• California,  Politics

    Warren Beatty: I Don’t Want to run for California Governor

    Beatty vs. Swarzenegger for California Governor?

    Actor Warren Beatty lashed out at California governor Arnold Swarzenegger while stating he does not want to run against him.

    Read the story here:

    Beatty, invited to speak to graduates of the University of California at Berkeley’s public policy school, has never held public office, but he has been a trusty supporter of Democratic presidential candidates for decades. In recent months, the two movie stars have sparred in separate public appearances that hinted at a possible political showdown.

    “I’m an opponent of (Schwarzenegger’s) muscle-bound conservatism with longer experience in politics than he has,” the star of the political satire “Bulworth” said at the commencement ceremony.

    “And although I don’t want to run for governor, I would do one hell of a lot better job than he’s done,” the 68-year-old actor said. “I could name you a lot of Democrats who would be so much better than I would, and maybe even a few Republicans.”

    Please Warren run against Rob Reiner in the Lefties Primary. This is one race I am going to love to blog.

    Oh and yeah, keep talking about raising taxes on the rich (the rich being everyone) to balance the California budget.

    Latest Flap handicap: Arnold by at least 15 points.

    Hat Tip: Huffington Post

  • Criminals,  Morons

    OnStar: Hide Your Stash

    Bernalillo County, New Mexico, Sheriff’s deputies have made one of the biggest drug busts in the department’s history.

    It seems a toddler activated the OnStar system after locking himself inside his father’s Cadillac Escalade. Sheriff’s deputies responded and noticed a suspicious new trailer nearby.

    Oops…the trailer had 1,700 pounds of marijuana inside, worth about 1/2 million.

    Read the story here.

    The moral of the story?

    If you are a drug trafficker – bust the window and get your son out before he reaches for the OnStar.

  • Methamphetamine

    Santa Maria Times: Life on the Streets Battling Meth

    This is Part Two of the award winning series from the Santa Maria Times on the tragedies of Methamphetamine:

    Rolling down the neighborhood streets and rural roads of northern Santa Barbara County in his black-and-white patrol car, sheriff’s Deputy Thomas Mathews has a front-row seat to law enforcement’s struggle against methamphetamine.

    A 27-year-veteran of the department, Mathews watched as heroin and cocaine gave way 15 years ago to the cheap high of methamphetamine, a stimulant that can be smoked, snorted, eaten or injected.

    His eyes scan the sidewalks for suspicious citizens as his car cruises down quaint areas such as Orcutt, Los Alamos and Casmalia, far from what most people would consider dangerous communities. Methamphetamine use happens in every neighborhood on his watch, he said.

    Mathews, 49, aggressively works to enforce what police call “11550s,” a reference to the state health and safety code for those under the influence of narcotics.

    In an 18-month period, Mathews has arrested more than 150 people for allegedly being under the influence of methamphetamine, he said.

    Though the crime is a misdemeanor that sometimes isn’t even charged by prosecutors, Mathews believes citing people is an efficient way to pull them into the system before their health deteriorates or they harm others.

    On a recent Tuesday night, Mathews was working the 6 p.m. to 2 a.m. shift. He estimates half the people on the street are under the influence of drugs or alcohol during that time period.

    Early in his shift, Mathews spots a middle-aged man in dark clothing riding his bicycle at Clark Avenue and Gray Street in Old Town Orcutt.

    The lack of lights on the man’s bike makes Mathews suspicious. So he jumps from his car and approaches.

    The man is a 41-year-old construction worker biking home from his job. Mathews chats with him and then briefly tests his vital signs. The man’s eyes and eyelids are trembling, a symptom of meth use. The man’s pulse is at 120, though he is standing still.

    Dispatch informs the cop that the man has a previous arrest warrant, and Mathews cuffs him and places him in the back of the patrol car.

    The deputy then searches through the man’s backpack, where he is not surprised to find a home-made glass methamphetamine pipe with residue encrusted on it.

    “If you don’t arrest these individuals, you’re allowing them to commit crimes,” Mathews said. “They’re the people stealing your identity and breaking into your vehicles at night. It affects quality of life.”

    That’s a viewpoint shared by others in law enforcement, who say users often resort to crime to afford their habit.

    “The burglary rate is high in part because of methamphetamine use,” said Lt. Larry Ralston of the Santa Maria Police Department. “People are breaking into cars stealing stereos, breaking into houses where they can buy a day’s use.”

    Mail fraud and identify theft also are crimes commonly committed by meth addicts looking for quick cash, Ralston said, adding that police have had to alter their methods to adjust to the volatility of meth users.

    “Meth users tend to be more violent than users of other drugs,” said Sgt. Don Dodson of the Lompoc Police Department. “The drug makes them agitated.”

    In that respect, the drug is much worse than the heroin problem in the North County 20 years ago.

    Dealers of meth are also more violent.

    “We’re seeing a lot more guns now, which is always scary,” said Sgt. Greg Carroll of the Santa Maria Police Department’s narcotics suppression team. “I think it’s the paranoia that they get. They feel they need some sort of protection.”

    The structure of meth-dealing operations in Santa Maria often starts with one person who receives several pounds of the manufactured drug from a contact in Mexico for about $6,000 a pound, Carroll said.

    That person then packages the drug in smaller amounts and supplies it – for about $11,000 a pound – to other dealers, who then further break down the drug to amounts like a gram, “teener” (1/16 ounce) or “eight-ball” (1/8 ounce), police said.

    A gram, which costs from $60 to $80, can provide about five doses of use, Carroll said.

    For the past 10 years, meth has been the most commonly sold illegal drug in Santa Maria.

    “It’s pretty much taken over,” Carroll said. “And it will be here for a while. When you have a poor economy, people tend to turn to drugs.”

    With help from informants and normal patrols, police have been able to shut down several larger operations, Carroll said. However, new operations quickly rise up and meet the demand.

    An ample supply of the drug will always exist on the Central Coast, said Sgt. Sean Donahue of the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff’s Department, noting the area’s geographic location makes it an easy distribution point.

    “The main manufacturing sites are in Mexico and California,” Donahue said. “And we’re right between San Francisco and Los Angeles. (Highways) 5, 101, and 99 are all close by.”

    Back at the sheriff’s substation in Orcutt, Deputy Mathews is interviewing the man he recently busted on suspicion of being under the influence.

    The suspect is mild-mannered, and willing to chat with the officer.

    He speaks of being a casual user of the drug who became badly addicted. Recently, the suspect purchased a small quantity of the drug from an acquaintance, and said he’d last smoked the drug several days ago.

    “I use it for the rush,” the suspect said. “You feel more energetic and you get more things accomplished, I think. It’s like drinking five or ten Red Bulls. It’s overrated though, I think, really.”

    The suspect agrees to take a urine test, but says he doesn’t yet have to go.

    Mathews accompanies him to the substation’s jail, where the man will likely wait in a holding cell until he is ready to give a sample.

    Most under-the-influence suspects are released after booking, and then sent a citation through the mail. However, this suspect’s other arrest warrant may prevent his release that night.

    Though the business of collecting urine samples and booking suspects for misdemeanors is not something all deputies are interested in doing, Mathews believes it’s the only way to make a dent in local meth use.

    There are some good web links at the Oregonian newspaper here.

  • Blogosphere

    Huffington Post: Hot Links

    Well, I suppose it is easier to hotlink from a smaller blog and steal their bandwidth than to upload to Flickr.

    Flap has been guilty of this in the past and certainly gives attributuon – at the very least.

    However, the folks over at Huffington’s Post have experience and the resources — so what is the excuse?

    Laziness?

    See the FLAP here:

    Arianna, Arianna — we’re so glad you’re here. But if you want to become the celebrity darling of the InterWeb — how about not stealing and taking credit for the creative, investigative, and deliberative work from other, legitimate bloggers? Better yet, how about this: once you’ve taken an image and given no credit, why not rub salt in the wound and just go right ahead and hotlink it?

    That’s right, just steal bandwidth from the little guys. We’ll roll over for you just like we were the California electorate. Just because you reportedly throw one heck of a cocktail party doesn’t mean you’ve got this internet thing licked.

    And for the record – we gave you almost 24 hours to realize your mistake.

    So, Arianna what’s the story?

    Update #1

    Instapundit says give the Newbs a break! Ok… we can cut them so slack and we can all learn about Flickr and how not to hot link without at least attribution.

  • Media,  Politics

    Bill O’Reilly to Michael Kinsley: Off with His Head

    Bill O’Reilly, syndicated radio show host, columnist and Fox News commentator has a problem with Los Angeles Times (free registration required) editorial editor, Michael Kinsley’s editorial:

    Selective Outrage
    According to chaos theory, the flapping of a single butterfly’s wings can trigger a hurricane halfway across the globe, a phenomenon known as the “butterfly effect.” Now the Bush administration thinks it has detected something that might be called the “Newsweek effect.” It says the magazine’s publication of an item in its May 9 issue, alleging that U.S. guards flushed the Koran down a toilet in order to humiliate prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, was a cause of riots in Afghanistan and Pakistan last week that left at least 14 people dead.

    We’ll leave it to the scientists and philosophers to debate the finer points of chaos theory. What we can say here is that the “Newsweek effect” is exaggerated.

    This is not to say that Newsweek’s article was correct; after apologizing for it on Sunday, the magazine retracted it on Monday. And the use of anonymous sources, on which the Newsweek article relied, raises questions of motivation and credibility that news organizations (including this one) ignore at their peril. But the story hardly tarnishes all news coverage of the war, as the administration, and much of the conservative media, would have you believe.

    The more interesting question may not be how Newsweek goofed, but why the Muslim world is so ready to believe the story. For all the administration’s huffing and puffing about Newsweek getting the story wrong, it has produced such a catalog of misdeeds at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo that almost any allegation is instantly credited abroad. The administration itself has said that 11 soldiers have been disciplined for abusing prisoners at Gitmo.

    The United States has already been convicted in the court of world opinion for its treatment of its prisoners, and that’s the administration’s fault, not Newsweek’s. Shutting down Guantanamo and giving suspected terrorists legal protections would help restore our reputation abroad. Crowing over Newsweek’s mishap won’t.

    Now, O’Reilly says off with Kinsley’s head! Really!

    Read that here:

    Fox News host Bill O’Reilly said that Los Angeles Times editorial board wouldn’t understand his objection to legal representation for detainees at Guantànamo Bay, Cuba, until terrorists “grab [editorial page editor] Michael Kinsley out of his little house and they cut off his head.” He further opined: “And maybe when the blade sinks in, he’ll go, ‘Perhaps O’Reilly was right.'”

    Flap never agrees with Michael Kinsley and rarely watches the Factor.

    O’Reilly to me just has no credibility – especially after his Vibrator Affair with a staff member.



    Can anyone really take this guy seriously and…… why is he still on the air?

  • Business

    What Wendy’s Learned in Finger Flap

    Food for Thought
    What Wendy’s learned from the fingertip hoax

    We all recall the story.

    The CEO of Wendy’s has written this piece in Opinion Journal:

    There’s nothing quite as unnerving as becoming the target of fraud. For us at Wendy’s, that nightmare became reality when a customer falsely accused the Wendy’s on Monterey Road in San Jose, Calif., of putting a human fingertip in a bowl of chili. Within an hour the story was on TV news, and soon after, Wendy’s was fodder for Jay Leno. It was painful for us to watch unfold.

    As funny as the story was to us in the blogosphere many of us realized what a calamity this fraud was for this business and employees.

    Flap loves chili and when possible will frequent Wendy’s.

    How about some low fat turkey chili guys?

  • Humour

    Chief Justice William Rehnquist and Alice Cooper Soulmates?

    Well, what does the Chief Justice of the Unites States Supreme Court have in common with Alice Cooper the rock star?

    An Honorary Degree at Grand Canyon University, a Christian liberal arts college in Phoenix, Arizona.

    Read about it here:

    Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist has another degree – and what presumably is his first connection to rocker Alice Cooper.

    The 80-year-old Rehnquist was awarded an honorary doctorate in political science from Grand Canyon University, a Christian liberal arts college in Phoenix. Rehnquist, who has academic degrees from Stanford and Harvard, practiced law in Arizona’s capital city from 1953-69.

    Last spring, Grand Canyon University honored Cooper, a born-again Christian once known for shocking concert audiences with guillotines, fake blood and decapitated baby dolls.

    Rehnquist, a Lutheran, also has some musical talent, albeit of a much lower-key nature: He leads Christmas carols at the court each year.

    But, at least the Chief Justice will be in tune! And hopefully no snakes.