Even the Orgrimmar Grunts are Addicted!



This is a 100% "ish" post. No gold involved, but I thought you all might get a kick out of this if you haven't seen it yet...

A while back, I posted about the Mysterious Fortune Cards being the WoW Crack. Well, not only are the players addicted, but one Org Grunt admitted it publicly....


I am not sure if there is some Blizzard program that saw me list some on the AH, or if it was just completely random. Bah, who knows. It's funny anyways.

BTW, don't get used to short posts like this, I just wasn't finished with my post for the day when this hit, and figured I needed to share this with ya'll. Now to open up some cards...erhm, i mean play the AH and get my shuffle and mill on. =)



The Silver Suppression Explained

The Silver Suppression Explained - Office Series 5 : Silver has been demonetized just as gold has. Banks only have big stacks of IOUs of various types No one talks about how India and the middle east how they trade in silver and gold for thousands of years even to this day. These people cherish precious metals much more then own currency. Used in weddings,trade,and everyday life.Too, no one really knows how much gold these people have stored over thousands of years? For a rainy-day?



Silver wont take off for as long as fiat silver can run the game. It will take a run of fiat silver investors to request physical (rather than dollars) for silver to skyrocket. It will take a lot for those investors to lose faith in the dollar enough to take the silver. Most of those guys are heavily invested in stocks and bonds and still believe in the dollar so the silver boom may take some time.

Gold Prices Have Bottomed ?

NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- David Banister, chief investment strategist at ActiveTradingPartners.com, reveals why gold has bottomed and how he's buying.



....While our permanent wondered if you look the bottom actually we're looking for gold her -- Yahoo (YHOO) ! thirteen hundred and now we're on my numbers which we didn't the other -- about quality and remind you dollar I would regret -- investors. Would want to start looking at longer. There are certain goal we all know that you've been here over time and I look for certain. Decline I think again already -- thirteen and are you need very likely to bottom....

Illinois civil union law signed today -- more equality yet more injustice

Illinois will become the 12th jurisdiction in the country to provide formal recognition of same-sex couples in a status that confers the state-based rights and responsibilities of marriage. Governor Quinn signs the bill into law later today, and it becomes effective June 1. (To recap -- marriage is available in Connecticut, DC, Iowa, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont; civil union is available in Illinois and New Jersey; domestic partnership is available in California, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington -- and also in DC).

That's good news. And adding to the good news, Illinois joins Nevada and DC in making the status available to all different-sex as well as same-sex couples. (California and Washington include different-sex couples if one partner is 62 or older). The bill's sponsor, Rep. Greg Harris, has said it is wrong to write a law that discriminates. I couldn't agree more.

The law will also treat same-sex couples married elsewhere as members of a civil union in Illinois. This is an important provision. Without it, the state's DOMA might leave such a couple with no legal status. The existence of that DOMA, of course, is its own injustice, as it perpetuates the notion that same-sex couples are not good enough for marriage.

But I've got another complaint with Illinois. The state is shameful in its legal treatment of unmarried couples. Under a dreadful 1979 Illinois Supreme Court ruling, the state will not enforce agreements between unmarried couples or allow one partner to have any claim to property owned by the other. That ruling will remain the law for couples who do not enter civil unions. While only Washington state treats property acquired by unmarried partners as "community" property, allowing for a just distribution when the couple splits up (the result I favor), most states do allow one partner to prevail if s/he can prove that there was an agreement to share assets or provide support. It's hard to prove such an agreement, but Illinois goes the additional step and refuses to enforce such agreements even when they can be proven.

Even worse, Illinois does not allow a nonbio mom to file for custody or visitation rights with the child born to her same-sex partner, even if they planned for and raised the child together as two parents. While it may turn out that civil union partners will both be legal parents of a child born to one of them if a doctor performs the insemination and both civil union partners give written consent, a child whose parents do not enter a civil union will have only one parent and will risk losing that parent if the couple splits up.

These two inequities can be remedied only by additional statutes, and I won't wholeheartedly join the celebration in Illinois until neither marriage nor civil union forms such a bright line between whose families count and whose don't.

Thanks to Chicago lawyer Richard Wilson, for keeping me posted on Illinois developments and sharing my concerns.

POPSHOP RADIO 002

It's not like your calendar doesn't already have a huge red circle around this Thursday marked POPSHOP, but just in case you were somehow unaware, there is indeed an amazing evening of pop and electronic sounds transpiring this Thursday eve at Tammany Hall. We've got The Knocks. We've got Penguin Prison. We've got Like Diamonds. We've got Lightwaves. And we've got a crippling addiction to hot jams and good times. To ring in the occasion, The Knocks have put together a brilliant little mini-mix featuring the artists involved Thursday and other generally amazing tracks, available for streaming and download via Soundcloud below. Get involved, the transition from "Golden Train" into the '96 Bulls remix of "Dancing With The DJ" is kind of the fucking best. Tracklisting, ahoy.

1. "Locomotive"- Alex Winston
2. "Manners" - Icona Pop
3. "Golden Train" - Penguin Prison
4. "Dancing With The DJ" (Monsieur Adi/96' Bulls Remix) - The Knocks
5. "Helena Beat" - Foster The People
6. "In This Together" - Like Diamonds
7. "What Am I Supposed To Do" - Treasure Fingers
8. "Loveliest Creature" (Lightwaves Remix) - Savoir Adore

Valley of the Kings, Egypt – Information and Tips

Decked out at the west bank of the Nile across Luxor, lies the Valley of kings in Egypt, which is another place of undying mystery. The kings of the new Kingdom during the eras including 16th to 11th centuries BC were mainly buried here. Besides, it is believed that the Pharaohs chose this particular isolated valley to build their tombs because a Theban Peak evocative of the shape of a pyramid stood towering over it. The Valley of the Kings is divided into two parts which are the east and the west valley.

The East Valley
It encompasses most of the tombs of Pharaohs from the new kingdom which are open to the public.

The West Valley
It has only one tomb open to public because of which tourist mainly flock to the east valley. One can explore the tomb of Ay who succeeded the Egyptian throne after Tutankhamun.

Tomb of Tutankhamun
The most famous of all tombs is of the King Tutankhamun which is the most recently discovered tomb and has been named KV 62 as per the tomb naming convention. Tutankhamun died unexpectedly at an early age of around 19 years following a brief reign. The tomb is considerably smaller as compared to those of other Egyptian Pharaohs. The linen wrapped mummy of the king still rests in the tomb. A number of artefacts were gathered during the excavation of the tomb. This intriguing legacy of Tutankhamun has travelled all over the world. The gold burial mask remains one of the most popular and fascinating symbols.

Best Time to Visit Egypt
Longing to unveil the mystical saga of the Valley of Kings? Don’t forget to plan the trip to Egypt during the favourable seasons. Although, winters from December to February may be the perfect time to visit the country, it may be difficult to net cheap flights to Egypt for these months. Spring lasts from March to May and autumn from September to November. These are good times to explore most attractions in the country including the Valley of the Kings. Flights to Egypt with number of airlines are usually more easily available for these months as compared to the winter peak season.

Practical Information for Visiting Valley of the Kings
The visitors require a standard ticket to explore the three tombs however they need to buy a separate one for the tomb of the King Tutankhamun.

Some of the tombs can be closed from time to time for the renovation.

Necessary things to carry include sunglasses and sun blocking lotion. Often tourists are seen in the valley with terrible sunburns. Durable and comfortable shoes are must as there is a lot of walking around, climbing down and up the various tombs.

Tombs can be oppressively hot especially in summers and it is important to take ample amount of water irrespective of the season. Water can also be purchased at the visitor center.

Photography is allowed against a permit in most tombs however flash photography is prohibited. Take plentiful batteries for your camera to the tombs. Although these are sold within the Valley of the Kings, the price will be exorbitantly high.

Reaching Valley of the Kings, Egypt
A number of international airlines connect Egypt to the rest of the world. One can find a number of Egypt holiday experts who can book cheap tickets for flights as well as budget accommodation at the destination. Luxor is the most convenient launch pad for starting Valley of the Kings expedition. Arrive in Luxor which is connected to Cairo and other major cities in Egypt by regular trains service, buses and taxis. While in Luxor, there are ferries or private motor boats to get you to the Valley of the Kings. At the ferry terminal, there are taxis to take you around the sites.

What next?

Last few weeks been hectic at my work place... i just thinking and dreaming about my next holiday... whats next? what should i do?

I had my bucket list.. i did my solo traveling for the very first time abroad to Malaysia in Jan 2007. I did snorkeling also in 2007 for the very first time... i did bungee jump from the highest bungee in the world.. well at least that would last for sometimes... so... whats next?

She looks so cool!!


On the top of the list is "SURFING". Yes.... oh i think its very cool thing to ride wave!! i am not that good with balance, but i love roller skating (which is totally different..i know) but at least both depends on balance. But yeah.. i want to feel.. how is it feels like to stand on that board riding the waves!

Where? Bali is on the top of the list... but ive been doing my browsing i had another options like Sumatra, Lampung not bad.. as well as West Sumatra! Lombok is always on my mind too!


The "other world" that i want to see!



Next on my list is "PADI OPEN WATER DIVING" yes... i had lots of ideas..i just think.. when i did the snorkeling i saw how amazing world under water... if only i could get closer!

I should do this within 2011! wish me good luck! (start checking my annual leave, hehe)

Knowing When to Say When.....AH Bullying (special guest: Beastie Boys)

Now there has been quite some talk about beating the competition with buying out their auctions, and listing for higher. "Owning the market". "Bullying the competitors". No matter what you call it, you can win.....or lose. I guess it comes down to who is the better bettor...I say I had good odds today. Read on, young whippersnappers....


A while back I posted about purchasing items from vendors and reselling them. There are alot of different ways to do this, and in that post, I spoke about the Inscription Vendor you can find in any major city. Now the Dust of Disappearance you can normally make a few gold on (depending on competition pricing), but this post isn't directed at that. It is about the Vanishing Powder, which you can pick up 5 for 36s. Pretty cheap, huh? Yeah. Today, upon logging in, I ran up to get my normal stack of DoD to "flip", and decided to pick up a few stacks of the Vanishing Powder.



I go to the AH, and see no one is selling. So I toss them up for a very "reasonable" flip. I do an AH scan, and I check back about 20 minutes later, and see they all sold. Hmm. Ok. Normally doesn't happen THAT quick. So I hit the vendor again, grab up a few more stacks, and as I get ready to list them......



I notice that someone else just hopped into the game, and put a ton of them up. C'mon man....supply and demand? Not sure what their thinking was, but hey, by all means. So I toss up a few more, undercutting by "almost" half, and.....You know whats coming next, right?




Yup. Sold em all out. And who was the buyer? You guessed it. So what's an Alto to do? Try it again....I buy two stacks, put them on the AH, and what do I get?



But it couldn't be...not again....This time I will give you two guesses, and I imagine you will get it on the first try....(change of subject quick...does anyone listen to Directv music channels? It's really funny, but Sabotage from Beastie Boys is playing right now. Kinda fits...Hahahaha.) Alright, back to my post...Where was I? Oh yeah, Guess who????



Wow. You are right! Again! How did you guess? It was once again the "bully" pushing me out of "his" market. Alright. I can understand doing this type of business with, uhm, let's just pick a random crafted market, Netherweave Bags, because in all reality, there is NOT an unlimited supply like in this situation. And for a whole 7ish silver apiece, this cat just bought 60 of these from me, so basically handed me over 270ish gold.

Now don't get me wrong, this style of AH'ing can work to your advantage, but I don't recommend doing it in this form. I mean, a month'ish ago when I posted my original article on selling these, I noted that they really only sell on weekends, I can normally sell them for around 2-3 gold each, pulling in 40ish gold profit per 20 stack. But within an hour, I sold 60 to one guy. All due to his "bully" tactic.

To all reading this, you have probably done this or been a "victim" of AH bullying yourself. At some point. It happens quite a bit with the Mysterious Fortune Cards, but once again, they are "limited" crafts. Normally, your competition will only have limited amounts, so you can use and abuse as much as you desire (or feel you are able to "risk"). Did I mention crafted goods sell quite often? These powders do not have the demand to play this game. He is going to have to sell a few weekends worth of these to just "hit" what he lost to me in an hour by trying to "bully" me out.

Now I could be completely wrong in this whole post, and wasted both mine and your time, maybe he had a hidden agenda that I wasn't aware of or haven't seen....but I doubt this.

I want to end this post by saying thanks to my unscrupulous bully, and let them know that at any time, they can feel free to "donate" to the Alto Fund. Thank you sir. Or madam.

But He's So Dreamy!

It's a hard time for liberals when they're reduced to stuff like this:
Whatever my feelings about Obama's centrism I've got to say that he and Michelle really adorn the White House. As a couple they are just...well...magnificent and the children are fucking adorable (same age as my two so I really feel for them). The huffpo lineup of former first ladies and their dresses at these state dinners was like the evolution of humanity from grotesquely old and billowy faux victoriana to blooming, statuesque, youth.
Those words were written by a commenter on this post at alicublog, a hardcore Obama supporter and Democratic party loyalist. (No permalink, but it's on the first page of comments.) Now, I confess I paid tribute to the Obamas' charm (with due reservations on the table) before the killing, torture, jailing, and general suppression really got going, and his emptiness was confirmed once and for all. On one hand, slobbering about their glory like a courtier (who probably has never yet gotten within grovelling range of Himself, but evidently still Hopes) while brushing aside his "centrism" (! -- does she consider Dubya a centrist?) is obscene. On the other, even she recognizes that she has nothing else positive left to say about her Leader's policies and actions. Flattery: the last refuge of political apologists.

And then I found this on the FAIR blog. Obama's new press secretary is a former journalist, and married to a journalist. (Hell, why didn't he just appoint Rachel Maddow his new press secretary?) The writer, Peter Hart, then quotes Howard Fineman, whom we've heard from in these precincts before, and he's nothing if not consistent: always on the side of the cool kids, the In Crowd.
Among his other attributes, Jay Carney is a cool dancer. I know that because I saw him and his wife, Claire Shipman, getting down on the tented dance floor of a fancy Georgetown wedding years ago. Jay Carney, who went to Yale and was a foreign correspondent in Moscow, is--besides being smart, savvy, loyal and well-connected with the right sort--suave.
Don't touch that dial! There's more:
There are few better-connected couples in the Washington media and social scene than Carney and Shipman. Their children attend the Sidwell Friends School with the Obama girls. They are the kind of well-liked, Ivy-credentialed insiders who make the Tea Party boiling mad. But why should Obama care?
To my mind, there are better ways to infuriate the Teabaggers, but it doesn't surprise me that Obama chose this one.

Howie -- I'm sure he won't mind me calling him "Howie" -- concludes by comparing Carney and outgoing press guy Robert Gibbs.
Gibbs, the son of teachers at Auburn University, liked to celebrate Auburn football victories by wrapping White House trees in toilet paper. I could be wrong, but I don't think Jay has done or will do that for a victory over Harvard.
Well, I'm sure that at the very least Carney would have underlings TP the trees for him. When I was a child, I TP'ed trees as a child, but when I became a man I put away childish things and let the servants do them on my behalf.

But He's So Dreamy!

It's a hard time for liberals when they're reduced to stuff like this:
Whatever my feelings about Obama's centrism I've got to say that he and Michelle really adorn the White House. As a couple they are just...well...magnificent and the children are fucking adorable (same age as my two so I really feel for them). The huffpo lineup of former first ladies and their dresses at these state dinners was like the evolution of humanity from grotesquely old and billowy faux victoriana to blooming, statuesque, youth.
Those words were written by a commenter on this post at alicublog, a hardcore Obama supporter and Democratic party loyalist. (No permalink, but it's on the first page of comments.) Now, I confess I paid tribute to the Obamas' charm (with due reservations on the table) before the killing, torture, jailing, and general suppression really got going, and his emptiness was confirmed once and for all. On one hand, slobbering about their glory like a courtier (who probably has never yet gotten within grovelling range of Himself, but evidently still Hopes) while brushing aside his "centrism" (! -- does she consider Dubya a centrist?) is obscene. On the other, even she recognizes that she has nothing else positive left to say about her Leader's policies and actions. Flattery: the last refuge of political apologists.

And then I found this on the FAIR blog. Obama's new press secretary is a former journalist, and married to a journalist. (Hell, why didn't he just appoint Rachel Maddow his new press secretary?) The writer, Peter Hart, then quotes Howard Fineman, whom we've heard from in these precincts before, and he's nothing if not consistent: always on the side of the cool kids, the In Crowd.
Among his other attributes, Jay Carney is a cool dancer. I know that because I saw him and his wife, Claire Shipman, getting down on the tented dance floor of a fancy Georgetown wedding years ago. Jay Carney, who went to Yale and was a foreign correspondent in Moscow, is--besides being smart, savvy, loyal and well-connected with the right sort--suave.
Don't touch that dial! There's more:
There are few better-connected couples in the Washington media and social scene than Carney and Shipman. Their children attend the Sidwell Friends School with the Obama girls. They are the kind of well-liked, Ivy-credentialed insiders who make the Tea Party boiling mad. But why should Obama care?
To my mind, there are better ways to infuriate the Teabaggers, but it doesn't surprise me that Obama chose this one.

Howie -- I'm sure he won't mind me calling him "Howie" -- concludes by comparing Carney and outgoing press guy Robert Gibbs.
Gibbs, the son of teachers at Auburn University, liked to celebrate Auburn football victories by wrapping White House trees in toilet paper. I could be wrong, but I don't think Jay has done or will do that for a victory over Harvard.
Well, I'm sure that at the very least Carney would have underlings TP the trees for him. When I was a child, I TP'ed trees as a child, but when I became a man I put away childish things and let the servants do them on my behalf.

Gold $7000 , Silver Will Reach a 4 Digit Number

20 to 40% of your portfolio in Metals? Why so little? What else could possibly be in your portfolio that is worth anything really? The stocks in your portfolio better be mostly if not ALL commodities. And hang on to your hat! Got cash? Buy Metal. Buy Gold and Silver


With the good old days of single digit silver stacking over, those who had the foresight to accumulate while all the others were flipping real estate are in the driver's seat. The irony is that most complaints about silver was that it was "too bulky", which isn't the case when it simply isn't available at all. Precious metals will be the last mania before food itself.physical shortage is here. Major seller quoted me six months for monster box of 500 coins. The end is not near, it is here! NOT mint problem. Bars, ingots and bars all short supply. Don't take my word -- call on-line silver sellers and ask. Industrial silver users panicking. JPM, others selling paper silver faster than ever.JPM morgan rumor covering shorts was fake out and get heat off them. JPM now cornering copper market. Copper is substitute for SOME silver apps.

JP Morgan is UNSINKABLE - no silver short positions : Jim Puplava Kathryn Derbes

Jim Puplava and Kathryn Derbes came close to call Max Keiser a liar and say that JP Morgan Chase has no such silver short positions.
buy silver crash jp morgan : Max Keiser
recorded on January 29th 2011

Are ETF Silver Bars Fake? Made out of Molybdenum?

The SLV has one maple 8 million people own it :o)The things that made me thinking is Ted Butler of Silverseek when he stated JP has NO silver bars in their stocks.



This is where a big problem lies in the world of gold and silver. We have "trusted" the big guys for too long and they have abused that trust at every turn.
We are living through the final days of Fiat Money and you need to position yourselves with the right assets at the right time to survive this transition.
So let's look at how the gold/tungsten problem is related to silver.

The gold conspiracy world is a buzz with recent articles from Rob Kirby about tungsten bars that were plated with gold. According to Kirby's sources 1.3M-1.5M these 400oz bars currently reside in Fort Knox as well as have been sold into the global gold markets over the past 15-20 years. The article can be found here: http://news.goldseek.com/GoldSeek/125...

Lump this together with GATA's work in exposing the secret manipulation of the price of gold and you add jet fuel to the gold conspiracy inferno.

The world is slowly waking up from the self induced coma that investors and governments have been living under when it comes to the realities behind gold and the implications of this awakening should not be underestimated.

Does Turmoil Change Gold Trade?

Jan. 28 2011 | Why political unrest in Egypt is an outlier event for the gold markets, with Doug Kass, Seabreeze Partners Management.

Where the Wild Things Are

Open Salon features some strange stuff, often several months past its sell-by date, but some garbage is timeless, y'know? Like this piece denouncing the burning of books, reacting to the threatened Koran-burning last fall, by a "former advertising and marketing executive and winner of over 50 advertising awards for excellence, ... an unpaid Senior Advisor on John Kerry's 2004 Presidential Campaign... [and a] blogger, activist, Democratic Strategist on MSNBC and FOX News and founder of Common Sense NMS." As you'd expect from such a person, his post was bogus from the title on, which he repeated in the main text. "Americans Don't Burn Books"? I suppose this is an example of the "No True Scotsman" tactic, because of course, Americans often have burned books, though nowadays it's simpler just to pulp them. The blogger's extended tantrum is, by the way, an example of the very magical thinking that underlies burning books or flags or effigies: that the burned object is a poppet, and by burning it you burn the person it stands for. (This is often associated with "voodoo dolls", but poppets are European magic, as American as apple pie.)

Then there was this one, "Political Propaganda Has Defined Patriotism." Patriotism often goes along with the poppet-magic mentality, and it has always been associated with propaganda. (Remember Samuel Johnson's quip that patriotism is the last refuge of scoundrels -- the unsavory aspects of patriotism are not exactly a new discovery.) The post begins by invoking the "Nazi's" (a plural was presumably meant but the possessive was written) and the popular legend about the Big Lie, blithely ignoring, oh, say, Parson Weems, "The Star-Spangled Banner," and "Cry 'God for Harry, England, and Saint George!'" According to the blogger, Paul Joseph Goebbels wrote that "The most brilliant propagandist technique… must confine itself to a few points and repeat them over and over and over." (Except that Goebbels didn't write that, it was Hitler. Details, details.) Then she writes, "Over the past two years, many of the very techniques Goebbels employed have been used to mobilize a discontent and fearful America." You'd have to call that liberal propaganda defining patriotism, because it's the kind of big lie that was a staple of liberal discourse under Bush, like Molly Ivins's 2007 lament, "What happened to the nation that never tortured? The nation that wasn't supposed to start wars of choice? The nation that respected human rights and life? A nation that from the beginning was against tyranny?" The US was never such a nation, any more than it was the kind of nation depicted in Reaganite propaganda (white people living behind picket fences in small towns, self-reliant and beholden to no one, especially government bureaucrats). So this post is a textbook example of what it pretends to denounce.

Most recently I stumbled on this post. The title was promising: "I'm an Atheist, Ask Me How." Except that the blogger doesn't know how. She begins:
I can hardly believe that Christianity is still so prevalent in this, the year of our Lord, 2010. It’s fucking bizarre that an organization advocating homophobia and misogyny is so globally cherished.
Starting from the atheist premise that there is no god, the answer should be obvious: an organization advocating homophobia and misogyny is globally cherished because homophobia and misogyny are globally cherished. To oversimplify somewhat, since there is no god, religious doctrines and dicta must be invented by people. Religions are collective constructions, so they don't need to be consistent or reasonable. Someone who for political reasons has a voice gets to insist that this or that bit goes into the stew. If enough people agree with him, his bit will be embraced and cherished and trumpeted by most believers. If not, his bit will be tactfully reinterpreted, or paid respectful lip service and ignored. Consider Mark 10:25, "It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the Kingdom of God." It's as securely scriptural as Leviticus 18:22, in fact it's a teaching of Jesus, but you won't find most Christians putting a lot of store by it.

Or consider Jesus' prohibition of divorce, Mark 10:11. Even in the New Testament this teaching is diluted by Matthew, who shows Jesus giving a loophole for someone with an adulterous spouse. Conservative Christians hung on to it in the US until fairly recently, but by the time the divorced and remarried Ronald Reagan became a presidential contender, they were ready to shove this Christian teaching down the slippery slope. And now, homosexuals are demanding the "right to marry," and it's Reagan's fault.

I don't know why misogyny and homophobia are so popular, but they are, and if they weren't, it wouldn't be possible for religion to exploit them. And the blogger knows this, because she also says, "There is no God, Heaven, or Hell, all religion is man-made, and you are not morally superior because of your faith." See that? "All religion is man-made."

Further, where traditional religion fades, other, newer authorities take up these attitudes and run with them. Secular science's first take on homosexuality and women was straightforwardly reactionary: Homosexuals were not sinners, but they were sick, and could be cured. Women needed to stop trying to usurp the place of men, such as universities (hard study would render women sterile and eventually drive them mad), and should stay at home tending the children, as Evolution intended. Women who continued to rebel in this manner were clearly mannish and might even try to love each other (see homosexuality), would wear suits and smoke cigars, and civilization would perish as the contagion spread.

But this was all in the past, I hear you say, and we are more enlightened now! Perhaps, or perhaps not. Not until 1973 did the American Psychiatric Association remove homosexuality from its official list of disorders, and not for another couple of decades did it reject therapeutic attempts to "cure" us, though there had always been good evidence that such attempts were ineffective and mainly succeeded at making the patients miserable. As for gender, there are still plenty of scientists pushing a biological determinist line, that boys like guns and girls like dolls, and despite the critical flaws in their evidence and their claims, they still have no trouble getting funding for their research or publicity for their claims. The corporate media give them all the exposure they could wish, and the line is that only backward, biased feminists and leftists quibble with these secure, unbiased scientific findings. The case of race is similar.

The problem isn't science, or even religion; it's what the philosopher Walter Kaufmann named "decidophobia," the fear of fateful decisions. Neither science or religion can make our decisions for us. And that is frightening, as Kaufmann acknowledged. Most people evidently want to believe that there is a solid, certain place where they can stand, and absolute principles by which to make their moral choices. Atheists tend to choose different ones than theists, but they seem to be no less likely to pretend to know more than they know.

Where the Wild Things Are

Open Salon features some strange stuff, often several months past its sell-by date, but some garbage is timeless, y'know? Like this piece denouncing the burning of books, reacting to the threatened Koran-burning last fall, by a "former advertising and marketing executive and winner of over 50 advertising awards for excellence, ... an unpaid Senior Advisor on John Kerry's 2004 Presidential Campaign... [and a] blogger, activist, Democratic Strategist on MSNBC and FOX News and founder of Common Sense NMS." As you'd expect from such a person, his post was bogus from the title on, which he repeated in the main text. "Americans Don't Burn Books"? I suppose this is an example of the "No True Scotsman" tactic, because of course, Americans often have burned books, though nowadays it's simpler just to pulp them. The blogger's extended tantrum is, by the way, an example of the very magical thinking that underlies burning books or flags or effigies: that the burned object is a poppet, and by burning it you burn the person it stands for. (This is often associated with "voodoo dolls", but poppets are European magic, as American as apple pie.)

Then there was this one, "Political Propaganda Has Defined Patriotism." Patriotism often goes along with the poppet-magic mentality, and it has always been associated with propaganda. (Remember Samuel Johnson's quip that patriotism is the last refuge of scoundrels -- the unsavory aspects of patriotism are not exactly a new discovery.) The post begins by invoking the "Nazi's" (a plural was presumably meant but the possessive was written) and the popular legend about the Big Lie, blithely ignoring, oh, say, Parson Weems, "The Star-Spangled Banner," and "Cry 'God for Harry, England, and Saint George!'" According to the blogger, Paul Joseph Goebbels wrote that "The most brilliant propagandist technique… must confine itself to a few points and repeat them over and over and over." (Except that Goebbels didn't write that, it was Hitler. Details, details.) Then she writes, "Over the past two years, many of the very techniques Goebbels employed have been used to mobilize a discontent and fearful America." You'd have to call that liberal propaganda defining patriotism, because it's the kind of big lie that was a staple of liberal discourse under Bush, like Molly Ivins's 2007 lament, "What happened to the nation that never tortured? The nation that wasn't supposed to start wars of choice? The nation that respected human rights and life? A nation that from the beginning was against tyranny?" The US was never such a nation, any more than it was the kind of nation depicted in Reaganite propaganda (white people living behind picket fences in small towns, self-reliant and beholden to no one, especially government bureaucrats). So this post is a textbook example of what it pretends to denounce.

Most recently I stumbled on this post. The title was promising: "I'm an Atheist, Ask Me How." Except that the blogger doesn't know how. She begins:
I can hardly believe that Christianity is still so prevalent in this, the year of our Lord, 2010. It’s fucking bizarre that an organization advocating homophobia and misogyny is so globally cherished.
Starting from the atheist premise that there is no god, the answer should be obvious: an organization advocating homophobia and misogyny is globally cherished because homophobia and misogyny are globally cherished. To oversimplify somewhat, since there is no god, religious doctrines and dicta must be invented by people. Religions are collective constructions, so they don't need to be consistent or reasonable. Someone who for political reasons has a voice gets to insist that this or that bit goes into the stew. If enough people agree with him, his bit will be embraced and cherished and trumpeted by most believers. If not, his bit will be tactfully reinterpreted, or paid respectful lip service and ignored. Consider Mark 10:25, "It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the Kingdom of God." It's as securely scriptural as Leviticus 18:22, in fact it's a teaching of Jesus, but you won't find most Christians putting a lot of store by it.

Or consider Jesus' prohibition of divorce, Mark 10:11. Even in the New Testament this teaching is diluted by Matthew, who shows Jesus giving a loophole for someone with an adulterous spouse. Conservative Christians hung on to it in the US until fairly recently, but by the time the divorced and remarried Ronald Reagan became a presidential contender, they were ready to shove this Christian teaching down the slippery slope. And now, homosexuals are demanding the "right to marry," and it's Reagan's fault.

I don't know why misogyny and homophobia are so popular, but they are, and if they weren't, it wouldn't be possible for religion to exploit them. And the blogger knows this, because she also says, "There is no God, Heaven, or Hell, all religion is man-made, and you are not morally superior because of your faith." See that? "All religion is man-made."

Further, where traditional religion fades, other, newer authorities take up these attitudes and run with them. Secular science's first take on homosexuality and women was straightforwardly reactionary: Homosexuals were not sinners, but they were sick, and could be cured. Women needed to stop trying to usurp the place of men, such as universities (hard study would render women sterile and eventually drive them mad), and should stay at home tending the children, as Evolution intended. Women who continued to rebel in this manner were clearly mannish and might even try to love each other (see homosexuality), would wear suits and smoke cigars, and civilization would perish as the contagion spread.

But this was all in the past, I hear you say, and we are more enlightened now! Perhaps, or perhaps not. Not until 1973 did the American Psychiatric Association remove homosexuality from its official list of disorders, and not for another couple of decades did it reject therapeutic attempts to "cure" us, though there had always been good evidence that such attempts were ineffective and mainly succeeded at making the patients miserable. As for gender, there are still plenty of scientists pushing a biological determinist line, that boys like guns and girls like dolls, and despite the critical flaws in their evidence and their claims, they still have no trouble getting funding for their research or publicity for their claims. The corporate media give them all the exposure they could wish, and the line is that only backward, biased feminists and leftists quibble with these secure, unbiased scientific findings. The case of race is similar.

The problem isn't science, or even religion; it's what the philosopher Walter Kaufmann named "decidophobia," the fear of fateful decisions. Neither science or religion can make our decisions for us. And that is frightening, as Kaufmann acknowledged. Most people evidently want to believe that there is a solid, certain place where they can stand, and absolute principles by which to make their moral choices. Atheists tend to choose different ones than theists, but they seem to be no less likely to pretend to know more than they know.

Things in Life Aren't Free- But in WoW They Are?


Alot of folks have different optinions on what is actually "profit". We have all heard the "I farmed it so it's free" line, which, in all reality it's true. You did spend the time to farm, and it was "free". We have also heard "well, it procced on the transmute, so it's free", which is also true. But I don't see it either way, and neither should you if you have the same mindset. Let me explain:

"I farmed it so it's free":

How long did it take you? What was your GPH (gold per hour)? Did you stop and take a second to check it out? How did you factor it in?

Ok, so you were in Twilight Highlands farming your Elementium Ore for an hour. You ended with 160 ores. A few green gems, and a blue. Oh yeah, 6 Volatile Earth, 2 Volatile Fire. Was it worth it?

8 stacks of Elementium: 720g
3 Pyrite Ore: 36g
Green uncut gems: 40g
Dream Emerald: 35g
6 Volatile Earth: 75g
2 Volatile Fire: 45g

Total is 940"ish" gold. Alright, not too shabby. But that is just the start. "It's all free". So you mail the ores to your gemmy, and prospect them. You end up with 930g worth of gems (AH price). So is that your GPH now? What about when you take the gems, cut them into Alicite Pendant, Jasper Rings, Carnelian Spikes, and then D/E them? Then you are looking at around 1100g? But is it still "free"? Now you notice that Nightstones are the Jewelcrafter's daily, so you get 80g each for the two that you got from prospecting. Now we are looking at almost 1300g. See where I am going with this? Sure, just from farming you can sell your "mats" straight out, and clear 900g. But spend a bit more time and you get 400g more. I know this is total common sense, but try to get in this mindset on what you can do with your time. This example can work with many different types of farming, so place yourself in your normal farming situation and go from there. Next.....

"Well, it procced on a transmute, so it's free"

So you are doing your daily transmute of Volatile Life to Volatile Air. Or Truegold. Or when you made your Jasper Rings, you procced a Blue one. You procced 3 on your Truegold transmute, and you want to sell them quick, so you hit the AH and toss em in for 100g UNDER the lowest price. You just lost dough buddy. Instead of them being free, you now have to pay for that Potion of Treasure Finding out of your own pocket, instead of using the system to pay. Get it? Got it? Good.

"I can sell it cheap, because I wasn't even expecting it, so it's free"

Wrong. And right. If you sell it cheap, you are losing money. This is once again common sense, but it seems that people don't see it that way. I see that Blue ring selling within a few days for 200'ish gold. But others seem to not do that, D/E it, get a Small Heavenly Shard (worth about 17g), and go on. That, my friends, is a loss. Not a "free" 17g, but a loss of 180g. But once again, it was free (as I am told)......

Ok. Now this is the one that burns me the most. Listening last night to JMTC reminded me of this. To each their own, but you are reading this because you care about my point of view, and here it is....

"Well, when I mill, I make my money back on Inferno Inks, so the Blackfallow Inks are free"

This one for some reason is my biggest pet peeve. Sickening. Now you are probably thinking "this alto's full of shit, why does this bother him so much?". Or you don't care. But tuff, I am gonna tell you anyways. Folks like this piss me off in a few ways. One, they lower the price of Blackfallow on the AH to next to nothing. Which in turn lowers the prices on Mysterious Fortune Cards. Which affects my bottom line.

Now before you say "Alto, you do the same thing, isn't that a contradiction?", Yes, I do "near" the exact opposite. I mill, sell my Inferno Inks, and use my Blackfallow Inks for other uses, unless the Inferno's are full of competition, then I will make Destruction Cards or just sit on them. I don't kill (flood) the market and make the prices lower to zero worth. Bah.

So as usual, I started going off and rambling for a bit. Yes, this is all common sense once again. Things in Life Aren't Free. Ever. Ore are they?


*pic is used from http://www.famousbloggers.net/

Strikes Loom For IAG As It Begins First Day of Trading Today

International Consolidated Airlines Group (IAG) that was created after the merger of British Airways and Iberia made its debut today at the stock market with a valuation of £6.1 billion. IAG shares started trading at 8 a.m. in London, which is the company’s main listing. The company will also be listed in Madrid.

British Airways ended its 24 years of trading on the stock exchange. From Monday, the airline’s shares will be traded under the name of International Airlines Group.

BA and the Spanish giant Iberia will both retain its brand names as part of the deal that is supposed to make them collectively the second largest airline by value after Germany’s Lufthansa. Both the airlines are expected to benefit hugely with the merger as they are likely to save 400 million euros a year by its fifth year of collaboration. Other than that, IAG will now have more than 400 aircrafts and is expected to handle passenger travel traffic of 60 million people annually. IGA will now maintain a network of flights that will connect to more than 200 destinations around the globe.

BA and Iberia also complement each other in terms of operations and especially long-haul flights. British Airways has a major presence in North Atlantic and Iberia is a popular option between Europe and Latin America. Add to it the anti-trust immunity awarded to both the airlines as well as American Airlines for their transatlantic business.

IAG has no plans to rest as it hopes to expand further through some aggressive acquisitions in the near future including some even outside Europe. IAG’s chief executive Willie Walsh believes that the merger is going to be the perfect springboard for further growth of the company.

BA’s Cabin Crew Votes for Strike

However, everything is not hunky dory for the UK’s flag carrier as BA’s cabin crew voted overwhelming in support of another strike as the showdown between Unite and the airline continues. This could be bad news for those travellers who have already landed up with cheap tickets on flights for their Easter vacations. With long weekends of Easter and the royal wedding in April, cheap tickets on flights are indeed few and far between.

Unite’s General Secretary-designate Len McCluskey appealed to BA for negotiations and was quoted by internet sources as stating, “Surely BA management must now wake up and listen to the voice of their skilled and dedicated employees.”

However, BA refuted the union claims of majority support of the cabin crew. "Unite has lost about 2,500 cabin crew members since this dispute started, as crew have voted with their feet. Even with a smaller membership, the proportion of Unite members supporting disruption continues to fall, contrary to the union's claims,” the airline said in a statement.

British Airways insists that even in the event of strike ticket holders shall not be troubled and it will be able to operate almost normal timetables from different airports.

The Retirement of our "King of Gold" Markco


Markco,

What you have done to the WoW community as a whole is undescribable. You have helped tons of folks not only learn how to make a buttload (for lack of a better term) of gold, but you have also brought this "hobby" [albeit a business for some] of gold making in WoW to the masses. Whether it was through your blog at JMTC or your 20K Gold Guide, you have helped us all!

I found out about your site almost 2 years ago (give or take a few hours). I started reading the articles and enjoyed hearing "insider information" on goldmaking. At the time, I wasn't aware there was even blogs, or what they were for that matter. For some little known reason, I thought that you were some type of Blizzard worker that was giving behind the scenes ideas on how to play wow, and believe it or not, I figured I was only one of a few people reading it (haha, yeah, I know), because everything you hit on, I was making a killing.

I even got a three day suspension back in the day for "manipulating the economy" I believe is how it was put. From playing the AH. Not from playing a character, not from "botting", not from speed hacks or honor farming. From the AH. Doing nothing other than what you talked about, but on a mass scale. This was due to the one week of making 35K. Back then, that would be like hitting 200K now. God I was pissed at you for making me lose my account. In the middle of this, I did start feeling guilty that I took your advice (and still thinking that you were a blizz employee gone rogue) and figured my lesson learned. So after a bit of emails and phone calls back and forth with Blizz, I got my account back. Funny, I know......

To make a long story short, I just wanted to thank you for your time and skillz for helping us all become what we are today. Good luck in your new edeavors and I am sure that you will succeed in anything that you get your grubby little hands on.

Thanks Brother,
Jerry.
AKA Alto

Now for all you readers of JMTC, the site is not leaving or shutting down, Mageshadow (formerly of The Gnomish Coin blog) has taken over and is doing a great job, so keep reading up on the articles, as they are still full of great information!

*The pic above was found at http://www.despair.com/

Valuable Information on Holidays in India

With its charming diversity, India remains one of the leading tourist destinations around the world. The place brims with different traveller delights – scrumptious food, magnificent historical monuments, beautiful gardens, beach and mountain resorts and remarkable wild life. Indeed, India offers it all and how!

Top Indian Tourist Destinations
India is huge country that is dotted with marvellous tourist attractions. Each part of the nation is a tourist paradise in its own right. Be it the wonderful beaches down south, the tantalising cuisines of the north, or the mesmerising natural beauty of the east – holidays in India are surely a treat for tourists. Here is a look at some highlights of Indian vacations that must not be missed.


Golden Triangle Tour
The Golden Triangle Tour is India’s exceedingly popular tourist circuit that is favoured by domestic and foreign tourists alike. It is called so because of the vague triangular shape that can be made out between Delhi, Agra and Jaipur. Each of the three destinations is full of world class attractions and offers India’s finest in terms of historical monuments. Delhi charms and enthrals travellers with its overwhelming structures like the Red Fort, India Gate, Jama Masjid and wonderful colonial architecture. Agra remains unmatched with the incredible Taj Mahal as well as the Agra Fort. Jaipur is a leading tourist destination that floors all with its splendours like Hawa Mahal, Sheesh Mahal, and Amber Fort and Palace.

Kerala
Kerala is an enchanting tourist destination that features wonderful landscapes, serene backwaters, remarkable wildlife parks and glittering beaches. Kerala offers numerous opportunities for travellers looking for adventurous getaways against the backdrop of extreme natural beauty. An incredible blend of multiple cultures, Kerala is also renowned for religious pilgrim spots and magnificent historic monuments.

Goa
The ultimate party place, Goa is perhaps the most westernised region of India and one that is completely relaxed and laidback in its character. Strong Portuguese influence has fashioned Goa into an irresistible destination for fun lovers. Mouth-watering cuisines, amazing water sporting action and never-ending beach fun make Goa an indispensable part of India holidays.

Ideal Time to Visit India
Generally, the best time to visit India is the period between November to February as the climate is quite cool and the festivals taking place during the period offer the perfect opportunity to revel in the cultural extravaganza. The time is also ideal for outdoor sightseeing in South India as well as in the plain areas of North India. If one is interested in winter sports, Gulmarg is the perfect location to chill out.

Monsoon in India is considered the off-season as far as tourism is concerned. Budget travellers can take advantage of off-season discounts during the period.

Getting There
A number of airlines operate direct as well as indirect flights to India from the UK. Jet Airways, British Airways and Kingfisher Airline are a few of the preferred airlines for flying from the UK to India.

Some Important Travel Tips

  • Getting a visa before travelling to India is compulsory and for transiting through India, one needs a transit visa. Travellers with a transit visa can not stay for more than 3 days in the country. For more information regarding visa and other related issues, check out the official website of FCO.

  • Important documents like passports, flight tickets and identity cards must be photocopied and kept separately from the originals.

  • It is best to avoid intermingling with strangers in cities. Travellers can contact police PCR vans that patrol different parts of the cities for any assistance.

  • Crime against foreigners is not unheard of in India. It is best to take basic safety precautious to avoid any unpleasant scenario.

Book your flights to India now to enjoy the best holidays in 2011.

Will the Gold Rush Continue?

Jan. 27 2011 | Richard O'Brien, CEO of Newmont Mining, one of the world's biggest gold producers, joined CNBC in Davos. "I foresee that we're maybe halfway in the gold cycle," he said. "I think we're going to see less supply," he added.

I am a Junkie for Junkies, are You?


Hey folks, did you have a chance to get over to see the new show at Auction House Junkies? A few of my favorite bloggers  (Wes and Cold- in no particular order) just posted their second podcast, talking about all things gold related.

I am definitely a loyal subscriber, are you?

There's something about listening to this....I really enjoy two peeps chatting about what they have been working on lately in the WoW world, especially by professionals. It's basically a blog post, more in depth and more descriptive, as you have a few points of view going on. So go there, hit play on the tab, and do your AH'ing, D/E'ing, Milling, Crafting, etc. It makes the time go by quicker, and to top it off, you have access to your AH when they start ripping out what items they are selling and what they are doing, you can check prices and get on the bandwagon quickly!

They covered (of course) the Mysterious Fortune Cards (which kills me, as no matter when, they are only 15ish gold on my server) and the pile of gold being made off them, and they hit quite a bit on the Obsidium Ore shuffle, that has also come and gone for me (once again, competition).

What did impress me was the detail in Blacksmithing. I do not have one, but it made me think of a few old "shuffles" that I used to do, as well as when the Enchanting mats [supply and demand] was spoke about too. Great information once again folks, I am waiting to hear what the next topic is......

And for those that want more detail on what was talked about, go direct to the cast, Auction House Junkies.

Till next time.....

Reasons Most Youngsters Book Flights to Perth for!

Perth, supposedly the sunniest capital city of Australia is a big hit with young people. Hundreds of youngsters save hard to fund their cheap flights to Perth as the destination is full of spoilers. Be it taking a romantic helicopter ride across the clouds, gyrating away booze fuelled night in some pub, or indulging in heart thudding adventure sports, Perth sets many a youngsters on a quest for tickets with cheap airlines to the destination. Here are some of the reasons that make Perth a hot favourite destination for the young.

Beaches

Perth is full of magnificent beaches and there is world of choice for indulging in people watching, swimming, snorkelling, surfing, and other adrenalin pumping water sports. The Scarborough Beach is a hot choice amongst teenagers and young adults for kite surfing, body boarding, and wind surfing, and the night parties. For scuba diving enthusiasts as well as other beach bugs, there are quite a few options in Rockingham, while Trigg makes for some heavy duty surfing. Although, there is no end to the number of beach attractions, one of the most popular places for beach hunting is the Rottnest Island. Beaches are definitely one of the biggest lures that attract young people in droves to embark on flights to Perth.

Adventure Sports

Adrenalin junkies booking flights to Perth are in for some unforgettable treats. Those who want to conquer the fear of heights can indulge in bungee jumping or trying out different forms of rock climbing such as multi-pitch climbing, sport climbing, crack climbing, face climbing, and aid climbing. Perth is also home to Western Australia’s award winning and supposedly biggest Skydiving centre and provides mind numbing Accelerated Freefall and tandem Skydive experiences. Similarly, there is no dearth of choice for indulging in caving expeditions and mastering the art of abseiling. For yachting aficionados, the lower regions of the Swan River Valley are amongst the most desirable places.

Tracks and Trails

Perth also offers plenty of biking, hiking, and walking trails. Many of these trails have provisions for guided tours and visitors can treat themselves to myriad exotic sights and smells of nature along the way. A popular bike trail is the Munda Biddi Trail, which runs across mesmerising wooded areas and gently rolling hills and treats one to wildlife like brush wallabies, western grey kangaroos, and brushtail possums. Another choice is the award winning Bibbulmun Track, which runs across mesmerising hills, river valleys, and forests. The walk covers seven rural communities and stretches for about a thousand kilometres between Perth Hills and Albany.

Nightlife

Perth’s electrifying nightlife sees happy crowds of youngsters painting the town red in the numerous pubs and discotheques dotting the city. The hottest centres of action are concentrated around Northbridge, Subiaco and Fremantle and some of the most popular venues are Must Winebar, Varga Lounge, The Moon & Sixpence British Pub, and Sapphire Bar. Those with more intellectual pursuits can stake out numerous venues like Perth Concert Hall, His Majesty’s Theatre, Subiaco Arts Centre, Yirra Yaakin Theatre, Buzz Dance Theatre, and Burswood Dome.

Shopping

Youngsters bitten by the shopping bug find themselves spoilt for choice in Perth. Some of the popular European type markets are the Galleria Art & Craft Markets and Art Gallery and Museum Concourse. Those looking for souvenirs can pick up authentic Aboriginal art from places like Creative Native and Indigenart. Perth is also the place to pick up Western Australian wines and crocodile and sheepskin leather products. Most of the duty free shops are located in the vicinity of Hay Street, Murray Street malls, and Forrest Chase complex. The area also has some of the main department stores, Myer and David Jones, and numerous fashion franchises, duty free shops, and historic arcades.

SILVER and GOLD is Money

Obamas plan is B.S. just more of what the uneducated want to hear !

Some law reviews are bringing academic thought to the wider (on-line) world; Penn Law Review hosts debate on arguing for marriage

I've written my share of law review articles. I wouldn't have tenure if I hadn't. And although that is the customary venue for legal scholarship, I've been increasingly frustrated with its limitations. Who reads law reviews? Well, other law professors do. Law students writing papers and their own articles do. And. And. Hmmm. That is really it. Lawyers handling cases raising new or controversial legal issues may cite law review articles in their briefs, and judges do sometimes cite them in opinions. (I love it when a judge cites one of my articles!) But lawyers don't regularly read law reviews for intellectual sustenance, and if you're not a lawyer, well, there's an access problem. Although there are notable exceptions, law reviews don't generally post their articles on line. And even if they did, if the typical article is a dense 50-70 pages, who even has the time except other academics?

Well something is new in legal academia, and I applaud it. Some journals are posting relatively short pieces on line in novel formats. Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review is holding a colloquium based on a short on-line article, Gay Rights and Lefts, by Northeastern Law Professor Libby Adler. Adler's piece will appear on February 1, and one month later the journal will post short responses (up to 1000 words) from a couple of dozen lawyers and law profs (including me). It's public intellectual discussion that can engage an audience far greater than the readership of law reviews.

Last month the online site of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review hosted a debate on "The Argument for Same-Sex Marriage." (The site is named PENNumbra, a cute name that a law student or lawyer would recognize as a play on the "penumbras" of various constitutional amendments in the Bill of Rights.) It's worth reading. Two law profs, Debroah Widiss and Nelson Tebbe, argue that lawyers should not argue that marriage is a fundamental right. It's not like childbearing or abortion, something you can do without the state. Rather it is a state-conferred status, and the state could abolish marriage for everyone, which it could not do if it was a fundamental right. (I agree completely.) Then they argue that typical equal protection arguments are unlikely to succeed in the Supreme Court, even though they have won in some lower courts. The argument they settle on is what they call an "equal access" argument -- that once the state creates marriage (like once it holds elections, or allows parties to appeal a trial court decision) it cannot selectively exclude people from the important institution it created.

The more interested read in the debate, however, is from Wake Forest law prof Shannon Gilreath, who argues against arguing for marriage. He criticizes the enormous amount of money spent litigating in California over the word "marriage" (since same-sex couples already had the rights under the term domestic partnership). He then critiques marriage from a gay liberation perspective. This isn't new, but he cites many legal scholars whose work is mostly available in law review articles, and so the benefit of this format shines through; you can get a taste of the larger critique in this user-friendly format.

Then he makes a more unusual point. He argues that the home is violent for women and the necessity of divorce to end a marriage creates a dangerous situation. He then discusses violence in same-sex relationships and argues we should not make them more difficult to exit. He also argues that the private family exemplified by marriage is less safe than a more communitarian idea of family. Here I think he misses a lot. Laws that protect against intimate violence extend almost everywhere to same-sex couples, as well as unmarried heterosexual couples. Those laws were once available only to married couples, and so it's an area of law that has actually expanded its reach to address the needs of real people in violent situations, married or not. He doesn't convince me that marriage creates more violence. And economic and emotional dependence can make it hard to leave an unmarried relationship. He did not convince me that the availability of marriage would make gay men and lesbians less safe in the home.

But I do love his last line: I fear that when the history of the Gay movement itself is written it will read more as epitaph than epilogue: Once upon a time there was a Movement... then there was Marriage.

While I'm pointing out critiques of the movement for marriage equality available on line, check out this one by Yale English/American Studies prof Michael Warner (author of The Trouble with Normal), that appeared as an essay in the California Law Review, but is, amazingly, available in full on line. It's longer than the new format of law review websites, but it's worth reading. He argues that gay rights advocates go after marriage because it symbolizes obtaining the dignity and respect of straight people. "To argue for gay marriage on these grounds," he writes, "is to despair that respect can be compelled on any other terms." I couldn't have said it better.

Updated 4.0.6 PTR Changes Jan 24, 25- Arcaeology....Again?! WoEZoe!


To go along with my normal updates for ya'll, Blizz just released more information changes from the PTR. Most are character changes, but they have posted a bit more:

It has already been spoke about around the blogoshphere (you know me, I mentioned this back on my post PTR Update Jan 14) but it seemed to have hit our friend, Miss Mediocre, who hit a popular post on it, "Dear Blizz, you kind of owe me 3500g".

What I am talking about is the Archaeology artifacts and how the prices are once again changing. The main one that changed, is the Word of Empress Zoe (or the "correct" Alto term of WoEZoe...haha), which was talked about vendoring for 1000g, Blizz has nerfed their own test realm, and it is now 375g. Hmmm.....

Everything from the Dazzling Sapphire Pendant (that "used" to sell for 98c will be 98s the lowest of the lows for changes) to the WoEZoe (see? funny huh?) that gains 365g from the current sell price. There are quite a few that have changed to upwards of 100g, some hitting 200g. Huge difference Blizz, that's one way to get folks out there digging.

So nothing too big happening elsewhere that I can see, (other than some numbers tossed around on a few potions) but you can always check out the Blizz post here.

Powerleveling your Professions- Alchemists, Alto Needs You!

Powerleveling Professions. Not for the amateur. Not for the feint hearted. Not for the poor..... 0-525 Alchemy cost me just shy of 12K server prices (had I watched the AH for the best prices, or saved mats up, it would have been quite a bit cheaper, but hey, gotta spend gold on something, right?). Now onto my post:


Pushing to get done before the upcoming 4.0.6 Patch, you might remember one of my toons as she has been the "star" of a few of past articles, such as "WTB Port to Dalaran" and "But what about Dalaran" . She is now another Illustrious Grand Master, if for no reason other than to D/E my 2 bank tabs of Carnelian Spikes that I have accumulated over the last few weeks. I have been worrying that the ilvl was too high on these and that Blizzard "might" nerf these soon, so I needed to get her there to ease the "stress" (I do not like to bother others with D/E'ing, not saying it's wrong, but.... I just prefer to do it myself, you know?).

So last night, 2am"ish", after hitting PvP and Random queues', questing, and farming on a constant rotation, I hit 75. Finially. Seemed like forever, as it almost took her seven days /played time to get there (alot of messing around, hitting AH, doing scans, so it should be quite a bit less).



There were a few tough things that I had to do today upon leveling, one of which hurt, bad.....Vendoring the  Lifebound Alchemist Stone for the unreal price of 8g, when just a week ago I could have been D/E'ing it and getting an easy 1K (or more) selling the Maelstrom Crystals....too little, too late on that one. No bozo button for Alto there...


I guess what I am trying to get to with this post is, yeah, powerleveling a profession is expensive. Now, after checking my AH run (with all the pots I made) through 525, I will be getting 3500g back on my Alchemist through this process. Quite a bit of an initial loss.....However, it is well worth it, as I will make the rest back in no time, I am sure of it. Now for my favor from my loyal readers.....

Any of you folks out there have a set "daily routine" for your Alchemist? Transmutes? Dailies? Are there certain flasks/pots that are selling well for you? On certain days? Holler!

If you would like to go further in depth, or if you are interested in doing a guest post on this topic, feel free to email me at altosgoldishadvice@gmail.com! If that doesn't seem feasable for you, how about a link to a blog that you feel would help? Or a few comments on what has worked, what doesn't work?

You know, you are my hero by doing this. Yes, you. I am talking to you. The one that is reading this right now. Or typing an answer now. Or writing an email......Thank you. Talk to yall soon!