Friday Open Thread

Filed in National by on October 23, 2009

It’s Friday and it’s open thread time. That means your Friday is already halfway over!

It’s also National Mole Day, a celebration of Avogadro’s number, 6.02 x 10^23 (the number of atoms in a mole). It’s celebrated from 6:02 AM to 6:02 PM on 10/23 every year. This link gives you some tips on how to celebrate Mole Day:

*Send a Mole Day greeting card to friends.
*Drink a glass of molasses milk (201g [ 7.1 oz ] of C6H12NNaO3S = 1 mole) at 6:02am & pm.
*Bake and eat 6.02 molasses cookies.
* Drink 1 mol of H2O (18 g or 0.63oz) of water at 6:02am.
* Ask people to guess how many moles you have in a brown paper bag.

I haven’t gotten any extra appreciation for National Chemistry Week. Perhaps everyone was waiting until Mole Day?

Bwahahaha – this is just funny. In North Carolina, a Republican critic of the Democratic governor delivered a wheelbarrow full of surveys to the governor’s office. Apparently he didn’t read the responses:

“I am embarrassed to be associated with this organization. Your tactics are disgusting and you’re going to lose a generation of voters,” was one, Perdue spokeswoman Chrissy Pearson told the News.

“Stop wording questions so geared up to get the answers you want and start wording them to actually find out the people’s opinion, not just confirm your own,” read another.

[…]

Other questions on the survey included:

“Do you oppose Bev Perdue and the Democrats’ plan to pass a job-killing $1.6 billion dollar [sic] tax increase in the middle of a recession?”

“Do you support sending the North Carolina National Guard to help secure our southern border?”

LOL, is North Carolina in danger from South Carolina?

Tags:

About the Author ()

Opinionated chemist, troublemaker, blogger on national and Delaware politics.

Comments (31)

Trackback URL | Comments RSS Feed

  1. Wow. Read this.

    Republicans shed a fifth of members since August. While the Teabaggers, the Birthers, the Deathers, the Tenthers, and all the rest of the dead-enders ranted in and around Town Halls, and some Democratic handwringers were demanding that Obama give up on bipartisanship and take them on head on, and pound on Congress for a Public Option, polls showed approval of Obama and of Health Care slipping. But that reversed in September. Now the Senate looks like it might get serious about a Public Option fairly soon, and the Washington Post reports that Republican self-identification has dropped from 25% on August 17 to 20% on October 18, with another 19% who say that they are not Republicans, but would vote for one. Pew and Gallup show similar results.

  2. pandora says:

    They scare people, which seems appropriate for the party of fear.

  3. lizard says:

    W.H. tells Congress that policy ‘Czars’ won’t testify

    Washington Times ^ | October 23, 2009 | Stephen Dinan
    The White House has told Congress it will reject calls for many of President Obama’s policy czars to testify before Congress – a decision senators said goes against the president’s promises of transparency and openness and treads on Congress’ constitutional mandate to investigate the administration’s actions. Sen. Susan Collins, Maine Republican, said White House counsel Greg Craig told her in a meeting Wednesday that they will not make available any of the czars who work in the White House and don’t have to go through Senate confirmation.

    hope & change & transparency

  4. I am happy today because the US Senate Passes Byrd-Shepard Hate Crimes Act!(More on my blog!) – but sad that it had to be attached to the Defense Spending Bill to pass and absolutly disgusted at some catholics that disagree with the Act and make it all about gays and lesbians, even though it isn’t.

  5. Update on where we are in the fight for the public option:

    The Huffington Post’s Sam Stein reports Harry Reid is just one or two senators away from securing the 60 votes he needs to defeat a Republican filibuster of a health care reform measure containing an opt-out public option. If Reid does manage to get 60 votes against a GOP filibuster, he’ll only need 50 votes to secure passage of the underlying bill, thanks to Vice President Joe Biden’s tie-breaking vote.

    I’d really like to know who the 1 or 2 holdouts are. Is the Lincoln and Landrieu?

  6. lizard says:

    Stephen Hawking’s successor named

    BBC ^
    Cambridge University has named the man who will succeed Professor Stephen Hawking in one of the world’s most prestigious academic positions. The celebrated physicist, who has motor neurone disease, completed his last day as Lucasian Professor of Mathematics on 30 September. The university said Professor Michael Green had been elected as the 18th person to take up the position…. …The Lucasian Professorship was established in 1663 and previous holders have included Isaac Newton.

  7. Brooke says:

    Well, I’ve been celebrating National Chemistry Week, all week. Some of us just aren’t showy about our religious identities. 😀

  8. lizard says:

    I am glad you explained that 6.02 x 10^23 was a mole, at first glance I thought it was the Obama Deficit!

    http://media.sfexaminer.com/images/091022beelertoon_c.jpg

  9. Progressive Mom says:

    Honestly? The best part of the Mole Day site is the drawing of the Mole. Really.

    Obama went to MIT today and got a geek shirt with a big formula on it. Which conservatives will probably say is a secret socialist message. But it didn’t have a Mole.

    The photo is here: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/10/23/obama-visits-mit-research_n_331963.html

    Happy Mole Day, UI

  10. Thanks, PM. I love the tshirt, too!

  11. shoe throwing instructor says:

    Been trying to self teach myself quantum physics for a while and was lost until one thing came to light, that,s the literally tiny size of the atom, 10,000 atoms will fit on the eracer head of a pencil, but they do have mass [there are now powerful microscopes that can actually see them] and more important the atom has worling parts to it called particles, 10;000 particles could fit comfortably on the sharpened tip of a pencil, these quarks control all the functions of the universe, up, down,sideways motion, magnatism, electricity, gravity etc. these specks on speack pass thru or pores easily and control are nerve system and all the functions that go on around us. It,s fun stuff to try and read and understand but the atom was actually discovered by the ancient greeks some tthree tousand years ago.

  12. cassandra_m says:

    Moving away from the cool science for a sec, this has got to be the most hilarious story of the day — these wingnuts are so desperate to believe just any shady or bad thing about Obama that they fall for ANYTHING.

    One blog writes up a satire in August about an Obama college thesis (entirely made up) — two days ago, Micheal Ledeen writes this up as the proof of the week (I have no idea of what) and today the Leader of the Republican Party and Fox Nation get in on the act. And it seems really likely that not one of these amazing geniuses knows yet that they’ve been had.

    How these people stay in the gene pool is a real mystery to me.

  13. shoe throwing instructor says:

    Speaking of rats moles and other rodents, the 100th bank failed today in naples florida,FDIC bye week is over. at this rate the entire country will have just two banks left to deal with, if you think bank charges are high now wait till citi and B of A have hold of your connolies.

  14. Faux News ran an article based on unsourced material. I seem to remember a big uproar over some unverified documents and Dan Rather. So, Fox is held to a different standard now?

  15. Knot-a-Dem says:

    Cassandra_m

    Did you folks around here condemn the false quotes attributed to Rush Limbaugh, or did you revel in those poorly sourced frauds (like Media matters itself did)? And when they were shown to be frauds, did you admit your error or did you say “Well, they sounded like something he would say, or at least think?”

    Just checking to see if you are consistent in your views, or if you hypocritically apply one standard to your political opponents and another to your side of the aisle — and yourselves.

  16. cassandra_m says:

    Are you talking about the same Rush Limbaugh who routinely smears and insults people? The one who routinely trades on racial invective and bigotry? The one who wouldn’t know the truth if was giving away free oxycontin?

    DO NOT CARE about any false quotes attributed to that rat bastard. For someone who makes a pretty damn fine living from making shit up, Rush is a damned whiny bitch. If you live by the falsehood, you an die by the falsehood as far as I’m concerned.

  17. Knot-a-Dem says:

    Thanks for owning up to your hypocrisy. You’ve lost your credibility as a blogger, cassandra.

  18. Exactly, Cassandra. Rush’s problem was that the false quotes didn’t look too different than his real ones. It was a nice try by the wingnuts to try to confuse the issue but Rush was has a very long history of racially insensitive language. Wasn’t it just last month that Limbaugh said that Obama is responsible for black kids beating up white kids and that we should have segregated buses?

  19. Steve Newton says:

    UI
    A technical question of sorts since you used scientific notation. If I am using a typescript that won’t let me do superscripts and I am doing a really really huge number like 1 raised to the 25th raised to the 25th is this the right way to do it? (1×10^25) x 10^25 or what?

  20. Steve,

    Your question doesn’t make much sense because 1^25 is 1.

    The way you’ve written is correct, but I would probably simplify to 1×10^625. I’ve also seen it written as 1E25 (like on a calculator).

  21. Speaking of GOP propaganda fail, check this out.

  22. Oh my:

    On Wednesday, Ann “Baseball Bat” Coulter wrote another of her charming columns that aren’t published anywhere:

    The bloggers and Keith bring different skill sets to the game. They provide the tendentious half-truths, phony opinion polls and spurious social science, while Keith provides his booming baritone, gigantic “Guys and Dolls” suits and gift for ridiculous, fustian grandiloquence. Keith is far better equipped than, say, the pint-sized, girly-voiced, Frito Bandito-accented Markos Moulitsas to deliver the party line.

    Markos, ‘ee ees so lazy an’ sleeeeepy. ‘Ee siesta all zee day. An’ ‘ee also a joto.

    Charming!

  23. Steve Newton says:

    UI I should have written it more clearly. There is a number in a book by Frank Tipler that I wanted to talk about (you know, the physicist who believes that the Omega Point will send us all to Heaven) that is so large he described is as (I don’t have it in front of me), say 3 raised to 10 to the 25th all raised again to 10 to the 100th. It wasn’t (3 x 10^25) times something, but (3 x 10^25) itself raised. He employed a superscript and then a superscript to that superscript. I can’t even figure out how to express the number because I had never seen that notation before.

  24. What you’re describing sounds more like:
    [3^(10^25)]^(10^100)

  25. Jason330 says:

    Mike Castle to the left of Tom Carper on banking regulation? While it is not hard to be to the left of Carper on anytyhing – Castle just burnished his “bipartisan” street cred by being the lone Republican to vote for the creation of the consumer financial protection agency by voting against Tom Carper, his US Chamber paymasters, and his payday loan making buds.

    Placed in the “winners” category by politico they managed to mar their observations with this knee slapper:

    Rep. Mike Castle (R-Del.)

    The lone Republican to vote for the CFPA legislation, Castle at least wins the title of most bipartisan, but his stance in favor of the CFPA is tricky.

    It may help him with the populist, crack-down-on-Wall Street crowd as he runs for Vice President Joe Biden’s old Senate seat. But he’s also got a huge banking industry in Delaware, so it could backfire with powerful business interests in Wilmington.

    Ha! Politco sucks!

  26. Jason330 says:

    Tom Carper brags to Fox News that he was invited to caucus with Republicans on HCR.

    Pssst…Tom, Fox News is not really a news network

  27. Jason330 says:

    As much as I hate Tom Carper for his unrelenting corporate WHORING – if he has really switched to supporting an “opt-out” clause for states that don’t want to participate from an “opt-in” plan, that would be a significant improvement that I would have to give him credit for.

  28. That Carper will eventually do the right thing doesn’t change the fact that he voted to protect the pharmaceutical industry and he voted against the public option in the SFC bill. But yes, I think it will turn down the burning passion against him.

    I think Carper might have gotten the message that rank and file Dems were very, very angry at him. I went to two party meetings where Carper’s aids were under relentless attack and the executive committee resolution was also aimed at Carper.

  29. Jason330 says:

    I’m loviing this NY-23 race.

    Newt and the NRA love Scozzafava while Palin, The Club for Economic Ruin, and Santorum love Hoffman. Who knows..If Christine O’Whackjob runs hard at Castle from the wingnut right – maybe she can cause a stir.

  30. Steve Newton says:

    UI
    Thanks–that’s exactly what I wanted. I just couldn’t figure out how to write it without two sets of superscripts.

  31. Jason330 says:

    Who are the worst tippers? The answer will not surprise you.

    In doing my not-so-scientific research of five servers at very different eateries, a disturbing trend was common. In every case the diners deemed among the 1) most demanding and 2) worst tippers were…drumroll please…

    The Sunday post-church crowd that comes in starting around noon, usually in fairly large groups of families. I kid you not, each server has interesting tales of torture tables.

    I’ll share the best two, because the waiters both receive not just a crap tip, but something in lieu of money. One received—I sh*t you not, a bible. The other one is probably even worse – the church ladies left him what looked like a $20 bill, but it was a mockup of one that if you unfolded it gave their church address and had scripture on it. Damn, that’s cheaptastic.