Will CVS Ever Pull Expired Medicine, Baby Formula From Their Shelves?

According to Consumerist:

CVS stores across the nation regularly stock expired medicine, milk, and baby formula, according to a damning union report. This isn’t the first time CVS has been caught stocking dangerous goods. Last year, New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo threatened a suit after his office caught the pharmacy selling goods over a year past their expiration dates. CVS claims that, despite investing over $160 million in a “perpetual inventory management” system, it’s nearly impossible to keep expired items off the shelf because they simply have too much stuff.

A CVS store is opening near me very soon. It will be interesting if I find expired products in the brand new store.

“The Consumerist is published by Consumer Media LLC, a not-for-profit subsidiary of Consumers Union, and takes no outside advertising.” In other words, it’s from the same people who publish Consumer Reports, only decidedly less stuffy.

Best spam line of the day

From among the many, many comments you don’t see — some 10,000 in three years:

“it is interesting that while everybody else is discussing the financial crisis you are taliking about it. Very well done.”

This comment was attached to the post about the three-year-old.

Sam the Author

The General, JC Christian, reviews Joe The Plumber, the book:

Last year, the “average American” elected an Harvard educated constitutional law professor to the presidency. Average conservatives knew better. They rallied behind Joe the Plumber and Sarah Palin, people like ourselves; people I proudly call “mediocre Americans.”

And that’s why Joe is still so immensely popular. He’s angry, vicious, ignorant, and intellectually incurious. He’s one of us, and like us, he didn’t learn about public policy and international relations at a university or from books or journals; he learned everything he needed to know by tuning into Rush, Hannity, Savage, and Ingraham.

This is a great book, one every true conservative should buy, and more importantly, read. Yes, I know that sounds like a tall order …

Several of the other reviews are fun, too.

Thanks to Jill for the tip.

Another best New Mexico line of the day

“[Monday] Noon-5 p.m. Live music, dance, artists, lowriders, readings and book signings, Chautauqua performers, and more (museum and Plaza). Throughout the Plaza, characters from the past, dressed in period costumes, will appear and tell their stories.”

Santa Fe New Mexican

Lowriders and book signings. Is this a great place to live, or what?

[This weekend is the opening of the New Mexico History Museum in Santa Fe (behind the Palace of the Governors).]

Ice vs. Maverick

Near the end of a third-quarter timeout, the camera caught Val Kilmer and three of his chins on the JumboTron, punctuating the moment by playing “Danger Zone” by Kenny Loggins. You know, a “Top Gun” homage. He took a second or two to get the joke, then unleashed one of those “Very funny, you got me, just know that I’m on a lot of meds right now” smiles. And this would have been enjoyable on its own, but they cut to someone else in the stands. …

That’s right. …

Tom Cruise!

He caught on a little quicker and did the Tom Cruise Over-Laugh. And this would have been great on its own, but the Lakers pushed it to another level: They went split-screen with Kilmer and Cruise with “Danger Zone” still blasting. As far as I was concerned, this was the most emotional reunion in Lakers history.

Bill Simmons has more.

And there is some great Kobe and LeBron analysis down the page.

Heroes, all

Flags will be flown at half-staff through the Memorial Day weekend in honor of Navajo Code Talker John Brown Jr. of Crystal, N.M., who died Wednesday at the age of 87.

Brown received the Congressional Gold Medal in 2001. …

He was one of the original 29 Navajo Code Talkers with the U.S. Marine Corps and “endured the horrors of combat in the Pacific Theater battles on the islands of Tarawa, Saipan, Tinian and Guadalcanal,” said a proclamation by Navajo Nation President Joe Shirley Jr.

Brown was born on Dec. 24, 1921 to Nonabah Bia Begay and Little Policeman (the late John Brown Sr.) in Chinle, Ariz., near Canyon De Chelly.

Santa Fe New Mexican

May 22nd

Today is the birthday of two important and influential American writers, Peter Matthiessen (82) and Garry Wills (75).

[Matthiessen’s] father was a successful architect, and Matthiessen grew up in an affluent area of southwest Connecticut. He served in the Navy during World War II, studied at Yale, and then traveled to Paris, where he and two other young writers, Harold Humes and George Plimpton, decided to start a literary journal called The Paris Review.

After publishing two novels that weren’t very successful, Matthiessen took off on a trip across the United States in his Ford convertible, with a shotgun and a sleeping bag, looking for places where certain American animals were dying out: the bear, the wolf, the crane. His journey became the subject of his book Wildlife In America (1959), which was one of the books that helped launch the modern environmentalist movement in the United States. Matthiessen has continued to write books about nature, such as The Snow Leopard (1978).

The Writer’s Almanac with Garrison Keillor (2007)

[Wills] grew up in a conservative Roman Catholic family. He said, “[I was raised as] a Catholic cold warrior, praying after Mass every day for the conversion of Russia.” His father was an appliance salesman who believed that reading was a waste of time, and he used to pay Wills not to read.

Wills couldn’t stop reading, though. He got a job writing for the conservative National Review, but during the 1960s, he started traveling around the country, writing about protests and race riots. He began to argue against the Vietnam War and for federal support of civil rights. He continued to call himself a conservative, but other conservatives didn’t think so.

His first important book was Nixon Agonistes (1970), about Nixon’s 1968 campaign for the presidency. Since then he has written dozens of books, about religion, Shakespeare, the Kennedys, the Declaration of Independence, Ronald Reagan, John Wayne, The Gettysburg Address, and the papacy.

The Writer’s Almanac with Garrison Keillor (2008)

Arthur Conan Doyle was born 150 years ago today. A physician, Doyle modeled Shelock Holmes after a professor he knew in medical school. There are 56 stories and four novels featuring the famous detective.

Mary Cassatt

Mary Cassatt was born on May 22nd in 1844.

Mary Cassatt Mary Cassatt

Mary Cassatt (1844-1926) was a unique artist because she was a woman who succeeded in what was in the nineteenth century a predominantly male profession, because she was the only American invited to exhibit with a group of independent artists later known as the Impressionists, and because she responded in a very distinctive way to their mandate to portray modern life.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Click images for larger version and to learn more.

A lawsuit to relish

It seems Sara Lee is red hot at Kraft. Sara Lee makes Ball Park franks; Kraft owns Oscar Mayer.

According to the Chicago Tribune here’s the beef:

The Sara Lee suit, filed in U.S. District Court in Chicago, says the ad is false and misleading because in large type it implies one Oscar Mayer dog bested the taste of all Ball Park dogs. But the footnote, “in very small type,” says that Oscar Mayer compared its hot dogs to “the leading beef franks” of its main rivals.

The suit also claims Oscar Mayer’s contention that its Jumbo Beef franks are “100 percent pure beef” is false because they contain a host of other ingredients. Sara Lee says Oscar Mayer has rejected requests to drop its 100 percent pure beef claims.

The case law that applies may have been written by Justice Felix Frankfurter.

With apologies to official oldest child Ken.

Smackdown in the Senate

American Heritage has an essay on the assault on Senator Charles Sumner by Representative Preston Brooks 153 years ago today. The essay details the events leading up to the attack — an inflammatory speech by Sumner — and the aftermath. Here’s what they say about the acutal assault:

Brooks avoided the potential difficulty of a fair fight by entering the Senate chamber after that body had adjourned. He waited chivalrously for all the ladies to leave, then approached Sumner’s desk, where the senator was franking copies of his speech to be sent to supporters. Brooks spoke a few words explaining his presence, then began whacking Sumner over the head with his cane. When the senator raised his hands, Brooks became excited and, he recalled, felt “compelled to strike him harder” than he had intended.

Sumner managed to get up and stagger down the aisle, pursued by Brooks, as a pair of congressmen tried to separate the two men and several others argued over whether to get involved. Sen. Stephen Douglas, who had been another target of Sumner’s abuse, was called to the scene but chose not to interfere, worrying that, in view of the state of relations between him and Sumner, “my motives would be misconstrued.”

Brooks recalled that by the time his cane finally shattered, less than a minute after he first confronted the senator, he had dealt Sumner “about 30 first rate stripes. Towards the last he bellowed like a calf. I wore my cane out completely but saved the Head which is gold.”

Blue Double Cross

Krugman’s column today is about how the health care industry is already undermining health care reform.

“We can do a lot better than a government-run health care system,” says a voice-over in one of the ads. To which the obvious response is, if that’s true, why don’t you?

To which I will add — I’ve had “government” health care insurance since 1973. The rest of the country should be so lucky.

Another Tail from Sofie

Official daughter-in-law Veronica reports:

Carpool conversation between Sofie and her good friend, A.

Sofie: What should we play at school today?

A: Dunno.

Sofie: How about “Cold, Lost Girls?”

A: Nah. How about “Puppy Protector?”

Sofie: Nah.

Cold, Lost Girls? Puppy Protector? What’s wrong with Kick the Can and Mother, May I?

Meanwhile, Sofie doesn’t need to protect her aunt and uncle’s puppy, Barkley (123 pounds).

Sofie and her 'cousin' Barkley
Sofie and her 'cousin' Barkley

Click image for larger version.

Great idea

The mophie Juice Pack Air is a rechargeable external battery concealed inside of a protective form-fitting case for the iPhone 3G. It offers you the full protection of a hard-shell case while providing almost twice the battery life of the iPhone alone.

Its ultra-thin, lightweight, low-profile design houses a rechargeable 1200mAh lithium polymer battery for up to 270 hours standby time. The case allows USB charging and sync with iTunes as well as full protection for your iPhone 3G.

Apple Store (U.S.)

$79.95 at the Apple store. Or for a couple dollars more from Amazon.

Mophie Juice Pack – Case and Rechargeable Battery for iPhone 3G

Available for iPod touch, too.

Mophie Juice Pack – Case and Rechargeable Battery for iPod Touch 2G

Morons. We’re surrounded by morons.

Example 1:

“The American Civil Liberties Union on Wednesday threatened to sue a San Diego County school that refused to let a student present a report on slain gay rights leader Harvey Milk until her classmates got permission from their parents.”

Via Atrios.

Example 2:

Republican National Committee: “as he prepares to deliver remarks in hall that holds the constitution, flashback obama: “constitution flawed” http://bit.ly/tFL7O #RNC [Twitter, 5/21/09]”

The flaw that Obama was referring to was slavery.

Via Media Matters Action Network.