Wednesday, September 28, 2005

Moving is a pain in the ass

I have two more days to finish getting shit out of my place and clean it. Besides being busy as hell with work, and trying to think about wedding planning, having to move sucks. I even had movers, thank god, but still haven't quite finished. And Mark's house has practically no storage space. The kitchen needs remodeling in a major way. It might become the top priority after the wedding, along with getting the baby's room together.
Half of my shit is being stored in my Grandma's basement, which is clean and dry. The basement of the place I a moving out of is damp, and moldy. Anything down there has a layer of mold. We have given tons of shit away to Good Will. And I discoved FreeCycle here in columbus, so some people are coming to pick up my washer and dryer tomorrow. Monday I have a guy coming to pick up all kinds of shit for a family who relocated from Louisiana. I have given tons of clothes away because I couldn't fit them in the closet I have at Mark's. Figured it wouldn't fit any way, and when it did fit again, I doubt I'd want to be where those clothes.

I think with the wedding money we should re-do the kitchen, that way we will have somewhere to put the things we get.

Mark's house needs to be cleaned in a way that it has never experienced, which is next on the list after I have finished moving and we get rid of all this stuff on Monday. Every blind and curtain in the house needs to be thrown away. Well except the curtains in Mark's room they are fairly new.

New Carpet. Also another major priority.

Thursday, September 22, 2005

Quiz Time

I am too tired to post anything worthwhile, so thought I'd throw up a quiz.




You Are Somewhat Machiavellian



You're not going to mow over everyone to get ahead...

But you're also powerful enough to make things happen for yourself.

You understand how the world works, even when it's an ugly place.

You just don't get ugly yourself - unless you have to!

Sunday, September 18, 2005

update

Well the last 10 days have been pretty crazy. Last Friday I found out that I was pregnant. My birth control failed miserably. Not keeping it wasn't an option, so Mark and I decided to get married. We are doing it this week actually so I can get on his insurance. However we are having a real wedding December 3rd. Last week we managed to set a date, book a place, and find a church. And I am moving in with him, so we have been cleaning his house, which needed some major help, so I'd have a place to put my shit. I really like living in Grandview, and hopefully living in Hilliard will be only for the next 2 years max.

I have been feeling like a moody tired mess, which I doubt will end any time soon.

Saturday, September 10, 2005

The Boston Globe

PETER SINGER
Un-American about animals
By Peter Singer | August 20, 2005
WHAT COUNTRY has the most advanced animal protection legislation in the world? If you guessed the United States, go to the bottom of the class. The United States lags far behind all 25 nations of the European Union, and most other developed nations as well, such as Switzerland, Australia, New Zealand and Canada. To gauge just how far behind the United States is, consider these three facts:
Around 10 billion farm animals are killed every year by US meat, egg, and dairy industries; the estimated number of animals killed for research every year is 20 million to 30 million, a mere 0.3 of that number.
In the United States, there is no federal law governing the welfare of animals on the farm. Federal law begins only at the slaughterhouse.
Most states with major animal industries have written into their anticruelty laws exemptions for ''common farming practices." If something is a common farming practice, it is, according to these states, not cruel, and you can't prosecute anyone for doing it.
Together these last two points mean that any common farming practice is legal. If you hear farm industry lobbyists trying to tell you that there is no problem in the United States because unhappy animals would not be productive, ask them how it can be good for a hen to be kept with four or five other hens in a cage so small she couldn't stretch her wings even if she had the whole cage to herself.
To measure how far ahead other countries are, we can first look at British animal protection legislation. British law makes it illegal to keep breeding sows in crates that prevent them from walking or turning around -- the way in which about four out of every five US sows are kept. In Britain, law does not allow veal calves to be denied adequate roughage and iron, as is common in the United States to help produce the gourmet veal often served in restaurants.
Nevertheless, it is not Britain but Austria that has the most advanced animal protection legislation. In May 2004, a proposed law banning the chicken ''battery cage" was put to a vote in the Austrian Parliament. It passed -- without a single member of Parliament opposing it. Austria has banned fur farming and prohibited the use of wild animals in circuses. It has also made it illegal to trade in living cats and dogs in stores and deems killing an animal for no good reason a criminal offense. Most important, every Austrian province must appoint an ''animal lawyer" who can initiate court procedures on behalf of animals.
Why are Europeans so far ahead of Americans in protecting animal welfare? I doubt that it is because Americans are more tolerant of cruelty. In 2002, when the citizens of Florida were given a chance to vote on whether sows should be confined for months without ever having room to turn around, they voted, by a clear majority, to ban sow crates. Most Americans, though, have never had the chance to cast that vote. The animal movement in the United States has not succeeded in turning animal rights into electoral issues about which voters seek their candidates' views.
As a result, the American animal movement has shifted toward targeting corporations rather than the legislatures. For example, in 2001, the organization Viva! launched a campaign accusing Whole Foods of selling inhumanely raised duck meat. Whole Foods responded by exploring the issue and setting new companywide standards for raising ducks.
Other sets of standards will follow by 2008, Whole Foods plans to have in place a set of standards for all the species of farm animals it sells. By addressing an individual corporation, animal rights activists are hoping that other retailers will follow suit and this pressure will influence legislation changes in the United States.
Judged by the standards of other developed countries, over recent decades the United States has done little to improve the protection of the vast majority of animals. We should direct our energies to reducing the suffering of farm animals and put pressure on our corporations and our legislatures, both state and federal, to bring the United States at least up to the standards of the European Union in our treatment of animals.
Peter Singer's most recent book is ''In Defense of Animals: The Second Wave."

Thursday, September 08, 2005

PETA Urgent News


I feel for the people there, but I love animals too.

"On August 29, Hurricane Katrina slammed into the Gulf Coast. In addition to the human misery that the storm left in its wake, Katrina left many thousands of animals dead and dying. But the greater problem has turned out to be state and federal governments adding to this toll—and causing the slow and agonizing deaths of thousands more much-loved dogs, cats, and other animals—through their failure to allow animal protection agents to rescue animals.

Worse, although the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) guidelines on animal handling in a disaster were carefully crafted years ago in cooperation with PETA and other animal organizations, our government has evidently thrown them out the window, even going so far as to order citizens to abandon their animals under threat of arrest—animals who in many cases were considered members of the family and were all that these people had left.

Volunteer Steve Miller told The Advocate in Baton Rouge that “FEMA has told us we cannot take the pets” along with the distraught human victims that they are evacuating. “They told [us] that we could not take one cat or dog in our boats,” Miller said. “It’s a stupid rule. More people are going to die because of that.”

Telling these exasperated citizens of our country to abandon the animals they care for so deeply is, in fact, illegal. Chapter 14, Section 102.1(A)(1)(d) of Louisiana’s Revised Statutes, for example, states that anyone who abandons an animal is guilty of the crime of cruelty to animals.

Please politely call on Michael Brown, Under Secretary of Homeland Security for Emergency Preparedness and Response and head of FEMA, to immediately order his subordinates and their brave volunteers to evacuate animals with their human families, effective today, from areas affected by Katrina. Tell Mr. Brown that in these United States, we can and must do better for our citizens and their animals:

The Honorable Michael Brown
Under Secretary of Homeland Security for Emergency Preparedness and Response
500 C St. S.W.
Washington, DC 20472
202-646-3900
202-646-3930 (fax)
FEMAOPA@dhs.gov

On Tuesday, September 6, New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin reportedly issued a mandatory evacuation order and authorized police to remove people from their homes regardless of the residents’ wishes, according to CNN. Although Lt. Gen. Russel Honore—Commander of the First U.S. Army and the man in charge in New Orleans—apparently stated that his military units will not carry out such evacuations, New Orleans police officers and other law enforcement agents may force city residents to abandon their animals when evacuating. Please ask Mayor Nagin to ensure that his beleaguered constituents are allowed to bring their companion animals along should they be evacuated:

The Honorable Ray Nagin
Mayor of New Orleans
Send an e-mail to the Mayor’s Office here

Visit HelpingAnimals.com for further information and updates on Katrina and our response. Help Support This Critical Work With a Special Donation Today!"

Tuesday, September 06, 2005

Stop Violence Against Women

Every day four women die in the U.S. as a result of domestic violence. And more than 700 women are raped or sexually assaulted every day. We can stop these tragedies -- but we urgently need your help. Join hundreds of thousands of women across the country in making sure that the Violence Against Women Act is reauthorized by Congress when it expires in September 2005. Please help! Millions -- that¹s right, MILLIONS -- of women and children will be better off as a result!

Tell Congress that 700 women is 700 too many. Sign the petition to reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act.

Visit www.700women.org to sign the petition

Friday, September 02, 2005

Heading to PA this weekend






I'll be in Tidioute.