Monday, September 29, 2014

Gone Geese

  • Robert Reich (AlterNet) on the "recovery:"
    Corporations aren’t expanding production or investing in research and development. Instead, they’re using their money to buy back their shares of stock.
  • Tangentially related:  Driftglass quotes Politico and Rod Serling on race and politics.
    ...[T]his country will still be politically divided amount three groups.
    • Exhausted Liberals, for whom this is all brutally self-evident and has been since forever.
    • Conservatives, go to bed at to the reassuring, brain-killing hum of Fox News them over and over again that the real racists are those damn Liberals who keep talking about race.
    • And the Centrist/Independents...who hide in the No Labels political sock drawer and reflexively shriek "BothSides!BothSides!BothSides!" anytime anyone starts bringing up the sordid history of modern Conservatism.
    This berserk monster that the Right built and then set loose in order to win elections has been running amok in plain sight for my entire life.
    [Emphasis in original.]
  • Wisconsin Poll Watcher Militia now claiming it was all a hoax because federal felony charges might be in store for them.  Voter intimidation is illegal.  Who knew?  [Via Xopher Halftongue at Making Light in comments.]
  • Via Zandar Versus The Stupid, a Rolling Stone exposé of the Koch brothers.  Rolling Stone has featured some of the best political writing of the decade.  I just got out of the habit because I seldom read music writing.  *sigh*

Sunday, September 28, 2014

Not Quite Over Yet

San Francisco faces Pittsburgh and Oakland faces Kansas City in a one game playoff for the Wild Card slot.

And then we can actually start the postseason.  My neighbor is a St. Louis fan.

*Boggle*

Sadly, No! examines a National Review Online article which appears to align with reality.
A National Review article that actually allows someone to note the tragic reality of how women, children, and those with diminished power are targeted by abusers and how their abusers are protected by social institutions are about the way women and children are treated in society and the way that abuser voices are privileged because of their station?

Friday, September 26, 2014

Oh, Let's See...

Yeah. Hermitting is the best plan.

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

There's Still Shouting

The Giants are one game from elimination, and naturally, they're playing the Dodgers.  Pittsburgh (!), for the first time since the glory days of Bonds and Bonilla, is about to make the playoffs.  The Angels have clinched, but since they have the most wins (97 wins is tops in both leagues), they will probably flake in the playoffs.  Meanwhile, Detroit and Kansas City are still duking it out in the AL Central.  Everyone else is looking down the wild card matchups, which may be Oakland v. Kansas City (yes, I get the irony there) on the AL side and Pittsburgh against whichever of the contenders wins tonight.

Rosh HaShona is tomorrow (well, tonight), and as soon as the regular season is over, fall can commence.

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

He Just Figured This Out

Eric Schmidt of Google has discovered that ALEC lies.  Ties have been cut.

ALEC's response:
“It is unfortunate to learn Google has ended its membership in the American Legislative Exchange Council as a result of public pressure from left-leaning individuals and organizations who intentionally confuse free market policy perspectives for climate change denial.

Freddie Mercury's Stunt Double

  • Milwaukee has (division-race-wise) joined the choir invisible, and the possible wild card matchups are intriguing.
  • Peter Van Buren (TomDispatch via AlterNet) explains the historical situation of Iraq and why the United States should have refused to have anything whatsoever to do with it.  Which reminded me that the late Steve Gilliard had written about military history and Iraq and extensively quoted gjohnsit of Daily Kos, who wrote:
    The first trick to learning from history is not to learn the wrong thing from history. For instance, Bush and the rest of the pro-war, right-wing liked to reference Neville Chamberlain before WWII as reasons to invade Iraq (and now, Iran). The Republicans are right to compare WWII and Iraq, but not for the reasons they think.
    If the Republicans weren't so ignorant about history they would have compared Yugoslavia to Iraq. No, not Yugoslavia in the 1990's. I'm talking about Yugoslavia during WWII.

    Like Iraq, Yugoslavia was artifically put together by the victorious allies after WWI, and combined several ethnic groups that had long, hostile relationships. They managed to live together for decades until Hitler decided that he didn't like their current government in April, 1941. Hitler invaded for no other reason than he wanted "regime change". Yugoslavia's army collapsed quickly. However, that was mearly the beginning.

    Hitler did not have enough troops available to contain any outbreak of ethnic strife, and Yugoslavia decended into civil war.
    In Croatia [in 1941] the indeginous fascist regime set about a policy of "racial purification" that went beyond even Nazi practices. Minority groups such as Jews and Gypsies were to be eliminated as were the Serbs: it was declared that one-third of the Serbian population would be deported, one-third converted to Roman Catholicism, and one third liquidated.
    - Encyclopaedia Britannica, 15th Edition
    In the end, three times as many people died in Yugoslavia during WWII as died in the Yugoslavian civil war in the 1990's. The trigger was the overthrow of the government without the military force to enforce its will on an ethnically diverse people. Republicans learned the wrong lesson from history. Saddam Hussein wasn't Hitler. Saddam was King Peter II.

    Well, not really. But you get the idea.
  • Together for 72 years, married this month.  Is your marriage threatened yet?
  • See if this sounds familiar:
    We are better, we are more entitled, we are different or at least less interested in the people around us, or the tribes or nations around us, because we’re worthier than they are. Our people are the prettiest, our language is the most musical, our clothes are the most stylish. And these people are barbarians or at the very best civilized but crude. We are deserving of resources just as I, as the individual, am deserving of the raise, or deserving of the job or deserving of the hottest girl at the party because I’m better than the other guys around me.
    It's an article on narcissism, individual and tribal.  (Sarah Gray interviews Jeffrey Kluger for Salon, excerpted in AlterNet.)

Sunday, September 21, 2014

In Memoriam

Polly Bergen, actress/singer/activist.

When I was small, she was a panelist on I've Got A Secret, and I could never figure out what she did.  I have to say that between the early '70s and now, I did not remember her at all.  I had no idea she was a feminist.

Saturday, September 20, 2014

In Memoriam

  • Jackie Cain, singer (Jackie and Roy; Roy died in 2002), who had a particularly fine version of "Lady Madonna" that I used to hear on the station I used to listen to back in the late '60s.
  • George Hamilton IV, singer (I'd heard of him before I'd heard of the actor, and confused the two well into my teen years)

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Johnny and The Moondogs

  • Johnny:  San Diego, the Cubs, Cincinnati, Atlanta, Miami, the Mets, and Philadelphia have joined the previously eliminated National League teams.  Washington has won the division (which means they'll punk out in the playoffs).  Baltimore has won the equivalent division in the American League (yes, that means the Yankees were eliminated, and yes, I'm sad about Derek Jeter) over Toronto and Tampa Bay (Boston, Céspedes notwithstanding, having bitten the dust earlier).  Minnesota, the White Sox, and Seattle also go home early.  Meanwhile, the Wild Card stats are firming up.
  • The Moondogs:  Miss America interned for Planned Parenthood.  (Salon, via AlterNet.)  The "conservative" press is shocked!  Shocked!  to discover she worked there for three! months!  The pearl-clutchers would  be even more horrified to learn that plenty of Miss Americas were pro-choice for women.  As it happens, I have a spare strand of pearls, but I will not be loaning it to conservatives; I might not get it back.

Saturday, September 13, 2014

Social Studies

  • Amanda Marcotte (yes, I know) at AlterNet spotlights seven women misogynists.  
  • Samhita Mukhopodhyay (Feministing) wrote, for the Guardian, reprinted at AlterNet, another one of those articles about *gasp* how many people are single and how awful that is, although the middle of the article tries for a more nuanced view.  
    ...the stereotypes about single people are usually inaccurate and don’t take into account dating in today’s complex cultural and financial realities.

    Single simply means unmarried – not that anyone counted in singlehood’s ranks is not in a relationship. You could be in a seven-year relationship, going strong and still check the box for “unmarried” and decide never to participate in the institution of marriage, but only the government (and maybe your interfering mom) will think that you’re single. [...] Marriage has long been a mostly-financial transaction anyway: from when marriages were exclusively a deal brokered between a father and his son-in-law to be, to the ghastly cost of modern weddings, there’s always been money involved.
    And then the wrap-up:
    Many single people not in relationships have to navigate being caught between two worlds: one in which everyone gets married and it’s the standard organizing principle of our society; and one in which we can allegedly just “have it all” but can’t even pay our rent and are wondering if he’s ever going to text again.
    Only two? Really?
  • Janee Woods (AlterNet) on the difference between discomfort and danger in racial settings.

Thursday, September 11, 2014

In Memoriam

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Their Lips Are Moving...

Straws.  Without which one's bricks are rather goopy...
  • On the mawwiage (thank you, Impressive Clergyman) front:
    • Still trying. Still ridiculous.
      Allowing gays and lesbians to wed, Stewart said, creates "genderless marriage" and "weakens the social expectation of the child's bonding right," leading to a likely increase in fatherless and motherless children.

      Judge Ronald Gould asked Stewart where children's "bonding rights" could be found in the law. The attorney acknowledged he had no legal source, just the messages that states and social institutions send to men and women.

      If you really want to send a message, Berzon said, "put up a billboard."
      No, really.
    • This marriage is between a man and a woman.  But folks are...concerned.
    • ETA (Just went up at Republic of T):  Marriage as panacea.  Unless, of course, you're gay.  Or not having children.  Or not possessed of a college degree.  Or or or.
  • Zandar calls it:  The Mask Slips Again.  Or alternately, Pennywise the Clown does not dress at home.
    Like I keep saying, Republicans want fewer people to be allowed to vote. This is a solid plank of their platform, to make sure a few people vote as possible. When that happens, they win. When people vote, they don't. Therefore, they must stop people from voting by any way possible.

    Especially if those people are black.

    This is why when I see people declare there's no difference between the two parties and that voting doesn't matter, I want to slap them. If voting doesn't matter, why are Republicans trying so hard to stop people from doing it?
    [Emphasis in original.]

Monday, September 8, 2014

Mathematical Elimination Fever!

Now that September has spent a week in residence, let's check on teams playing out the string or acting as spoilers, because otherwise there would be a lot of links and ranting, even now.

American League:  Boston, Houston, and Texas are out, with Minnesota poised to join them.  National League:  Arizona and Colorado are in Wait Till Next Year territory.  The Cubs will be there by the end of the week.

My team, of course, is mired in a slump.

Thursday, September 4, 2014