And then came the locusts: the NWS says that almost every river in the region will flood, and four will do so “mightily.” Republican homophobes all around say, “I told you so.”
Round two: Amanda Knox’s appeal trial opened in Italy yesterday.
Can’t stop this! nuh nuh nuh nuh: state lawmakers go on a grim roll for a few hours, cutting millions of dollars from the state budget and provoking little to no protest in Olympia.
The crooks you love: Self-declared “swindlers, liars, and cheats” Penn and Teller are giving their third and last show at the Paramount tomorrow. Don’t go if you still believe in the tooth fairy.
Derivatives, and the Jabberwocky: The NYT publishes long exposรฉ on the highly secretive committee of former bankers that regulates derivatives trading. No promises that you’ll understand what a “derivative” is by the end of it, or ever.
“An indispensable force for good”: new docs show that the US recruited way more Nazi collaborators than had been known, and pardoned many of them. They helped, for example, Klaus Barbie get to Bolivia. … Don’t tell Palin.
All aboard?: A flawed text (there’s no mechanism for compelling carbon output decreases. *Slams head on keyboard*) is approved, one-by-one, by everyone except Bolivia, whose refusal is met by, “Remove that coca-leaf from your mouth, sir, and say again?”
Assange in Isolation: WikiLeaks leading man Julian Assange has been moved to an isolation unit of Wandsworth prison in London. Methinks everyone wanted to sleep with him for being so awesome.

Re: Assange in Wandsworth. I have heard a rumor he’s in the cell Oscar Wilde once occupied. If this is true, I bet this is a tidbit your reader demographic would relish.
The New York Times is running articles on “secret banking groups” organizing conspiracies. Ron Paul is now in charge of overseeing the Fed in Congress. What were you saying about Baggers being right….?
@1:
Unfortunetly, mos’ Stranger readers don’t even know who Oscar Wilde was.
@3, I know who Oscar Wilde was, and Picture of Dorian Gray was a great little book. As was his satirical criticism of Victorian/Edwardian England
@3 What makes you think that?
You think Palin would get publicly angry over this? It runs contrary to American exceptionalism, she’d never bring it up.
@3, of course we know who Kim Wilde is. “Kids in America” was a prophetic masterpiece. I didn’t know she was jailed in England though.
Re: Assange. Presumably, this will leave fewer witnesses for when the inevitable “accident” occurs.
@3:
And of course we know who Oscar Wilde was – he was the slobby sports writer in Neil Simon’s “The Odd Couple”…
@3,
He’s that green muppet that lives in the trash can, right?
They’ll just break Assange like the MI5 broke David Shayler.
@10, if by “breaking” you mean asking the occasional polite question in the presence of his very good lawyer with recording devices running, then I’m sure you’re right.