- Dr. Rita Levi-Montalcini, neurologist (Nobel Prize co-winner)
- Jane Holmes Dixon, bishop
- Fontella Bass, singer
- Richard Adams, early same-sex marriage legal case
- Charles Durning, actor
- General Norman Schwarzkopf, which I mention only because someone brought up living American generals a few weeks ago without mentioning Stormin' Norman, and I thought that was...odd.
"My hovercraft is full of eels." Political (Monty) Pythonist and baseball fanatic. Other matters as inappropriate.
Monday, December 31, 2012
In Memoriam
Friday, December 28, 2012
How Soon They Forget
- There are only 3 World War II veterans left in Congress. (Lifted from skippy.)
- Workers' rights:
Since the Reagan years, improvements in worker productivity have not translated into corresponding improvements in worker compensation. Profits often increase at the expense of workers as companies export jobs to take advantage of cheaper domestic or foreign labor. When workers lose the rights won through struggles culminating in the New Deal and afterwards, they are faced with increasing attempts by management to reduce benefits and wages. Taking away bargaining rights and effective union representation is inherent in the nature of Right to Work legislation. The only right workers are given in Right to Work laws is the right to work for less pay and/or benefits. This is borne out in employment statistics for states that enforce such laws and states that don’t have them.
(Also lifted from skippy, though not the intended link.) - Stan Lee is 90! (And you can catch all his Hitchcockian cameos!)
- Something you may not have known about the late Jack Klugman.
- Yes, I do have obituaries to post. Later.
Thursday, December 27, 2012
The Long Con
Southern Beale has figured out the Republican Party:
This isn’t a new revelation by any means — Rick Perlstein pretty much laid it out in The Long Con: Mail Order Conservatism — but I always assumed the con referred to a few leeches sucking off the system. There will always be some Glenn Beck types playing the rubes in Missouri and Tennessee, selling their snake oil and taking advantage of the gullible in flyover states. But I didn’t realize the whole fruit was rotten. I didn’t realize, until now, that the con is the point of the Republican Party. The Republican Party and all of its ancillary operations are simply mechanisms for making money. Again: end, full stop.When everyone and everything is for sale, scamsters will thrive because there's nothing of value outside of mere money, but if Moliére and Jonson did not convince modern people of the pitfalls of money-worship, surely I can't.
Monday, December 24, 2012
Saturday, December 15, 2012
Brass Tacks Spent Ammo Idolatry
Some folks who I like will take exception to this. That is their right. Some folks who I could care less about will also take exception to this. Too bad.
Yesterday a horrific thing happened.
I'm not going to argue about the shooter's mental health. I'm not going to speculate on his family life. I'm not interested in his motive, although I hope it can be reconstructed from his writings and whatever he tweeted. If he tweeted.
The arguments for gun control and its opposite have also been made. Many times. As a science fiction person, I'd like guns to be sentient and telepathic, and if they detect that their wielders are about to shoot another human being, they should fire prematurely and incapacitate that shooter's precious body parts. That would probably take warfare back to hack-and-slash, but, BIG SECRET HERE we don't need war.
I'd just like a bit of honesty here.
Some people (I do not agree with them) claim that the United States is a Christian nation. That is, that we [fsvo "we"] worship Jesus Christ as the Son of God. I think Christian-Americans give the Anointed One a lot of lip service, and with some (usually the loudest and most vociferous) it stops there.
Some people hold the gun sacrosanct. No, I'm not kidding.
Now, a gun is a tool. Granted, it is a tool with very few applications, but a tool it is. It is not a holy relic. It is not the Hand of God. It can only deal death and wounds.
If the lives of schoolchildren are worth less than the right to bear arms, please say so. Come clean. If this nation as a nation worships the Gun, let's end the hypocrisy. "One nation, under the Gun, indivisible."
(If hunting really were a sport, shouldn't deer be armed as well?)
If firearms are the true objects of veneration, perhaps we can have less cant about how Christian we are while people starve in the streets and stuff.
[ETA: No More Mister Nice Blog saying somewhat similar things.]
Yesterday a horrific thing happened.
I'm not going to argue about the shooter's mental health. I'm not going to speculate on his family life. I'm not interested in his motive, although I hope it can be reconstructed from his writings and whatever he tweeted. If he tweeted.
The arguments for gun control and its opposite have also been made. Many times. As a science fiction person, I'd like guns to be sentient and telepathic, and if they detect that their wielders are about to shoot another human being, they should fire prematurely and incapacitate that shooter's precious body parts. That would probably take warfare back to hack-and-slash, but, BIG SECRET HERE we don't need war.
I'd just like a bit of honesty here.
Some people (I do not agree with them) claim that the United States is a Christian nation. That is, that we [fsvo "we"] worship Jesus Christ as the Son of God. I think Christian-Americans give the Anointed One a lot of lip service, and with some (usually the loudest and most vociferous) it stops there.
Some people hold the gun sacrosanct. No, I'm not kidding.
Now, a gun is a tool. Granted, it is a tool with very few applications, but a tool it is. It is not a holy relic. It is not the Hand of God. It can only deal death and wounds.
If the lives of schoolchildren are worth less than the right to bear arms, please say so. Come clean. If this nation as a nation worships the Gun, let's end the hypocrisy. "One nation, under the Gun, indivisible."
(If hunting really were a sport, shouldn't deer be armed as well?)
If firearms are the true objects of veneration, perhaps we can have less cant about how Christian we are while people starve in the streets and stuff.
[ETA: No More Mister Nice Blog saying somewhat similar things.]
Friday, December 14, 2012
Thursday, December 13, 2012
Santayana Strikes Again
Driftglass (the Mike Royko Memorial Emeritus Chair of the Department of Journalism at Unseen University) on vast conspiracies:
Which is why, even though artifacts like the Mann & Ornstein critique remain virtually unknown or unacknowledged or simply denied by the wider world, we on the Left pass them around like Zappa bootlegs. We are the ones who refuse to forget what was actually said and done during the Age of Clinton. Who refused to forget Valerie Plame. Who refuse to forget a report named Jeff Gannon, who was not a reporter and was not named Jeff Gannon. Who refuse to forget Lee Atwater. Who refuse to forget how we were mocked and derided for suggesting that criminal wars and reckless tax cuts would lead to crippling deficits. We refuse to forget these historical facts and hundreds of other because, even though it isn't much, like the Irish monks who painstakingly copied and maintained the documentary record of Western Civilization during its dark age, we will not let the truth gutter out and die without a fight. [Links in original.]Lest we forget. As it were. Also, fundraising time over there.
Monday, December 10, 2012
Cindy Lou Who, Me?
Driftglass has kicked off his postponed fundraiser with a Dr. Seuss parody, and that's giving enough away.
Sunday, December 9, 2012
Why the Drug War Won't Be Won
Lewis Lapham essay, reprinted at AlterNet. Orotund but true:
So again with the war that America has been waging for the last 100 years against the use of drugs deemed to be illegal. The war cannot be won, but in the meantime, at a cost of $20 billion a year, it facilitates the transformation of what was once a freedom-loving republic into a freedom-fearing national security state.
Novelist to Spy
About Dennis Wheatley, why Ian Fleming's spy is famous, and really bad intelligence services.
Saturday, December 8, 2012
Fraud Fraud
- Over at The Brad Blog, a little electoral mythbusting going on:
Quite simply put, if people are going to argue that Barack Obama's four million vote popular vote margin and his decisive 332-206 electoral vote margin were achieved because of fraud, they are going to have to do better than to continue to promote fake reports of exaggerated turnout and real reports of Romney's colossal failure to secure the votes of urban African-American voters. They are going to need compelling evidence, of which to date, there is none.
Article by Keith Darling-Brekhus. Using, y'know, research and evidence. - Via skippy and MoveOn.org: Graphic of union benefits, most of which people take for granted, or why we should support strong unions.
- Vagabond Scholar on the fiscal speed bump negotiations:
Not that any of this is new, but this latest political battle shows once again that:
1. Republicans do not care about good policy or responsible governance.
2. Republicans do not care about public opinion. (Numerous polls show that the public supports raising taxes on the rich.)
3. Republicans do not care about election results (unless they win).
4. Republicans do not believe in fair dealing and good faith.
5. The media will not report political disputes accurately if doing so means criticizing one party significantly more. - Republic of T and the season to be jolly. (Blame Emperor Constantine. You might as well.)
Thursday, December 6, 2012
By the way,
Is it selective reading on my part, or have conservatives been sounding like very small children lately? They seem to gloat if they "win," and whine when they don't get their way. (There are other examples; it's an embarrassment of riches.)
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
The Dough-Re-Mi
- Gold and its properties, from Naked Capitalism. I actually remembered some of this...
- The possibility that the Republicans are trying to wreck the economy, from the Guardian (before the election, which renders some of the points moot and some...suspicious) via skippy.
- I can get a secure fax solution for my medical practice (yes, the What?? was strong when I got a good look at it; spam just gets weirder and weirder).
Sunday, December 2, 2012
Gaffer Twist
Lance Mannion (via Avedon's Sideshow, where I discovered that a blog on her blogroll that I click maybe twice a year is now a Japanese porn site) on Social Security:
That's why we need to ensure that no cuts are made. The odds are that you will get old and Wall Street is a crapshoot. Really, the 19th and early 20th centuries were not good places to live.
But the larger plan was to put a program in place to be built on and expanded so that---and here was the crazy idea---nobody would have to work until they dropped or else face a cold and hungry and penurious old age.(Leaving aside that it was also carefully designed to exclude domestic workers originally.)
The idea was that none of us should have to ask permission from the likes of Lloyd Blankfein to live past the age when we can push a mop or swing a shovel or load a truck, sew a stitch, drive a rivet, sweat pipe, bag groceries, flip burgers, gut fish, make beds, haul trash, dig coal, pick lettuce, or clean other people’s houses and raise their kids.
The idea was that it wasn’t the natural order of things that most people should break their backs, break their hearts, and have their spirits broken working all their lives to make a few people rich.
The idea was that there ought to be more to life than toil and sorrow and that at some point everybody should be able to lay down their tools and enjoy a few years of rest in comfort and security before they die.
That's why we need to ensure that no cuts are made. The odds are that you will get old and Wall Street is a crapshoot. Really, the 19th and early 20th centuries were not good places to live.
Saturday, December 1, 2012
Serious Business
- Via Hullaballoo, Jobs and Growth, Not Austerity. (A large clutch of economists approve this message.)
- Christmas, materialism, and the Amish: Jill at Brilliant at Breakfast waxes thoughtful.
- Long interview with Julian Assange (Democracy Now via AlterNet).
- Follow-up on fast food workers' strike. (Hullaballoo.)
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