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Cute Dogs for Your Monday Blues!

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Cosplay Pictures for the Weekend!

Cosplay pictures for your enjoyment!

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Revenge of the Fifth!

For those of you who celebrated May the Fourth be With You too much, are now suffering the Revenge of the Fifth!  Also known as Cinco de Vader…

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May the Fourth be With You!!

If you don’t understand (ie, the Arizona Republic) ask someone who is cooler than you…

STAR WARS!!!  Woohoo!!  Can’t wait for the next movies…

Want to have fun?  Check out my friends and members at the 501st Legion site here:

https://www.facebook.com/The501stLegion?fref=ts

People who don’t know the 501st Legion (ie, the Arizona Republic) it has over 400,000 members.  It is named after the 501st Legion which was led by General Anakin Skywalker in the Clone Wars, then by Darth Vader (same guy Arizona Republic) after he converted to the Dark Side…

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Cosplayers – Rebecca Gau and Jaime Molera think you are “Offensive”

So here is the story on Azcentral.com.  That’s right, Rebecca Gau and Jaime Molera think that my weekly post of cosplayer pictures are racy and offensive.  I should not be able to work at the Arizona Department of Education according to them because you cosplayers are just so scantily clad and inappropriate, that if I post cool pics of you on my site, somehow it will destroy the morals of children across Arizona.  They also attack Cassie O’Quin, known to most of you as Cassandra S. Kyle.  I met her and interviewed for KWOD Radio because of all her charity work with children.  She deserves better than yellow journalism and hate-based accusations and innuendo.

Here is Jaime Molera’s lobbying firm contact information, if you wish to express your opinion:

602.279.9925 Phone
602.279.9935 Fax
300 W. Clarendon Avenue
Suite 220
Phoenix, AZ 85013-3422
info@ma-firm.com

Here is Rebecca Gau’s contact information in case you think her opinion is what is “offensive”:

Twitter – @RebeccaGau

602-926-1707
Don’t defend me.  These two are outspoken critics of my boss, Arizona Superintendent of Public Instruction, Diane Douglas.  I am used to criticism and could really care less what these two think.  However, they have essentially called the whole cosplay community a bunch of racy, degenerative sluts in their attempt to discredit me.  Despite my efforts on “cosplay is not consent” and supporting the cosplay community, there are still ignorant people like this who think you soft porn for dressing up like your favorite characters.  If you disagree, please let them know.
Now for the article – I think I have a wider circulation than the Arizona Republic, so I will help them out… 🙂

Racy photos on website of schools chief’s aide draw criticism

The online activity of Superintendent Diane Douglas’ chief of staff is raising questions among officials and influential figures in the education community, who view it as inappropriate given his position at an agency responsible for educating more than a million Arizona K-12 students.

Michael Bradley, who is in charge of day-to-day operations at the Arizona Department of Education, runs a website featuring items of general interest, including pictures of dogs and quirky news items, as well as thousands of photos of scantily clad women in costumes, and sexually suggestive images and humor.

It’s the racy imagery, including an image of one woman touching another woman’s breasts and women eating phallically-shaped foods that has caused concerns.

Bradley, also an author of “PG-13 and R-rated” science-fiction books, defended the images posted at www.mbtimetraveler.com and on a separate social-media site as typical of the popular hobby known as “cosplay,” or costume play where women and men dress as characters inspired by popular culture. He says his website is a “re-post website,” and that most of the content is sent to him by those who want their images shared. He said similar images are also available on social-media sites such as Facebook.

“You see more at a nightclub,” Bradley said of the images on his site. “It’s really harmless.”

Bradley noted that mainstream news sites, including azcentral.com, post photos of women in cosplay. Bradley said Friday that he plans to delete a collection of sexually suggestive photos of women eating food.

Douglas has known about the website and his writings for months, he said.

A Department of Education spokesman said Douglas was returning to the Valley from Yuma on Friday and was not immediately available for comment.

On the website, Bradley identifies himself as a full-time author and public speaker, but makes no mention of his position as the No. 2 official in the state Education Department.

Concern over Bradley’s website has mounted in recent weeks as knowledge of it has spread, reaching the highest levels of state government.

The Governor’s Office did not immediately respond for a request for comment.

Former schools Superintendent Jaime Molera says he supports freedom of speech, but that given his position, Bradley’s online activity crosses a line for parents and teachers.

“If he’s a private guy and this is his genre of writing, that’s his decision, and certainly there’s a whole lot of people who are into that,” Molera said. “At the same time, he’s the chief of staff to the state schools superintendent and there is a standard that they have to portray to the public — particularly schoolkids.”

Rebecca Gau, executive director of Stand for Children and a former gubernatorial education policy adviser, said she learned of the website weeks ago. She said the content is “offensive.”

“There are pictures of women’s breasts, there are pictures of paraphernalia related to women’s breasts, there are comments about women’s breasts,” said Gau. “I take my children’s digital footprint very seriously, I would expect state leaders to do the same thing.

“When you’re paid by taxpayers … there’s a certain expectation that you’re going to conduct yourself at all times in a respectable way.”

Bradley said the criticism stems from disagreement with the policies and politics of Douglas. He said he warned Douglas that her critics might use the website as ammunition against her.

“It’s just enemies looking for a reason to get mad at me,” Bradley told The Arizona Republic. “I don’t think anybody at the Capitol even knew I had a website, so for them to go to it and complain about it, they just disagree with whatever policy … the superintendent has, and so they want to find something to criticize me. I’m a pretty clean-cut person.”

“People will try to destroy me because they hate Diane Douglas,” Bradley said.

Bradley was thrust into the spotlight in February, when he orchestrated the attempted firings of two Board of Education staffers because of their perceived support for the Common Core education standards. The incident led to a standoff between Douglas and Gov. Doug Ducey over who has the authority to hire and fire Department of Education staff.

Bradley launched the website before he began working with Douglas and said he intends to continue operating the site and writing after his employment with the state ends. Bradley said he told Douglas he was an author, and told her about his books, telling her they aren’t available in schools and “I’m not a famous author.” He said his website has had more than 1 million hits, and about 3,000 hits daily.

Bradley, who earns $150,000 a year, said he does not blog during work hours, but schedules some content to automatically appear during the day.

Asked if the website is appropriate, given his position with the state, Bradley said, “I’ve kept my writing life separate.”

One woman featured in costume on his website has been hired as an executive assistant to Douglas, a $40,000-a-year position Bradley describes as “low-level.”

Bradley said he met Cassie O’Quin through the cosplay community. He said they became friendly, and after researching her background he asked if she would be interested in working as Douglas’ executive assistant. Quin’s position is at-will since she reports to Douglas, he said.

Records from the Department of Administration show O’Quin was hired on Dec. 24, shortly before Douglas was sworn into office.

A spokeswoman for the Department of Administration said she is unaware of any state policy pertaining to employees’ personal websites.

Former schools Superintendent John Huppenthal, who blogged under pseudonyms during his time in office, declined to comment on Bradley’s activities, saying he’s now a “private person.”

Political analysts have attributed Huppenthal’s secret blogging, which included remarks that people who receive public assistance are “lazy pigs” and that Spanish-language media should be shut down, as one reason for his loss to Douglas in the 2014 Republican primary election.

Reach the reporter at yvonne.wingett@arizonarepublic.com or 602-444-4712.

Follow on Twitter @yvonnewingett

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And…Here is why I am accused of being racist and anti-handicapped people…

Despite the fact that I myself am a disabled veteran and handicapped with a bone disease where I have fake bones, apparently, one joke makes me hate handicapped people.  This is it:

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That’s right, I laugh at stick figures without arms.  I am a hater.

This next joke I posted is why I am racist.  They have never seen The Walking Dead apparently, and don’t understand the message is that African-Americans are over represented in prison and treated unfairly in the justice system and in movies, where they are often the first to be killed off on screen.  Ok, here it is…

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The reporter sounds nice so I hope they see the ridiculousness in this political attempt to discredit me.  However, papers rarely write stories saying they looked into something and there was no reasonable basis, nor do they research something and simply not print a story.  Here is hoping they show some reason after researching the “offensive” posts.

I have over 1.3 million hits now on this website and nearly 20,000 posts, many of which have many, many jokes and cosplay pictures.  Frankly, this is the best my enemies can come up with?  Probably not.  I have over half a century of living.  I am sure I’ve done something stupid along the line…

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Origins of human alcohol consumption revealed

alcohol1.jpg

File photo (GERMANY-BEER/ REUTERS/Michael Dalder)

Human ancestors may have begun evolving the knack for consuming alcohol about 10 million years ago, long before modern humans began brewing booze, researchers say.

The ability to break down alcohol likely helped human ancestors make the most out of rotting, fermented fruit that fell onto the forest floor, the researchers said. Therefore, knowing when this ability developed could help researchers figure out when these human ancestors began moving to life on the ground, as opposed to mostly in trees, as earlier human ancestors had lived.

“A lot of aspects about the modern human condition everything from back pain to ingesting too much salt, sugar and fat goes back to our evolutionary history,” said lead study author Matthew Carrigan, a paleogeneticist at Santa Fe College in Gainesville, Florida. “We wanted to understand more about the modern human condition with regards to ethanol,” he said, referring to the kind of alcohol found in rotting fruit and that’s also used in liquor and fuel.

To learn more about how human ancestors evolved the ability to break down alcohol, scientists focused on the genes that code for a group of digestive enzymes called the ADH4 family. ADH4 enzymes are found in the stomach, throat and tongue of primates, and are the first alcohol-metabolizing enzymes to encounter ethanol after it is imbibed.

The researchers investigated the ADH4 genes from 28 different mammals, including 17 primates. They collected the sequences of these genes from either genetic databanks or well-preserved tissue samples. [Holiday Drinking: How 8 Common Medications Interact with Alcohol]

The scientists looked at the family trees of these 28 species, to investigate how closely related they were and find out when their ancestors diverged. In total, they explored nearly 70 million years of primate evolution. The scientists then used this knowledge to investigate how the ADH4 genes evolved over time and what the ADH4 genes of their ancestors might have been like.

Then, Carrigan and his colleagues took the genes for ADH4 from these 28 species, as well as the ancestral genes they modeled, and plugged them into bacteria, which read the genes and manufactured the ADH4 enzymes. Next, they tested how well those enzymes broke down ethanol and other alcohols.

This method of using bacteria to read ancestral genes is “a new way to observe changes that happened a long time ago that didn’t fossilize into bones,” Carrigan said.

The results suggested there was a single genetic mutation 10 million years ago that endowed human ancestors with an enhanced ability to break down ethanol. “I remember seeing this huge difference in effects with this mutation and being really surprised,” Carrigan said.

The scientists noted that the timing of this mutation coincided with a shift to a terrestrial lifestyle. The ability to consume ethanol may have helped human ancestors dine on rotting, fermenting fruit that fell on the forest floor when other food was scarce.

“I suspect ethanol was a second-choice item,” Carrigan said. “If the ancestors of humans, chimps and gorillas had a choice between rotten and normal fruit, they would go for the normal fruit. Just because they were adapted to be able to ingest it doesn’t mean ethanol was their first choice, nor that they were perfectly adapted to metabolize it. They might have benefited from small quantities, but not to excessive consumption.”

In people today, drinking in moderation can have benefits, but drinking in excess can definitely cause health problems, experts agree. Scientists have suggested that problems people have with drinking, such as heart disease, liver disease, and mental health problems, result because humans have not evolved genes to sufficiently process ethanol. Similarly, humans have not evolved genes to handle large amounts of sugar, fat and salt, which, in turn, have given way to obesity, diabetes, high blood pressure and many other health problems.

One model for the evolution of alcohol consumption suggests that ethanol only entered the human diet after people began to store extra food, potentially after the advent of agriculture, and that humans subsequently developed ways to intentionally direct the fermentation of food about 9,000 years ago. Therefore, the theory goes, alcoholism as a disease resulted because the human genome has not had enough time to fully adapt to alcohol.

Another model suggests that human ancestors began consuming alcohol as early as 80 million years ago, when early primates occasionally ate rotting fermented fruit rich in ethanol. This model suggests that the attraction to alcohol started becoming a problem once modern humans began intentionally fermenting food because it generated far more ethanol than was normally found in nature. The new findings support this model.

In the future, Carrigan and his colleagues want to investigate what the ethanol content of fallen fruit might be, and find out whether apes, such as chimpanzees or gorillas, are willing to consume fermented fruit with varying levels of ethanol.

“We also want to look at other enzymes involved in alcohol metabolism, to see if they’re co-evolving with ADH4 at the same time,” Carrigan said.

The scientists detailed their findings online Dec. 1 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

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Ten real life legendary weapons…

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Cosplay Pictures for Your Weekend

Cosplay and cosplayers for your viewing enjoyment!

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Cute Dogs for Your Monday Blues

Cute dogs to cheer up the start of your week…

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