Showing posts with label In memoriam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label In memoriam. Show all posts

Monday, October 16, 2017

In Memoriam





  • Sima Wali, champion of Afghan women's rights



  • Mary Cochran, dancer.



  • Richard Wilbur, poet.
  • Monday, October 2, 2017

    In Memoriam

    Tom Petty, musician
    Anne Jeffreys, actress
    Monty Hall, game show host (& co-creator)
    Lady Lucan, not murdered
    The 50+ people killed in Las Vegas


    Wednesday, September 27, 2017

    In Memoriam

    Hugh Hefner, Playboy magazine

    Wednesday, September 20, 2017

    In Memoriam

    Saturday, September 16, 2017

    In Memoriam

    Catherine Bond, mental health advocate.

    Tuesday, September 12, 2017

    In Memoriam

    Saturday, September 9, 2017

    Wednesday, September 6, 2017

    In Memoriam

    Kate Millett, influential feminist writer. I read most of her stuff in the '70s and '80s.

    Sunday, September 3, 2017

    Friday, September 1, 2017

    In Memoriam

    • Richard Anderson, actor
    • Shelley Berman, comic (third comic this fortnight)  I believe I mentioned him as a formative influence on my sense of humor.  Maybe $DEITY is having trouble stomaching Trump too.

    Monday, August 28, 2017

    In Memoriam

    Sunday, August 20, 2017

    In Memoriam


    Monday, August 14, 2017

    In Memoriam

    Monday, July 31, 2017

    In Memoriam

    Thursday, July 27, 2017

    Saturday, July 22, 2017

    Friday, July 21, 2017

    In Memoriam

    Sunday, July 16, 2017

    In Memoriam

    All New York Times obits

    Tuesday, July 11, 2017

    Cranky Pants Day

    • Yes, there is a forthcoming rant, but right now, I'm listening to Thelonious Monk's "Epistrophy," and slapping down stupid can wait.
    • Liberals v. Leftists.  Yes, like Batman v Superman:  Dawn of Justice, only without the noise and special effects and probably without the justice.
      [...] Since the election, leftists and conservatives have also seen eye to eye when it comes to denouncing liberals like Markos Moulitsas, the founder of liberal website Daily Kos, who gleefully cheered when it was reported earlier this year that people in red states would be disproportionately hurt by Trumpcare. “Be Happy for Coal Miners Losing Their Health Insurance,” declared Moulitsas on his blog. “They’re Getting Exactly What They Voted For.” In another instance, the liberal blogger earned bipartisan condemnation (so to speak) when he tweeted in response to the Trump administration denying North Carolina hurricane aid: “There’s your reward for voting Republican, North Carolina.”

      Liberals like Moulitsas have almost become caricatures of the smug and unsympathetic liberal elite that right-wingers have long depicted; it’s as if liberals have gradually come to adopt the ridiculous qualities that Republicans have assigned to them over the years. Which brings us to an important point: Leftists haven’t suddenly jumped on the liberal-bashing bandwagon because it’s the hip thing to do in the age of Trump, but because many self-described liberals have become the obnoxious and out-of-touch liberal elite that conservatives have long claimed them to be, while simultaneously shifting toward the right on various economic issues. (To be fair, obviously the right doesn’t see it this way.) Saval touches on this in his Times Magazine essay, observing that to call someone a liberal today “is often to denounce him or her as having abandoned liberalism.”

      [...]

      In response to the left-wing calls for class politics, liberals have frequently argued that leftists have an unhealthy “obsession” with economic issues, and that they disregard social issues like LGBTQ rights or women’s reproductive rights. Some liberals have even implied — absurdly — that left-wingers are closet cultural reactionaries. It was sometimes claimed during the 2016 primary campaign that progressives who favored Sanders didn’t like Hillary Clinton because of her gender, rather than her politics. But this kind of deflection simply reinforces the leftist critique of liberals, who, as Saval puts it (in summarizing the left’s perspective), “shroud an ambiguous, even reactionary agenda under a superficial commitment to social justice and moderate, incremental change.”
      (Conor Lynch, Salon, via AlterNet)
    • Rachel Cohen's (The American Prospect) conversation with Maia Szalavitz on drug addiction as a learning disorder.
      There is no reason other than racism that marijuana is illegal, and it’s very clear from the history that that’s the case. [...] But all of our drug laws, including alcohol prohibition, resulted from racist or anti-immigration panic, or a combination of the two.
    • Might be related; might be bunnies:
    • Power may cause brain damage.
      “Hubris syndrome,” as he and a co-author, Jonathan Davidson, defined it in a 2009 article published in Brain, “is a disorder of the possession of power, particularly power which has been associated with overwhelming success, held for a period of years and with minimal constraint on the leader.” Its 14 clinical features include: manifest contempt for others, loss of contact with reality, restless or reckless actions, and displays of incompetence. In May, the Royal Society of Medicine co-hosted a conference of the Daedalus Trust—an organization that Owen founded for the study and prevention of hubris.
      [Emphasis added] (Jerry Useem, The Atlantic)
    • Conspiracy ... or military control?
      It is impossible to know exactly how widespread this military censorship of entertainment is because many files are still being withheld. The majority of the documents we obtained are diary-like reports from the entertainment liaison offices, which rarely refer to script changes, and never in an explicit, detailed way. However, the documents do reveal that the DOD requires a preview screening of any project they support and sometimes makes changes even after a production has wrapped.

      [...]

      In all, we are looking at a vast, militarised propaganda apparatus operating throughout the screen entertainment industry in the United States.
      Plays spoooooooky theremin.
    • In memoriam:

    Thursday, July 6, 2017

    In Memoriam

    Heathcote Williams, poet and radical.