That doesn’t sound like me…
July 4, 2006 at 12:11 am | In silly | Comments Off on That doesn’t sound like me…Is there some sort of Internet scam that somehow involves registering fake MySpace accounts? Earlier today I wanted to see if I had a MySpace account (so I could post a comment on the Ezra Furman and the Harpoon‘s blog, of course). I tried a few e-mails on the lost password page and found out that I did, although I didn’t remember creating it and it had a weird password and e-mail I don’t use much. And it had some weird information already entered. I mean, I hate astrology. And gender constructs. Especially ones that don’t really fit, like “female” or United Kingdom:
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Female 25 years old United Kingdom ![]() Last Login: 7/3/2006 |

Are these the default settings or what?
Beware the coming North American community
June 27, 2006 at 7:59 pm | In David Dreier, immigration, silly | Comments Off on Beware the coming North American community(Take notice, friends of mine who work at “news” shows: this story is crying out for correspondent coverage.)
I’m glad I’m not the only one concerned by those internationalist Republicans and their plan for a United States of North America.
Dreier for `guests’
Unfortunately, the recent letter from Genevieve Clavreul is factually mistaken when it attempts to conceal a statement made by Rep. David Dreier.
A Los Angeles Times article of Dec. 16, 2005, clearly quotes Dreier stating, “Any final bill that emerges from the House and the Senate, must include a guest-worker program both for future migrants and for illegal immigrants already here.”
Appallingly, Dreier is campaigning to legalize up to 30 million illegal immigrants now in our country, rewarding their lawlessness.
According to La Opinion of May 16, 2004, Dreier even agreed with officials at a meeting in Guadalajara, Mexico to work to legalize the greatest possible number of “migrants without legal documents” in the United States. What blatant betrayal of America!
Even worse, Dreier is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations which is working to merge Canada, Mexico and the United States into a single “North American Community” by 2010 (see www.spp.gov). This would dissolve our borders at the expense of American sovereignty and independence, which we cannot allow to happen.
The only candidate on the Nov. ballot for Congressional District 26 opposing all forms of “guest worker” or “temporary worker” amnesty for illegal immigrants is Elliott Graham of the American Independent party.
Jan Akers
La Cañada Flintridge
Someone should really call Dreier’s office and ask them where he stands on transnational nation-merging.
Decided to check my referers
June 23, 2006 at 12:38 pm | In silly | Comments Off on Decided to check my referersApparently I’m the fourth link on Google for “Summer and Seth Pictures.”
Sorry, anonymous reader. There’ll be none of that here. OK, maybe just one:
The United States of North America?
June 20, 2006 at 9:39 pm | In silly | 1 CommentLook, I’m no fan of NAFTA, but what world do these people live in?
Author Jerome Corsi filed a Freedom of Information Act request yesterday asking for full disclosure of the activities of an office implementing a trilateral agreement with Mexico and Canada that apparently could lead to a North American union, despite having no authorization from Congress.
As WorldNetDaily reported, the White House has established working groups, under the North American Free Trade Agreement office in the Department of Commerce, to implement the Security and Prosperity Partnership, or SPP, signed by President Bush, Mexican President Vicente Fox and then-Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin in Waco, Texas, March 23, 2005.
Corsi specifically has requested the partnership’s membership lists, constitutive documents, meeting minutes, meeting agendas and meeting schedules as well as all findings, reports, presentations or memoranda.
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Corsi believes President Bush effectively agreed to erase U.S. borders with Mexico and Canada when he signed the SPP.
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“This is all being done by the executive branch below the radar,” Corsi told WND. “If President Bush had told the American people in the 2004 presidential campaign that his goal was to create a North American union, he would not have carried a single red state.”
The president, Corsi maintains, has charged the bureaucracy to form a North American union “through executive fiat … without ever disclosing his plans directly to the American people or to Congress.”
Attorney Robert A. McGuire, who filed the request on Corsi’s behalf and is preparing further requests, says if the president “is creating a new North American union government without the full and complete knowledge of the American people, we are facing a severe constitutional crisis.”
The purpose of the FOIA, he said, is to get the “full facts exposed in the light of day, available for the American people and for Congress to examine and decide.”
Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Colo., is demanding the Bush administration fully disclose the activities of the SPP office.
Tancredo wants to know the membership of the SPP groups along with their various trilateral memoranda of understanding and other agreements reached with counterparts in Mexico and Canada.
Many SPP working groups appear to be working toward achieving specific objectives as defined by a May 2005 Council on Foreign Relations task force report, which presented a blueprint for expanding the SPP agreement into a North American union that would merge the U.S., Canada and Mexico into a new governmental form. Author Jerome Corsi filed a Freedom of Information Act request yesterday asking for full disclosure of the activities of an office implementing a trilateral agreement with Mexico and Canada that apparently could lead to a North American union, despite having no authorization from Congress.
Hmm…
June 8, 2006 at 12:04 am | In silly | Comments Off on Hmm…Browsing Wikipedia, I found this entry and this entry particularly intriguing.
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