How an Iowa man grows a 1,600-pound pumpkin

“It’s extreme gardening,” Young says, strolling through the remnants of his pumpkin plot. He stops at a smooth spot in the dirt the size of a minke whale. It’s where Young grew the second-largest pumpkin the world has ever seen.

The “big guy,” he calls it, weighed in at 1,662 pounds. In the last decade, big-pumpkin growing has gone from a farmer’s hobby to a regulated, worldwide competition. The boom in gourds has been fueled mainly by the Internet, which makes seeds and growing advice widely available. This year, nine pumpkins outweighed last year’s world record holder. Young’s missed being crowned king gourd by only 27 pounds…

Click here to read this article.

Happy Hallowe’en

‘Tis now the very witching time of night,
when churchyards yawn, and hell itself breathes out contagion to this world.

Now could I drink hot blood, and do such bitter business
as the day would quake to look on.

Hamlet 3.2.380-391

 

War Plans: United States and Iran — George Friedman, StratFor

 

A possible U.S. attack against Iran has been a hot topic in the news for many months now. In some quarters it has become an article of faith that the Bush administration intends to order such an attack before it leaves office. It remains a mystery whether the administration plans an actual attack or whether it is using the threat of attack to try to intimidate Iran — and thus shape its behavior in Iraq and elsewhere. Unraveling the mystery lies, at least in part, in examining what a U.S. attack would look like, given U.S. goals and resources, as well as in considering the potential Iranian response. Before turning to intentions, it is important to discuss the desired outcomes and capabilities. Unfortunately, those discussions have taken a backseat to speculations about the sheer probability of war.

Let’s begin with goals. Continue reading

Iraq’s Cabinet Approves Lifting Immunity for Security Firms

An Iraqi government spokesman says Iraq’s cabinet has approved a law that lifts immunity from prosecution for private security firms in Iraq.

The spokesman, Ali al-Dabbagh, said Tuesday the measure will subject all security companies to Iraqi law and will revoke the immunity given to foreign security contractors by the U.S.-led Coalition Provisional Authority in 2004.

He says the law is being referred to parliament for ratification.

VOA News – Iraq’s Cabinet Approves Lifting Immunity for Security Firms

Military chaplain: Marines in Iraq look to pastor for answers to tough questions

Habbaniyah, Iraq – Under a sun-blanched desert sky, Navy Chaplain
Michael Baker and Marine Sgt. Bill Hudson Gross bounce in the back of a
truck as it rumbles across Camp Habbaniyah. Clad in helmets and body
armor in the 110-degree F. June heat, they’re on a mission: to baptize
Sergeant Gross.

“I am going to try to talk him out of it,” confesses Chaplain Baker,
a tall, lanky Methodist minister whose formal Mississippi-tinged speech
and posture mask an often goofy sense of humor.

It’s not the baptism itself; it’s just the part where Gross wants
Baker to immerse him in the Euphrates, one of four rivers that the
Bible describes as flowing from the Garden of Eden. For Gross, an
infantry platoon leader who just weeks before saw two of his men
wounded by shrapnel, the river has a personal connection. Two years ago
he deployed to a small base on the river, where he turned his back on
religion after learning of his father’s death back home. Now that he
has rediscovered his faith, he feels it fitting to be baptized in a
river where, he says, “a lot of people gave up hope.”

Click here to read the rest of this article.

Is child-porn law too broad?

Under a 2003 child-pornography law, Congress empowered federal agents to arrest anyone for advertising, promoting, presenting, distributing, or soliciting material in a manner that is “intended to cause another to believe” that the material is illegal child pornography. The law applies even if the underlying material isn’t actually child pornography.

US Solicitor General Paul Clement says the law, a section of the Protect Act, is a carefully calibrated effort by Congress to safeguard children from sexual exploitation by targeting those who would traffic in child pornography.

Critics say the law is a vague and over-broad regulation of free speech that threatens to establish the federal government as a kind of thought police. They say the government should punish illegal conduct, not controversial – or even repulsive – thoughts and fantasies. In addition, they say the law could chill artistic, literary, scientific, and other forms of protected speech.

Thinkers only, please.  Those with knee-jerks should pad their chins before reading.

Is child-porn law too broad? | csmonitor.com

Will Gore Get Arrested?

Fresh from winning the Nobel peace prize for his climate change evangelism, Al Gore is apparently considering an invitation from a prominent environmental group to engage in civil disobedience against the construction of new coal-fired power plants.

AlterNet: Blogs: PEEK: Will Gore Get Arrested?

Send a message to Congress: Don’t Bankrupt the Independent Press!

Tuesday’s the big day. That’s when Congress will hold a hearing on the outrageous Time Warner-inspired postage rate hike that’s saddled many small publications with up to with a half million dollar annual increase in postal costs, and brought many smaller publications to the brink of financial disaster.  What the rule essentially does is give postage breaks to large mailers like T-W, while increasing the rates of smaller volume mailers.

Now’s the moment for champions of independent media to take a stand.  We want to collect 100,000 signatures, and we want to have phones ringing off the hook on Capitol Hill by Tuesday.

Our founding fathers knew that a free press is a cornerstone of democracy. That’s why they encouraged small publishers and a broad spectrum of opinions in media by guaranteeing fair postal rates for all.

But mega-magazines have undermined that founding principle. Time Warner and others like them are passing the buck onto smaller independent publishers, threatening to silence the fearless investigative journalism that small media outlets are known for.

Now is our chance to restore the founder’s vision.  Please send
a message to Congress, post haste.

A message in the sand: Tibetan monks’ ritual reflects impermanence of life


Thupten Chosang will spend several hours next week creating an intricate pattern with colored grains of sand. Then he’ll help sweep it away.

“It shows the circle of life,” said Chosang, a 30-year-old Tibetan monk who will fashion a mandala with fellow monks at Millsaps College in Jackson. “Death is the beginning of life and birth is the beginning of death. When we finish mandalas, we dismantle them. It shows the impermanent nature of life.”

As part of a tour called “The Mystical Arts of Tibet,” Chosang and nine other Tibetan monks will visit Jackson to share the ancient ritual of sand painting. The tour aims to promote peace while raising awareness of the Tibetan refugee community in India.

clarionledger.com – Religion | A message in the sand: Tibetan monks’ ritual reflects impermanence of life

Monk puts new face on Buddhism

PORT ARTHUR — Bhante Kassapa is the new, blue-eyed face of Vietnamese Buddhism.

The U.S. Air Force veteran, one-time Franciscan monk and former airport communications trainer will this weekend become what is thought to be the first white American to don the robes of a senior monk in the Vietnamese Buddhist tradition.

Port Arthur monk puts new face on Buddhism | Chron.com – Houston Chronicle

Neocons Embrace Islamic Terror Group

Daniel Pipes, one of America’s premiere Islamophobes, has a soft spot for one deadly deadly Islamic terrorist organization.

The enemy of my enemy may be my friend, but sometimes it’s hard to see who the enemy really is to begin with.  And who can you believe, among the folks who are telling us who they are?

AlterNet: War on Iraq: Neocons Embrace Islamic Terror Group

Clinton’s gender poses challenge in Iowa

Iowa remains the only state besides Mississippi never to have elected a woman to the governor’s office or to Congress. A bedeviling question is how that legacy will play for Hillary Rodham Clinton, who is seeking to become the first woman president and is in a far tighter race for the Democratic presidential nomination in Iowa than she is in other early-primary states.

Clinton’s gender poses challenge in Iowa

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