The Vatican is set to release it’s gay-bashing tome in a few weeks. It will declare (among other things) that for a man to be ordained as a Priest, he can not be gay.
Here’s my question. If Priest’s are supposed to be celibate, then why does it matter who they are not having sex with?
Here are a few assumptions on my part.
I’m assuming that gay men have a lot of sex. Especially gay men living as a couple. Being that they are men and we all know the sex drive men have. Maybe everyday?
Conversely, does that mean Lesbians couples only have sex three, maybe four times a year?
My mind just kinda wanders as I drive to work.
The folks over at Adaptive Path have invited me into their private alpha testing of Measure Map. The setup was extremely easy. They have prepared specific walkthroughs for several different blogging platforms complete with screenshots that are clear and concise. I had my WordPress blog setup in less than five minutes.
It seems that Measure Map is currently focused on providing stats which are important to bloggers, but their proposed feature list will certainly include more and more robust (read: enterprise) type statistics. RSS feed management is coming soon and as it is an alpha, there are sure to be tons more features.
I only spent about 15 minutes with the app, so these are just initial impressions, but like most everything from Adaptive Path, it looks great. It seems to be fast right now; scaling will be something to keep our eyes on. I have not personally used Mint, but I can certainly say that setup is much easier with Measure Map mostly because it’s a hosted app and not something running on your own server.
I hope to post more insight both here and to the Measure Map folks after Thanksgiving. Heading to the folks for a few days and won’t be online, but I like what I see so far.
Verena Vlajo, 24, from Austriais the first-ever woman to participate in the World Cyber Games competition. Asked if she has any strategy for gaining an edge over other gamers, she replied, “distraction.”

OK, I think I get it now. All this talk of Intelligent Design and it has finally sunk in.
There are some gaps in the fossil record, and evolution doesn’t answer every conceivable question regarding how we got here, so that means there must be a designer (implying God) that made it all happen. OK, got it.
What’s brilliant about Intelligent Design is that it solves so many other theories also.
Like the Theory of Gravity.
Yes, gravity is a theory just like evolution. Gravity was described in the General Theory of Relativity by that one guy… the guy with the funny hair. Einstein. (I’m also glad to see his brothers made something of themselves, too.)
A theory describes a scientific principle that can be repeated in testing, yet may still not be completely understood. With the case of gravity, that’s very true.
Gravity is a very powerful force. Heck, it’s got to hold the moon in place. But in the world of the small, like atoms, gravity is very weak. But it doesn’t make sense then that a black hole seems to be very strong, and very small. See, that’s why it’s a theory.
Intelligent Design fixes the problem! And I think that it needs to be put into school text books right away. Teachers should read a statement whenever they talk about gravity telling students that it is “just a theory and not the only solution.”
Here it is: at the center of our planet is an intelligent, supernatural designer pulling everything toward it.
Theory solved.
My wife doesn’t understand my cactus hobby. Frankly, 14 cacti later and neither did I. Then I realized, I’m just like a cactus.
A prick on the outside, soft and moist on the inside.