Thursday, September 29, 2005

Ahh.. FedEx

SAN FRANCISCO, California (AP) -- A federal judge has certified a class action lawsuit alleging that FedEx Corp. discriminated against minority workers.
The suit was filed in 2003 by eight current and former employees. It seeks millions of dollars in damages and an end to the company's alleged discriminatory practices.
The class action case, certified Wednesday, includes an estimated 10,000 current and former hourly workers and about 1,000 low-level management employees in Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming and parts of Texas.
The suit contends the delivery service paid thousands of current and former minority employees less than their white counterparts, passed over them for promotions and gave minorities poor work evaluations.
James Finberg, an attorney representing the class, said FedEx normally promotes from within, yet three times the number of package handlers and loaders are minorities compared to drivers, who earn more. Twice the number of minorities fail promotional tests than do whites, Finberg added.
"FedEx knows that black and Hispanics fail at a much higher rate, but yet has not changed the test," Finberg said.
Jim McCluskey, a FedEx spokesman, said the Memphis, Tennessee-based company was considering appealing the ruling.
"We are confident that when the merits of the case are considered, it will be shown that the plaintiffs were not treated differently because of their race or ethnicity," McCluskey said.
In court documents, FedEx contended that promotions were based on "objective" factors, not race, that include time of service, passing a basic skills test, previous performance evaluations and whether the employee has been disciplined.
FedEx's statistical analysis shows that minorities receive higher evaluations on average than whites in many job categories, and showed that minorities received higher wages than whites in many jobs.
U.S. District Judge Susan Illston said it would be up to a jury to decide. No trial date has been set.


Hrm... Why are the blacks and hispanics failing that test at a much higher rate? Could it be that maybe they didn't go to school to learn basic math??! How is that racist? Why should FedEx have to cater to a minority because they are more likely to fail?

Now, I worked at FedEx and I think I know what test they are talking about. I took it and Aced it. The questions were not hard. They just ask simple math, reading comprehension and ask questions about proper lifting techniques.

As much as I dislike the FedEx company, I hope this gets thrown out of court. It's totally bullshit. I think people just want to play the freaking race card everytime they fail.

Wednesday, September 28, 2005

My Feelings

I just wish to talk about my feelings here for one minute. Now, I know I'm a guy and I'm not supposed have them or I'm supposed to be all tough, but truthfully, I am not. I have feelings just like any woman. All guys do have feelings, but some just choose not to keep in touch with them for whatever reason.

I do however, hide them unintentionally at times. I think the reason I do that is to guard myself. I'm usually really open about my feelings, but usually it's only if I feel the other person has similar feelings as me. Like say for instance, I meet this girl and we talk, get to know eachother and I feel she is a really great person. I tell her I have an interest in her and would love to go on a date, but she says she doesn't like me like that. I will always hide my feelings from then on out towards that girl. I guess it's a protection thing.

If you are curious how I really feel, you also need to be very open with me. I need to feel safe in order to express myself. Usually if a girl thinks I like them, I usually do. If I express a lot of interest in them, you're damn straight I like them.

I dunno, I just thought I'd put that out there for a certain someone.

I Love this Comic

Republicans are not this retarded, or are they?

Dear MoveOn member,

Last week, congressional Republicans responded to Hurricane Katrina by proposing to cut nearly a trillion dollars from vital national services, like health care for the poor and elderly, student loans, Amtrak, and eliminating the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (again!).1 Republican leaders in Congress are now gauging the public's response to see if they can get away with their plan. We need to show them the answer is "no."

The cost of rebuilding the Gulf Coast, while huge, is far less than what President Bush has given away in tax cuts to the wealthiest one percent.2 National crises like Hurricanes Rita and Katrina are times for all Americans to stick together and put in our fair share.

So today we're launching an urgent petition to Congress to fully rebuild the Gulf Coast and pay for it by ending Bush's tax cuts for the very wealthy, not by slashing vital services that Americans need. If we can gather a quarter million signatures this week, we can show them that this destructive plan just won't fly.

Please sign today:

Sign here.

The Republican proposal, titled "Operation Offset," was authored by the Republican Study Committee, a group of over 100 influential members of Congress, including powerful committee chairs and members of the Republican leadership.3 The proposal starts with support from at least these 100 representatives, and they are looking to quickly build momentum.

A full reconstruction of the Gulf Coast region is generally estimated to cost around $200 billion.4 We could more than meet this cost by rolling back Bush's 2001 and 2003 tax cuts for just the wealthiest one percent of the country, which would save us an estimated $327 billion.5

"Operation Offset," however, calls for an astounding $949 billion dollars in cuts over 10 years to vital national services.6—almost five times the full cost of reconstruction. To further put that in perspective, it's also more than 4 times what we've spent in Iraq.7

This plan is not about "offsetting," or rebuilding—it's about exploiting this crisis to push their longstanding goals for America. As conservative movement leader Grover Norquist has often put it, the goal is to get government "down to the size where we can drown it in the bathtub."8 This proposal is their latest attempt to drown the public sector.

The excess of the Republicans' proposed cuts is almost unbelievable. You can read the full proposal here:

Operation Offset.

Here are just some of the most egregious cuts:

$225 billion cut from Medicaid, the last-resort health insurance program for the very poor.
$200 billion cut from Medicare, the health care safety net for the elderly and the disabled.
$25 billion cut from the Centers for Disease Control
$6.7 billion cut from school lunches for poor children
$7.5 billion cut from programs to fight global AIDS
$5.5 billion to eliminate all funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting
$3.6 billion cut to eliminate the National Endowments for the Arts and Humanities
$8.5 billion cut to eliminate all subsidized loans to graduate students.
$2.5 billion cut from Amtrak
$2.5 billion to eliminate the Hydrogen Fuel Initiative
$417 million cut to eliminate the Minority Business Development Agency
$4.8 billion cut to eliminate all funding for the Safe and Drug-Free schools program
And the list goes on and on.

Which and how many of these cuts move forward in Congress depends largely on the public response this week.

As the reconstruction begins our country faces a basic question: Will we respond to Katrina by banding together to solve national problems, or by helping the wealthy and powerful cut and run while those left behind fend for ourselves?

The radical Republicans have spoken up loud and clear with their answer, and we must respond with ours.

Thanks for all that you do.

–Ben, Tanya, Matt, Justin and the MoveOn.org Political Action Team
Monday, November 26, 2005


1 "Lawmakers Prepare Plans to Finance Storm Relief," The New York Times, September 20th 2005
The New York Times, September 20th 2005.

Note: the $500 billion referred to this article only covers section 1 in "Operation Offset". The
full proposal has six sections and calls for total cuts of $949,674,000,000 over 10 years.
See the full proposal here: Click here.

2 Center for American Progress

3 The Republican Study Committee

Some examples of prominent RSC members include:

RSC Founder Rep. John Doolittle (AZ), Republican Conference Secretary

Rep. Eric Cantor (VA) Chief Deputy Majority Whip

Rep. Richard Pombo (CA), Chair, House Committee on Resources

Rep. Joe Barton (TX), Chair, House Committee on Energy and Commerce

4 "How to spend (almost $1 billion a day)" Time Magazine, September 26th, 2005

5 Center for American Progress

6 Operation Offset, RSC Budget Options 2005

7 Based on a $196 billion dollar cost for the Iraq war to date.
National Priorities Project
http://costofwar.com/

8 "Grover Norquist: 'Field Marshal' of the Bush Plan", The Nation, May 14th 2001

PAID FOR BY MOVEON.ORG POLITICAL ACTION
Not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee

Tuesday, September 27, 2005

Nice Name



You might need to clicky on this one to see the name, but I kid you not, this storm is named Typhoon Longwang. Who the hell named this storm? Hopefully it doesn't "shoot the gap" between China and North Korea :p. I hope there are no boats in its path. I'd hate for it to spill a lot of seamen.

Saturday, September 24, 2005

Some pics I took


Busted!


Three Mile Island


The reminents of Hurricane Katrina as she came through Pennsylvania


Just a really cool spider pic I accidently took.

Tuesday, September 20, 2005

Hurricane Rita










Rita just made hurricane status. She is now a minimal Cat. 1 hurricane and is effecting the Florida Keys. It's not expected to do an major damage to the Keys, so they are in the clear, but lets watch and see where she goes.

Monday, September 19, 2005

With Love, Anything is Possible

Saturday, September 17, 2005

Evolution Smevolution

I just watched all these The Daily Show episodes on evolution. All I can say is they are hilarious and I urge anyone with an obscene amount of free time to watch them. You might even learn something.

9/12
9/13
9/14 Part 1
9/14 Part 2
9/15

Wednesday, September 14, 2005

Work

Well, last night I was looking at my bank statement and I seriously need to get a job now, so I think I am going to go apply at some fast food restuarants. I always told myself I would never go back to working crappy jobs like that, but I need money.

God, I didn't think I'd ever have to sink this low in my job searching efforts, but alas, I'm 27 years old and I'm going to be applying at freaking Mcdonalds. If that isn't a freaking blow to my self esteem, I don't know what is.

I applied at a temp service, but I haven't heard anything back from them regarding work. I've filled out countless applications and sent tons of resumes out and not many have been interested.

I had that one "job" the other week , but that didn't work out. It was a job selling air filters to people in their homes. I went to training and such and was all excited about starting something new for myself. Then the last day of training I'm told I need to find 10 non renters, non single people to sell this crap to in order to pass my training. Also, on top of that, I only had about 4 hours to do this. I'm like you gotta be freaking kidding me. I did some calling around to some family and a few friends. I mostly got answering machines since it was fair week and everyone was out enjoying the cows or whatever else is at the fair. When it was all said and done, I had 2 appointments that I had to cancel since I didnt get my 10. If I would have had a little more time and not so many freaking "rules", I probably would have gotten my 10. I should have been able to show it to singles and renters since it was TRAINING to get you used to showing the stupid air cleaner to people.

Sorry for the rant, but I just had to vent a little bit here. I'm just a little upset atm, so I'm taking it out on whomever reads this :p.

Tuesday, September 13, 2005

Scarey!



Ok there are 3 things that freak me out about this picture.

1) It looks painful
2) Is that a girl or a guy?
3) It looks like It lol

Friday, September 09, 2005

Some pics



You got that right. :p



I don't know why, but this picture just cracks me up lol.

Sunday, September 04, 2005

Some Hurricane Humor





FEMA's "advanced" training simulation.