WE TRUST, In God
Zion man now officially named In God We Trust
[I guess it’s better than Ms. GoldenPalace.com (the former Ms. Terri Iligan. But at least she got paid.]
Steve Kreuscher is no more.
[I guess I can understand getting sick of spelling “Kreuscher” for people. I’m starting to get sick of telling CSRs in India how to spell “Bradley”.]
A Lake County judge granted permission to the Zion man Friday to officially change his name to “In God We Trust.” That’s “In God” as a first name and “We Trust” as a last name….
We Trust said the new name more closely represents his devotion to God than “Steve Kreuscher” did.
[There’s something to be said for The New York Times’s formality. I really like the ring of Mr. We Trust.]
The process to change his name took roughly three months. Throughout the course We Trust said he was looking for a sign from God that would let him know it was a good idea. He got it one day while adding up the expenses for the name change, which came out to roughly $600.
[I was expecting him to get a sign from the Almighty while looking in his wallet, but no:]
“I didn’t want to use my own money because things are tight,” said the father of four. “Three weeks later, I got my (tax) rebate check for $600….
[Wow. So God really is working through George Bush.]
Apparently, the Chicago Tribune reported earlier that Mr. We Trust was concerned about the boogeyman atheists “having the phrase ‘In God We Trust’ removed from U.S. currency.”
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“The Anglican project was an attempt to demonstrate that you could run a church for grown-ups: you could hold people together in a joint venture of mutual respect, learning and humility. That has gone now, already.”
Paul Handley, Editor of the Church Times, 20 July 2008
A different world cannot be built by indifferent people.
Lucky Numbers 17, 3, 6, 31, 14, 27
“It is terrible to contemplate how few politicians are hanged.”
—G. K. Chesterton #Revision
Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not change, I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal.
“Being a fool for Christ is one thing, being a complete idiot is another.”
—Doug Chaplin #I don’t think necessity is the mother of invention — invention, in my opinion, arises directly from idleness, possibly also from laziness. To save oneself trouble.
—Agatha Christie #“For this year, everyone that’s called has pretty much been just looking for money. That’s as opposed to the last couple of years, where some people were just sick of the crime and wanting to do something about it.”
Sgt. Lawrence Beller, 18 May 2008“Once, when I lectured at the University of California at Fullerton, a student asked me for a short, simple definition of reality. I thought it over and answered, ‘Reality is that which when you stop believing in it doesn’t go away.’”
—Philip K. Dick,in Valis
#Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from Doctor Who (26 March 2008)
“God delivered me from the evil that is Dr Who, materialism and alcoholism.”
(via Exploring Our Matrix)
“Despite the awesome theological implications, the Christmas story is easily reduced to pablum. How pleasant it is in mid-December to open a Christmas card with a pretty picture of Mary and Joseph gazing beatifically at their son, with the shepherds and the angels beaming in delight. The Christmas story, with its friendly resonances of marriage, family, babies, animals, angels, and—thanks to the wise men—gifts, is eminently marketable to popular culture. It’s a Thomas Kinkade painting come to life.
“On the other hand, a card bearing the image of a near-naked man being stripped, beaten, tortured, and nailed through his hands and feet onto a wooden crucifix is a markedly less pleasant piece of mail.”
—James Martin #“There is a record of Copernicus being asked. There is a record that there was a response. There is, of course, no record of what that response was.”
William Krieger, 23 March 2008Americans seem compelled to stop people doing stuff in private whilst happily engaging in the most improper behaviour in public.
—MadPriest #omg i pwn3d yr <3 (12 March 2008)
A common new technology for monitoring defibrillators is vulnerable to hacking and even to reprogramming that could stop the devices from delivering a lifesaving shock, according to research to be released Wednesday.
In the past couple years, more than 100,000 patients in the U.S. alone have been implanted with newer devices that reduce medical visits by sending information on a patient to a bedside monitor that then sends the data to a doctor, usually once a day.
In the model researchers studied, transmissions from the defibrillator to the bedside monitor are not encrypted, which means that someone intercepting the transmissions could retrieve such data as the patient’s birth date, medical ID number and, in some cases, Social Security number.
Surgeon General's Warning
—A lovely bit of urban culture in the Providence Westin, courtesy of the skybridge between the hotel and Providence Place Mall.
Recession! (6 March 2008)
Better stock up on canned goods while you still have a job. We’re all basically doomed. It’s gonna be just like the 1930s.

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