Maru (
yakalskovich) wrote2004-11-23 03:10 pm
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Hulluja nuo ihmiset!
Or: "These humans are crazy!"; or: "Die spinnen, die Menschen!" or: "Il's sont fous, les hommes!" (meaning humans, not men in particular; that is another story).
A blog is originally a web-log, which means that I a) log my RL life on the web or b) log where I have been on the web; this is the latter sort of entry.
While the fax spooled slowly into the spooler (and I am so not doing anything taxing in the meanwhile as not to disturb the software), I was surprised by the following articles:
US occupation forces Iraqi farmers to buy expensive patented seed from US companies! (in English)
Provider demands their customers to pay for being wiretapped (in German)
Americans worried about planned wind power generators off the New England coast (in German?) What is their problem? What "aesthetic desaster"? I love wind power generators; for me, they're part of the coastal landscape. How can anybody think old windmills cozy and nostalgic, but hate wind power generators?
Because of The Shrub, US Americans are actually emigrating to Canada - and not only ever saying they would! (in English)
And now something positive at the end: the unobtrusive civil servant who is going to kick Microsoft off all computers in Munich's public administration (in German)
A blog is originally a web-log, which means that I a) log my RL life on the web or b) log where I have been on the web; this is the latter sort of entry.
While the fax spooled slowly into the spooler (and I am so not doing anything taxing in the meanwhile as not to disturb the software), I was surprised by the following articles:
US occupation forces Iraqi farmers to buy expensive patented seed from US companies! (in English)
Provider demands their customers to pay for being wiretapped (in German)
Americans worried about planned wind power generators off the New England coast (in German?) What is their problem? What "aesthetic desaster"? I love wind power generators; for me, they're part of the coastal landscape. How can anybody think old windmills cozy and nostalgic, but hate wind power generators?
Because of The Shrub, US Americans are actually emigrating to Canada - and not only ever saying they would! (in English)
And now something positive at the end: the unobtrusive civil servant who is going to kick Microsoft off all computers in Munich's public administration (in German)
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Really. How stoopid. Might read up on all your links when I'm on free access.
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Counting wind power generators while driving past them isn't exactly trivial, by the way; they are like legendary standing stones in that respect...
*loves wind power generators*
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And no, I'm not being facetious, I mean to prove that people accept them once they're there, like church spires and windmills. You can tell any Vermonters you might encounter that they can calm down.
However, when I tried to buy a postcard with wind power generators for
Oh yes, I was going to ask you about gay civil unions, too...
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A funny story related to this... My friend Stefan comes from the Netherlands. He is as gay as they come, but he says he did not know about the gay marriage/union law that passed until it happened. He said there was no big controversy at all -- certainly unlike here! In Georgia they just passed an amendment to the state Constitution that says "marriage = man + woman" -- really disheartening. Ugh.... Of course in my home state they have had same-sex marriage for a year now I think!?
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I wonder how the Het-Only States are going to handle those things after ther fact. Imagine a gay married couple moved from Boston to Atlanta for job reasons - what are they then? No longer married? And what do the courts or hospitals say about the speical rights of spouses? It makes your mind boggle. Their status of being married or not flickers from state to state?
So, for fic-writing reasons, I need to know about gay civil unions and gay marrigage in Masachusetts, especially Boston. What rights does it give them etc. Is there anything a gay married couple is not entitled to, as compared to a het one (the way they can't adopt children here in Germany)? Are there different stages of officially being recognised as a couple? I know that all that originally began in the US when certain local administrations started extending benefits to non-married partners of their employees, and that in turn began including gay partners. There had to be some sort of official act to state they are, and it all rolled off from that point, if I remember correctly. Can you point me to some web site where I can find out about all that? I was going to mail you about that, but now we're talking anyway, I can ask here as well. The prospective recipient of said fic knows I'm researching this, even, so there needn't be that much secrecy.
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was happy about munich but then read they might have to take it back due to every little thing in pcs and the web being licensed. and it is impossible to avoid every licensed bit *hates microsoft* *patents*
so vienna will not follow. at least it waits to see what happens.
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It's not about having a totally license, free computer. It's about data protection in the public sector, and Microsoft keeping silent about what XP phones home about. At least in the case of Munich, so I hope Vienna follwos suit. Heh! If that concerns the Volkshochschule, then the "Spanish Ambassador in Birkenstocks" might have a problem there as well...
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you really have to supply more details (name, phone, pic) of that piefke couply in vienna. what is she like then, elisabeth in flip flops?
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And a fuzzy one, too.