Yep, that’s Kelly Osbourne! We wouldn’t have believed it either if Kelly hadn’t Tweeted this photo herself. “I’m just being Miley,†she captioned the Twitpic. Kelly, 26, and Miley Cyrus, 18, are co-starring in So Undercover (guess Kelly must be going undercover as Miley?) and the former Osbournes star is quickly becoming like another big [...]
Posts Tagged ‘America’
Economics Is Simple … The Fat Cats Just Want You to Think It’s Complicated So That You Won’t Demand Change
Economics and finance seem like complicated topics, and so many people “leave it to the experts”.However, these topics are actually simple, and if people hear a clear explanation, they will be able to form an opinion about our current economy and the g…
The Doors Respond To Florida’s Pardon Of Jim Morrison
40 YEARS AFTER MEDIA AND COURT CIRCUS, THE DOORS SPEAK OUT
![]() The Doors |
In the wake of Florida’s decision to issue a pardon to Jim Morrison of The Doors more than 40 years after
his alleged obscene acts on a Miami stage, his bandmates Ray Manzarek, John Densmore and Robby
Krieger issued this statement:
“In 1969 the Doors played an infamous concert in Miami, Florida. Accounts vary as to what actually happened on
stage that night.
Whatever took place that night ended with The Doors sharing beers and laughter in the dressing room with the Miami
police, who acted as security at the venue that evening. No arrests were made. The next day we flew off to Jamaica
for a few days’ vacation before our planned 20-city tour of America.
That tour never materialized. Four days later, warrants were issued in Miami for the arrest of Morrison on trumped-
up charges of indecency, public obscenity, and general rock-and-roll revelry. Every city The Doors were booked into
canceled their engagement.
A circus of fire-and-brimstone “decency” rallies, grand jury investigations and apocalyptic editorials followed – not
to mention allegations ranging from the unsubstantiated (he exposed himself) to the fantastic (the Doors were
“inciting a riot” but also “hypnotizing” the crowd).
In August, Jim Morrison went on trial in Miami. He was acquitted on all but two misdemeanor charges and sentenced
to six months’ hard labor in Raiford Penitentiary. He was appealing this conviction when he died in Paris on July 3,
1971. Four decades after the fact, with Jim an icon for multiple generations – and those who railed against him now
a laughingstock – Florida has seen fit to issue a pardon.
We don’t feel Jim needs to be pardoned for anything.
His performance in Miami that night was certainly provocative, and entirely in the insurrectionary spirit of The Doors’
music and message. The charges against him were largely an opportunity for grandstanding by ambitious politicians
- not to mention an affront to free speech and a massive waste of time and taxpayer dollars. As Ann Woolner of the
Albany Times-Union wrote recently, “Morrison’s case bore all the signs of a political prosecution, a rebuke from the
cultural right to punish a symbol of Dionysian rebellion.”
If the State of Florida and the City of Miami want to make amends for the travesty of Jim Morrison’s arrest and
prosecution forty years after the fact, an apology would be more appropriate – and expunging the whole sorry
matter from the record. And how about a promise to stop letting culture-war hysteria trump our First Amendment
rights? Freedom of Speech must be held sacred, especially in these reactionary times.
Love,
The Doors
The Morrison Family
“X Factor America†Pepsi Sponsorship
Coke may be King on American Idol, but Pepsi will be the reigning soft drink of choice once rival FOX talent show The X Factor America invades US airwaves in 2012. The US X Factor has signed $55 million sponsorship deal with Pepsi, Britain’s Daily Mirror has learned. Simon Cowell and his panel of judges [...]
Marilu Henner Memory Talent Wows America
Marilu Henner, the former star of the ’70s sitcom Taxi, wowed America this weekend when she demonstrated her “superior autobiographical memory” on national television. You see, Marilu has the uncanny ability to remember every day of her 58 years of life — a “gift” the actress put to the test with a battery of memory [...]
Unseen Rolling Stones pics hidden in duffel bag for 40 yrs found
U.S. Senate repeals “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy
The U.S. Senate has voted overwhelmingly to end America’s ban on openly-gay military service, setting the stage for a major advancement of civil rights.
A handful of Republican senators joined a united Democratic caucus to repeal the law known as “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.”
Sharon Osbourne doesnâ€t want Cheryl Cole for American ‘X Factor’
Nicole Scherzinger would be a much better judge than Cheryl Cole on the upcoming US version of ”X Factor”, according to Sharon Osbourne. The star, who was a judge on the UK version of the show for four series, said that Scherzinger, who was a guest panelist on the British programme this year, would be [...]
Dec. 17, 1790: Accurate Calendar Requires Sacrifice, You Dig?
1790: Workers doing repairs in Mexico City unearth a massive stone bearing ancient symbols. It turns out to be a representation of the Aztec calendar and will eventually become a national treasure.
The disc-shaped stone measured 12 feet in diameter and 3 feet thick. It was covered with pagan symbols. The Spanish had contemptuously buried it [...]
America is ready to elect a gay president: Jimmy Carter
Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter says America is ready to elect a gay president. And the 39th president predicts it will happen in ”near future”. “I think the entire population of America has come tremendous strides forward in dealing with the issue of gays,” the New York Daily News quoted him as telling the website [...]
Extreme Inequality Helped Cause Both the Great Depression and the Current Economic Crisis
It is clear that when banks become too big, it harms the economy. Economist Steve Keen says that “a sustainable level of bank profits appears to be about 1% of GDP”, and higher bank profits lead to a Ponzi economy and a depression.But most mainstre…
Friday Crunch Crumbs: Larry King Hangs Up His Suspenders; “40-Year-Old Virgin†Star Sentenced To Life In Stabbing; Holiday Cocktail Recipes
For the second consecutive year “Whatever” topped a Marist poll of the Most Annoying Words or Phrases in the English language. As if! -Rip Torn skates on charges related to bank break-in…. -Christmas Tree Buying 101… -Worst toy ever? -Holiday cocktail recipes… -Top 20 Holiday Movies… -Oprah’s Book Club selection of Charles Dickens’ A Tale [...]
Heidi Jones Facing Storm Of Trouble Over False Rape Report
A WABC/Good Morning America meteorologist was arrested this week after perpetrating the ultimate snow job — falsely claiming to cops that a man tried to rape her while she was jogging in Central Park. Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy Police say the avid fitness buff and long-distance sprinter [...]
Mariah Carey Twins!
Mariah Carey’s eating for two. The five-octave songbird, who suffered a miscarriage early in her marriage to America’s Got Talent host Nick Cannon, is expecting twins! Cannon made the announcement on his 92.3 FM radio show in New York City on Thursday morning, ending weeks of speculation surrounding the singer’s pregnancy. The “All I Want [...]
Schumpeter : Why do firms exist?
Ronald Coase, the author of “The Nature of the Firm” (1937), turns 100 on December 29th
FOR philosophers the great existential question is: “Why is there something rather than nothing?” For management theorists the more mundane equivalent is: “Why do firms exist? Why isn’t everything done by the market?”
Today most people live in a market economy, and central planning is remembered as the greatest economic disaster of the 20th century. Yet most people also spend their working lives in centrally planned bureaucracies called firms. They stick with the same employer for years, rather than regularly returning to the jobs market. They labour to fulfil the “strategic plans” of their corporate commissars. John Jacob Astor’s American Fur Company made him the richest man in America in the 1840s. But it never consisted of more than a handful of people. Today Astor’s company would not register as a blip on the corporate horizon. Firms routinely employ thousands of workers and move billions of dollars-worth of goods and services within their borders. …
Extradition and WikiLeaks: Courting trouble
An American trial is drawing nearer for Julian Assange
AS THE frissons of the WikiLeaks disclosures fade and cyberwars between its foes and fans sputter and flare, legal questions are becoming central: how can America bring the site’s founder, Julian Assange, to court. The answer to that may lie in Britain, where Mr Assange is battling an extradition request from Swedish prosecutors who want to question him on sexual-assault charges.
Extradition from Britain to Sweden is normally a formality, though Mr Assange’s lawyers argue that “ulterior motives” are at work. On December 14th a court in London adjourned the hearing until January 11th. It also granted Mr Assange bail; oddly, the British (not Swedish) authorities appealed against that. This helps stoke fears among Mr Assange’s supporters that the Swedish case is just a ruse to keep him behind bars pending eventual extradition to America. …
The Stuxnet worm: Yet to turn
New twists in the story of a mysterious and sophisticated cyber-weapon
IS THE price of second-hand computers about to plunge in Iran? Those in its nuclear facilities have been infected by the Stuxnet worm, an ingenious cyber-weapon seemingly designed specifically to sabotage uranium-refining by disrupting centrifuges’ industrial-control systems. On November 29th President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad admitted Stuxnet had hit “a limited number” of the centrifuges. He had previously said that only administrative machines at nuclear facilities had been infected. The International Atomic Energy Agency reported a few days earlier that engineers at Iran’s Natanz plant had stopped feeding uranium into its centrifuges, but Iran said it restarted the process six days later. IAEA figures also showed the refining was less productive.
This is just what a Stuxnet attack would look like. According to Symantec, a computer-security company, the worm performs an inventory of the systems it is running on, looking specifically for “frequency converter drives” made by two firms, one Iranian and the other Finnish, running at speeds between 807 Hz and 1210 Hz. (These high frequencies correspond to the rotation speeds of centrifuges; America tightly controls the export of frequency converter drives able to operate at frequencies above 600 Hz.) …
Monitoring forests: Seeing the world for the trees
An international deal on deforestation makes it ever more important to measure the Earth’s woodlands
PERU’S forests cover 72m hectares of the country (278,000 square miles). That is three times the area of Britain. And Peru intends to hold on to its greenery. In 2000 its deforestation rate was 250,000 hectares a year. By 2005 that figure was down to 150,000. This year, according to Antonio Brack Egg, the country’s environment minister, it will be 90,000. In 2021, if all goes well, it will be zero.
To make sure things stay on course, Dr Brack says, the government needs to spend more than $100m a year on high-resolution satellite pictures of its billions of trees. But he hopes that a computing facility developed by the Planetary Skin Institute (PSI), a not-for-profit organisation set up by Cisco Systems, a large computing firm, and America’s space agency, NASA, might help cut that budget. …





