Archive for February, 2005

The 77th Annual Academy Awards

Posted in Film, Television on February 28th, 2005 by Chip Gibbons

I enjoy watching the Academy Awards each year especially with others.

I watched last night’s show with a friend and it was fun, although I thought the show seemed cheap and poorly staged not to mention overly scripted and downright boring.  Here’s MSN’s review.  Here’s a list of the winners.

Chris Rock seemed to be trying too hard at times and his shouting became tiresome.  Some of his jokes were hysterical, however, especially when he started comparing President Bush’s handling of our country’s finances with the life of a cashier at The Gap.

Giving awards in the audience was bizarre.  You had top-tier actresses like Cate Blanchett in these beautiful, expensive gowns handing out awards with a backdrop of movie theater seats and aisles.  Not very glamourous.

The set was absolutely horrible.  Perhaps that why they decided to hand out statues in the theater aisles instead.

I’m so glad The Aviator didn’t win Best Picture.  It was an entertaining film but I never bought Leonardo DiCaprio as Howard Hughes.

I haven’t seen Million Dollar Baby so I don’t know yet if I think it deserved the award.  It’s defintely on my to-see list.

BTK: Bind, Torture, Kill

Posted in Government/Politics, Religion on February 27th, 2005 by Chip Gibbons

He worked for the government, he was active in his church, he lead a Boy Scout troop, he was married with two children and he called himself BTK.

In Park City, the suspect’s neighbors said [Dennis Rader] helped elderly neighbors with yard work but described him as an unpleasant man who often went looking for reasons to cite his neighbors for violations of city codes.

Bill Lindsay, 38, lived behind Rader and said his wife caught Rader in their adjoining backyards filming the back of their house.

“He really acted really funny,??? said Lindsay, a truck driver. “I’d be on the road and my wife would tell me, ’Dennis has been out again, taking his pictures.???’

Jason Day, 28, said his brother was in Rader’s Cub Scout pack at the nearby Park City Baptist Church, but their mother pulled him out because of Rader.

“It was his demeanor,??? he said. “He was so strange.???

Rader served on the Sedgwick County Board of Zoning Appeals and the Animal Control Advisory Board, according to official documents posted on the Internet, and was president of the Christ Lutheran Church in Wichita, according to the church’s Web site.

I’m not sure what evidence the Wichita, KS police have that pointed them to Rader but I think it’s very interesting that such a serial killer can blend so well into mainstream society.   So well that it took 30 years to catch him.

It also took decades for police to catch Gary Ridgeway.

Spybot Search and Destroy (S&D)

Posted in Product Reviews, Web/Tech on February 24th, 2005 by Chip Gibbons

The February 24, 2005 issue of PcWorld has an article on Spybot free spyware removal software.

They also give a list of all their favorite free anti-spyware programs and links to download them.

If you’re going to download an anti-spyware program be sure you download something from a reputable company or organization.  Some anti-spyware programs remove some spyware only for the purpose of replacing it with new spyware.

The program ran very quickly on my system and it found 22 problems!  I told it to fix the problems and it performed that task very quickly.  21 of the problems were classified as "tracking cookies" and the other one was a "registry key."

I printed out the log of the report and it said it had fixed all the problems.

Spybot also found 28 problems on my notebook.  I fixed those problems.

In addition, Spybot has an "immunize" function that is supposed to block new spyware before it gets installed on your computer.  Spybot can also be updated so that it can recognize new adware and spyware programs as they are developed by companies that want to spy on your computer.

Our Godless Constitution

Posted in Government/Politics, Religion on February 24th, 2005 by Chip Gibbons

It is hard to believe that George Bush has ever read the works of George Orwell, but he seems, somehow, to have grasped a few Orwellian precepts. The lesson the President has learned best–and certainly the one that has been the most useful to him–is the axiom that if you repeat a lie often enough, people will believe it. One of his Administration’s current favorites is the whopper about America having been founded on Christian principles. Our nation was founded not on Christian principles but on Enlightenment ones. God only entered the picture as a very minor player, and Jesus Christ was conspicuously absent.

That is how Brooke Allen begins the article Our Godless Constitution in The Nation.

The article is a long and thorough examination of the religious (or more correctly, anti-religious) beliefs of our founding fathers.

The Founding Fathers were not religious men, and they fought hard to erect, in Thomas Jefferson’s words, "a wall of separation between church and state." John Adams opined that if they were not restrained by legal measures, Puritans–the fundamentalists of their day–would "whip and crop, and pillory and roast." The historical epoch had afforded these men ample opportunity to observe the corruption to which established priesthoods were liable, as well as "the impious presumption of legislators and rulers," as Jefferson wrote, "civil as well as ecclesiastical, who, being themselves but fallible and uninspired men, have assumed dominion over the faith of others, setting up their own opinions and modes of thinking as the only true and infallible, and as such endeavoring to impose them on others, hath established and maintained false religions over the greatest part of the world and through all time."

If we define a Christian as a person who believes in the divinity of Jesus Christ, then it is safe to say that some of the key Founding Fathers were not Christians at all. Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson and Tom Paine were deists–that is, they believed in one Supreme Being but rejected revelation and all the supernatural elements of the Christian Church; the word of the Creator, they believed, could best be read in Nature. John Adams was a professed liberal Unitarian, but he, too, in his private correspondence seems more deist than Christian.

George Washington and James Madison also leaned toward deism, although neither took much interest in religious matters. Madison believed that "religious bondage shackles and debilitates the mind and unfits it for every noble enterprize." He spoke of the "almost fifteen centuries" during which Christianity had been on trial: "What have been its fruits? More or less in all places, pride and indolence in the Clergy, ignorance and servility in the laity, in both, superstition, bigotry, and persecution." If Washington mentioned the Almighty in a public address, as he occasionally did, he was careful to refer to Him not as "God" but with some nondenominational moniker like "Great Author" or "Almighty Being." It is interesting to note that the Father of our Country spoke no words of a religious nature on his deathbed, although fully aware that he was dying, and did not ask for a man of God to be present; his last act was to take his own pulse, the consummate gesture of a creature of the age of scientific rationalism.

Read the whole thing at The Nation web site.