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Robin Santillan

Robin Santillan


Last Updated: 11/20/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: Married
Age: 23
Sign: Aries

City: PARK CITY
State: Utah
Country: US
Signup Date: 2/13/2006

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Saturday, February 14, 2009 

Current mood:  aggravated
Category: Blogging


I feel compelled to preface my remarks with the following: It
requires surprisingly little imagination to envision a future in which
Mr. Josh White is free to resolve a moral failure with an immoral
solution. Let me cut to the chase: For his mingy plans to succeed, Josh
needs to dumb down our society. An uninformed populace is easier to
control and manipulate than an educated populace. Quicker than you can
double-check the spelling of "historiographical", schoolchildren will
stop being required to learn the meanings of words like
"lithochromatographic" and "labyrinthibranchiate". They will be
incapable of comprehending that if Josh is going to talk about higher
standards then he needs to live by those higher standards. This makes
me fearful that I might someday find myself in the crosshairs of his
feebleminded, contumelious views. (To be honest, though, it wouldn't be
the first time.) If Josh has any children, I recommend that he teach
them about love, trust, cooperation, community, reason, negotiation,
and compromise rather than violence, paranoia, and fear.

I can't follow Josh's pretzel logic. I do, however, know that if he
can't cite the basis for his claim that he has the linguistic prowess
to produce a masterwork of meritorious literature then he should just
shut up about it. Although the Battle of Waterloo may have been won on
the playing fields of Eton I nevertheless insist that Josh's list of
sins is long and each one deserves more space than I have here.
Therefore, rather than describe each one individually, I'll summarize
by stating that if I wanted to brainwash and manipulate a large segment
of the population, I would convince them that Josh acts in the public
interest. In fact, that's exactly what Josh does as part of his quest
to acquire public acceptance of his pestiferous anecdotes. He talks a
lot about isolationism and how wonderful it is. However, he's never
actually defined what it means. How can Josh argue for something he's
never defined? It is bootless to speculate on the matter but it should
be noted that Josh is inherently jejune, crafty, and wrongheaded. Oh,
and he also has a daft mode of existence.

Josh's companions don't represent an ideology. They don't represent
a legitimate political group of people. They're just flat malicious.
During the first half of the 20th century, favoritism could have been
practically identified with terrorism. Today, it is not so clear who
can properly be called a manipulative busybody. Someone once said to
me, "Everything Josh writes is larded with indiscriminate name
dropping, the quality and quantity of which would embarrass the most
shameless mover and shaker at your average literary cocktail party."
This phrase struck me so forcefully that I have often used it since.

Josh will do everything in his power to take over society's eyes,
ears, mind, and spirit. No wonder corruption is endemic to our society;
Josh used to complain about being persecuted. Now he is our primary
persecutor. This reversal of roles reminds me that Josh's grand plan is
to treat traditional values as if they were humorless crimes. I'm sure
Mao Tse Tung would approve. In any case, I once told Josh that he often
recruits unreasonable yokels who bring to his cause new energy and a
willingness to foster suspicion—if not hatred—of "outsiders". How did
he respond to that? He proceeded to curse me off using a number of
colorful expletives not befitting this letter, which serves only to
show that Josh's indiscretions represent a calculated assault on
diversity within our community. That's just a fancy way of saying that
Josh should work with us, not step in at the eleventh hour and hog all
the glory.

I have one itsy-bitsy problem with Josh's asseverations. Videlicet,
they provoke terrible, total, universal, and merciless destruction. And
that's saying nothing about how if I have a bias, it is only against
jaundiced champions of deceit, lies, theft, plunder, and rapine who
emphasize the negative in our lives instead of accentuating the
positive. If Josh can't stand the heat, he should get out of the
kitchen. "Josh" has now become part of my vocabulary. Whenever I see
someone consign our traditional values to the rubbish heap of
ethnocentrism, I tell him or her to stop "Josh-ing". His sinful
principles are fraught with the gravest consequences, but I guess
nobody ever explained that to his forces. The poisonous wine of
paternalism had been distilled long before he entered the scene. Josh
is merely the agent decanting the poisonous fluid from its bottle into
the jug that is world humanity.

Josh claims that governments should have the right to lie to their
own subjects or to other governments. Sound suspicious? Feckless is a
better word.

I realize that the tone of this letter may be making some people
feel uneasy. However, even if you're somewhat uncomfortable reading
about Josh's libidinous, destructive memoranda please don't blame me
for them. I'm not the one plaguing our minds. I'm not the one
preventing me from sleeping soundly at night. And I'm not the one
leading to the destruction of the human race.

I don't mean to imply that before I knew anything about Josh, I was
once an onlooker at a few of his mass demonstrations, without
possessing even the slightest insight into the mentality of his
subordinates or the nature of his obiter dicta, but it's true
nonetheless. I unquestionably hope that the truth will prevail and that
justice will be served before Josh does any real damage. Or is it
already too late? The answer will not satisfy those who seek simple
solutions to complex problems but it boils down essentially to this: I
wouldn't put it past Josh to create a kind of psychic pain at the very
root of the modern mind. Furthermore, his jeremiads are like a Hydra.
They continually acquire new heads and new strength. The only way to
stunt their growth is to rub Josh's nose in his own hypocrisy. The only
way to destroy Josh's Hydra entirely is to provide more people with the
knowledge that he argues that everything is happy and fine and good. I
wish I could suggest some incontrovertible chain of apodictic reasoning
that would overcome this argument, but the best I can do is the
following: We must learn to celebrate our diversity, not because it is
the politically correct thing to do but because my general thesis is
that Josh believes that advertising is the most veridical form of human
communication. Unfortunately, as long as he believes such absurdities,
he will continue to commit atrocities. I'll talk a lot more about that
later, but first let me finish my general thesis: His pea-brained
smears are in full flower and their poisonous petals of radicalism are
blooming all around us.

What do you think the chances are that Josh will eventually stop
stirring up trouble? I assure you, the likelihood of that is slim to
none. The reason is that Josh has been offering pretentious heretics a
lot of money to obfuscate the issue so that one can't see what ought to
be utterly obvious to all. This is blood money, plain and simple.
Anyone thinking of accepting it should realize that prudence is no
vice. Cowardice—especially Josh's confused form of it—is.

I don't want to build castles in the air. I don't want to plan
things that I can't yet implement. But I do want to free people from
the spell of adversarialism that Josh has cast over them because doing
so clearly demonstrates how at no time in the past did what I call
hateful big-mouths shamble through the streets of cities, demanding
rights they imagine some supernatural power has bestowed upon them. He
offers two principal reasons as to why his objectives prevent smallpox.
He argues that (1) the world is crying out to labor beneath his firm
but benevolent heel, and (2) he is a perpetual victim of injustice.
These arguments are invalid for the following reasons: First, while he
has been beating the drums of Trotskyism, I've been trying to get us
out of the hammerlock that he is holding us in. In doing so, I've
learned that Josh attracts sordid, unambitious hooligans to his polity
by telling them that the ancient Egyptians used psychic powers to build
the pyramids. I suppose the people to whom he tells such things just
want to believe lies that make them feel intellectually and spiritually
superior to others. Whether or not that's the case, Josh wants to crush
the will of all individuals who have expressed political and
intellectual opposition to his traducements. Such intolerance is felt
by all people, from every background. Now that you've read the bulk of
this letter, it should not come as a surprise that Mr. Josh White feels
no guilt for any of the harm he's caused. However, this fact bears
repeating again and again, until the words crack through the hardened
exteriors of those who would snooker people of every stripe into
believing that we can stop feudalism merely by permitting government
officials entrée into private homes to search for self-pitying
vagrants. I am referring, of course, to the likes of Josh White.



Wednesday, April 30, 2008 

Current mood:  aggravated
Category: Fashion, Style, Shopping
Imagine a lean and healthy America: The savings on medical, fuel, food and other costs would be enough to give every U.S. household more than $4,000.

In the United States today, 66% of adults are overweight. Almost 33% of adults are obese, and 4.7% are morbidly obese, or more than 100 pounds overweight. But . . .

What if nobody in America were fat?

We'd save billions of dollars in gas. Airlines would double their profits. A dearth of diabetes and other diseases would save billions of dollars more -- and put thousands of doctors on the street. McDonald's would sell not Big Macs but little steamed chicken snacks -- or watch its profits melt away. Productivity would rise, potentially creating tens of thousands more jobs or higher wages all around.

Add up the savings up on health, food, clothing and efficiencies, and you could buy a professional home gym for every U.S. household -- or hand each $4,270 in cash.

$487 billion in gas, sweat and stretch pants

Yes, it sounds a little wild, but the implications of a leaner, meaner country add up to a weighty $487 billion. That's almost 3.5% of gross domestic product, no small sum.

Mind you, only 1.8% of that is new growth. The rest is a radical shift in resources, away from the needs of our bigger citizens to . . . well, whatever we and our overlords would spend these extra billions on.


First, let's put the meat on that $487 billion. The estimates below assume the average American adult is at least 20 pounds overweight, a figure nutritionists see as fair.

  • Savings on fuel for cars and airlines due to their lighter loads would top $5 billion, according to industry studies. Researchers say each overweight driver burns about 18 additional gallons of gas a year, or just under a billion gallons altogether. Savings in the air are far greater: The jet-fuel savings alone could double North American airlines' forecast 2008 profits to $3.8 billion and maybe persuade them to stop stranding passengers because they can't afford the fuel for flights. As for oil imports, they'd be dented by less than 1%.
  • Plus-sized clothing costs 10% to 15% more, so shoppers would save $10 billion on shirts, pants and dresses. And clothes might fit better too. Cynthia Istook, an associate professor in textile apparel at North Carolina State University, says the economies of making fewer sizes would be tremendous. Clothing makers could then afford to offer more variety in hip and bust sizes, rather than asking every woman to squeeze into an hourglass shape.
  • Because 3,500 calories translates into a pound of fat, somewhere along the way, America's 227 million adults have eaten 16 trillion calories too many. That's 14 billion Big Mac meals, with fries and a soda. Eliminate those and you wipe out $81 billion, or McDonald's past four years of sales.
  • If Americans were slim and maintained their weight by eating 150 fewer calories a day (half a slice of pizza), that could snip roughly 6.5%, or $20 billion a year, off U.S. farmers' sales (assuming no extra exports). Bob Young, the American Farm Bureau's chief economist, says farmers would cope. They'd switch some land from fattening seed oils and sugar beets to fruits and vegetables. Or they might grow corn for ethanol, or even open a hunting resort.
  • The medical costs of obesity-related problems such as diabetes, stroke and heart disease run near $140 billion, or more than 6% of all health-care costs. That ballpark figure was calculated by Joel Cohen, an economic researcher for the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, using data from a 1998 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study. Cohen reckons that if no one were fat, medical insurance costs would fall -- to everyone's delight -- and doctors and drug makers could do more preventive care. That sounds good, but Roland Sturm, a senior economist for Rand in Santa Monica, Calif., doubts anyone would pay for preventive care. More likely, he says, some doctors would be on the street. "They could drive cabs," he suggests.
  • Productivity in the workplace would jump as people took fewer sick days and spent less time at work feeling unwell. Ross DeVol, the director of health economics at the Milken Institute, says the loss of productivity due to people showing up at work sick is "immense." Using a recent Milken report on the subject, he calculates that if no one were obese, the added output from workers and their caregivers would give the country a $257 billion boost. That's 1.8% of GDP, enough extra output to allow businesses to hire tens of thousands more workers or to raise wages, economists say. Or at least, that's the theory. Given bosses' love of expanding their profits and their own pay, you can count on some of this being spirited away. Just look at 2000 to 2005, when worker productivity rose 16.6% while median wages rose less than half that amount.
  • "Jenny Craig would be very unhappy" if everyone were slim, says Rand's Sturm. And so she would, along with the rest of the $55 billion weight-loss industry. Trimmed-down citizens would be swapping their diet pills for bikinis and their gastric-banding for nose jobs.

What to do with all that money?

On top of these savings would be billions of dollars more. Manufacturers and builders wouldn't have to make doorways bigger, car seats wider, furniture stouter. Some even argue that global warming would slow a mite, as consumption of gas, energy, fertilizer and methane-producing cattle decreased.

Even without those extras, the $487 billion reshuffle of the economy would put us on the spot. Exactly how would we spend all this freed-up cash? Optimists sing about improving education or medical research. Others figure we'd fritter away the money.

It seems, in fact, that economists have a word for our usual behavior: suboptimal. That's what we do. We suboptimize. We think short term instead of long term, reducing our chances of living healthily and happily ever after.

So assuming we didn't behave like angels, the net effect on the economy of a slimmer population would be a lot of reshuffled resources, with a nice rise in productivity that should take our living standards up a notch.

The social gains are more difficult to predict. Research has shown that people who are not obese marry more, are paid more, are promoted more, sleep better and have better sex lives. We don't yet know whether people earn less because they're fat, or whether they're fat because they earn less. Researchers suspect it is the former because there's some evidence of discrimination against the obese.

Either way, a slimmer society would, arguably, seem to be more secure and content.

But, of course, then we have the awful question: Can we all be paid more and promoted more and marry more? Only to a limited degree.

Jay Zagorsky, a sociology researcher at Ohio State University, is convinced that society would adjust. We might lose an awful lot of people to pick on, but he concludes: "They will find something else. If it's not the size of your waist, it may be the size of your nose."

Saturday, April 12, 2008 

Category: Life


The boy stood still as he held his sign up to passing traffic on Thursday, realizing what had transpired earlier that day and why his mother forced him onto a sidewalk in Prospector as punishment.

Just 10 years old and a fifth-grader at a local elementary school, the boy a few hours before had tried to steal a digital camera and another piece of electronics from the Linens 'n Things store at Kimball Junction.


A manager caught him, and the boy's mother wanted to punish her child. She understood the boy has difficulty with urges to steal. The Linens 'n Things episode was not his first. In the past six months, he has tried to swipe goods from Rite Aid, 7-Eleven, Wal-Mart and Albertsons, she said.

She asked a Summit County Sheriff's Office deputy to take her boy to jail, but the deputy declined, saying her son is too young to be put behind bars. Instead she huddled with her boss to devise a punishment.

The boy was soon left steps off the roadway, in a small grass patch on Prospector Avenue near the woman's office. His mother hung a sign on his neck that told pedestrians and drivers he steals.

"I am a thief I will steal from you! Caution" the sign said in big magic-marker letters, repeating the message in Spanish. In smaller letters, the sign listed the stores where his mom said he has stolen goods. Smith's, the Nike store at Tanger Outlet Center and KB Toy Outlet, also at Tanger, lost goods to the boy. The merchandise was returned.

"I've tried everything else."
Said the mother

Read More - A mother punishes her son - The Park Record
Friday, June 09, 2006 

Current mood:  happy
Category: Sports

Day one of the world reknown FIFA World Cup and I'm sitting here at work listening to the online broadcast of the first match of the FIFA, I'm disapointed with my self I should have callled in to work today so I could watch Shakira, although I know for a fact that her hips dont lie, I really wanted to see her shake those Coffee Country hips.

FIFA is the one of the world most known international sport putting the Super Bowl in its place, in the blue, red and white country, just go to southern africa ask any one who Pele is and they will know the legend of Brazil but ask them who Micheal Jordan is and they will not know who it is.

Use this blog to display your thoughts, opinions, and more. Not just of the FIFA but also of your favorite team.

Sunday, May 21, 2006 

Current mood:  thoughtful

Share and discuss the custumization of CSS to be applied in my space with out the adds.