Saturday, November 21, 2009

Health Care: Abortion Is Not the Only Moral Issue | Newsweek BeliefWatch: Lisa Miller

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Lisa Miller

Abortion Is Not the Only Moral Issue

Our entire health-care system is filled with complex moral choices. We shouldn't make our health-care debate about just one.

Nov 18, 2009
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    We suffer, this week, from a moral myopia. Thanks to the passage in Congress of a health-reform bill, abortion is in the news again, but with the same old warriors brandishing their same old spears. Kate Michelman and Frances Kissling talk about how the current version of the health-care bill “risks the well-being of millions of women for generations to come.” The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops thanks the members of the House, “who took this courageous and principled step to oppose measures that would force Americans to pay for the destruction of unborn children.”Abortion, the pundits like to say, is a "complex moral issue." According to recent research by the Pew Forum, about half of Americans believe abortion is "morally wrong," yet half wish it to remain legal most of the time. Surely we and our representatives in Congress, who are able to hold such paradoxical views in mind, are not so deafened, cowed, or paralyzed by the screaming on both sides that we can't absorb a truer reality. Culture warriors are not the only arbiters of the great moral questions of the day, and abortion is hardly the only ethical component of the health-care debate. Our entire health-care system (and the proposed reform) is rife with "complex moral issues." To activate our consciences only in the realm of abortion relieves those consciences of too much responsibility. (Article continued below...)

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    The Abortion Evangelist

    Take a "complex moral issue" completely unrelated to fetuses. One in 10 Americans suffers from hearing loss—including more than a million children. Few private insurers cover hearing aids, which cost, on average, more than $2,000 each. Medicaid covers hearing aids for kids, but after 21, they're on their own. What this means, in effect, is that people who can afford hearing aids can hear. People who can't—well, they can't. Nothing about this is equitable. Nothing about this shows—as the bishops articulated in their victorious letter to constituents after health care passed the House— a concern for "the poor and vulnerable." Yet we have so far lived equably with this injustice. We rarely consider the plight of the hearing impaired. We have had no public conversation about whether taxpayer money should cover hearing aids. No religious group has taken up the case of affordable hearing aids for the middle class. That the American Academy of Audiology and others successfully lobbied Congress to include a provision in the health-care plan that guarantees patients the flexibility to select an insurance provider based on individual hearing needs has made no headlines.

    In the arena of what the right likes to call unborn children, our health-care system is dramatically inconsistent, a morass of moral contradictions. Americans of every political and religious denomination agree that there should be fewer abortions. But only one state—Kansas—requires an adoptive mother's private insurance to cover the birth mother's prenatal care, according to Mark McDermott, legislative chairman of the American Academy of Adoption Attorneys. Thus adoptive parents often pay thousands of dollars out of pocket in health-care costs for the birth mother. What is our moral position here? That we oppose what one right-to-lifer whom I spoke to the other day called "the chopping up of little babies," but when an uninsured woman wants to give her baby up for adoption—or carry it to term and keep it herself—we can't figure out how to pay for her prenatal care?

    Perhaps a reformed health-care system will fix this problem. But not if it's scuttled in a fight over abortion.

    Our health-care system—and our culture—has an inconsistent view on the value of the human fetus. Most employer-based plans currently pay for an abortion, which costs, on average, about $400. (The Hyde amendment forbids the use of federal money for abortions to Medicaid recipients, but 17 states will provide them to Medicaid recipients through the use of state funds.) Some private insurers, depending on the state, will also pay for assisted reproductive technology, including in vitro fertilization. But very few will pay for the long-term storage of embryos—that is to say, freezing—created through IVF. What are the moral lessons, here? That we care enough about families to create embryos, but not enough to maintain them? To be sure, private insurers should not be in the business of establishing ethically consistent health-care policy. And perhaps, with such questions, consistency is unattainable and even undesirable. But our public conversation about fetuses needs to include these technological developments; 1 percent of all babies born in America are conceived through assisted reproductive technology.

    It is disingenuous to argue against abortion in the health-care bill on the grounds that taxpayers should not have to pay for something that goes against their conscience. Taxpayers pay for things they find morally objectionable all the time—war, death-row executions, and the bailout of irresponsible investment banks, for starters. It is similarly disingenuous to describe the Stupak amendment, whose fine points are too wooly to describe here, as a "ban" on abortion. It does raise obstacles, which I believe would unfairly penalize poor and middle-class women. But should the Stupak amendment (or something like it) pass the Senate, abortion would remain legal. In the first trimester, it would continue to be quick, safe, and relatively inexpensive—a lot less than a hearing aid. Most women, according to the Guttmacher Institute, pay for their abortions out of their own pockets; they could continue to do so.

    Our so-called moral outrage, then, is preventing us from taking a clear-eyed look at the moral dimension not just of abortion but of health care as a whole. Ironically, perhaps, the Roman Catholic Church offers one of the most coherent theologies of "life" out there, a commitment to see as sacred all human life, from the embryo to the death-row inmate to the innocent casualties of war. "We're picking and choosing issues," complains Father John Dear, a Jesuit priest and peace activist. "The church has been politicized and the bishops are hammering away at abortion, but that just doesn't make sense." This week's abortion conversation is about politics. Let's not pretend it's about anything else.

    With Jessica Ramirez

    © 2009

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    Let's compare moral atrocities: I bet Lisa Miller can find more holes in YOUR moral argument than MINE!

    Posted via web from Keith's posterous

    Thursday, November 19, 2009

    iPhone not charging? Read this! | Willy Dobbe

    Broken iPhone (by Jeffery Simpson)

    The other day I used all the power of my iPhone and wanted to charge the iPhone in its doc. When I came back a couple of hours later, I noticed that the phone was not charging! In fact, I was unable to turn in on in any way! And yes, all cables were connected in the right way. But the iPhone became a brick. I was unable to start the phone by pressing the upper power button, home and also the well know "two finger salute" (pressing power and home for 10 seconds). The phone didn't react on anything. Even when connected to my macbook, nothing happend My Mac didn't see the iPhone and the iPhone still was not booting or even displaying anything on the screen.

    Now I cant imagine anymore being without an iPhone so I was already driving in my head towards Belgium were you can buy simlock free phones. Yes my iPhone is jailbroken, iPhones want to be free ! Smiling

    After some googleing I found an answer that was odd but worked! In case your iPhone seems to be bricked and doesn't charge or react on anything perform the following voodoo:

    1. switch the mute switch 4 times (up, down, up down)
    2. now press home and power for 6-10 seconds

    And see your iPhone come back from a perma sleep. It worked for me, do not through your iPhone away when this happens to you!

    Wow! This worked! :-)
    My iPhone is now BACK!!!!!!

    Posted via web from Keith's posterous

    Friday, November 13, 2009

    Decision may be any day now

    Help stem the flood of Corporate Personhood!

    Begin forwarded message:

    From: Public Citizen <action@citizen.org>
    Date: November 13, 2009 11:01:06 AM PST
    Subject: Decision may be any day now

    Dear Keith,

    Any day now, the Supreme Court will issue its decision in a case that could unleash a flood of corporate money into our political system.

    A corporate titan driving a giant steamroller that is about to crush the U.S. Capitol building, showing corporate influence in elections.
    Don't Get Rolled!
    Haven't heard much lately about the Citizens United case? That doesn't mean nothing is happening. In fact, a lot is going on behind the scenes at the Supreme Court:

    1.) The justices likely decided how to rule within a day or two of the September argument and are now writing it up;
    2.) Justices frequently argue with each other through their draft opinions, finalizing them only when someone lets someone else have the last word;
    3.) The justices are probably hurrying to get the decision out in time before the 2010 congressional campaign season gets under way.

    Public Citizen attorney Scott Nelson, who represents former and current lawmakers in the case, tells more here.

    Right now, there are three things you can do if you think more corporate influence in our politics and policy-making is a bad idea:

    1.) Sign the petition and pledge to protest.
    2.) Check out our blog posts on CitizenVox.org to get the latest updates and join the discussion in the comments section.
    3.) Spread the word: Tell your friends about the Don't Get Rolled campaign.

    The court could overturn a century of modest limits on corporate influence in our elections. Corporations already have far too much leverage over lawmakers -- a large contributing factor to the lack of oversight of Wall Street that resulted in our current economic crisis. But it could get much, much worse.

    Help Public Citizen fight back -- go to www.DontGetRolled.org and tell a friend today!

    Thank you for all you do!

    Rick, Angela and Glenn
    Your Advocates at Public Citizen
    donate
    action@citizen.org

    To learn more about the Don't Get Rolled campaign, visit http://action.citizen.org/t/5489/petition.jsp?petition_KEY=2067.

    If this message was forwarded to you, sign up to receive action alerts from Public Citizen at http://action.citizen.org/signUp.jsp.

    Support our work: https://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/476/t/1173/shop/custom.jsp?donate_page_KEY=761&track=w10dgr1112.

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    Wednesday, November 11, 2009

    I used Shazam to discover Butterfly by Robert Glasper


    Hi,
    I used Shazam to discover Butterfly by Robert Glasper and thought I'd share it with you.
    Shazam users on iPhone and iPod touch, tap here to add this to your Tag List.

    Sent from my iPhone

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    May or may not be going to U2 in June...

    Woke up this morning with my exclusive U2 Fan Club personal presale access code hot in my hands... no internet. Work for a half hour to get router reset, finally get onto Ticketmaster site, browse for best tickets, enter credit card, hit Submit... tells me "Please enter a gift card number and click the Apply button..." ...There IS no "Apply" button! So I hit "Redeem Gift Card" button, tells me "To redeem a gift card please click the Apply button..." This is proving to be more challenging than I thought...

    I was lost between the midnight and the dawning
    In a place of no consequence or company

    I must really want to go to this concert. Cancelling today's chiropractic appt. On hold with Ticketmaster now for a half hour...

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    Sunday, November 01, 2009

    Patrick Crayton 2nd consecutive game with punt returned for TD!!!

    Sent from my iPhone

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    Speedtest.net iPhone Result

    Test Date: Nov 1, 2009 9:08:16 AM
    Connection Type: WiFi

    Download: 841 kbps
    Upload: 163 kbps
    Ping: 249 ms

    A detailed image for this result can be found here:


    Sent from my iPhone

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    Saturday, October 31, 2009

    I used Shazam to discover Ponta De Areia by Esperanza Spalding


    Hi,
    I used Shazam to discover Ponta De Areia by Esperanza Spalding and thought I'd share it with you. Interesing jazz fusion!
    Shazam users on iPhone and iPod touch, tap here to add this to your Tag List.

    Sent from my iPhone

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    Thursday, October 29, 2009

    Bellevue Locksmith: $29!? BULLSHIT!!!

    Lauren Guzcinski: 888.686.3088
    Says her locksmith service will give me a quote before doing any work.

    Well then, why did they charge Milena $181.95???

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    I used Shazam to discover Cantaloupe by Baaba Maal


    Hi,
    I used Shazam to discover Cantaloupe by Baaba Maal and thought I'd share it with you.
    Shazam users on iPhone and iPod touch, tap here to add this to your Tag List.

    Sent from my iPhone

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    Sunday, October 25, 2009

    By the Time

    Beautiful ballad with Imogen heap

    Check out the song By the Time by Mika on midomi.com.

    If you have Midomi on your iPhone, click here to open this song in Midomi.

    Or click here to download midomi now.

    Sent from my iPhone

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    Saturday, October 24, 2009

    We Do What We Want To

    Milena liked this one. 

    Check out the song We Do What We Want To by O+S on midomi.com.

    If you have Midomi on your iPhone, click here to open this song in Midomi.

    Or click here to download midomi now.

    Sent from my iPhone

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    All I Need

    Check out the song All I Need by Radiohead on midomi.com.

    If you have Midomi on your iPhone, click here to open this song in Midomi.

    Or click here to download midomi now.

    Sent from my iPhone

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    Everybody's Got to Learn Sometime

    Check out the song Everybody's Got to Learn Sometime by The Field on midomi.com.

    If you have Midomi on your iPhone, click here to open this song in Midomi.

    Or click here to download midomi now.

    Sent from my iPhone

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    I used Shazam to discover Swooping Molly by Martin Simpson


    Hi,
    I used Shazam to discover Swooping Molly by Martin Simpson and thought I'd share it with you.
    Shazam users on iPhone and iPod touch, tap here to add this to your Tag List.

    Sent from my iPhone

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    Friday, October 23, 2009

    Thursday, October 22, 2009

    kcaB

    What a wake up call! What am I doing with my life? Yes, it's noble being a teacher, but is it what i really want? Is it what the UNIVERSE wants?

    What shall I do with the rest of my life?

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    Wednesday, October 21, 2009

    Xrays

    Got xrays yesterday, and I thought my spine looked curved, as in scoliosis. 

    We gave them to Lonny, and Milena talked to him today, and, yes, it looks pretty bad, apparently.

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    At Healthy Kids Fair, First Lady Promotes Awareness : NPR

    I Love our First Lady!!!

    Posted via web from Keith's posterous

    Monday, October 19, 2009

    Tuesday, October 13, 2009

    PSALT: Education Phasing

    Animated chart of just the education phases for PSALT.

    The narrower focus did help keep my presentation to 5 minutes or under!

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    Friday, October 09, 2009

    PSALT logos?

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    President Obama Wins 2009 Nobel Peace Prize : NPR

    President Obama in the Rose Garden
    Enlarge Gerald Herbert/AP

    President Obama made his way from the Oval Office to the Rose Garden to deliver remarks on health care reform Monday in Washington, D.C.

    President Obama in the Rose Garden
    Gerald Herbert/AP

    President Obama made his way from the Oval Office to the Rose Garden to deliver remarks on health care reform Monday in Washington, D.C.

    text sizeAAA
    October 9, 2009

    President Obama on Friday won the Nobel Peace Prize, a stunning choice of an official who had been in office for less than two weeks before this year's nomination deadline.

    Obama won the prize "for his extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples," the Norwegian Nobel Committee announced, saying it had "attached special importance to Obama's vision of and work for a world without nuclear weapons."

    White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said Obama woke up to the news a little before 6 a.m. EDT. The White House had no immediate comment on the announcement, which took the administration by surprise.

    Obama becomes the third sitting president — and the first since Woodrow Wilson in 1919 — to win the prize. Theodore Roosevelt won the award in 1906. Former President Jimmy Carter won in 2002, and former Vice President Al Gore won in 2007.

    "Only very rarely has a person to the same extent as Obama captured the world's attention and given its people hope for a better future," Thorbjoern Jagland, chairman of the Nobel Committee said. "In the past year Obama has been a key person for important initiatives in the U.N. for nuclear disarmament and to set a completely new agenda for the Muslim world and East-West relations."

    He added that the committee endorsed "Obama's appeal that 'Now is the time for all of us to take our share of responsibility for a global response to global challenges.'"

    The Nobel committee received a record 205 nominations for this year's prize though it was not immediately apparent who nominated Obama.

    "The exciting and important thing about this prize is that it's given to someone ... who has the power to contribute to peace," Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg said.

    Commanders In Peace: The White House Laureates

    The list of Nobel Peace Prize laureates now includes three sitting U.S. presidents and one former president. The Norwegian Nobel Committee also has recognized one sitting vice president and one former vice president.

    2009: President Barack Obama, "for his extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples."

    2007: Former Vice President Al Gore, shared with the intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, "for their efforts to build up and disseminate greater knowledge about man-made climate change, and to lay the foundations for the measures that are needed to counteract such change."

    2002: Former President Jimmy Carter, "for his decades of untiring effort to find peaceful solutions to international conflicts, to advance democracy and human rights, and to promote economic and social development."

    1925: Vice President Charles Gates Dawes, for his work as chairman of a League of Nations commission that made recommendations in 1924 on how to handle questions about German reparations after World War I (the "Dawes Plan"). Dawes shared the 1925 prize with British Foriegn Secretary Austen Chamberlain, who was honored for efforts to promote Franco-German reconciliation through the Locarno Pact of 1925.

    1919: President Woodrow Wilson, for founding the League of Nations.

    1906: President Teddy Roosevelt, for his work on various various peace treaties.

    Source: The Nobel Foundation

    Wilson and Roosevelt had "significant accomplishments in office when they won the prize," presidential historian Robert Dallek told NPR's Morning Edition. He noted that Roosevelt had mediated the end of the Russo-Japanese War in 1905, while Wilson was instrumental in the establishment of the League of Nations after World War I.

    The Nobel committee's action also "clearly is a kind of poke in the eye to the George W. Bush administration, because what it is saying is America is back on the scene after eight years of Bush, back on the scene as a nation that is on the forefront of promoting world peace," Dallek said.

    "In this case, the prize will add, or increase, his moral authority," political activist and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel said of Obama. Wiesel won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986.

    "I confess to surprise" at the news, Wiesel told NPR. He joked that he would now have to refer to Obama as "my fellow Nobel laureate."

    "The Nobel Prize committee has its own rules and they may decide anything they want. They may decide that encouragement is part of the experiment," Wiesel said, noting Obama's short tenure as president.

    "So soon? Too early. He has no contribution so far. He is still at an early stage. He is only beginning to act," said former Polish President Lech Walesa, a 1983 Nobel Peace laureate, of Obama.

    "This is probably an encouragement for him to act. Let's see if he perseveres. Let's give him time to act," Walesa said.

    Nobel nominators include former laureates; current and former members of the committee and their staff; members of national governments and legislatures; university professors of law, theology, social sciences, history and philosophy; leaders of peace research and foreign affairs institutes; and members of international courts of law.

    Until seconds before the award, speculation had focused on a wide variety of candidates besides Obama: Zimbabwe's Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, a Colombian senator, a Chinese dissident and an Afghan woman's rights activist, among others.

    Former Peace Prize winner Mohamed ElBaradei, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna, said Obama has already provided outstanding leadership in the effort to prevent nuclear proliferation.

    "In less than a year in office, he has transformed the way we look at ourselves and the world we live in and rekindled hope for a world at peace with itself," ElBaradei said. "He has shown an unshakeable commitment to diplomacy, mutual respect and dialogue as the best means of resolving conflicts."

    Obama also has attempted to restart stalled talks between the Israelis and Palestinians, but just a day after Obama hosted the Israeli and Palestinian leaders in New York, Israeli officials boasted that they had fended off U.S. pressure to halt settlement construction. Moderate Palestinians said they felt undermined by Obama's failure to back up his demand for a freeze.

    The Nelson Mandela Foundation welcomed the award on behalf of its founder Nelson Mandela, who shared the 1993 Peace Prize with then-South African President F.W. DeKlerk for their efforts at ending years of apartheid and laying the groundwork for a democratic country.

    "We trust that this award will strengthen his commitment, as the leader of the most powerful nation in the world, to continue promoting peace and the eradication of poverty," the foundation said.

    In his 1895 will, Alfred Nobel stipulated that the peace prize should go "to the person who shall have done the most or the best work for fraternity between the nations and the abolition or reduction of standing armies and the formation and spreading of peace congresses."

    Unlike the other Nobel Prizes, which are awarded by Swedish institutions, he said the peace prize should be given out by a five-member committee elected by the Norwegian Parliament. Sweden and Norway were united under the same crown at the time of Nobel's death.

    The committee has taken a wide interpretation of Nobel's guidelines, expanding the prize beyond peace mediation to include efforts to combat poverty, disease and climate change.

    The award comes at a sensitive time for the administration. Obama meets Friday with his top advisers on the Afghan war to consider a request by Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the U.S. commander in Afghanistan, to send as many as 40,000 more troops to Afghanistan as the U.S war there enters its ninth year.

    Obama ordered 21,000 additional troops to Afghanistan earlier this year and has continued the use of unmanned drones for attacks on militants in Afghanistan and Pakistan, a strategy devised by the Bush administration. The attacks often kill or injure civilians living in the area.

    The White House said the president will make a statement on having won the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday at 10:30 a.m. EDT.

    I am so proud to be an American!

    Posted via web from Keith's posterous

    Thursday, October 08, 2009

    PSALT: Zones+Phasing, Grid

    Second draft of my animated chart for demonstrating the progression of PSALT development via zones & phases.

    I'm now working on just the zones & phasing (well, actually, just the phasing) of the education stuff. The narrower focus should help keep my presentation to 5 minutes or under.

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    Monday, October 05, 2009

    Molalatladi

    Heard on all thingsconsidered  

    Check out the song Molalatladi by BLK JKS on midomi.com.

    If you have Midomi on your iPhone, click here to open this song in Midomi.

    Or click here to download midomi now.

    Sent from my iPhone

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    Shaman (Sikh) ringtone

    Click here to download:
    Shaman (Sikh) ringtone.m4r (636 KB)

    God, I've always LOVED how gorgeous and lifting and heavenly this track is-- Lorelei and ... (thanks to Rachel, who introduced it to me while I was getting a massage with her several years ago, during Lotus Cup/Creative Culture Village days).

    I've always wanted to do a remix of this track, to extend it, to extend the JOY, the illumination, the experience of ecstatic boundlessness expressed... this is not quite a remix, but I'm now extending the ecstacy into iPhone-land...

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    Phases and Zones animated sketch 1

    Download now or watch on posterous
    phases+zones2.mov (2805 KB)

    First animated sketch for my permaculture design course project... (second one is done; coming up next.)

    I *HAD* been working on "education," but was really getting nowhere-- topic too big. But, with feedback from Amie and Stan and the rest of my group yesterday, was able to come home excited and re-focused on phasing, and how our Land Trust might actually proceed thru time.

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    Saturday, October 03, 2009

    (I've Been) Searchin' So Long

    Check out the song (I've Been) Searchin' So Long by Chicago on midomi.com.

    If you have Midomi on your iPhone, click here to open this song in Midomi.

    Or click here to download midomi now.

    Sent from my iPhone

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    Happy People Dancing on Planet Earth

    Happy People Dancing on Planet Earth 
    Credit: Matt Harding & Melissa Nixon

    Explanation: What are these humans doing? Dancing. Many humans on Earth exhibit periods of happiness, and one method of displaying happiness is dancing. Happiness and dancing transcend political boundaries and occur in practically every human society. Above, Matt Harding traveled through many nations on Earth, started dancing, and filmed the result. The video is perhaps a dramatic example that humans from all over planet Earth feel a common bond as part of a single species. Happiness is frequently contagious -- few people are able to watch the above video without smiling.

    <html> <head> <title> APOD: 2008 July 22 - Happy People Dancing on Planet Earth </title>  <meta name="orgcode" content="661"> <meta name="rno" content="phillip.a.newman"> <meta name="content-owner" content="Jerry.T.Bonnell.1"> <meta name="webmaster" content="Stephen.F.Fantasia.1"> <meta name="description" content="A different astronomy and space science related image is featured each day, along with a brief explanation.">  <meta name="keywords" content="Earth, happy people, dancing"> </head> <body BGCOLOR="#F4F4FF" text="#000000" link="#0000FF" vlink="#7F0F9F" alink="#FF0000"> <center> <h1> Astronomy Picture of the Day </h1> <p> Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer. <p> 2008 July 22 <br> 
    <br /> </center> <center> <b> Happy People Dancing on Planet Earth </b> <br> <b> Credit: </b> Matt Harding & Melissa Nixon </center> <p> <b> Explanation: </b> What are these humans doing? Dancing. Many humans on Earth exhibit periods of happiness, and one method of displaying happiness is dancing. Happiness and dancing transcend political boundaries and occur in practically every human society. Above, Matt Harding traveled through many nations on Earth, started dancing, and filmed the result. The video is perhaps a dramatic example that humans from all over planet Earth feel a common bond as part of a single species. Happiness is frequently contagious -- few people are able to watch the above video without smiling. <p> <center> <script type="text/javascript"> digg_url = 'http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap080722.html'; digg_skin = 'compact'; </script> <script src="http://digg.com/tools/diggthis.js" type="text/javascript"></script> <br> <b> Tomorrow's picture: </b>martian cliff <p> <hr> < | Archive | Index | Search | Calendar | RSS | Education | About APOD | Discuss | > <hr><p> <b> Authors & editors: </b> Robert Nemiroff (MTU) & Jerry Bonnell (UMCP)<br> <b>NASA Official: </b> Phillip Newman Specific rights apply.<br> NASA Web Privacy Policy and Important Notices<br> <b>A service of:</b> ASD at NASA / GSFC <br><b>&</b> Michigan Tech. U.<br> </center> </body> </html>

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous

    Friday, October 02, 2009

    Stuck Between Stations

    Fun rocker!

    Check out the song Stuck Between Stations by The Hold Steady on midomi.com.

    If you have Midomi on your iPhone, click here to open this song in Midomi.

    Or click here to download midomi now.

    Sent from my iPhone

    Posted via email from Keith's posterous