08 January 2010 @ 01:00 am
I just looked over my sweetheart's links page and sometimes when I read something nice that someone said or thought about me, it's like getting a present. This weather has got me down, down, down. The cold is making my back tense up a lot, so I stay in bed or bundled up for most of the day. Spending some time in the bathtub with some epsom salts was nice, though.
 
 
Current Mood: relaxed
 
 
08 January 2010 @ 12:42 am
Sufferings
Sara

I can see you crying
At first I didn’t know
Why your tears were spilling
But soon I knew that you couldn’t
Go on like you were
That what you thought was love
Turned from you
And struck you down
And while you were forced to endure
The torture that insued
Your only chance of rescue
Rebuked you
Laughing in your face
And this I’ll say to you
As you weep in my arms
I am here
I will never leave
You can always find me here
Forever for you and your troubles
I will dry your tears
And wipe away the scars that you think
Will remain forever
Now, Listen
I cannot solve
Every problem that you endure
But I swear
A million times in my own blood
That whenever you need love
I will be the one to supply it for you
Please don’t cry anymore
My sister
The past is gone
It will never return to you
The light will still shine
The sea will still glow
And one day
You will fly further
Than this cage of hell
That you live in
Nothing ever again
Will hinder you
From your dreams
Spread your wings, sister
In time
You will fly
I promise
And when that day comes
You will suffer no more
 
 
07 January 2010 @ 06:29 pm
Can I just throw a couple chicken breasts in the crock pot with some chicken broth/stock and expect to come home (about 8 hours) to something yummy?

Or any recipes to recommend kind of along these lines?
 
 
07 January 2010 @ 09:24 pm
Can anyone direct me to a site or instructions on making no slip hair clips? I'd like to make some for my daughters, but everything I'm coming across is books/DVDs you have to purchase or instructions that aren't very detailed or don't include pictures. TIA!
 
 
07 January 2010 @ 04:59 pm
Cookie

Cut-out cookies aren't just for the holidays! With this set, you not only get the adorable copper guitar cookie cutter, but you also get a booklet filled with cookie recipes. Who wouldn't want to make some "Max's Kandy Cities" or some "Loft Party Makeouts"? $13.95 at The BUST Boobtique.

 
 
07 January 2010 @ 07:15 pm

What would you serve with peanut butter/cream cheese pie?

Posted via LiveJournal.app.

 
 
07 January 2010 @ 08:17 am
Ham and Bean Soup

1 pound dried Navy beans, sorted and soaked overnight, drained
2 quarts water
1 meaty ham bone or chunks of ham
1 teaspoon salt, or to taste
1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper
3/4 cup chopped celery with leaves
1/2 cup chopped onion
Combine beans and water in a large saucepan. Bring to a simmer; cook just until tender. Combine beans and liquid with remaining ingredients in slow cooker. Cover and cook on LOW for 8 to 10 hours.
Serves 8.
Tags: ,
 
 
Current Mood: cheerful
Jazzin to the sounds of...: Soundscape audio channel - ComCast
 
 
07 January 2010 @ 06:54 pm

Huffington Post:
Geithner's New York Fed Pushed AIG To Keep Sweetheart Deals Secret


An arm of the Federal Reserve, then led by now-Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, told bailed-out insurance giant AIG to withhold key details from the public about overpayments that put billions of extra tax dollars in the coffers of major Wall Street firms, most notably Goldman Sachs.

The sordid tale unfolds in a series of e-mails between the company and the New York Fed obtained by Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA), the ranking member of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, and first publicly disclosed by Bloomberg News.

The matter is the subject of an "ongoing review" by the Office of the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (SIGTARP), communications director Kristine Belisle said in an e-mail to the Huffington Post. SIGTARP is headed by Neil M. Barofsky, a former federal prosecutor.

Taxpayers have committed about $182 billion to AIG. The under-regulated firm developed and sold complicated derivatives products without having adequate capital in place if those bets went bad, which they eventually did. The firm nearly single-handedly wrecked the entire financial system.

After the firm was given a taxpayer-funded backstop, one of its most controversial acts was to repay banks at 100 cents on the dollar for what was by that point nearly worthless insurance the banks had bought from AIG, known as credit-default swaps.

A brutal report issued in November by a government watchdog disclosed that AIG had actually been trying to negotiate better terms with the banks until - guess what? -- the New York Fed stepped in. The report held Geithner personally responsible, and led to renewed questions about his fitness for the job.

Now it turns out Geithner's people told AIG to delete references on draft regulatory filings to the sweetheart deals. And AIG then excluded any mention of them in its December 2008 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission...

WATCH Roy Sekoff On AIG-Fed Emails: This Has Got To Be The End Of Geithner

Roy On Ed Show

We've Become A Gov't 'Of The Bankers, By The Bankers, And For The Bankers'

 
 
 
07 January 2010 @ 04:40 pm
1/07/10
 
 
07 January 2010 @ 04:14 pm
New pendant, handmade out of clay and hand painted with a painting of a butterfly called a Sparkling Cherub (I love that name!)


Read more... )
 
 
07 January 2010 @ 02:33 pm
Wines

Wine snobs, I mean connoisseurs, are notoriously hard to buy for. Enter this wine tasting pack. Each pack contains a variety of vials plus a coupon to redeem for a full size bottle of wine, or more depending on the sampler. Included in the Napa Cab vs. Santa Ynez Syrah Tasting Pack are two 50ml bottles of high-end Napa Cab and two 50ml bottles of Syrahs, both sourced from White Hawk Vineyard $65 at Bruxr.


 
 
07 January 2010 @ 05:55 pm
Whoops! Sorry for the post fail. Guess I learned that one can't create a poll and then c/p it elsewhere. Let's try this again, shall we?

Hello everyone! I'm sure some of the older members may have been wondering what happened to the 'Sauciest Dwelling' Poll. My tiara is a little crumpled and I lost my sceptre during the move, and I am more than ready to see some amazing places grace our homepage!

Well, Aad and I decided to start the new year with a new poll and a new approach. We'd like to see the poll expanded to include different categories such kitchens, bathrooms, rooms in general and apartments/homes. The top three winners in each category will have their photos posted on the homepage. We'll run the poll every two weeks.

So, let's kick things off with the Sauciest Kitchens the comm has to offer.
Poll #1508576 Sauciest Kitchens
Open to: All, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 194

PIck your favorite kitchens in the community.

View Answers

blueskitten
37 (19.1%)

lumpyhead
23 (11.9%)

mamaphunk
42 (21.6%)

manics
76 (39.2%)

after_the_ashes
16 (8.2%)

cheaps1utsavior
25 (12.9%)

charlottegeary
12 (6.2%)

veronica_milvus
7 (3.6%)

ohkimme
29 (14.9%)

nadjuha_ha
43 (22.2%)

_scapegrace
31 (16.0%)

fotojournalist
4 (2.1%)

mamallama
1 (0.5%)

theldara
1 (0.5%)

honeywest
38 (19.6%)

ramonium
26 (13.4%)

anamomda
49 (25.3%)

 
 
07 January 2010 @ 02:51 pm
I crafted this Tree of Life pendant from recycled sterling silver wire, a faceted garnet bead, and love. Can you see the word "Love" in its branches? The next tree that I make like this will have an E with its own set of branches (rather than joined with the V), and I also need to do a better job with the O:



Next: a sun, an owl, and a tree bracelet... )
 
 
07 January 2010 @ 05:16 pm
You know, just about every time I post anything about writing, but especially if I post about increasing the visibility of women, queer culture, and people of color in literature, I get several of this kind of comment--and yes, I just got ANOTHER one on my Racefail post.

"If you want more representations of women/gays/PoC, why don't you write your OWN damn books?"


Often accompanied by the cute addendum: "Just tell YOUR story, and don't worry about politics."

Look, I don't expect every random commenter to be conversant in my complete works. I don't expect them to know me at all, given how many come via outside links. I'm not being all DON'T YOU KNOW WHO PRINCE IS?

But seriously. One might consider, when there are over 100 comments, let alone 300, that the author of the post might possibly have written something other than the post at hand, and possibly a quick google search is preferable to looking hilarious in comments. I know that assuming Everyone Else Is An Idiot is part of what makes the Internet such a jolly place, but it's LJ, there's a lot of writers here, and people who post about SFF and fandom usually have some vested interest in it, and it's not like there aren't links to my books all down the side of the page.

Not to mention, it's not actually the first best destiny of Everyone on Planet Earth to be a writer of fiction. Cultural commentary is important and valuable in and of itself, and some people need to, you know, read books and react to them. I know! Crazy! My reaction to culture would still be viable even if I couldn't string a denouement together with a duct tape, a wristwatch, and my Aunt Martha's wedding band. So would, and is, yours.

The second one, which I also tend to get when talking about any thorny issue in a work in progress, is much harder to respond to. But pretty much the only thing to say is:

My story is political.

I can write from the heart--and seriously, where else would I be writing from? I'm such a commercial sellout with my popcorn novels and my stacks of cash that I have to dig down to my Grinchy literary heart with both hands and even then I might not find anything but hot sparkly vampires? I'm all heart, baby. But I can write from my ventricles and still be political, because I am a woman and a feminist and queer and there is no telling my story, no matter how cloaked in fiction, without bringing all my uncomfortable politics in. That is telling my story. It means I worry about colonial issues, it means I worry about portrayals of gay sex, it means I consider the race and gender balance of a cast of characters, it means I think long and hard before committing narrative. Because my politics are the politics of thinking long and hard about things.

But hey, maybe one of these days I'll get around to writing my own books and not just complaining annoyingly on the Internet about how the world could occasionally suck just a little less. It could happen. You never know.

Probably not, though. I'm mostly hot air. Hot, politically correct, ugly, loud feminist air.
 
 
Current Mood: thoughtful, dammit
 
 
07 January 2010 @ 01:35 pm

...another spree killing.

"According to court documents, [Timothy Hendron, the gunman] was involved in a legal dispute over the firm's management of employees' retirement funds.

Mr Hendron and some of his co-workers accused ABB's pension-review committee of causing their retirement accounts to include investment options with unreasonable and excessive fees and expenses..."
 
 
Current Mood: keep moving nothing to see
 
 
From [info]tithenai and [info]yuki_onna:

Were I a summonable monster, what kind of ritual would you craft to summon me? (Include items to lure monster-me and method for said fell ritual.)
 
 
07 January 2010 @ 04:11 pm
New CHUM BABY and MYSTERIOUS leafy SEADRAGON mousepads!!! Wether you hate babies or love seadragons, I've got something to park your mouse on!!!


BUY THEM NOW!
 
 
07 January 2010 @ 01:10 pm


It's been a momentous 12 months here at LiveJournal. We crossed a capital T at Ten years young. And, like most precocious pubescents, we celebrated turning double digits by publishing our first book! Needless to say, we've experienced some major changes, both inside and out. Before we recap, we'd like to thank you for bearing with us as we've struggled through ungainly growth spurts, identity pangs, and, yes, the occasional blemish. We hope you'll continue to stand by us: We're gaining wisdom with maturity.

Stuff you liked

  • Back in February, we placed a call for entries for our ten-year anniversary anthology in [info]lj_turns10. In December (less than a year later!), we officially announced the publication of Live Journal: The First Decade. Featuring an inspired collection of writing, photographs, and artwork from the pages of LiveJournal history, the book has been selected by Blurb.com as a top staff pick! We are proud to have played host to so much talent over the years, and we thank our contributors for sharing their extraordinary work.
  • We all love quirky surprises, but not when it comes to managing our account settings. This year we streamlined settings into one central account management area. No more pouring through FAQs to figure out how to control privacy settings, modify notifications, adjust mobile settings, or update contact information!
  • Being users ourselves, we realize our own mothers couldn't find us on LiveJournal based on our usernames and userpics alone (*heaves heavy sigh of relief*). But since there are times when we actually want to be found, we created a search tool--Find Your Friends--to help locate people by email address (it's in the Friends drop-down menu).
  • Spam counter-attack: The war against vicious malware and spambots reigns eternal, but we've been making serious inroads to ensure your online security. We've established new protocols, such as requiring email address validations. We've grown more savvy about ferreting out suspicious behavior. We've added features, like whitelisting, to help you protect your communities. Our valiant (i.e., overworked) spam avengers (a/k/a the LiveJournal ops team) are standing on red alert so you can sleep safely at night.
  • After an intensive beta, we launched My Guests at the end of the year, which lets you see who's been hanging around your journal. A number of you have even discovered secret admirers (not all of whom are creepy)!
  • Last, but by no means least, we want to thank our volunteers for providing invaluable support and feedback. Their Herculean efforts enable us to answer your questions more efficiently, identify spammers, reduce abuse, and deliver better features (through tireless testing). On behalf of the staff and the larger LiveJournal community, we are truly grateful for their diligence, intelligence, loyalty, and passion.

You got your fix

  • We recently debugged a number of the oustanding issues with the rich text editor so your entries look great regardless of whether you know html. You can read more about text editors here.
  • In response to user demand, we brought back international voice posting. For more info on voice posting, read here.
  • At long last, we revived TxtLJ with Verizon. For more info on TxtLJ, check out the FAQ.

Paid features you enjoyed

  • In December, we introduced My Stats, which provides detailed data on who's been viewing your entries as well as statistics on commenting, RSS requests, friending history, and more. Despite a few early glitches, the response has been extremely favorable.
  • This year, we launched and improved Notes (i.e., the feature formerly known as Alias), which lets you add private comments on friends and commenters (it's in the Profile drop-down menu). This way you won't be caught red-faced when you strain to remember details about that wonderful LiveJournal friend who sent you a birthday vGift. For more info, read the FAQ.
  • When we first announced View friends pages by date, we thought it would be a quiet, minor enhancement. The rave reaction floored us, which made us all very happy. We gave it a fine tuning in February of 2009, so it's even better!
  • How embarrassing! It appears pingbacks have gone back to the shop for service. We’ll keep you posted. We didn't know just much you liked pingbacks until it went in for service. It's back and, judging by your irritation when it wasn't available, this is good news. FYI, pingbacks send instant notifications (via screened comments) whenever someone links to one of your entries on LiveJournal. For more info, read this entry in [info]paidmembers or check out the FAQ.

Mixed reviews

  • The search is still on. Some of you have reported getting more comprehensive results for keyword searches using the new Yandex search engine and like the ability to search within content categories (like entries or comments). Others have not been satisfied with the relevancy of search results. Please be patient. We're still tweaking this product.
  • This past December, we wanted to try out a new holiday promotion. Given the crap economy, we decided to offer our Paid/Permanent users a stack of $10 coupons to send to Basic/Plus users for paid account upgrades. We hoped you would like it. And some of you did, but many were disappointed that we didn't offer Give More as well. We want to thank you so much for letting us know. Your input will help us plan better in the future. Just FYI, Paid/Permanent users can continue to send out coupons through January 15th. Coupons can be redeemed through January 31, 2010.
  • We were pretty excited about Your Journal Your Money, which allows Paid/Permanent users to earn extra cash by displaying Google ads to Basic/Plus and logged out users. A number of you tried it. Some of you really like it. Others, not so much. (Just FYI, Paid/Permanent users who do not participate in this program will not view ads on journals. Participants will see ads on their own journal, but won't see them on other journals unless they specifically opt in.) For additional details, visit here.
  • We relaunched m.livejournal.com, our mobile app. While it offers a nicer UI and enhanced functionality, some of you think we can do better on load times. Like most of us, it's a work in progress. You can customize your mobile settings here. For more info, please read the FAQ.

Missing Inaction

  • We shudder to bring up the neon purple elephant squatting on our heads, but, yes, we didn't give you those a la carte userpics. We've been making radical improvements to our backend in order to support them. But no excuses. We know you want them. We cringe every time you mention them. We're sorry we dropped the ball on this, and we promise to do our best to get them to you in 2010.

Stumbling points

  • Back in early August, we experienced outages related to a series of DDoS attacks. We are proud to report that we were down a total of one hour over the course of a few days. We thank our heroic ops guys for getting us up sooner and more consistently than any of our less fortunate social networking friends. We apologize for leaving you temporarily stranded.
  • A couple of months back, we offered a free, unrestricted vGift, which induced a snowflake cookie avalanche. This resulted in backed up/delayed notifications, which, in turn, led us to reboot systems, rendering scrapbooks unavailable. It took a while to shovel free. Apologies for the inconvenience. We learned a valuable lesson that should keep us calamity-free in the future (fingers crossed while knocking on wood).
  • That darn Best Buy ad. First off, we're sorry about the audio auto-play (we got it turned off as quickly as possible). While it's true that we'll continue to show this type of ad to accounts that normally see them (never to Paid/Permanent accounts), we'll make sure the sound defaults to off moving forward. We promise to do our very best to keep ads to a minimum on LiveJournal, while keeping a roof over Frank's head.

Full steam ahead!

As we plunge headfirst into the next decade, we want to take a moment to look back and thank all of our employees, both past and present, who have worked so hard to create our unique and magical universe. We couldn't have made it this far without you: Your contributions brighten our path everyday. We also want to extend our heartfelt appreciation to each and every one of you. Whether you've been around for ten days or ten years, your humor, intelligence, talent, and creativity are what makes this the most vibrant global community on the Internet (the best place on the Web, in our humble opinion). Here's hoping that 2010 will be the greatest year yet! We thank you for joining us as we embark upon another glorious decade of LiveJournal history!