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    Apparently suggesting that the ruling party in South Africa is corrupt is fine as long as you don't make a mockery out of President Jacob Zuma's penis. You see, there's a collection of works called "Hail to the Thief" being shown at the Goodman Gallery in Johannesburg, and according to Reuters' Peroshni Govender one image, by artist Brett Murray, goes a little too far in exposing Zuma. "The African National Congress wants the Goodman Gallery to remove a painting of Zuma called 'The Spear', which depicts the president with his genitals exposed, and another work that has a 'For Sale' sign superimposed over the party logo," reports Reuters. It's a little silly, yes, and considering the types of artistic outrage that galleries have experienced over controversial pieces of art--maybe we shouldn't be laughing. "It's making a mockery of the highest office," ANC spokesman Jackson Mthembu told Reuters. Mthembu said the artist was within his rights to express himself but said "The Spear" was "vulgar" and ridiculed President Zuma's stature. You'd think since Mthembu felt so strongly, he'd have the whole collection banned right? After all, isn't the whole collection pretty much ridiculing the president? Obviously (thankfully?), the gallery isn't stepping down. "We feel it is censorship to take the image down,” gallery spokeswoman Lara Koseff said in a report from The Mail & Guardian. Gallery director, Liza Essers, added: "It is a sad day for South Africa when creative production is being threatened with censorship from our ruling party." And people like it! Reuters is reporting it's already been sold! A copy of the painting is at the link. Personaly I don't see the problem, it's not like the artist painted the president with a micro-penis

    Painting of South African President's Penis Creates Controversy

  • St. Stephen's in Houston to perform same-sex covenants

    Tuesday, May 15, 2012 HOUSTON CHURCH TO MARRY GAYS If Episcopal Diocese OK’s Gay "Blessing" By JOE GOMEZ The Bishop of the Texas Episcopal Diocese named St. Stephens Episcopal Church as the first in Houston to be allowed to offer ceremonies for same-sex covenants. It's a move that anti-gay activist Pastor Tom Brown, thinks goes against the teachings of the bible. "The first thing Jesus said about marriage is that god made us male and female so this would be completely contradictory to our lords own teaching," says Brown. Brown thinks that many people will be leaving the Episcopal Church if it approves same sex marriages, but Noel Freeman with Houston's GLBT caucus disagrees. "I think it's a perfect exercise of freedom of religious expression," says Freeman. The State of Texas does not recognize same sex marriages legally so this would be solely a ceremonial move.

    St. Stephen's in Houston to perform same-sex covenants

  • Have you ever paid for it?

    I'm just wondering how one goes about making that choice. Did you just decide that you were tired of putting yourself out there for rejection? Tire of the bar scene? Wanted someone who would just leave when it was done? Did you call a service or answer a Craigslist ad?

  • Ancient life, millions of years old and barely alive, found beneath ocean floor

    Call it survival of the slowest: Extraordinarily old, bizarrely low-key bacteria have been found in sediments 100 feet below the sea floor of the Pacific Ocean, far removed from sunlight, fresh nutrients and what humans would consider anything interesting to do. Some of these organisms, scientists say, could be at least 1,000 years old. Or maybe millions of years. Their strategy for staying alive is to be barely alive at all. Their metabolism is dialed down to almost nothing, an adaptive advantage in a place with so few resources. The bacteria that survive are the ones that can satisfy themselves with minute traces of oxygen and a parsimonious diet of organic material laid down millions of years ago. Such buried bacteria have been found before, but a new study, published Thursday online by the journal Science, has provided the clearest look at their glacial pace of existence. The conclusion, in short, is that microbes can putter along at extremely low rates of oxygen respiration, their numbers limited only by the paucity of energy available in the buried sediment. “These organisms live so slowly that when we look at it at our own time scale, it’s like suspended animation,” said Danish scientist Hans Roy, a biologist at Aarhus University and the lead author of the study. “The main lesson here is that we need to stop looking at life at our own time scale.” An ancillary message is that human beings should not be too chauvinistic about what constitutes, or characterizes, a living thing. There are a lot more nuances to nature than scientists realized just a few decades ago. The ingenuity of life gives hope to researchers looking for evidence of life beyond Earth. Extraterrestrial life could conceivably be detected by robotic probes, for example, in the Martian subsurface, or in an ice- covered ocean on a cold moon farther out in the solar system. ‘Life in the slow lane’ Scientists now believe that much of the life on Earth is barely able to fog a mirror, as it were. The deep-sea microbes may be an extreme example of a laid-back norm. Most of Earth life, measured by numbers, is not rambunctious and charismatic like life in the sunshine, nor is it akin to the microbes that grow quickly in a laboratory petri dish. Rather, it’s kind of boring — living out of sight, below the surface, in total darkness, using energy slowly and efficiently. NASA research scientist Tori Hoehler, who was not involved with the new study but who has investigated such microbes, said, “I think this is a window into life in the slow lane, which, far from being a niche thing, is probably the average condition on Earth.” Only in recent decades have scientists come to realize that life on the surface is but the flashy veneer of the biosphere. Life, we now know, will find a way to survive in the unlikeliest places, from deep-sea hydrothermal vents and ancient salt deposits to Yellowstone’s hot springs. There are microbes living on aerosolized particles high in the atmosphere. But the subsea, buried bacteria demonstrate a form of extremophiles that are at the end of the spectrum of vibrancy.

    Ancient life, millions of years old and barely alive, found beneath ocean floor

  • Mitt Romney was arrested in 1981 for disorderly conduct

    Fans of truly explosive political fireworks may have been disappointed when the seemingly unflappable Mitt Romney all but clinched the Republican nod to face the famously no-drama President Obama. But flashes of Romney's well-guarded temper have made cameo appearances on the campaign trail, and BuzzFeed's Andrew Kaczynski just unearthed a gem from Romney's past: A three-decade-old arrest for clashing with a law officer. Here, a look at that tale and four classic "Mitt-frontations" (as his family calls them): 1. Facing a "disorderly conduct" arrest This story first surfaced in Romney's doomed 1994 bid to unseat Sen. Ted Kennedy, Kaczynski says: In 1981, Romney was putting the family boat into Lake Cochituate, an hour outside of Boston, when a park officer told him he couldn't because the license looked painted over. If he launched, he'd face a $50 fine. "I was willing to pay the fine," Romney told The Boston Globe. But the officer returned as Romney put the boat in and, visibly angry at being ignored, handcuffed Mitt, who was "dripping wet in a bathing suit," and booked him for disorderly conduct. Romney contested the arrest in court, threatened to sue, and got the arrest dismissed and sealed. "He did not have the right to arrest me because I was not a disorderly person," Romney told The Globe. Right, I guess "laws are [just] for little people and suckers, aren't they?" says Kaili Joy Gray at Daily Kos. 2. Tangling with a traffic cop at the Olympics During the 2002 Winter Olympics, says Alec MacGillis at The New Republic, Romney, who was the Games' chief organizer, pushed local sheriff's deputies out of the way to personally manage a traffic snarl outside the downhill ski area. He also lit into an 18-year-old security volunteer, Shaun Knopp, who told reporters that Romney rudely asked "who the fuck" he was and "what the fuck" an amateur like him was doing at the Olympics. Romney denied dropping f-bombs, saying the worst he broke out was "H-E-double hockey sticks." I find the idea of Romney directing traffic and dropping f-bombs "immensely humanizing," says Tommy Christopher at Mediaite. "I like that guy" — why isn't he running? 3. Putting Rick Perry in a "Vulcan neck pinch" In a GOP debate last October, Romney had an "odd and unexpected moment" with Texas Gov. Rick Perry, says The New Republic's MacGillis. Perry interrupted Mitt, and Romney appealed to the moderator. But "when no help arrived, he turned on Perry, his voice rising to a shout and his eyes flashing with anger." He even condescendingly put his hand on Perry's shoulder, shocking observers used to Mitt's "robotic self-control." Romney's "attempted Vulcan neck pinch on Rick Perry" was actually "a very strong bit of power politics," says Mediaite's Christopher, except for the part where "he tried to complain to the ref." 4. Sparring with party rockers LMFAO In February 2010, Romney was on a flight from Vancouver to Los Angeles when he had his "most unusual altercation," says MacGillis. He and wife Ann were seated behind Sky Blu (Skyler Gordy) of the party-rock duo LMFAO. Gordy leaned back before takeoff, Romney told him to return his seat to an upright position, and Gordy wound up being escorted off the plane. As Romney tells it, after he politely asked Gordy to sit up, then "tapped him on the shoulder," Gordy "gave me a good swat and he broke my hair." In Gordy's version, told on YouTube, Romney yelled, "Sir, sir put your seat up!" then reached up and "put a condor grip on me. ... It was pretty hostile."

    Mitt Romney was arrested in 1981 for disorderly conduct

  • What size waist are you?

    Anyone her size 30 waist or under?

  • Do you believe in ghosts?

    Serious replies only. If so, have you had an experience with one?

  • OMM going after the GAP now