservative in many ways. I found little in the way of truly new ideas, although in his case it sounds like he actually accomplished some of this on a state level. Romney puts a lot of [...]

    Posted: January 28, 2008, 12:25am EST
  • Romney: Foreign Policy

    What can we say about Mit Romney that hasn’t been said a thousand times in the press. He’s a Mormon, which is a first for a serious Presidential candidate (at least in my memory, which isn’t that good). He’s a Republican governor of a very liberal leaning state. This, the [...]

    Posted: January 27, 2008, 12:41am EST
  • The issues

    For the next few posts I’ll be looking over a few of the top candidates for the office of President from both parties. I have a few areas that I’d like to focus on, and I’m mostly going to contain myself from going off about how dirty they’re playing in [...]

    Posted: January 27, 2008, 10:43pm EST
  • Super Ruby Tuesday '08

    It’s been a while, but the wait should not be taken as a sign that I have fallen off the earth. Nor should the reader assume that I have given up on politics, world events, science and religion just because I have not put fingers to the keys for a [...]

    Posted: January 27, 2008, 10:00pm EST
  • Gullible Warping

    This seems extraordinary.  10 years ago a bunch of bureaucrats, led by Al Gore, met in the Japanese city of Kyoto and dreamed up a “solution” to the apparent problem of global warming by drafting up a bunch of rules around limiting emissions. 

    These limits were inherently unfair to [...]

    Posted: December 14, 2007, 2:04pm EST
  • Geography links

    Pretty keen blog devoted to the geography of elections, particularly this election.  Some neat maps and links to other sites regarding maps and tools that others have done regarding the political and cultural landscape.   Worth a look-see.

    Also, if you’re inclined, check this one out too.  Common Census [...]

    Posted: November 02, 2007, 4:59pm EDT
  • Happy Halloween

    A short history of the Vampire, as a figure of legend and religious mysticism, from one of my favorite geographers.

        The modern vampire is a product of myths evolved through both space and time. There is no one single origin for bloodsucking beasts but one can see [...]

    Posted: October 31, 2007, 1:39pm EDT
  • Self-deluded idealism

    Read this interesting post on Political Correctness in the Roman Empire.  Then come back.

    OK, welcome back.  The Roman historian Tacitus might have been waxing idealistic, and might have just been disgruntled with the breakdown of Roman society, when he reported that Germanic tribes where hippie communes, but [...]

    Posted: October 29, 2007, 4:36pm EDT
  • Events in Burma and the Coalition of Peace.

    Haven’t been blogging on world events much, or at all, but I think that, just in case someone is reading this from a cave somewhere, you should be aware that there is a small country called Myanmar, which was formerly known as Burma, that is going through some birthing [...]

    Posted: September 28, 2007, 4:39pm EDT
  • Sim God

    If you’ve ever played a “Sim” game, you know how fun it is to try and manage and control the holistic worlds that are created within. Keep an entire city running. There’s even one of the entire earth, sort of. And as computer power continues to increase, the limits of [...]

    Posted: September 12, 2007, 11:44pm EDT
  • Post to remind us

    I wasn't going to post anything today, specifically to remember 9/11. There are plenty of people doing that, and I did my own remembering, and talked with some people about it. However, I just saw this article that Dave Barry (yes, the humor columnist) did on that very day. [...]
    Posted: September 12, 2007, 11:31pm EDT
  • The vara

    Fun fact for the day.  I came across a very bizarre unit of measurement today while considering land surveys in Texas.  It seems that while surveyors in most parts of the country rely on feet or chains (go figure), in Texas, and indeed in some other southern states, you might [...]

    Posted: September 05, 2007, 4:24pm EDT
  • Indian Heaven Wilderness

    Admittedly, my posts about hiking in Oregon and Washington have fallen short this year. We did get out a bit this last couple of weeks, so I’ll tell you about a wilderness that’s worth taking a leisurely stroll in.

    The Indian Heaven Wilderness, in the [...]

    Posted: September 03, 2007, 11:03pm EDT
  • Melt down of modern news

    My wife and I were talking about the state of logical debate in our fine country and society at large today, she because she had heard an interview with a man named Lee Harris, who is apparently liberal and gay, who wrote a book describing how the left has [...]

    Posted: September 03, 2007, 9:49pm EDT
  • Portland's Pearl

    For those with Portland pride, the Project for Public Spaces (PPS) in New York put the Pearl District in NW Portland in it’s top 60 great public spaces in the world!

    Portland is probably going to hang this from their highest banner for some time to come, but they [...]

    Posted: August 24, 2007, 10:24am EDT
  • Silver Star Mountain


    If you are looking to the northeast from most locations in Portland, Oregon, your view of one of the spectacular volcanoes of the Northwest, 12,276 foot Mt Adams, is blocked by some tall hills, or low mountains, just outside of Vancouver, Washington. The tallest peak [...]
    Posted: August 21, 2007, 6:41pm EDT
  • Degar of Vietnam

    Just as the U.S. is trying to open relations with Vietnam, it’s good to remember that this isn’t an open and free, capitalistic and democratic society.  Far from it, and ever since we abandoned them after the Vietnam war, things haven’t been well for the average citizen of Southeast [...]

    Posted: August 03, 2007, 1:44pm EDT
  • Bolivian Musical Capitals

    Geographic post of the day.
    This is kind of a geopolitical bit of news, but it has some geographic implications that will get geographers worked up, and possibly force poor students to re-memorize the capitals of Latin American countries.

    Bolivian Marxist President Evo Morales has decided that he needs to [...]

    Posted: July 23, 2007, 4:34pm EDT
  • Dysfunctional Politic

    On my continuing theme of disgust at the current political climate in America, which I blame all politicians and other people who refuse to see anything but partisan victory and power of conquest, I noted this great article by Roger Simon, via Instapundit, about the rhetorical battle between the [...]

    Posted: July 23, 2007, 4:34pm EDT
  • Wyden's Flat Tax

    I’m always ready to be surprised by a Democrat legislating in the nation’s capital.  It’s even more neato when that Senator is from my own home state of Oregon, who’s blue-state credentials usually allow Democratic legislators to tow party line without having to answer to their constituents.

    For the [...]

    Posted: July 23, 2007, 4:32pm EDT
  • Homer vs. giant

    Homer Simpson joins the Cerne Abbas giant on the landscape of the English countryside, angering pagans who find some ritual significance in the figure carved into the side of a hill.  Pagans think it’s of ancient origin, like Stonehenge, but most historians now concede that it was probably done [...]

    Posted: July 20, 2007, 5:47pm EDT
  • Obama and Kindergarteners

    There’s a story filtering around the conservative side of things that Barack Obama wants “sex education” for kindergarteners.  I saw this here, and from the article, it sounds like this is far less of a big deal than the right makes it out to be.

    Obama clarified:

    Posted: July 19, 2007, 4:43pm EDT
  • Weather Control

    This is kind of scary:  Weather control for political purposes.

        Thirty-two thousand people are employed by the People's Republic of China in their weather control program. The operation costs up to ninety-million dollars and members are equipped with everything ranging from rocket launchers to modified anti-aircraft [...]

    Posted: July 19, 2007, 1:36pm EDT
  • The Journey of Man

    Via Catholicgauze, here’s a neat time lapse application that shows a depiction of mankind’s dispersal across the globe from about 150k years ago, from a central origin point in Africa.  As with most things archeological, you need to take this as a theory, not fact, but it’s interesting [...]

    Posted: July 19, 2007, 1:16pm EDT
  • Peace

    If you are anything more than an occasional browser of this blog, or someone who has come here more than a couple of times, you have probably noticed the bleak amount of posting I’ve been doing lately.  Fear not.  I am still here.  Part of it was that I have [...]

    Posted: July 18, 2007, 5:35pm EDT
  • Happy 4th of July!!!

    Posted: July 04, 2007, 11:28am EDT
  • Where America got it's name

    Catholicgauze asks the question and ponders some of the possibilities. You've all heard of Amerigo Vespucci, the Italian explorer, however it's thought that the German mapmaker, Martin Waldseemuller, who's map is thought to be the first to name it such, would not have known Vespucci by the given name [...]
    Posted: July 02, 2007, 10:09pm EDT
  • What's your state GDP compare to?

    A great blog called Strange Maps had this neat map someone made to show the relative GDP of each state by renaming them to a country in the world with a similar GDP.

    [...]
    Posted: July 02, 2007, 10:04pm EDT
  • U.S. Congress vs. UN Human Rights Council

    Well, I’ve certainly been one to criticize the UN Human Rights commission in the past, and their current manifestation of that group, the Human Rights Council.  It’s a shame really that something with the potential to do so much good ends up being as useless, and worse than useless: actually [...]

    Posted: June 27, 2007, 2:09pm EDT
  • Geography - we hardly knew ya

    I had thought to blog on this when I read it, but Catholicguaze got to it first.  In the GIS world, I get a newsletter (it’s pretty lengthy, more like a newspaper or a journal) from ESRI concerning their product ArcGIS, which is what I use at work.  Most of [...]

    Posted: June 26, 2007, 5:56pm EDT
  • Gerrymander your district

    Check out this great redistricting game online.  Normally I won’t talk up online games, but this is a map game.  Ah, the power of the cartographer!

     The object is to redraw the voting districts for imaginary places based on certain criteria and public reaction so that you can get [...]

    Posted: June 26, 2007, 5:09pm EDT
  • The Universe: Feel Small

    A small atlas of the Universe, which is boiled down to 9 pictures at scales ranging from 12.5 light years to 14 billion light years.  And you ask yourself, “They can see that far into space?”  It does seem like a long way.

    The thing that caught my eye [...]

    Posted: June 19, 2007, 4:51pm EDT
  • Your brain is as dry as the remainder biscuit after a voyage

    How to insult someone like Shakespeare.

    [...]
    Posted: June 18, 2007, 12:22pm EDT
  • Popular Constitutional Law and Roe

    OK, so I saw this interesting paper on Democratic Constitutionalism and Backlash, where two gentlemen writing for the Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review talk about popular constitutional engagement.   This article was very long, and full of big words, so I didn’t take the time to read the entire [...]

    Posted: June 13, 2007, 4:42pm EDT
  • Integrity Magazine Sales reminder

    This seems like a good time to remind people that there are predatory organizations out there that use teens who are out there on their own and have no family support structure to turn to. If some young person comes to your door trying to sell magazines, this might [...]
    Posted: June 06, 2007, 10:11pm EDT
  • Place of the day

    Long ago in this container of Grich I had a regular post called "Country of the Day." That turned into country of the week, and then country of the whenever-I-feel-like-spending-the-time. I'm sorry I let this go, as I enjoyed the process. But at times it took a fair bit of [...]
    Posted: June 01, 2007, 5:20pm EDT
  • Marriage and Children

    There have been a couple of great posts lately, starting with Instapundit noting an article in the Economist regarding the success factor of kids raised in an intact family. I won't go too far along that line, as I really don't have much to say beyond what the article [...]
    Posted: June 01, 2007, 4:43pm EDT
  • Sporting news

    Some events just passed us by that I didn’t get to watch, but I’m not so caught up in the things of the world that I think it’s monumentally important that I did.  But it would have been fun either way.

    The national spelling bee is over, and Evan [...]

    Posted: June 01, 2007, 3:09pm EDT
  • Oxbow Regional Park


    For those of us in the Portland area, we live in a big city that's blessed with natural diversity and beauty that you would be foolish not to experience and enjoy. For those of you who can't seem to get away, or who are reluctant to [...]
    Posted: May 30, 2007, 10:42pm EDT
  • Rooting out evil

    Just a short note to all of you to keep your eye on Lebanon, where things are getting hot again.
    There have been bombings and attacks, and Lebanon is getting more and more tired of harboring Palestinian refugees who harbor the same people who incited Israel to attack their [...]
    Posted: May 26, 2007, 9:39pm EDT
  • CEO income controversy

    Gateway Pundit looks at CEO pay and notes that the big earners aren’t really making as much as they were in the 90s, contrary to popular notion. There is still a big gap between what executives earn and what the guy sitting in the cubical a few floors below [...]

    Posted: May 25, 2007, 5:04pm EDT
  • If you live in Portland

    ... then you'll get this blog post.
    Not much going on (he says as the world dissolves) so I was reading the Oregonian, which I don't often do, and found some interesting stories.

    The legislature never seems to stop making laws and handing out money, so here's some interesting [...]
    Posted: May 24, 2007, 9:12pm EDT
  • Phoning it in

    The Insta poses an interesting question.  In this age of information, is the fine journalistic art of editing an interview to the point where it’s unrecognizable to the person who was interviewed over?

    I’ll reprint the same quote he did here.

        It is a transaction that clearly [...]

    Posted: May 22, 2007, 11:55am EDT
  • Catholic-politician abortion policy

    Morality in politics has a special place in the hearts of the conservative.  The number one issue among religious conservatives is abortion, and will continue to be for some time.  It’s not a pretty subject, but anger and emotions run hot when discussing it, and politicians tend to try and [...]

    Posted: May 11, 2007, 4:54pm EDT
  • Tax preparation blues

    I’m not a supporter of John Edwards, being that he’s a Democrat doesn’t help, but I’m always willing to listen when people have a good idea.  Even if it doesn’t pan out to be a good idea when all thought out and debated, this tax preparation idea has merit.

    [...]
    Posted: April 25, 2007, 4:29pm EDT
    by Richard
  • New Look

    You might notice, if you've been here before, that I've traded in that obnoxious orange for one of Blogger's new templates. Very nice. Enjoy. [...]
    Posted: April 25, 2007, 10:34pm EDT
    by Richard
  • Viewing Homer from Space

    People generally have this notion that satellite technology is good enough to read license plates, or mostly thanks to movies like Enemy of the State, that geosynchronous satellites run by the government can watch your every move from space. However that's just not so, as even the best and highest [...]
    Posted: April 25, 2007, 10:03pm EDT
    by Richard
  • Follow up

    Follow up from the Russian thing.  It appears that we might not be just sitting back either.

        U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates is in Warsaw for talks with leaders on U.S. plans to deploy a missile defense system in Poland and the Czech Republic.

    OK, the [...]

    Posted: April 24, 2007, 4:12pm EDT
    by Richard
  • Back in the USSR

    Just in case you were wondering, we’re the enemy again.

        The International Herald Tribune reported on Friday that Russian News Service, a radio broadcasting conglomerate recently taken over by state gas monopoly Gazprom, had brought in a new team of a managers and staff had been [...]

    Posted: April 23, 2007, 4:11pm EDT
    by Richard
  • French election

    Of course we already have a map of the results. Thank you CatholicGuaze.
    There will be a run off election on May 6th between the socialist party Segolene Royal and the more conservative US-friendly Nicolas Sarkozy. Sarkozy got the most votes in the preliminary round, so it's generally thought [...]
    Posted: April 23, 2007, 12:17am EDT
    by Richard
  • Pope and unborn part 2

    OK, I've been around this with a few people in my church who took my comments about the Pope's declaration that there's hope that unborn and unbaptized children will all get to go to heaven. I was pretty harsh, but what I was attempting to say was that the [...]
    Posted: April 23, 2007, 11:11pm EDT
    by Richard
  • Pope and the baby issue

    The Pope and the catholic church have been grappling with the issue of whether babies go to heaven or not before they're baptized. Apparently this is in response to many catholic women who are concerned about all the aborted babies in the world. This isn't a small or unemotional issue, [...]
    Posted: April 21, 2007, 6:19pm EDT
    by Richard
  • Virginia Tech

    The shooting that took place at Virginia Tech earlier this week has certainly worked all of us up into a frenzy.  I’ve been watching with sorrow in my heart for those who’s life will be affected by this and for those who lost their lives.  But more-so I will [...]

    Posted: April 20, 2007, 5:31pm EDT
    by Richard
  • Voice over IP - 911 challenges

    You might be aware that today’s technology allows 911 emergency services to locate you based on information that your phone is sending back.  Traditional land lines have been able to do this for a while, based on the telephone record of where that phone number resides, and cellular technology is [...]

    Posted: April 20, 2007, 8:47am EDT
    by Richard
  • Zimbabwe tries to shut down NGOs

    Interesting article from Reuters about Zimbabwe starting to take down all the NGOs there.  NGOs include all those organizations who selfishly provide aid and food to people who are starving due to Robert Mugabe’s campaign against everyone in his country.

        Mugabe, sole ruler since independence in 1980, has [...]

    Posted: April 17, 2007, 3:07pm EDT
    by Richard
  • Google Earth domination

    After reading this article on how Google is doing a great job giving average people the geographic context of any given event on the earth, in this case the situation in Darfur...
    Google Earth has added a Global Awareness layer to its maps program that lets you learn about [...]
    Posted: April 11, 2007, 3:49pm EDT
  • Google Earth domination

    After reading this article on how Google is doing a great job giving average people the geographic context of any given event on the earth, in this case the situation in Darfur...
    Google Earth has added a Global Awareness layer to its maps program that lets you learn about [...]
    Posted: April 11, 2007, 3:49pm EDT
    by Richard
  • History of modern geographic thought

    A short guide to the modern history of geographic thought, by Catholicgauze.  If any of you are interested, this sums up the last 150 years of geography as a discipline and academic field, which is not quite where it is today.  I recall some of this, but most of [...]

    Posted: April 04, 2007, 5:27pm EDT
  • History of modern geographic thought

    A short guide to the modern history of geographic thought, by Catholicgauze.  If any of you are interested, this sums up the last 150 years of geography as a discipline and academic field, which is not quite where it is today.  I recall some of this, but most of [...]

    Posted: April 04, 2007, 5:27pm EDT
    by Richard
  • Darfur update

    Darfur.  Finally!  “A high-level United Nations mission to Darfur said today that the Sudanese government had organized and taken part in human rights crimes against its own population and that international action to stop the killings and rapes had been inadequate.”

    [...]
    Posted: March 14, 2007, 1:54am EDT
    by Richard
  • Negative U.S. influence

    Why is the U.S. so hated around the world?

        In part it is due to the Soviet's propaganda machine which instead of directly trying to influence events created a self-sustaining Marxist subculture which seeks to destroy the establishment (United States and allied institutions) in the West. This [...]

    Posted: March 14, 2007, 1:31am EDT
    by Richard
  • Darfur update

    Darfur.  Finally!  “A high-level United Nations mission to Darfur said today that the Sudanese government had organized and taken part in human rights crimes against its own population and that international action to stop the killings and rapes had been inadequate.”

    [...]
    Posted: March 14, 2007, 12:54am EDT
  • Negative U.S. influence

    Why is the U.S. so hated around the world?

        In part it is due to the Soviet's propaganda machine which instead of directly trying to influence events created a self-sustaining Marxist subculture which seeks to destroy the establishment (United States and allied institutions) in the West. This [...]

    Posted: March 14, 2007, 12:31am EDT
  • Trying a nation

    I find it interesting that the United Nations can come up with the logic in trying an entire nation for genocide.  At issue is the Bosnian genocide during the Serbian/Bosnian crisis in the early 90s. 

    The international court in the Hague, Netherlands, exonerated the Serbs for the crimes [...]

    Posted: March 09, 2007, 1:55pm EST
  • Trying a nation

    I find it interesting that the United Nations can come up with the logic in trying an entire nation for genocide.  At issue is the Bosnian genocide during the Serbian/Bosnian crisis in the early 90s. 

    The international court in the Hague, Netherlands, exonerated the Serbs for the crimes [...]

    Posted: March 09, 2007, 1:55pm EST
    by Richard
  • Islamic hatred discussion

    In many countries of the world, well in most countries apparently, there is a substantial penalty for renouncing your faith if you’re a Muslim.  The death threats are certainly not an incentive to renounce Islam as your religion. 

    Fascinating that there are probably millions of Muslims walking around [...]

    Posted: March 07, 2007, 5:57pm EST

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