- Badtux the Busy Penguin
In a time of chimpanzees, I was a penguin.
The religious right is motivated by the suspicion that someone, somewhere,
is having fun -- and that this must be stopped.
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Vacation ending
Bedsheets
-- Badtux the Snarky Penguin
Kiwi Torch
New Zealand by way of London band Howling Bells with "A Ballad for Bleeding Hearts" off of their album Radio Wars. This relatively new band's output is somewhat uneven, but when they're good, they're good....
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Monday, August 30, 2010
Illegal immigrant crimelord caught!
Yeppers. "La Barbie" is an illegal alien... in Mexico. The United States is the source of the guns, money, and in some cases even the manpower, that fuels the drug cartels in Mexico that have turned life down there into a living hell for many Mexicans. But for some reason ole' Weepy ain't so interested in that problem. Huh, go figger...
-- Badtux the Bedsheet-glimpsin' Penguin
Dashed hopes and regrets
Yes, I know I did a Dex Romweber Duo song just a couple of days ago, but this song just stuck to me because I know where Dex is coming from, us fat old farts know far too much about dashed hopes and regrets. This is the Dex Romweber Duo (Dex and his sister) with "People Places and Things" off of their recent album, Ruins of Berlin.
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Sunday, August 29, 2010
Breakfast of champions
Slaid Cleaves, "Breakfast in Hell" off his Broke Down CD. An old-fashioned working man's ballad.
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Saturday, August 28, 2010
All it needs is an aircraft carrier and a Mission Accomplished sign
Just sayin'.
Anybody who thinks we're really leaving Iraq anytime soon is crazier than Weepy Beck. After all, there's oil in them thare sands... and Halliburton ain't finished suckin' it out.
-- Badtux the Snarky Penguin
Still alive
Here, have some fuzz on fuzz action:
Makes me sleepy just lookin' at it...
-- Badtux the Sleepy Penguin
Hopelessly sad
Townes van Zandt once said that his songs weren't sad, just hopeless. But can songs that make you cry be anything but sad?
This is "Marie".
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Friday, August 27, 2010
Fat man fuckin' *rocks*
Old fart Dexter Romweber and his sister (on drums) show what rock'n'roll is all about. He may be fat, and he may be old. But he knows how to thrash that antique axe of his and shout into the mike, and his sister knows how to pound them drums.
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Thursday, August 26, 2010
It's a free country (*)
I remember when you could just walk into a Social Security office, do your business, and walk out. But that was back when the Soviet Union was around, when the United States prided itself on being different from the Soviet Union. "In the Soviet Union", Reader's Digest proudly proclaimed, "you can't walk down the street without an armed police officer stopping you and asking you for your papers. We don't do that in free countries." For once, that right-wing loon DeWitt Wallace was right...
-- Badtux the Sovok Penguin
(*)For some definition of "free" that isn't in the dictionary.
Duty Meow for the Future
Only Devo would do a video where they play with a room full of cats in order to celebrate their first new album in, uhm, decades? Devolution, indeed! (Of course, the whole Bush II era is sorta proof of that, eh?)
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
BP and U.S. government colluding to protect BP?
-- Badtux the Snarky Penguin
Going to the beach....
Love
L.A. dream pop duo Devics, with their song "Song for a Sleeping Girl" from their 2006 album Push the Heart. Sadly, it appears they're no longer active... a shame, they had a number of well-written and gorgeous tunes...
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
It is 101F in Santa Clara, CA
-- Badtux the Overheated Penguin
And it is done...
- Badtux the now Happily-employed Penguin
Madness
Baltimore band Lower Dens with their song "Rosie" from their first album, 2010's Twin-Hand Movement. Nice atmospherics, a bit tedious if you're not in the right herbal mood beforehand (if you know what I mean)...
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Monday, August 23, 2010
What a day!
Company 1: A small but profitable company with 10 engineers in their engineering department.
Company 2: A division of a multi-billion-dollar large company that originated as an acquisition, with about 20 engineers in the division, and which is semi-independent but which is important to the main company's core strategies.
In both cases I liked the people I interviewed with, they liked me, and I'd be working with some cool technologies. I think I'd do well in either environment. Now my problem is deciding which of these I will choose. Now *that* is a problem to have!
-- Badtux the Somewhat-relieved Penguin
Ode to roots
This is the Raveonette's tribute to the debt they owe to the Ronettes, "Ode to LA". Ronnie Spector, who survived the Ronettes and Phil Spector, sings some of the vocals. The Raveonettes are a Danish duo who in this tune have created a remarkably American sound...
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Sunday, August 22, 2010
The zombie apocalypse
The first we see of the zombies is the hero and heroine are in a hotel conference room and suddenly black oozy mouse-sized things burst in through the doors, along with shambling zombies. The hero pulls out a pistol and shoots a path through the zombies to the emergency exit, with the heroine covering his back with another pistol and rushing out behind him.
From that point on, things got a little less cohesive. You see slugs oozing toward them as they run to their cars in the parking lot. The hero and heroine spend a few lines trying to figure out what's happening and what they're going to do, but spot the slugs and jump into their respective cars just in time for the slugs to start slapping against the windows, and they drive off in different directions.
The heroine is in a *very* crowded Mini Cooper pulling one of those small "mini-car" teardrop trailers. Apparently she's been on the road for a long time. She drives a ways, finds a secluded spot, pulls off, and sleeps an hour or so. After that she heads to the rural area where she grew up, thinking perhaps there's more of a chance they're not infected yet, especially since everybody is well armed out there. She pulls into the driveway of the property she owns, and notices a dead body hanging out the door and leaves in a hurry. Rather than taking the main road, she takes a back road that leads to one of her relatives' homes. She passes a Sheriff's car sprawled across half the road, red lights still blinking, windshield smashed in, she can't tell where the deputy is, so she just speeds past. Finally she arrives at her relative's house, and the relative lets her in. The relative then tells her that a slug is eating into his brain, and she has only a minute or two to grab his deer rifle and blow his head off before the slug takes over and tries to kill her. She does that, and the spattered slug writhes a bit then dies.
She stocks up quickly on more guns and ammo, as well as filling her car from fuel cans, and heads toward the nearest city. She isn't breaking any laws but a patrol car comes up behind her with its bubble lights flashing. Remembering the Sheriff's Department car and the possibility that these might be zombies like her cousin that she had to kill, she keeps going until there is a second patrol car coming towards her with bubbles flashing. At that point she figures zombies don't coordinate well enough for that and pulls over.
So of course they pull her out of the car and roust her and she tries to explain what she has seen, including the slug in her cousin's brain (though in her version of the story the cousin pulled the trigger himself to commit suicide). They don't believe her.
And then I woke up.
What do penguins dream when penguins dream? Well, now you know. Nope, no idea how this story ends :).
-- Badtux the Nightmare Penguin
Okay, this is just crazy


At that point, the question is, WHY? Look at the two photos above. One is a popular semiautomatic .30-06 deer rifle, the Browning BAR ShortTrac. The other is the M1 Garand, a rifle designed in 1936 which is similarly a semiautomatic .30-06 rifle (semiautomatic means one trigger pull per shot -- like the deer rifle, the Garand was designed for people who were aiming, not for "pray and spray" dipshits). They have a virtually identical rate of fire. The BAR is slightly lighter, probably a bit more accurate due to its tighter tolerances (the M1's were stamped out by the millions during WW2 in factories that cared more about volume than about quality) and, because it is newer, the BAR is capable of accepting +P (high pressure) ammunition and thus has more stopping power than the M1 Garand.
In other words, there is no (zero) reason to disallow (re)importing the M1 Garand, other than typical Pentagon intransigence when it comes to our allies selling off military surplus weapons (most of the sales agreements we force upon our allies forces them to either destroy or return weapons for free to the Pentagon for disposal once they're no longer needed, a protectionist racket on behalf of U.S. arms manufacturers who don't want to have to compete with their own used weapons on the international market). And that intransigence doesn't even make sense in the case of the M1 Garand -- due to all the millions that flooded the market after WW2, the thing hasn't been manufactured for over 60 years, and compared to modern combat rifles it's a heavy slow-firing relic that nobody would want to use in combat, especially when you can buy a cheap stamped AK-47 made in any of a dozen nations that the Soviets gifted with AK-47 stamping plants for under $50 in most 3rd world marketplaces.
But my guess is that the Pentagon just jerked their knee and pointed to the lines in the policy manual that disallow reselling (foreign) military surplus to civilians. The problem is that this is giving the right wing yet another "Obama is banning guns!" headline. My advice to the Secretary of Defense: Find out who in your department is refusing to give clearance for the Koreans to resell these guns, and kick his butt until he issues a special waiver to the Koreans. Otherwise this is going to turn into a political nightmare for the Obama administration, because if you ban the bottom gun (the M1 Garand), it's really, really, really easy for political opponents to say that the Obama administration wants to ban the top gun (the Browning deer rifle) -- something that, as far as I know, is contrary to every policy position that has ever been released by the Obama administration.
-- Badtux the Well-armed Penguin
Lights
The Walkabouts, "The Light Will Stay On", a 1996 single collected on their 2003 "best of" album Shimmers. These folks were active from 1985 to 2005, yet nobody seems to have heard of them. Carla Torgerson can actually sing (and can *still* sing, there's an acoustic version of her singing this song in 2008 and it's just as good as the original), unlike the modern generation of pop tarts, and their music is gorgeous. Just chalk it up to another case of the music industry not being able to recognize quality...
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Saturday, August 21, 2010
Magic
90's indie band Drugstore with their song "White Magic for Lovers", off their 1998 album by the same name. For some reason these folks never got any love even though their music is pretty good....
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Friday, August 20, 2010
Phew, what a week!
Of all these guys, the one I did today is the one I'd most like -- it's with a small but profitable company doing interesting things where you get to play with lots of cool technology and make it do things that make people want to buy. The second employer is a big company, but the division that I interviewed with has a strong manager and seems to be doing interesting things with network infrastructure and virtualization. The third employer is a startup, and is going to try to do what we originally wanted to do at my previous employer before the board of directors forced us to try to fit square pegs into round holes and sell into a market that the technology simply wasn't well suited for. I wouldn't mind trying to actually make that original vision work at a new company.
So anyhow, that was my week, and is why you didn't get any music this morning -- my queue finally ran empty. Here, have a pair of cats instead:
-- Badtux the Tired Penguin
Bonus new music: Saskia Sansom. Nothing of hers on Youtube yet, but click on the "music" tab and you can listen to some of her songs there...
Thursday, August 19, 2010
Another creep
“While SB 1070 is not a panacea for illegal immigration, it is one of several tools at our disposal,” says Conservative Republican Bill Montgomery, who’s running for Maricopa County Attorney in the August 24, 2010, primary election. “I fully support SB 1070 and its full and fair enforcement
My reply:
I am not interested in receiving emails from bigots and liars. Please remove my email address from your list.
Yes, I was feeling polite today :).
-- Badtux the Polite Penguin
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
Headlines you don't expect
Ann Coulter has been dropped as a keynote speaker for WND's "Taking America Back National Conference" next month because of her plan to address an event titled "HOMOCON" sponsored by the homosexual Republican group GOProud that promotes same-sex marriage and military service for open homosexuals.Wow, the wingnuts really *are* into purity testing, eh, when even Ann Coulter isn't conservative enough for them? Pretty sure the only people pure enough to be a real conservative will all be able to fit into a Volkswagen Beetle...
-- Badtux the Wingnut-observin' Penguin
Historical lettuce
1990's indie band Salad, with "Man with a box"... Marijne van der Vlugt had some real pipes on her, hmm?
- Badtux the Music Penguin
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
Markos Moulitsas is the world's dumbest political operative
-- Badtux the PoliSci Penguin
The End
Nine Inch Nails, "The Beginning of the End", from their apocalyptic album Year Zero. This is a techno-ish remix, not the original version. Both are good.
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Monday, August 16, 2010
Fear
Lucinda Williams, "Car Wheels on a Gravel Road" from her album of the same name.
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Sunday, August 15, 2010
Busy penguin
- Badtux the Stressed Penguin
Who is wrong?
Leonard Cohen doing a live version of his early song, "One Of Us Cannot Be Wrong". Sheer poetry...
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Saturday, August 14, 2010
Skin
British post-rockers Her Name Is Calla, with their song "The White And The Skin" off of their new EP, Long Grass.
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Friday, August 13, 2010
Heavy thievery
The Rosewood Thieves, "Heavy Eyes". This version of the song happens to be a demo that, as far as I know, is not on any album. But it's probably well worth tracking down.
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Thursday, August 12, 2010
No racism here, nosiree!
So now we hear from the rabid right the same damned thing, just a different ethnicity filling in the blanks:
The most compassionate thing we can do for Muslims who have already immigrated here is to help repatriate them back to Muslim countries, where they can live in a culture which shares their values, a place where they can once again be at home, surrounded by people who cherish their deeply held ideals.
No racism here, nosiree, just good Christian compassion for those heathen niggersMuslims! Can anybody doubt why EBM now refers to the Republican Party as "the Party of the Confederacy"?
-- Badtux the Racism-sniffin' Penguin
Stress diet continues
-- Badtux the Involuntarily Dieting Penguin
Velvet
Shoegazer band Slowdive singing "Some Velvet Morning". This was of course written by the late Lee Hazlewood for Nancy Sinatra during the late 60's, but it certainly seems to survive the acid treatment well... of course, the original was pretty trippy too. Here we are...
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
Thought for the day
-- Badtux the Snarky Penguin
Trickle down economics

Will that work? In the fever-fogged dreams of Ben Bernanke and Milton Friedman, it might work. But as has been repeated multiple times before, when you're at the zero bounds printing money is merely pushing on a string -- it all disappears under mattresses as fast as you print it. Unless some entity actually takes that money and spends it, at which point it starts contributing to economic activity.
Now... what kind of entity could take that money and spend it? Let's see, I'm thinking about this really big entity, that is actually receiving the money that the Fed is printing... gosh, what could that entity be called? Certainly nothing as mundane as "Federal Government of the United States of America", everybody knows that governments can't spend money, they can only consume money into a black hole of suck after which it disappears forever from the economy. Well, everybody who is a total fucking moron or a dishonest partisan hack knows that, anyhow... the rest of us knows that the money gets spent and goes to, like, people, in exchange for goods and services. And that when there's slack goods and services in an economy -- like, say, in ours, where factory utilization is low and unemployment is high -- this means that goods and services that otherwise wouldn't be moving in the economy start moving in the economy. But sadly, it's only us sane people who know this, and the lunatics are in charge of the loony bin... a.k.a., WASF.
-- Badtux the Economics Penguin
Naturally Lush
Lush, "Nothing Natural", off of their album Spooky. Lush was a dream pop band from Britain that was briefly popular before Nirvana swept all non-grunge music off the pop charts. But even today, their music is dreamily lush and well worth listening to when you're in one of your more, uhm, herbal moods, if you get my drift...
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
The art of the non-denial denial
And that, my friends, is the art of the non-denial denial :).
-- Badtux the Amused Penguin
Raw Right
Some raw Shannon Wright from 2001. She's playing in the attic of a club in Houston, singing (and occasionally screaming) some creepily emotional songs into a crappy SM-58 vocals mike. Later in her career she has moved more towards Tory Amos style piano... and has red hair, in case you're wondering, JzB :).
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Monday, August 09, 2010
On why social safety net programs are a subsidy for employers
The deal is that we run into the most fundamental Iron Law of Economics here: People will not work for less money than is necessary to provide for their basic survival. They won't. Because if they do, they die. Yet minimum wage here in American is not sufficient, in and of itself, to provide for the basic survival of most of those receiving it -- you simply cannot provide food and shelter for yourself, much less your family, with a 40 hour per week minimum wage job (or, more likely, two 20 hour per week minimum wage jobs). Yet employers are having no problems recruiting sufficient minimum wage workers to keep their doors open. WTF?!
The deal is that these employers are being subsidized. These transfer payments are a subsidy, allowing these employers to pay less than they'd otherwise pay. If not for the transfer payments, these employers would have to raise their wages to a "living wage" -- one that is sufficient for the basic subsistence of their workforce. In short: the modern safety net is welfare for the employers of service workers.
You want to see the perfect example? Wal-Mart. When you go to work for Wal-Mart, you are given directions on how to sign up for Medicaid and food stamps. It is understood that working for Wal-Mart is not sufficient to provide for food and healthcare for you and your family. It's formalized. Without this subsidy, people wouldn't work for Wal-mart, because they couldn't survive.
So anyhow, now you know why, unlike The Tax Foundation, I count programs like Medicaid and food stamps as transfer payments to employers, food stores, and doctors, not transfer payments to the poor who never actually see the money. 'Nuff said on that one...
-- Badtux the Economics Penguin
Liberal plot
But of course, to the true home-grown Christian Taliban, all of science is a liberal plot. Didn't you know that science, in general, is inherently a liberal conspiracy to divert people away from the Bible? Sheesh! Get with the program! What has science ever done for us, anyhow? Other than, well, planes, computers, communication satellites, cars, hot and cold running water upon demand, indoor plumbing, modern medicine, y'know, unimportant stuff?!
- Badtux the Snarky Penguin
Curvy Dreamtime
Some nice dream pop for your morning enjoyment: Curve, "Low and Behold". Curve is one of those bands that for some reason nobody seems to have heard of despite the fact that they had a fifteen-year career. They tend to be lumped into "shoegazer", "dream pop", or "electronica", and were one of the inspirations for the band Garbage, one of my other favorites.
- Badtux the Music Penguin
Sunday, August 08, 2010
Widow of a different kind
Suzanne Vega sings about her failed marriage in "Widows Walk" off of her album Songs in Red and Grey, which sold about five copies, four of which were to her immediate family. Which just goes to show that the 'oughts (from 2000 to 2009) had absolutely no taste, that they refused to listen to brilliantly cool stuff like this...
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Saturday, August 07, 2010
Pearl clutchers hyperventilate on Prop 8 overturn

Look. I don't give a shit whether your mate is black, white, male, or female. Whatever kinky shit you get up to in your private time is your business. Gay sex? I ain't gay, so WTF would I think about gay sex for?
Y'know, for some supposedly non-gay people, these folks sure do have an obsession about gay sex. I mean, they obsess more about it than the gay mayor of Gaytown. That's just, well, squicky. Look: Most normal straight folks, we don't go through every day thinking about gay sex. I mean, we got lives. We think about our families, we think about our jobs, we think about the grass needing mowing, but the only time we think about gay sex is when somebody brings it up in our presence, at which point our reaction is probably squick! (since gay sex ain't what moves our rod, if y'know what I mean), but once that moment's over, we ain't thinking about gay sex no more because, well, we aren't gay. So what does that say about the magic undies wearers and such who are doing such pearl-clutchin' about gay marriage and whinin' about how that mighty supervillain The Gay Agenda is gonna shoot everybody with his magic Gay Ray of Gayness and, like, make everybody gay? Dude. Gay. Just sayin'.
-- Badtux the Snarky Penguin
Update on the Stress Diet
-- Badtux the Involuntarily Dieting Penguin
Friday, August 06, 2010
Thursday, August 05, 2010
Commie plots *everywhere*!
General Ripper knows the truth about flouridation, and now the Colorado Republican Party has identified the next Commie conspiracy against America: Bicycles.
Yes. Bicycles. Bet you didn't know you were riding a Commie plot to destroy America back when you were a kid riding your bicycle around your neighborhood, did you? That's why kids aren't allowed to ride bicycles nowdays without being swathed in so much gear that they can barely see and only if their parents are accompanying them -- the children! Oh the children! They must be protected from this vile and horrid Communist plot against America! And Colorado Republican gubernatorial candidate Dan Maes says he's just the one to do it!
-- Badtux the Bicycling Penguin
Stale Air
The French duo Air had a brief moment of fame four years ago when one of their songs was featured on the show Veronica Mars. Indeed, it was this very song, "Run"...
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Wednesday, August 04, 2010
Feds lied?
-- Badtux the "If it's a U.S. security agency, it's lying" Penguin
Tube Feeding
Halou, "Tube Fed". Halou later shed the DJ / trip-hop sound and went more hard rockers as Stripmall Architecture.
- Badtux the Music Penguin
Tuesday, August 03, 2010
Digby doesn't get it
Utter nonsense. Not happening. There will be no general public outrage, any more than there is for the fact that the United States is the world's biggest prison state with more people behind bars than any other nation on the planet, because most of the people involved are those people. You know, those people, unseemly people who have the audacity to be poor, or brown, or have disabilities, people who aren't like us. It's the same thing that allowed Saddam Hussein to remain in power despite being a brutal dictator... sure, he was brutal, but he was brutal against those people, people who weren't good citizens, as long as you kept your head down and went along with things life in Saddam's Iraq was a lot nicer than life in today's Iraq... thus why the Iraqi government had to execute Saddam, because he was a threat to their power every moment he remained alive.
Monkeys. That's what we're talking about, mostly-bald monkeys with delusions of not being monkeys. Monkeys don't view any monkeys who aren't part of their own troop as having any value. Same deal with the Americans who don't get irate about cops killing brown people or poor people or disabled people because said people are "not like us". We were monkeys for 2 million years before civilization was invented, and the veneer of civilization is now starting to rub a little thin...
- Badtux the Avian Penguin
Any Seattlites out there?
-- Badtux the Aquatic Penguin
Fluorescent Glow
Stereolab, "Fluorescences". Retro synths from the 90's, harking back to the 70's...
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Monday, August 02, 2010
Hey, that's *my* family crest too!
Upper East Side girl reading book about knights: Mommy, what does our family crest look like?
Upper East Side mom: Poor people being crushed by a boot.
-- Badtux the Peasant Penguin
Alert cops foil terrorist attack
Oh wait.... Raymond Peake and Thomas Tuso are white. And not Muslim. So they're not terrorists. They're just common criminals. Alrighty, then!
-- Badtux the Snarky Penguin
Is negative opinion of Iraq/Afghan wars a crime?
Jacob Appelbaum, an American working with the Tor Project and a sometime-volunteer for Wikileaks, was stopped at the border by U.S. Customs while entering the United States from Canada, and detained for a couple of hours while being interrogated by Customs and by FBI agents. He did not answer their questions, but, rather, repeatedly requested access to his attorney.
The Wikileaks documents are all over a year old. There is no damage to national security from such out-of-date documents -- only a damage to the job security of the apologists for the Afghan war. And we can't have that, can we?
- Badtux the Security Penguin
The End is Coming
The Raveonettes - "Here Comes the End", off their EP Beauty Dies.
-- Badtux the Music Penguin
Sunday, August 01, 2010
Them ole' deflation blues
goin' down the hill
my income
don't give no thrill
I got the blues
uh huh
I got the blues
yes indeed
I got them ol' deflation
got no money in my wallet blues.
Well ole' price stickiness
keeps prices up
while income deflation
keeps my wallet down
I got the blues
uh huh
I got the blues
yes indeed
I got them ol' deflation
got no money in my wallet blues.
And if Paul Krugman
ain't always right
how come he's the only one
who called this one right
We got the blues
uh uh
We got the blues
yes indeed
We got them ole' deflation
got no money in our wallets blues....
-- Badtux the Blues Penguin
Wasted Kills
'Black Balloon' by The Kills, off their album "Midnight Boom".
-- Badtux the Music Penguin