"My hovercraft is full of eels." Political (Monty) Pythonist and baseball fanatic. Other matters as inappropriate.
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
I Had a Wow Title, But It Evaporated
Well. That was weird (odd error message about cookies and Javascript, but then signed me in anyway).
Driftglass the blog is five years old today, and still has all its own teeth!
Also, today is Cesar Chavez Day, a state holiday in California; Like a Whisper has a brief meditation on his legacy.
And Echidne of the Snakes has a post up about body image in Hong Kong and Asia. (Takes a few minutes to load.)
Driftglass the blog is five years old today, and still has all its own teeth!
Also, today is Cesar Chavez Day, a state holiday in California; Like a Whisper has a brief meditation on his legacy.
And Echidne of the Snakes has a post up about body image in Hong Kong and Asia. (Takes a few minutes to load.)
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
Explains it All with a Sigh
I don't know what it is about Tuesday, other than the afternoons are forever, but stardreamer at Dreamwidth just hit one out of the park.
Taste:
What I suspect is that faced with the truth these are people who lie to themselves even harder. Fox News is no longer necessary.
Taste:
You didn't get mad when we gave a 900 billion tax break to the rich.
You didn't get mad when the deficit hit the trillion dollar mark.
You didn't get mad when American soldiers died because of inadequate equipment.
You finally got mad when the government decided that people in America deserved the right to see a doctor if they are sick.
What I suspect is that faced with the truth these are people who lie to themselves even harder. Fox News is no longer necessary.
The Lessons of History and Guantánamo
As I mentioned a while back, the Dreyfus case has had repercussions extending into the present.
Scott Horton brings this around to the prisoners at Guantánamo and justice.
Scott Horton brings this around to the prisoners at Guantánamo and justice.
But outside of a handful of lawyers and human rights activists, now themselves the targets of a McCarthyite smear campaign, no actors on the political stage in Washington see any advantage in rallying to the cause of the Gitmo prisoners. This is demonstrated by the infamous 90-6 vote in an overwhelmingly Democratic senate to block funding for the Obama initiative to close Guantánamo. America does not want to confront the reality of its own conduct. Where today is the voice of a Clemenceau or Zola on the American political stage?This needs to be called out, over and over again.
One of the key lessons of the Dreyfus experience is that in times of perceived national security crisis, the justice process often suffers in the face of perceived political exigency, and few political leaders have the fortitude to defend it. Justice too often is itself denounced as a weakness or luxury that the state cannot afford in such circumstances. History teaches another lesson: true justice, wielded forcefully, is no liability, but rather a powerful weapon in the hands of any democratic state.
Monday, March 29, 2010
Essay You Should Read
From twistedchick on Dreamwidth, writing about cheap hate:
Independent, intelligent thought is valuable, and it doesn't take a master's degree or a bachelor's degree or even a high-school diploma. All it takes is a willingness to listen to more than one point of view, ask questions, and keep asking questions until the answers make sense -- and then think about those answers, see if they accord with the truth that you know about how the world works (and I mean common sense and basic thought, not ideologies) and keep asking questions.
Sunday, March 28, 2010
In Memoriam
Probably the last of the early aviatrixes: Elinor Smith. (Under all 4 East River bridges? Wow!)
Saturday, March 27, 2010
Friday, March 26, 2010
In Memoriam
The Fifties were all about harmony.
No, not in reality. Reality was the Cold War, the threat of nuclear annihilation, the civil rights struggle in the United States (Brown v. Board of Ed, Montgomery bus boycott), pressure and counter-pressure to conform (Beat was not, strictly speaking, a mass movement).
In popular music, well, let's fudge a little. Big band/swing music was still lumbering along, but it was slowly dying off. Rock and roll was percolating, but didn't come into its own until the late '50s. In between, one could hear jazz and blues and folk, which were nurturing a lot of the changes in music through this and the next decade; and you heard a lot of vocal group harmony.
When I think of vocal group harmony, I think of glee clubs and choruses and choirs. I sometimes remember barbershop quartets, although The Music Man typed them as being turn-of-the-previous-century. (We've shared hotels with barbershop quartets, and having them spontaneously serenade is cute.) Mostly, though, I think of my cousins' then-boyfriends harmonizing on "What's Your Name?" in the living room. I think of the Flamingos, the Del-Satins, the Penguins. I think urban streetcorner singing. I think of the Doo-Wop side of the Force. (Although I call it Doo-Wah.)
(Since I don't know the history, I get to speculate that there is more than a tinge of racism in the barbershop/doo-wah divide. I expect to be enlightened if I'm wrong; that's what the Internet is for.)
Two of the harmonizers I used to hear all the time on the radio have died: Cherie DeCastro, singer with the DeCastro Sisters, and Johnny Maestro, singer with the Crests (and later the Del-Satins and the Brooklyn Bridge).
No, not in reality. Reality was the Cold War, the threat of nuclear annihilation, the civil rights struggle in the United States (Brown v. Board of Ed, Montgomery bus boycott), pressure and counter-pressure to conform (Beat was not, strictly speaking, a mass movement).
In popular music, well, let's fudge a little. Big band/swing music was still lumbering along, but it was slowly dying off. Rock and roll was percolating, but didn't come into its own until the late '50s. In between, one could hear jazz and blues and folk, which were nurturing a lot of the changes in music through this and the next decade; and you heard a lot of vocal group harmony.
When I think of vocal group harmony, I think of glee clubs and choruses and choirs. I sometimes remember barbershop quartets, although The Music Man typed them as being turn-of-the-previous-century. (We've shared hotels with barbershop quartets, and having them spontaneously serenade is cute.) Mostly, though, I think of my cousins' then-boyfriends harmonizing on "What's Your Name?" in the living room. I think of the Flamingos, the Del-Satins, the Penguins. I think urban streetcorner singing. I think of the Doo-Wop side of the Force. (Although I call it Doo-Wah.)
(Since I don't know the history, I get to speculate that there is more than a tinge of racism in the barbershop/doo-wah divide. I expect to be enlightened if I'm wrong; that's what the Internet is for.)
Two of the harmonizers I used to hear all the time on the radio have died: Cherie DeCastro, singer with the DeCastro Sisters, and Johnny Maestro, singer with the Crests (and later the Del-Satins and the Brooklyn Bridge).
Thursday, March 25, 2010
Trying Not to Repeat Myself
The Cleaning Frenzy is lurking in the corners...
- Happy 7th Anniversary to Fafblog! (Well, there was that missing year, but Medium Lobster was probably being Very Serious.)
- Marijuana legalization is on the ballot in California.
- Greta Christina at Blowfish Blog (I got there by way of The Angry Black Woman) writes on "Closeted Politicians and Bi Invisibility" and I love two things: one,
It’s getting to the point where, when a politician is rabidly homophobic, I just assume now that they’re gay. It’s become a standard item on my gaydar: Does he have unusually good fashion sense? Is he a little more aware of the works of Lady Gaga than is strictly necessary? Is he a right-wing politician who foams at the mouth about how disgusting homosexuals are and consistently votes against gay rights? Yup — probably gay. I think we need to start a PR campaign about this: if “rabid anti-gay political activism” becomes a standard marker for “probable homosexuality,” maybe fewer right-wing politicians will run with it.)
and two,
It’s not like there’s a gay person in a vacuum in the Smithsonian, against whom we all measure ourselves to determine our own sexual orientation.
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
Point for Point, or I Have Marshall McLuhan Right Here.
Linked via Driftglass: American Dad at TPM brings what even Drifty calls a BFG to the fight with conservative attack weasels.
I'm only going to quote the section on history. He's pretty thorough:
I'm only going to quote the section on history. He's pretty thorough:
HistoryThere are loads of links at the original if you need specifics and citations.
If you're going to use words like socialism, communism and fascism, you must have at least a basic understanding of what those words mean (hint: they're NOT synonymous!)
You can't cut a leading Founding Father out the history books because you've decided you don't like his ideas.
You cant repeatedly assert that the president refuses to say the word "terrorism" or say we're at war with terror when we have an awful lot of videotape showing him repeatedly assailing terrorism and using those exact words.
If you're going to invoke the names of historical figures, it does not serve you well to whitewash them. Especially this one.
You can't just pretend historical events didn't happen in an effort to make a political opponent look dishonest or to make your side look better. Especially these events. (And, no, repeating it doesn't make it better.)
You can't say things that are simply and demonstrably false: health care reform will not push people out of their private insurance and into a government-run program ; health care reform (which contains a good many of your ideas and very few from the Left) is a long way from "socialist utopia"; health care reform is not "reparations"; nor does health care reform create "death panels".
Oh, And...
Showcased this morning by Brilliant at Breakfast and Shakesville so far this morning that I've seen: Bob Herbert's column in the NY Times this morning.
I suspect other factors, but that's me (I also last week finally got hold of a copy of The Last Days of the Late Great State of California, which firmed up my knowledge about California in the '50s and '60s and about Ronald Reagan in particular; I'd thought that Governor "Pat" Brown had term-limited out [because I was under the impression then that California governors were only allowed to serve two terms, even before that actually became law], not that he'd lost, and Mr. Reagan was Not One Of The Good Guys, not by a long chalk; anyway, that campaign has shall we say resonances even today, even though the culminating and well-imagined disaster in the book has not [yet] happened).
The G.O.P. poisons the political atmosphere and then has the gall to complain about an absence of bipartisanship. [Emphasis added.]I was reading "The Vanishing Liberal" by Kevin Baker (that so wants to be typoed) in Harper's this morning (hard copy—I subscribe), which asserts that the right did not become populist; the oft-repeated lies about liberals convinced Democrats that liberals no longer spoke for the people.
The toxic clouds that are the inevitable result of the fear and the bitter conflicts so relentlessly stoked by the Republican Party — think blacks against whites, gays versus straights, and a whole range of folks against immigrants — tend to obscure the tremendous damage that the party’s policies have inflicted on the country. If people are arguing over immigrants or abortion or whether gays should be allowed to marry, they’re not calling the G.O.P. to account for (to take just one example) the horribly destructive policy of cutting taxes while the nation was fighting two wars.
If you’re all fired up about Republican-inspired tales of Democrats planning to send grandma to some death chamber, you’ll never get to the G.O.P.’s war against the right of ordinary workers to organize and negotiate in their own best interests — a war that has diminished living standards for working people for decades.
With a freer hand, the Republicans would have done more damage. George W. Bush tried to undermine Social Security. John McCain was willing to put Sarah Palin a heartbeat away from the Oval Office and thought Phil Gramm would have made a crackerjack Treasury secretary. (For those who may not remember, Mr. Gramm was a deregulation zealot who told us during the presidential campaign that we were suffering from a “mental recession.”)
A party that promotes ignorance (“Just say no to global warming”) and provides a safe house for bigotry cannot serve the best interests of our country. Back in the 1960s, John Lewis risked his life and endured savage beatings to secure fundamental rights for black Americans while right-wing Republicans like Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan were lining up with segregationist Democrats to oppose landmark civil rights legislation.
Since then, the right-wingers have taken over the G.O.P. and Mr. Lewis, now a congressman, must still endure the garbage they have wrought.
I suspect other factors, but that's me (I also last week finally got hold of a copy of The Last Days of the Late Great State of California, which firmed up my knowledge about California in the '50s and '60s and about Ronald Reagan in particular; I'd thought that Governor "Pat" Brown had term-limited out [because I was under the impression then that California governors were only allowed to serve two terms, even before that actually became law], not that he'd lost, and Mr. Reagan was Not One Of The Good Guys, not by a long chalk; anyway, that campaign has shall we say resonances even today, even though the culminating and well-imagined disaster in the book has not [yet] happened).
National Treasure and a Schmear, Please
Jon Carroll on the New Guy at CNN:
My temptation was to headline this column "Is Erick Erickson molesting Lutheran schoolchildren?," with the first sentence "I assume not." It's the oldest trick in the smear-campaign handbook; on the other hand, provocateurs wouldn't keep doing it if it didn't work. "Carroll boffing Peace Corps returnees?" and then: "We have no evidence that this is true."Mr. Erickson apparently believes that subordinating his id to his ego and super-ego is elitism, and will have none of it.
Monday, March 22, 2010
Why I Love Jill @ B@B
"So where are the Republicans? Getting ready to tell Americans that no, they can't have these things. They're getting ready to tell Americans that insurance company profits are sacrosanct. They're getting ready to tell Americans that THEY stand for 40% premium increases; that THEY stand for denial of coverage for pre-existing conditions. Because if you're a Republican, screwing over working people is the American Way."That. There's more, but Jill is nothing if not succinct.
Some Health Insurance Reform
So now we're where we would have been in 1912 were it not for the phobia about socialism (I've seen some of the thoughts of normally-intelligent people who seem to be expecting jack-booted thugs showing up at the door demanding breakfast and a bed tomorrow morning, and I want to say, "Get a grip," except that the fear seems to mirror the ancient Puritan suspicion of someone, somewhere, having a good time. Y'know, evil things happen to good people. Good things happen to evil people. That's the way the universe works. If you think education is expensive, try ignorance. [And if you think ignorance is expensive, wait till you have to deal with folks who've been taught from books sanctioned by the Texas Board of Ed.]).
Saturday, March 20, 2010
Dissection
Which would prove again my point: people throw these terms around not because they have a clue what they really mean, but because they have learned through a century of propaganda that these are “bad things”, naturally opposed to the Good and Democratic things that all right-thinking Americans should support. And of course in today’s climate, if you don’t support them, you are, ipso facto, Un-American.Political accusations that don't mean what you think they mean, from Cogitations.
Friday, March 19, 2010
Noisy Skeletons
Via The Root: Baltimore Brew documents Baltimore's history of racial segregation as abetted by the Baltimore Sun.
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Speaking of People Who Poke Badgers With Spoons...
Roger Ebert examines one such, with videos.
Short quote:
(The Conservative Bible is going to be a Very Short Book.)
Short quote:
Beck even went so far as to cite Jesus Christ, saying, and I quote: "Nowhere does Jesus say, Hey, if somebody asks for your shirt, give your coat to the government and have the government give them a pair of slacks." Well, Beck has me there. It is quite true that nowhere does Jesus say that. Nor, for that matter, does he ever say, A wop bop a lu bop, a wop bam boom!I hear that some right-wingers (who will never score in hockey) want to edit the Bible to "correct" the words of Christ to be more like those of Ayn Rand. Note to these twerps: Matthew, chapter 5, and Luke, chapter 6. Special to GB: Matthew 5:40, Luke 6:29.
(The Conservative Bible is going to be a Very Short Book.)
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Presenting in Time for Pesach
Your 2010 Facebook Haggadah. You may recall the 2009 version, which is now here. Note: holdovers from last year.
Via Becky Zoole on Dreamwidth.
Via Becky Zoole on Dreamwidth.
Sunday, March 14, 2010
We Get A Little Upset
Anna van Z of Mills River Progressive Gets Angry:
PLEASE - Start badgering, start harassing, and start getting LOUD to your alleged representatives this week, preferably Monday. STOP BEING NICE. STOP BEING POLITE. STOP BEING AGREEABLE. Stop pretending that your nicety-nice communication attempts are going to see anything but the circular file.
Saturday, March 13, 2010
Friday, March 12, 2010
Thinking about the Almighty
Real Live Preacher on God.
(You don't see much of that soubriquet of God anymore, do you? At least, I don't, and I read a lot. I just find it fascinating to contrast Gordon Atkinson, who writes the blog Real Live Preacher, with Glenn Beck, who pokes badgers with spoons. And yet God has informed the lives of both men.)
Time to break out Journey videos. Old Journey videos.
(You don't see much of that soubriquet of God anymore, do you? At least, I don't, and I read a lot. I just find it fascinating to contrast Gordon Atkinson, who writes the blog Real Live Preacher, with Glenn Beck, who pokes badgers with spoons. And yet God has informed the lives of both men.)
Time to break out Journey videos. Old Journey videos.
About the Election in Iraq?
Medium Lobster has a few things to say.
Is Iraq a democracy? Of course not. But is it close to becoming a democracy? Ha ha, no. But it certainly does resemble, from a distance, when we squint, the vague shape of a notion of the idea of something that contains one particular rote procedural aspect of democracy - albeit one that happens to be attached to a military dictatorship. And certainly that must be worth something.
Attorneys on Toast
Phil Spector's lawyers appeal his 2nd degree murder conviction.
(And probably the lack of coverage in American media, but that's just me being catty.)
(And probably the lack of coverage in American media, but that's just me being catty.)
Thursday, March 11, 2010
Not Romanian, Either
Via whump, Slacktivist sees Glenn Beck for What He Is. Hint: Mr. Beck has studied the Bizarro-world Gospels.
A Quickie, Because I have a Gig
Jon Carroll on supporting the troops.
I support our troops. I support our troops because almost everyone is afraid to rescue them from death or disfigurement, so they band together and develop a finely honed us-against-them mentality, except the "them" isn't only the enemy; it's the corrupt politicians and lazy media types and people who want someone else to fight their wars for them. Support the troops; let them come home.Go, Jon.
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Leave it to...
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
In Memoriam
Willie Davis, center fielder for the Dodgers in the '60s and '70s. (The article mentions that he made a record 3 errors in one inning in 1966--that is recounted here. Click the "No, thanks" on the ad if you don't want to subscribe.)
Polityx
The Root asks: Why are there so few black women politicians?
One reason given:
One reason given:
And there is yet another layer to the glass ceiling for women, and particularly black women: the media. Erika Falk, a professor at Johns Hopkins University and author of the book Woman for President, demonstrates a strong and unsettling media bias stretching back to the first female candidates—running in the 19th century. According to her research, women are less frequently written about, and for fewer substantive issues (no matter how much they know about cap and trade). They are more often described using physical characteristics such as what they are wearing, and are more frequently referred to by their married names—such as “Mrs. Clinton” rather than “Sen. Clinton.” “The trend lines are flat,” Falk says. “When you consider the social changes that have gone on since 1872,” she adds, “the fact that the press coverage [has] not improved is really astonishing.”Another:
Black women who are not seen as conciliatory sometimes get the short end of the stick. “Behavior that’s seen as appropriately assertive [in men] is seen as inappropriately aggressive on the part of the female,” says Gidengil. “This presents women candidates with a classic damned if you do, damned if you don’t, dilemma.” Black women struggle additionally with prevailing cultural perceptions about a black woman’s “attitude.” “I say what’s on my mind, and I’m not going to not express my opinion or point of view because I’m the only girl in the room,” says [Carol] Moseley Braun, who was voted out of office by Republican Peter Fitzgerald in 1998. “And I paid the price for it.”
Monday, March 8, 2010
The Reich
Scott Horton:
Whose values does Liz Cheney share? Look at the nations around the world in which criminal defense counsel are harassed and persecuted. Look at Putin’s Russia and the case of Sergei Magnitsky, or Mugabe’s Zimbabwe and the case of Beatrice Mtetwa. Perhaps it is in countries like Russia and Zimbabwe that Liz Cheney and her Weekly Standard friends might find governments that share their values.
Waiter, There's a Phalanx of Microbes in My Soup
One of the "dogmas" of libertarians (because they would probably not characterize it as dogma. I do) is that government regulation of quality x is Bad, and that the market will prevent nasty things happening because people won't use the product and the company's reputation will suffer and the company will go out of business.
Counter-argument.
Thanks to the Group News Blog.
Counter-argument.
Thanks to the Group News Blog.
Sunday, March 7, 2010
Lunchtime Links
Mills River Progressive's Anna is Angry:
Dave has what should be a completely normal experience at a hotel.
(Thank heaven Blogger saves things!) Southern Beale on a curious programming choice.
I know I threatened promised to write more and have been filling postings since with links. Also, I'm near my 900th post. And I'm not sure how spring training is shaking out; I should check on that. Metsgrrl's annoyance with the front office is paradoxically re-interesting me in the team; go figure.
Right now, though, my Muse (or whoever that is yelling "Get some fresh air, ya slob!" inside my head) is insistent that I take the camera and go get some pictures. So.
Speaking for myself (and maybe you?) I am beyond angry - so far beyond angry I don't even know what to call it. But perhaps unlike you, I doubt very much the system we have now is fixable. It's a sad, pathetic charade; the desiccated, ghoulish remains of what used to be a semi-functional democracy (or a functional semi-democracy, depending on your viewpoint)She goes on to quote Joe Bageant and John Cory (quote is from the latter):
When a compassionate conservative says, "Healthcare reform is socialism," why not answer, "No, sir it is the moral and American way to care for people."(And the Four Tops and Boyz II Men, but I digress.)
Yes, I can hear it now: "You are naïve and simplistic. These are complicated matters and require sophisticated solutions. Democrats are a big tent and strive for balance. But Republicans block our path at every turn. We are thinking and considering new ways to work in harmony with everyone."
Bite me.
The only thing you get with "harmony" is a Barbershop Quartet.
Dave has what should be a completely normal experience at a hotel.
(Thank heaven Blogger saves things!) Southern Beale on a curious programming choice.
I know I threatened promised to write more and have been filling postings since with links. Also, I'm near my 900th post. And I'm not sure how spring training is shaking out; I should check on that. Metsgrrl's annoyance with the front office is paradoxically re-interesting me in the team; go figure.
Right now, though, my Muse (or whoever that is yelling "Get some fresh air, ya slob!" inside my head) is insistent that I take the camera and go get some pictures. So.
Saturday, March 6, 2010
Not Just a Magazine
International Women's Day is March 8. (Link is to Feministe's post on the subject.)
Lessons of History
On Solon and the foundation of Athenian democracy, with applicable examples.
Is it right for a new leader to refuse to “look back” on the transgressions of his predecessor? Solon in general embraces this principle of amnesty or forgetfulness as essential to the fluidity of a democratic state. But he also imposes important limits on it. Some crimes cannot be forgiven, he writes, the failure to act on them will only undermine the legitimacy of the democratic state. And the proper vehicle for enforcement is a public prosecutor who exists and operates with a reasonable measure of detachment from the daily political process; it should not be the work of the new leader himself.Hint.
In America today, these principles rest in our own constitution and laws. And they are under steady and almost thoughtless assault by our worldly-wise political elites–always so obsessed with the daily play of the partisan political game which they referee and oblivious to the lessons of history and power of principle.
Friday, March 5, 2010
Credo
OMYWORD! at Politics After 50 talks about labels.
What I want for myself and the world is pretty simple. I want individuals of all shapes and sizes, all orientations and backgrounds, all economic levels and abilities - to have a voice and most importantly, to have rights. I want people to be able to choose their own destiny, their own future, their own lovers, their own path. I want those who've lost their way to be given a hand, whether it be my own, some other individual or organization, or the government's. I want the assault of women around the world to stop. I want children to be safe and protected. I want our governments to serve their people and at the same time, to serve the greater good of all nations and all people. I want conflict, at every level, to be resolved through words and laws and actions and concessions which have been fueled by the fire of righteousness and truth. I don't want war to be the answer, ever. I want commerce to be driven by customer needs, not the greed of the self-serving. I want even the most "evil" of criminals or prisoners to be treated with respect, be given the right to a fair defense and trial, no matter what crime they have committed or have been accused of comitting. I don't want torture or the death penalty to be practiced anywhere in the world, by anyone, at any time. There is no ticking bomb scenario that can convince me otherwise.
Also, the Emperor Has No Clothes
Alan Grayson, "crazy" like a fox.
As Avedon says,
As Avedon says,
Why haven't Democrats been demanding that teaching the Constitution be returned to the classroom, by the way? Why haven't they made a point of saying as often as they can that ever since the Reaganauts and Horowitz started attacking education, fewer and fewer of our students have the first clue what's in the Constitution? Why haven't they been asking: If conservatives claim they love the Constitution so much, why haven't they been demanding it be put back into the public school curriculum everywhere?
Thursday, March 4, 2010
OK, Time to Go Out and Play
Via Mills River Progressive: Washington's Blog's Disquisitions on hope and courage, with quotes.
I don't know about you . . . but I don't have the luxury of giving up hope. When I get depressed, overwhelmed or exhausted by the stunning acts of savagery, treason, and disinformation carried out by the imperialists, or the willful ignorance of many Americans, I will myself into finding some reason to have hope.Both essays are reposted from a couple years ago. The writer may be a libertarian.
Because the struggle for liberty is too important for me to give up.
Jon Swift Memorial
Cold coffee. Eeeeeeeewwwwwwwww...
Via Brilliant at Breakfast: Sadly, No! is running A Very Special Blogroll Amnesty Day in honor of the late Jon Swift, with some unsurprising picks (Doghouse Riley, Driftglass) and some surprising ones (Ephemeral New York? Why hadn't I run into that before?) along with the confession:
Via Brilliant at Breakfast: Sadly, No! is running A Very Special Blogroll Amnesty Day in honor of the late Jon Swift, with some unsurprising picks (Doghouse Riley, Driftglass) and some surprising ones (Ephemeral New York? Why hadn't I run into that before?) along with the confession:
Speaking for myself, I must admit that as I’ve grown longer in tooth on these here Internets, I’ve become a creature of habits (most of them bad, the rest unmentionable) … and one of them is a laziness that has set in, where on 99 out of 100 days I click through the same 10 or so big blogs to catch the general gist of what’s going on, rather then explore the nooks and crannies of the ‘Tubes like I used to do.As we used to say, AOL.
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
Ave atque Vale
Terrance of Republic of T on making it legal. Festive beverages in three days!
In sadder news: blogger Jon Swift is dead. (Link goes to skippy's and jurassicpork's eulogies respectively. Skippy is also posting links to other remembrances. See also Melissa's note at Shakesville.)
In sadder news: blogger Jon Swift is dead. (Link goes to skippy's and jurassicpork's eulogies respectively. Skippy is also posting links to other remembrances. See also Melissa's note at Shakesville.)
Curious
Jon Carroll, a National Treasure, posted a column on February 3 in which he said he was taking ten or so days off.
I was just wondering...
ETA: He's supposed to reappear Friday.
EFTA: He's back.
I was just wondering...
ETA: He's supposed to reappear Friday.
EFTA: He's back.
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
Related News
In honor of International Women of Color Day (which was yesterday) and Women's History Month (March), I present an exceptional woman of color who just made history.
It’s most fitting that James leads a church with hallowed credentials of its own. James heads St. John African Methodist Episcopal Church in the Falls, the oldest black church in the city, celebrating about 105 years of service to the community.
“I’m the second woman pastor in the history of St. John’s,” said James. The other, the Rev. Jocelyn Hart, left for Philadelphia in 2005.
On Garden Avenue, St. John’s sits on a former Underground Railroad site, not far from the Niagara River.
And Boiled Over
Copied from a comment I made at Echidne of the Snakes:
ETA: Tinfoil Hattie informs me that in some states, the employer pays into the unemployment system as a cost of doing business.
Unemployment "insurance" is paid into BY THE WORKER. (Which description fits neither Kyl nor Bunning.) IT'S WORKERS' MONEY. YOU SENATORIAL PRATS ARE WITHHOLDING THE WORKERS' OWN MONEY.(I did apologize for the yelling.)
ETA: Tinfoil Hattie informs me that in some states, the employer pays into the unemployment system as a cost of doing business.
Revenants
Sherilynn Ifill at The Root:
Though frankly, nations don't have "souls," only ideals that they fail to adhere to and eventually slough off as unattainable and/or silly on the way to becoming, well, the word(s) that should be here would probably translate as "lacking in honor" or "decadent," and I tend to dislike the connotations of both honor and decadence. The U. S. may well be the current analog of the Roman Empire, but it's also the barbarians.
When lawyers at the highest levels of government twist, obscure and ignore legal principles to reach the conclusions they want, when a legal analysis of detainee treatment is focused not on the prohibition against torture in both the United Nations Convention Against Torture and America's own domestic statutes , but on finding legal justification for inflicting the maximum mental and physical pain, a nation is well on the way to losing its soul.That makes us the Undead. And it explains the glut of zombies and vampires in popular culture.
Though frankly, nations don't have "souls," only ideals that they fail to adhere to and eventually slough off as unattainable and/or silly on the way to becoming, well, the word(s) that should be here would probably translate as "lacking in honor" or "decadent," and I tend to dislike the connotations of both honor and decadence. The U. S. may well be the current analog of the Roman Empire, but it's also the barbarians.
Monday, March 1, 2010
Strategic Retreats
I want to yell "Jill! No-o-o-o!" but I understand the feeling. distributorcap NY threw in the towel at the beginning of February, but the Senator from Kentucky kindled some of the old fire. (Aside: Why are most ex-sports figures who go into government Republican? Senator Bill Bradley would seem to be the exception, but I think he was somewhat conservative for a Democrat.)
Thinking Liberally
Anthony McCarthy ruminates on the "left" and "secularism" at Echidne of the Snakes.
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