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February 24, 2006

My car is back!!

2000 Honda Civic SI - shiney in the sun
Picture of my car where I got the new tires and alloy wheels
the always busy Radial Tire Company - Brookville Road in Silver Spring, MD . Great folks!

My car was stolen off the parking lot at work Nov 29th and stripped. The Allstate Adjuster I was just working with decided to fix the car, even tho Sandy at the dealership told them (and me) that these kinds of extensive rebuilds can take a long to locate all the parts. The 2000 Honda SI is apparently still worth a huge part of what it sold for - I paid $16k for it new in May 2000, and now, 5 years & 75k miles later its bluebook value is still around $12,000! Its a great car - averages 30 miles-per-gallon and has the vTec engine - stomp the gas pedal and when you hit 4,500 rpm (to around 7000rpm) it sounds and feels like a big 4 barrel carb or supercharger has kicked in. A very quick little car.

The adjuster never asked me if I'd rather have a check to total the car, he decided to have it rebuilt no matter how long it took. That left me waiting all this time without a car - so I bought a used Honda CRV before Christmas , rather than spend a lot of money on a rental car.

Feb 28 would be 90 days since the theft, and I was working up a really thorough rant for my insurance adjuster about how my time apparently has no value to them, blah blah, blah ... But Thursday morning I got a call from the body shop that the car was done. Completely unexpected!. I picked it up after work Thursday (and dropped off the CRV for a warrantee adjustment on the idle when cold). It looks good. New dashboard, steering wheel, & front seats, New fenders and bumpers, new custom wheels and Toyo tires ... (I mean, the original wheels & tires were gone and had to be replaced anyway - and these didn't cost any more than new Honda wheels and tires would have ...)

It looks good - and handles great - I've been driving the CRV since mid-December and I'd forgotten how much fun the car was!

February 19, 2006

Happy Birthday to meee!

JBL monitors as imagined in the upper corners of our media room

I bid on these old (mid-70's) JBL 2-way Studio Monitors on ebay a few weeks ago. The problem was, due to the size (2' x 3' x 2' and roughly 100lbs each) they were listed as "Pickup only" - and they were just outside Philadelphia, PA. Well, turns out I had the best bid and won them for a very reasonable fee. Due to last weekend's snow we weren't going to do any roadtrips- so we made plans to do a 1-day roundtrip on Sat 18th.

We left Fairfax around 9:15am - got to Top 10 Music outsde Philly at 11:45 - had the speakers loaded and covered by 12:30.

And what would a trip to Philly be without Cheese-steak subs. Chris gave us directions to Leo's Steaks - and he was right - they were to die for ... I've never had anything like that in DC - Philly Cheese-steaks are like crack - Emma even bought another sub to bring back with us! Anyway - we were home before 7PM, hauled the speakers inside, and I wiped them down with Tung oil to freshen the walnut veneer a bit.

I bought them knowing I'd need to add a set of high-tweeters and redo the crossover network for long-term use, but the woofers alone were worth more than I paid or the complete speakers. So fair I've listened to some old Who, Jaco Pastorius, Weather Report, The Concert for George (Harrison) and a few other things - the bass is tight and amazing! Once I get them finish freshened up a bit more and get the high-tweeters installed I can put them up in the corners where my old JBl L36 speakers (bought new in 1976) sit now. I'll put the L36s in the back of the room for surround sound use.

And the birthday thingee? Why, its today, Feb 19th! The speakers are like a fine gift to me!

February 10, 2006

JBL Cats and Kitties

Loud Button for JBLs
Just an old button I got years ago on a trip to NYC -
and the speaker cloth I used to redo my 30 yo speakers with ...

Loud Boxes
Just some old JBL speakers I won on eBay Thurs night -
They'll require a trip north to pick them up, then wood restoration
and adding a high tweeter to make them like the 3 ways on the right
but from what I've heard, it will be quite a sweet investment!

February 2, 2006

Bush and Iran - old friends against Gays ...

'Bigotry Conquers All,' Gay Rights Groups Say of U.S. Vote at UN by Abid Aslam

from http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0130-07.htm
Published on Monday, January 30, 2006

WASHINGTON - The governments of the United States and Iran--part of President George W. Bush's ''axis of evil'' and his current nuclear bete noire--demonstrated rare unity of cause this past week when Washington backed a Tehran initiative to deny UN access to advocates of sexual minorities' rights.

Critics of the move denounced it as a show of bigotry.

''This vote is an aggressive assault by the U.S. government on the right of sexual minorities to be heard,'' said Scott Long, director of the Human Rights Watch (HRW) program for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people.

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''It is astonishing that the Bush administration would align itself with Sudan, China, Iran, and Zimbabwe in a coalition of the homophobic,'' Long said.

Rights advocates said the Bush administration's international posture matched its increasingly strident and discriminatory bent at home. Religiously and socially extremist elements of the U.S. population and among Bush's supporters--to whom many pundits attributed the president's 2004 re-election-- have been increasingly loud and militant over the past year, according to human rights activists.

Even so, on Friday the Pacific Northwest's Washington joined 16 other states that had passed ''landmark legislation protecting people against discrimination because of sexual orientation,'' said Roberta Sklar, spokesperson for the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force.

This brought to nearly half--48 percent--the proportion of the U.S. population protected by similar anti-discrimination measures.

Friday's vote in Washington State demonstrated that despite ''a lot of propaganda and positioning...there is great support for equal protection,'' Sklar told OneWorld.

The federal government's UN vote to dismiss two international organizations' applications for speaking rights at the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) brought the U.S. government in line with regimes it routinely chides as human rights delinquents, HRW said. These include the leaders of Cameroon, China, Cuba, Pakistan, Russia, Senegal, Sudan, and Zimbabwe.

The move also marked a shift in policy for Washington, which previously had supported or abstained on such applications, according to HRW. Officials gave no explanation for the change, it added.

Some 40 groups joined the rights watchdog Wednesday in signing a letter demanding that Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice account for the turnaround.

''Is it now the policy of the U.S. government to oppose consultative status for all organizations working to promote the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people?'' the letter asks.

''As U.S.-based organizations working in the fields of human rights and sexual rights, we are dismayed--and we expect better,'' it concludes.

Groups signing the document included Advocates for Youth, Al-Fatiha Foundation for LGBT Muslims, Amnesty International USA, Catholics for a Free Choice, Center for Health and Gender Equity, Latino Commission on AIDS, MADRE, Metropolitan Community Churches, National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, Open Society Institute, and Women's Environment and Development Organization.

At issue are applications filed by the Brussels-based International Lesbian and Gay Association and the Danish gay rights group Landsforeningen for Bosser og Lesbiske in May 2005.

Both groups had sought consultative status with ECOSOC. Consultative status is the official means by which non-governmental organizations (NGOs) around the world can participate in discussions among member states at the United Nations. Nearly 3,000 groups have this status, according to HRW.

When ECOSOC's NGO committee met to review the applications this week, Iran led governments opposed to the two groups' applications in moving to have them summarily dismissed. This was an almost unprecedented maneuver at the world body, where organizations normally are allowed to state their cases, critics of the move said.

U.S. representatives on the NGO committee abstained on a vote to allow debate on the applications before moving to vote in favor of the Iranian proposal to jettison the applications. The motion to dismiss passed 10-to-5 with three abstentions.

Chile, France, Germany, Peru, and Romania voted not to dismiss the applications. Colombia, India, and Turkey abstained while Cote d'Ivoire, which is being consumed by civil unrest, was absent.

At least three other applications are pending, from the European Region of the International Lesbian and Gay Association, the Canada-based Coalition Gaie et Lesbienne du Quebec, and Germany's Lesben- und Schwulenverband in Deutschland.

''As long as human rights abuses against lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people occur, it is vital that non-governmental organizations working on their behalf are given a place and voice at the United Nations,'' the U.S.-based groups said in their letter to Rice.

That had been the U.S. position, the groups said, adding that this week's about-face came despite the U.S. State Department's own expressions of concern regarding oppression against sexual minorities in various countries but particularly in Iran and Zimbabwe.

The U.S. government's latest 'Country Reports on Human Rights Practices,' covering 2004 and released last year, highlighted Iran's use of the death penalty to punish male homosexual behavior and Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe's verbal lashing of homosexuals as ''people without rights'' and ''worse than dogs and pigs.''

Joe Solmonese, president of the group Human Rights Campaign, assailed the U.S. reversal, saying ''the United States recklessly ignored its own reporting proving the need for international support for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people.''

Added Matt Foreman, the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force's executive director: ''It is deeply disturbing that the self-proclaimed leader of the free world will ally with bigots at the drop of a hat to advance the right wing's anti-gay agenda.''