Oct 27, 2007

hardware

The commercials for Ace hardware and Home Depot always feature like these clueless people wandering in who decide to build a room on their house or something and then these employees who are basically contractors and carpenters and plumbers who guide the customer through the process and help them out throughout the entire store.

If you go to these places though they are stocked with poorly paid teenagers who don't know shit and old people who try to avoid customers at all costs. There are these doorbell things you push for help and everyone in the store is pushing them so on the loudspeakers it's a continuous stream of electronic buzzing and "help needed in plumbing supplies" "help needed in carpets."

Then if you do corner an employee they look at you in fear and then say "let me get someone who knows about caulking, I'll be right back" then they disappear forever.

WTF. Go to a small hardware store with 2 guys working there instead, they are better.

Oct 22, 2007

flaming hot - the truth about the san diego wildfires

the lady in the supermarket who i didn't know asked me if all my family was alright in the fires, i said yep, then bought 3 bananas and a 12 of corona as fire supplies

then she told me god bless you and an army man in a camouflage uniform behind me bought some caramel ben and jerry's and some kids outside gave me the eye but decided not to mess with me and walked on but still started shout-rapping after they passed me

then i saw some nice red outline in the black horizon driving back and went home and drank some beers

Oct 17, 2007

no deal

I'm pretty certain the contestants on "Deal or No Deal" are fake, they are actors in fake families overacting.

Not that it matters I suppose.

Oct 10, 2007

Gaza Strip Update

The Haniya Government Accuses the leaders of Fatah of being behind recent Gaza Explosions

from http://www.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/E43B59B9-2915-4D6D-9EC9-93DFE3160EEF.htm

Anxiety prevails in the Gazan streets these days as fears of a worsening security situation and a return to the conditions that existed before the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) took control in the Gaza Strip after a series of incidents at the police headquarters of the Hamas government of Ismael Haniya and following several explosions in various neighborhoods in the Gaza Strip.

Said Al-Dabbas, a driver, reflects on life in Gaza City and his concerns about it following the series of bombings targeting various places in the city in recent days and their unknown perpetrators and the predictable possibility of deteriorating security conditions and a return to the pre-Hamas level at any moment.

For Al-Dabbas the concern is that the situation in Gaza is similar to what is happening in Baghdad where explosions and their retaliatory responses are victimizing numbers of innocent civilians.

However the spokesman of the Interior of the Government Ihab Al-Ghussein says that Palestinian security services have arrested a number of those responsible for the recent bombings and that a number of these suspects belong to the Palestinian National Liberation Movement (Fatah).

These suspects have reportedly confessed during an investigation that they had received orders from their leaders in the Gaza Strip for the implementation of these blasts targeting both members of the Palestinian police and citizens alike.

And the information ministry confirms to Al-Jazeera that the suspects in custody proved that the Fatah leaders received large orders to their leadership sector in Ramallah that were intended for use in destabilizing security in the Gaza Strip region.

He points out that the authorities are competant and they will contact these leaders and interrogate them on their operations because no one is above the law regardless of their rank or political office.

Fatah Denies

These accusations are rejected by Ibrahim Abul-Naga, a leading member of Fatah in the Gaza Strip. He said in an interview with Al-Jazeera that this is unacceptable.

And he asked Hamas to reveal their evidence and any documents regarding the perpetrators to the public and to the media and to bring this evidence to court, asserting that the Fatah movement is also concerned about finding the identities of the perpetrators.

Abul-Naga also stressed that the Fatah Movement wishes to express their condemnation of these bombings and added that the Fatah Movement is not a cover for the use of these bombings because "Fatah began with the principle that the red line of Palestinian blood should never be overstepped."


تسود الشارع الغزاوي هذه الأيام حالة من القلق خشية تردي الأوضاع الأمنية في قطاع غزة وعودة الأحوال إلى ما كانت عليه قبل سيطرة حركة المقاومة الإسلامية (حماس)، بعد تعرض عناصر ومقرات للشرطة التابعة لحكومة هنية المقالة لتفجيرات في مناطق متفرقة من القطاع.
ويعبر السائق سعيد الدباس من سكان مدينة غزة عن قلق يعتريه، فسلسلة التفجيرات التي استهدفت أماكن متفرقة من المدينة في الأيام الأخيرة، وعدم معرفة مرتكبيها تنبئ باحتمالية تدهور الأوضاع الأمنية وعودتها إلى سابق عهدها في أي لحظة.


ومبعث قلق الدباس هو أن يصبح الوضع في غزة على غرار ما يحدث في بغداد، من تفجيرات وردود انتقامية يقع ضحيتها عدد من المدنيين الأبرياء.
وفي هذا الصدد، يقول المتحدث باسم وزارة داخلية الحكومة المقالة إيهاب الغصين، إن الأجهزة الأمنية الفلسطينية اعتقلت عددا من المتورطين بهذه التفجيرات وعددا من المشتبه بهم ممن ينتمون لحركة التحرير الوطني الفلسطيني (
فتح).
وذكر أنهم اعترفوا أثناء التحقيق معهم بأنهم تلقوا أوامر من قادتهم في قطاع غزة لتنفيذ هذه التفجيرات التي تستهدف أفراد الشرطة الفلسطينية والمواطنين على حد سواء.
والمعلومات التي تملكها الوزارة -يؤكد الحصين للجزيرة نت- تثبت تلقي قيادات فتحاوية كبيرة في القطاع أوامر من قياداتها في رام الله بغية العمل على زعزعة الأمن في القطاع.
ويشير إلى أن الأجهزة المختصة ستقوم باستدعاء هذه القيادات واستجوابها بشأن العمليات، لأنه لا يوجد أحد فوق القانون مهما كانت رتبته أو منصبه السياسي.


فتح تنفي هذه الاتهامات رفضها إبراهيم أبو النجا أحد قيادي فتح في قطاع غزة، معتبرا في حديث للجزيرة نت أنها غير مقبولة.
وطالب حركة حماس أن تكشف ما لديها من إثباتات ووثائق للجمهور ولوسائل الإعلام عن الفاعلين، وأن تقدمهم إلى المحاكم، مؤكدا أن حركة فتح جاهزة للمواجهة حرصا منها على معرفه من الفاعل.
وشدد أبو النجا على أن حركة فتح تعبر عن رفضها لهذه التفجيرات، وأضاف أن حركة فتح لا تشكل غطاء ولا مرجعية للذين يقومون بالتفجيرات، لأن "فتح لديها مبدأ بأن الدم الفلسطيني خط أحمر لا يمكن تجاوزه".

Oct 8, 2007

all we are saying is give peace a chance

from khaleej times oct 8


‘Be nice to your maid’ say new Saudi ads(AFP)7 October 2007

RIYADH - An advertising agency in Saudi Arabia plans to air public service commercials to promote kinder treatment of domestic helpers in a country where reports of abuse of foreign workers abound.

The ads will air on Arab satellite television stations after the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, expected to end on October 12, said Kaswara Al Khatib, founder and chief creative director of Full Stop Advertising.

The commercials were initially due to be aired during the fasting month but ‘people tend to be nice in Ramadan anyway, and we need to be nice to them (domestic staff) beyond Ramadan,’ Khatib told AFP.

Khatib said he put off the broadcasts also because he was concerned the message of mercy they are meant to send would get lost in the huge number of commercials aired during Ramadan, a month prized by advertisers as families huddle around their television sets.

The three ads cost around 100,000 dollars and were financed by a non-profit subsidiary of construction giant Saudi Binladin Group, the family-run business set up by the father of Al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden.

Khatib said he was in contact with two Arab stations—Saudi-owned MBC and Lebanon’s LBC, which is partly Saudi-owned—on airing the ads.

‘We deal with helpers as if they are not humans and have no feelings,’ said the 37-year-old electrical engineer.

One of the commercials shows an employer abusing his maid and driver, both from Asian countries as are the bulk of servants in Saudi Arabia.

‘You should thank God it’s only two months,’ the employer says when the driver asks for two months of unpaid wages.

‘He who has no mercy will not receive mercy,’ says the ad, quoting the Hadeeth, or sayings of Islam’s Prophet Mohammed.

Another ad shows a typical gathering of women having a meal and the hostess telling her Filipina maid—named Rahma, or ‘mercy’ in Arabic—to ‘get out of my sight,’ Khatib said.

In the third ad, viewers will see the feet of a housewife who is heard ordering her maid ‘not to sleep until the house is spotless’ and the maid scrubbing the floor.

‘Show mercy to those on earth, you will receive mercy from He who is in heaven,’ goes the theme, also borrowed from the Hadeeth.

Human rights groups have slammed the alleged abuse of foreign workers in Saudi Arabia, which hosts around six million expatriates.

Reports of exploitation ranging from the withholding of salaries and passports to physical assault and sexual abuse are increasingly appearing in the local press as it makes use of a measure of freedom allowed by authorities in recent years.

New York-based Human Rights Watch charged in August that the beating to death of two Indonesian female workers by a Saudi family highlighted the ‘atmosphere of impunity fostered by government inaction’ toward abusive employers.

In July 2004, HRW was accused by Riyadh of exaggerating the incidence of foreign labour abuse in Saudi Arabia after it released a report alleging that foreign workers were systematically exploited, some of them living in slave-like conditions.

Riyadh police teamed up with the Sri Lankan embassy in September to rescue a Sri Lankan maid who had telephoned the Arab News newspaper to say she had been imprisoned, abused and unpaid by her woman employer for at least seven years.

Charge d’affaires at the Sri Lankan embassy W.S.M.S. Wijesundera told AFP the housemaid had reached a settlement with her employers under which they will pay more than 5,000 dollars and buy her a ticket home.

Accusations of abuse of expatriate workers have also been levelled by rights watchdogs at employers in other oil-rich Gulf Arab countries. Millions of foreign labourers, mostly from Asia, work in the region in jobs ranging from construction to domestic help.