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With the advent of Google Instant, the same algorithm used for suggesting search terms Google thinks you might be after, Google has instituted a "blacklist" of terms that will automatically disable instant searching, hoping to prevent tender eyes from seeing things they ought not.

This, in and of itself, is not necessarily a bad idea - and all you have to do is press "Enter" to confirm that yes, you really want to search for "sex with goats on fire". But Google's Blacklist is an interesting beast, sure to offend everyone who is looking for something to be offended about. Either the presence or absence of some words, as well as how some words are handled, will be enough to put most whiners and complainers in high dudgeon.

For example, "are". If you add "are" after the following words, the blacklist kicks in: jews, christians, catholics born-again christians, evangelical christians, atheists, muslims, blacks, italians, mexicans, chinese, japanese, germans, arabs and french. The blacklist does NOT kick in when these words are entered before "are": terrorists, scientologists, agnostics, seventh day adventists, jehovah's witnesses, mormons, protestants, evangelists, pentecostalists, columbians, panamanians, iranians, iraqis, koreans, persians, turks.)

So if you're searching for "Muslims are...", you won't see instant searches because you might see something offensive. "Jews are..." is, of course, totally taboo to say even in progrssive society. Everyone knows that Jews must not be labelled in any way, unless you yourself want to be labelled an anti-Semite. "Mormons are...", however, is fair game. And, for what it's worth, the only thing Google suggests when you do type this in, is "Mormons are weird."

Thanks, Google. Well. Humph. Well! I'm shocked and appalled!

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I read today an insteresting and disturbing article about the evolution of Sesame Street over the last 4 decades, written to coincide with the show's 40th anniversary. According to Katie McLaughlin of CNN, "In the early days of "Sesame Street" -- that is, B.E. (Before Elmo) -- Sesame Street was a pretty grimy place." It was designed that way, in order to reach inner-city kids and bring both facts and a thirst for learning into a milieu that they could relate to.

The Cookie Monster smoked a pipe, which he ate on occasion, along with anything else that he hallucinated looked like a cookie; Oscar was a mean S.O.B., kids rode bicycles without helmets, and kindly neighbors invited little girls into their apartments for milk and cookies.

The only way to re-live the Sesame Street of the 60's is on DVD, where the episodes are preceded by some mealy-mouthed attorney's caveat: "These early 'Sesame Street' episodes are intended for grown-ups, and may not suit the needs of today's preschool child." By Mogg's adamantium claws, that is so disingenuous it makes me want to puke myself.

Miss Katie goes on to say, "For better or worse, today's preschooler is very different from the 1969 version. And children's television programming simply has to reflect that."

Horsehockey.

Today's preschooler is exactly the same as those of 40 years ago, or those in the 1890's, or those in 1492. What has changed is the hypersensitivity of the liberal media to anything that might offend anyone, and the capitulation of society in general to the whims of attorneys hungry for billable hours.

In my day, kids fell off of jungle gyms and out of tree houses regularly, suffered black eyes and broken arms, and nobody got sued. Watch E.T. again, and see how many of the wicked boys in that movie wore helmets as they ripped and tore around the hills on their BMX bikes. Sex education was not a part of the grammar school curriculum, and teen pregnancy rates were a fraction of what they are today. Kids who used bad language or were disrespectful to their elders developed a severe drug problem: they were 'drug' to the woodshed, or 'drug' to the bathroom to have their mouths washed out with soap.

No, it's not the preschoolers who have changed, but the society around them. And if you ask me, having a show as freshly original as Sesame Street (designed for those who needed it most and had access to the very least) "power washed" to conform to the sensibilities of the toffee-nosed elite is a sin, a shame, and a crime.

The Old Wolf has spoken.
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For the longest time I've been fascinated with the concept of acorns for food.

Cooking behind the cut! )

These thoughts brought to you by the humble Acorn.

belch

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