Monday, April 28, 2008
Friday, April 25, 2008
WTF?

My Beautiful Mommy will no doubt lead to a generation of even more image-obsessed women - why on earth are bookstores allowing this monstrosity? Please, please, PLEASE no one buy this.

Defining Obama
Dylan Loewe does a great job with this examination of the recent lackluster quality of the Obama campaign. The suggestions he provides, I believe, are exactly what Obama needs.

Such a great idea.
So I popped a few of Blood, Sweat and Tears' greatest hits on my iPod. I'm notorious for planting musical boobytraps in my library since I'm such a fan of the shuffle. Anyway, whenever one of the BS&T songs comes on = instant smile because they are just hilarious. "And When I Die" has been a particularly stand-out track.
If it's peace you find in dying,
And if dying time is here,
Just bundle up my coffin'
Cause it's cold way down there.
Just bundle up my coffin...genius. Ha!
If it's peace you find in dying,
And if dying time is here,
Just bundle up my coffin'
Cause it's cold way down there.
Just bundle up my coffin...genius. Ha!
GREAT quote
"Most folks are about as happy as they make up their minds to be."
-Abraham Lincoln
So true.
-Abraham Lincoln
So true.
Thursday, April 24, 2008
Hyphy

There are some Bay Area things I will most likely never understand.
Update: As a follow-up, when ghost riding goes wrong...
Slate imagines how Hillary could turn Springsteen's endorsement against Obama
So I'm a little late on this one, but still, found it funny enough to share post-primary.
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Song To Bobby
Cat Power's ode to Dylan - beautiful, definitely the best track off of Jukebox. Get it.
Too cool
Earth's Hum Sounds More Mysterious Than Ever
I think the fact that the planet makes music speaks more eloquently to the absolute necessity of that art form than anything I've ever heard of.
Mark Morford provides an amusing commentary on the phenomenon.
I think the fact that the planet makes music speaks more eloquently to the absolute necessity of that art form than anything I've ever heard of.
Mark Morford provides an amusing commentary on the phenomenon.
PA Primary Thoughts
Thank you Steve Kornacki. I was very disappointed with David Brooks (as many of you are) for turning on Obama and Kornacki puts him in his place. Regarding the PA Clinton win - we all knew it was coming. As much faith as I have (had?) in my fellow Pennsylvanians - that was a ROUGH primary for Obama - between horrible debates, misspoken words, Hil-dog downing a shot of Crown Royal... definitely not the best set-up. But the good news is that he was projected to lose by a much larger percentage just a month or two ago, and the race was closer than many predicted.
“When Obama goes to a church infused with James Cone-style liberation theology, when he makes ill-informed comments about working-class voters, when he bowls a 37 for crying out loud, voters are going to wonder if he’s one of them,” wrote Mr. Brooks, a onetime Obama enthusiast, in a column titled “How Obama Fell to Earth.”
Add to that indictment Mr. Obama’s status as the “most liberal” member of the Senate (as determined, using questionable criteria, by the National Journal) and—voilĂ —the G.O.P. has its caricature: Barack Obama, the arrogant liberal elitist.
“A few months ago,” Mr. Brooks concluded, “Mr. Obama was riding his talents. … Now, Democrats are deeply worried their nominee will lose in November.”
Eh, not really. That logic fixates on all of the ammunition that Republicans have at their disposal against Mr. Obama. But it ignores the more basic question of whether voters, upon being exposed to the caricature, will actually buy into it.
As I have mentioned before - I think the voters JUST DON'T CARE. Plus, Hillary really is taking all the fun out of attacking Obama for the GOP. When she's done, all they can do is pick over the scraps. Obama hasn't taken nearly as many pot shots as Clinton - and boy are the Republicans going to have a field day if she turns out to be their opponent. Really, I just don't get the whole "electability" argument against Obama. Please come up with a fresh, preferably logical, argument Mrs. Clinton, or get out of the way already.
Update: Maureen Dowd actually manages to not embarass my gender today with her political commentary - here's an excerpt:
The very fact that he can’t shake her off has become her best argument against him. “Why can’t he close the deal?” Hillary taunted at a polling place on Tuesday.
She’s been running ads about it, suggesting he doesn’t have “what it takes” to run the country. Her message is unapologetically emasculating: If he does not have the gumption to put me in my place, when superdelegates are deserting me, money is drying up, he’s outspending me 2-to-1 on TV ads, my husband’s going crackers and party leaders are sick of me, how can he be trusted to totally obliterate Iran and stop Osama?
“When Obama goes to a church infused with James Cone-style liberation theology, when he makes ill-informed comments about working-class voters, when he bowls a 37 for crying out loud, voters are going to wonder if he’s one of them,” wrote Mr. Brooks, a onetime Obama enthusiast, in a column titled “How Obama Fell to Earth.”
Add to that indictment Mr. Obama’s status as the “most liberal” member of the Senate (as determined, using questionable criteria, by the National Journal) and—voilĂ —the G.O.P. has its caricature: Barack Obama, the arrogant liberal elitist.
“A few months ago,” Mr. Brooks concluded, “Mr. Obama was riding his talents. … Now, Democrats are deeply worried their nominee will lose in November.”
Eh, not really. That logic fixates on all of the ammunition that Republicans have at their disposal against Mr. Obama. But it ignores the more basic question of whether voters, upon being exposed to the caricature, will actually buy into it.
As I have mentioned before - I think the voters JUST DON'T CARE. Plus, Hillary really is taking all the fun out of attacking Obama for the GOP. When she's done, all they can do is pick over the scraps. Obama hasn't taken nearly as many pot shots as Clinton - and boy are the Republicans going to have a field day if she turns out to be their opponent. Really, I just don't get the whole "electability" argument against Obama. Please come up with a fresh, preferably logical, argument Mrs. Clinton, or get out of the way already.
Update: Maureen Dowd actually manages to not embarass my gender today with her political commentary - here's an excerpt:
The very fact that he can’t shake her off has become her best argument against him. “Why can’t he close the deal?” Hillary taunted at a polling place on Tuesday.
She’s been running ads about it, suggesting he doesn’t have “what it takes” to run the country. Her message is unapologetically emasculating: If he does not have the gumption to put me in my place, when superdelegates are deserting me, money is drying up, he’s outspending me 2-to-1 on TV ads, my husband’s going crackers and party leaders are sick of me, how can he be trusted to totally obliterate Iran and stop Osama?
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Vanity Fair on Bob Dylan

http://www.vanityfair.com/ontheweb/blogs/daily/2008/04/dylan.html
Pretty cool feature examining the tastes of Bob Dylan based on his XM radio show. I was surprised (and also very not surprised) about a lot of the artists on there. Nice visual too. I enjoyed the quotes they pulled from Dylan, as well - here are a few of my favorites:
Re: Leadbelly – “One of the few ex-cons who recorded a popular children’s album.”
“Some people call Bob [Seger] the poor man’s Bruce Springsteen, but personally, I always thought Bruce was the rich man’s Bob Seger. Love ‘em both, though.”
“Willie Nelson’s tour bus runs on cooking oil….I’ve toured with Willie…sometimes late at night you can see us, I’m filling up my tank at the gas station and he’s filling his up at Denny’s.”
Re: Howlin’ Wolf—“This next song is entirely without flaw and meets all the supreme standards of excellence.”
*personal side note - I've become obsessed with Howlin' Wolf - get some!
“The Harmonica is the world’s best-selling musical instrument. You’re welcome.”
“Lipstick traces on cigarettes can get you in trouble or remind you of the wonders of the night before.”
Pretty cool feature examining the tastes of Bob Dylan based on his XM radio show. I was surprised (and also very not surprised) about a lot of the artists on there. Nice visual too. I enjoyed the quotes they pulled from Dylan, as well - here are a few of my favorites:
Re: Leadbelly – “One of the few ex-cons who recorded a popular children’s album.”
“Some people call Bob [Seger] the poor man’s Bruce Springsteen, but personally, I always thought Bruce was the rich man’s Bob Seger. Love ‘em both, though.”
“Willie Nelson’s tour bus runs on cooking oil….I’ve toured with Willie…sometimes late at night you can see us, I’m filling up my tank at the gas station and he’s filling his up at Denny’s.”
Re: Howlin’ Wolf—“This next song is entirely without flaw and meets all the supreme standards of excellence.”
*personal side note - I've become obsessed with Howlin' Wolf - get some!
“The Harmonica is the world’s best-selling musical instrument. You’re welcome.”
“Lipstick traces on cigarettes can get you in trouble or remind you of the wonders of the night before.”
BMW-sponsored photography
Despite corporate sponsorship, I enjoyed these photographs of the Flavorpill cities. John Curley does the ones of San Francisco - I enjoyed the shot of the bridge in the bay and the reflection of different buildings in the windows. I wanted to post the pictures on here, but blogger isn't allowing me to upload images right now, so a link will have to do.
Ten Things to Remember on Tuesday Night
Great Huffington Post commentary - here's an excerpt: "Hillbots will rejoice, Obamabots will panic, and McCainbots will watch Murder She Wrote and go to bed at six-thirty." This is going to be a fun election.
WWE Raw: Candidates Steps Into The Ring
http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2008/04/21/candidates-to-appear-on-monday-night-raw/
Thanks to Kate for this one. I haven't watched the videos yet, but wow.
Thanks to Kate for this one. I haven't watched the videos yet, but wow.
Monday, April 21, 2008
John Edwards on Colbert Report
I never knew he was so funny! Please consider VP, John...
This episode was fantastic (and all of them were filmed at UPenn's Annenberg Center this week). Other highlights: Barack Obama puts "distractions" on notice and Hillary Clinton fixes a screen.
This episode was fantastic (and all of them were filmed at UPenn's Annenberg Center this week). Other highlights: Barack Obama puts "distractions" on notice and Hillary Clinton fixes a screen.
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
"What Clinton Wishes She Could Say" - My Response
This commentary was fraught with misconceptions from the get-go. I'll try and keep this an concise as possible.
[Hillary] and Bill Clinton both devoutly believe that Obama’s likely victory is a disaster-in-waiting. Naive Democrats just don’t see it. And a timid, pro-Obama press corps, in their view, won’t tell the story.
Great start - labeling all Obama supporters as "naive Democrats" - does that really seem likely? We're naive - not the candidate running against Obama's all-but-insurmountable lead in delegates (as well as the popular vote, mind you)?
Republicans will also ruthlessly exploit openings that Clinton — in the genteel confines of an intraparty contest — never could. Top targets: Obama’s radioactive personal associations, his liberal ideology, his exotic life story, his coolly academic and elitist style.
Ha! I mean, seriously? Hillary hasn't targeted them? She's hit them all (and more!) and Americans (American Democrats plus Independents and even some Republicans, if we're to believe exit polls) have made it clear that THEY DON'T CARE. These are hardly policy-altering traits and when one weighs Obama's pros (a.k.a. his policies, ideas, composure, intellect, unwillingness to engage in political nastiness, sound judgment in the past, etc. etc. etc.) against "his coolly academic and elitist style" - well, let's just say I'm starting to have more faith in the reasoning skills of the American people again (following Bush's eight-year-long vacuum of intelligence - how did that ever happen!?).
But there is reason to question whether he would be able to perform at average levels with other main pillars of the traditional Democratic coalition: blue-collar whites, Jews and Hispanics. He has run decently among these groups in some places, but in general he’s run well behind her.
Finally, a fair assumption - he has had trouble with those demographic groups. So I decided to look up voting statistics by race from 2004 and see how it all pans out. Here's what I found (since the author is dealing in extremes, I decided to as well) - let's assume McCain gets the entire Hispanic vote and Obama gets the entire black vote. Wanting to make this a safe assumption, I decided to give McCain 51% of the white vote and split the Asians evenly (though from my own personal experience, they seem to support Barack Obama above Hillary Clinton and certainly above a Republican). But this is basically a sensitivity analysis, so I wanted to underestimate my team's chances of winning. Based on the total # voting in 2004 - here's what happened:
That would mean Barack would win 51.6% to 48.4%. Now you can say that my assumptions are out-of-whack (I did just pull them out of my behind) - but I think that if anything, I gave McCain too much. As I'm sure you all know, the Democrats have a HUGE advantage this year and McCain hasn't really done much to show he'll be a strong candidate. I mean, check out this research from the Pew Center. Plus, the author was right - Obama will likely inspire record turn-outs in black and youth voters. I don't see McCain doing the same. Nor Hillary for that matter. But yes, I'm completely and utterly biased.
The article continues with a number of arguments over what the Republican party can and/or will bring up about Obama (all speculation, of course). But the evidence thus far shows that Americans don't care about that petty little stuff anymore. And that Obama is TOUGH (do you think anyone else could have turned the Wright controversy into a political bonus?), tougher than everyone thinks. We have a nation striving to get away from the policies of the past eight years - and it begins with the election. Bush made it quite clear how he used religion and fear to win the election (well, possibly win...). America doesn't want to get fooled again. But here's the bottom line:
That is why some friends describe Clinton as seeing herself on a mission to save Democrats from themselves. Her candidacy may be a long shot, but no one should expect she will end it unless or until every last door has been shut.
Once again, I'm forced to bring up the fact that Hillary ambitiously believes she can "save" the Democratic Party (while simultaneously attempting to destroy their most likely nominee), but she can't even run a campaign that was known from the beginning as "inevitable." I just don't buy it.
Time to feel nostalgic whilst reading The Daily Pennsylvanian
http://media.www.dailypennsylvanian.com/media/storage/paper882/news/2008/04/16/Opinion/Barack.Obama.Its.Time.For.Change-3328031.shtml
Barack Obama writes a guest column in ye olde DP.
Barack Obama writes a guest column in ye olde DP.
Bruuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuce!
Bruce Springsteen Endorses Obama!!!

First of all, as an Obama-supporting Jersey girl - I love this. But more importantly, this comes at the perfect time for Obama. After the "bitter" comment uproar, he needed an endorsement from someone that the working man can relate to - and nobody understands and embodies both the troubles and the glories of the Mid-Atlantic region like the Boss. Fantastic news.
p.s. Bruce's influence in this region may be under-estimated by pundits, or not, but as for me, I think Obama's got the Pennsylvania primary on lockdown. I mean, does it get more patriotic than this:
I don't think so.

First of all, as an Obama-supporting Jersey girl - I love this. But more importantly, this comes at the perfect time for Obama. After the "bitter" comment uproar, he needed an endorsement from someone that the working man can relate to - and nobody understands and embodies both the troubles and the glories of the Mid-Atlantic region like the Boss. Fantastic news.
p.s. Bruce's influence in this region may be under-estimated by pundits, or not, but as for me, I think Obama's got the Pennsylvania primary on lockdown. I mean, does it get more patriotic than this:
I don't think so.
High-Def San Francisco
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
Up-and-coming bands I'm digging
Expect to see (hear?) good things from:

She & Him
The pair of M. Ward and Zooey Deschanel has a lovely, lovely sound.

David Ford
An indie anglophile's dream boy.

Daily Show coverage of the "bitter" gaffe
Jon Stewart uses the one defense that makes so much sense, I never expected to hear it - I want my president to be better than I am!
Monday, April 14, 2008
Nutter and Clinton pair up
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/14/us/politics/14penn.html?ref=us
This article definitely had some embedded greatness in that it both gave voice to the difficulty of Americans trying to discuss race without being racist or saying anything that could possibly be construed as racist (1) and allowed for some humor about stereotypes of political endorsement (2).
1
Vivian McCabe, a grandmother, neighborhood block captain and supporter of both Mr. Nutter and Mr. Obama, expressed the frustration in a sidewalk interview the other day. “I was shocked,” she said, referring to Mr. Nutter’s endorsement of Mrs. Clinton. “Not because he’s black, but — I was just looking at him to...” She paused. “What words should I use?” she said. She could not come up with any.
2
“He’s a really nice guy who’s talking about really important issues,” Mr. Nutter said last week while sitting over a late dinner of grilled cheese and chocolate milk at his favorite diner, Little Pete’s, “and I am aware that he is African-American.” Mr. Nutter’s wit is dry almost to the point of brittle.
This article definitely had some embedded greatness in that it both gave voice to the difficulty of Americans trying to discuss race without being racist or saying anything that could possibly be construed as racist (1) and allowed for some humor about stereotypes of political endorsement (2).
1
Vivian McCabe, a grandmother, neighborhood block captain and supporter of both Mr. Nutter and Mr. Obama, expressed the frustration in a sidewalk interview the other day. “I was shocked,” she said, referring to Mr. Nutter’s endorsement of Mrs. Clinton. “Not because he’s black, but — I was just looking at him to...” She paused. “What words should I use?” she said. She could not come up with any.
2
“He’s a really nice guy who’s talking about really important issues,” Mr. Nutter said last week while sitting over a late dinner of grilled cheese and chocolate milk at his favorite diner, Little Pete’s, “and I am aware that he is African-American.” Mr. Nutter’s wit is dry almost to the point of brittle.
Barack Obama and economic elitism
Jane Smiley gets pissed off at the HuffPost over the Clinton backlash against Obama's SF remarks (the stage really was set for something like this, was it not?). Meanwhile, Nico Pitney remembers another snazzy politician saying something similar once.
"The reason (George H. W. Bush's tactic) works so well now is that you have all these economically insecure white people who are scared to death," Clinton was quoted saying by the Los Angeles Times in September 1991.
My personal opinion is that Obama misspoke (or more accurately, he phrased his ideas in a way that is a little too dangerous taken out of context) but did not mean to be condescending. It was reminiscent of Bob Dylan's song Only a Pawn in Their Game - the over-arching theme of which, like most timeless music, fits really well in our current situation, as well as his. "...[T]he poor white man's used in the hands of them all like a tool..." Clinton at least is doing her darndest to ratify that line.
"The reason (George H. W. Bush's tactic) works so well now is that you have all these economically insecure white people who are scared to death," Clinton was quoted saying by the Los Angeles Times in September 1991.
My personal opinion is that Obama misspoke (or more accurately, he phrased his ideas in a way that is a little too dangerous taken out of context) but did not mean to be condescending. It was reminiscent of Bob Dylan's song Only a Pawn in Their Game - the over-arching theme of which, like most timeless music, fits really well in our current situation, as well as his. "...[T]he poor white man's used in the hands of them all like a tool..." Clinton at least is doing her darndest to ratify that line.
And actually, I think this little summary from Robert Shrum really points out the absurdity of all the fuss:
The political question here, of course, is whether the Clinton and McCain campaigns can exploit Obama's remarks to tag him as an "elitist" -- a label, their focus groups probably tell them, that can really hurt. Ironically, Obama's the one raised by a single mother. He's the one who only recently finished paying off his student loans. He doesn't know what it's like to have $100 million. The opponents who are attacking him are the ones who inhabit that financial neighborhood.
Zing!
Friday, April 11, 2008
Brooks column on memory loss
The Great Forgetting
Best line: "It is especially painful when narcissists suffer memory loss because they are losing parts of the person they love most."
*I realize that Alzheimer's etc. is not funny - but I think Brooks treated the subject with respectful levity and managed to see the bright side of a potentially tragic nationwide epidemic: "shorter memoirs."
Best line: "It is especially painful when narcissists suffer memory loss because they are losing parts of the person they love most."
*I realize that Alzheimer's etc. is not funny - but I think Brooks treated the subject with respectful levity and managed to see the bright side of a potentially tragic nationwide epidemic: "shorter memoirs."
C'mon, we've all been there.
"Man, what a day," Blume said regarding his 16-hour battle with everything from public transportation to profound spiritual alienation.
Wednesday, April 09, 2008
Seriously?
Aspiring Politican Changes Name To Pro-Life
That's right. And it will appear on the ballot that way. Sham, much?
That's right. And it will appear on the ballot that way. Sham, much?
Taxes!
I know it's everyone's favorite subject, particularly at this time of year. Thanks to Evan for pointing me to this well-done tax matrix for the presidential candidates. I had a decent understanding (and support) of Obama's tax policies, and this reinforced my views.

Tuesday, April 08, 2008
You've GOT to be kidding me!
Builders, Banks Could Get Tax Breaks
Here is the problem with what the American economy has become. After hearing about one too many fairy tales of entering the stock market at the right time, making millions, then getting out before the big bust - every investor now believes they can do it. When the logical course of events shows that they cannot, well, now they have the Super Fed around to save all the... poor helpless investment bankers. Basically, you have financial players purposefully creating bubbles, in hopes of profiting short-term, rather than investing with a more healthy, long-term approach. This strategy works, because even when it doesn't, the big banks have a big ol' government safety net - which creates moral hazard in terms of risk-reward assessment. Mark my words, if this sort of government action is allowed to continue, our booms and busts will continue to get closer and closer together, until the economy fluctuates like the seasons. And with that kind of instability, you can say goodbye to any sort of progress, any gains in our quality of life. With that kind of instability, America will one day be the world's Bear Stearns, and lord knows what country will play the role of JPMorgan (although China is looking increasingly likely...).
Side note: This Slate commentary focuses more on the bad economics of this policy than the bad principles - also a good read.
Here is the problem with what the American economy has become. After hearing about one too many fairy tales of entering the stock market at the right time, making millions, then getting out before the big bust - every investor now believes they can do it. When the logical course of events shows that they cannot, well, now they have the Super Fed around to save all the... poor helpless investment bankers. Basically, you have financial players purposefully creating bubbles, in hopes of profiting short-term, rather than investing with a more healthy, long-term approach. This strategy works, because even when it doesn't, the big banks have a big ol' government safety net - which creates moral hazard in terms of risk-reward assessment. Mark my words, if this sort of government action is allowed to continue, our booms and busts will continue to get closer and closer together, until the economy fluctuates like the seasons. And with that kind of instability, you can say goodbye to any sort of progress, any gains in our quality of life. With that kind of instability, America will one day be the world's Bear Stearns, and lord knows what country will play the role of JPMorgan (although China is looking increasingly likely...).
Side note: This Slate commentary focuses more on the bad economics of this policy than the bad principles - also a good read.
Monday, April 07, 2008
Garfield minus Garfield
**Thanks to Chris for this
http://garfieldminusgarfield.tumblr.com/
^It's exactly what it sounds like, but the results are more surprising than you'd think.
http://garfieldminusgarfield.tumblr.com/
^It's exactly what it sounds like, but the results are more surprising than you'd think.
Friday, April 04, 2008
Polling
81% in Poll Say Nation Is on the Wrong Track
These results don't surprise me at all. What does, however, is the poor phrasing of the poll's choices.
81 percent of respondents said they believed “things have pretty seriously gotten off on the wrong track,” up from 69 percent a year ago and 35 percent in early 2002.
I believe your other choice is "generally going in the right direction". Are all those qualifiers necessary? Must we be so timid in our polling? Why wasn't it: America is heading in the ______ direction - check "right" or "wrong". Sometimes simpler is so much better. Instead, we have things that have pretty seriously gotten off on the wrong track. Ugh.
These results don't surprise me at all. What does, however, is the poor phrasing of the poll's choices.
81 percent of respondents said they believed “things have pretty seriously gotten off on the wrong track,” up from 69 percent a year ago and 35 percent in early 2002.
I believe your other choice is "generally going in the right direction". Are all those qualifiers necessary? Must we be so timid in our polling? Why wasn't it: America is heading in the ______ direction - check "right" or "wrong". Sometimes simpler is so much better. Instead, we have things that have pretty seriously gotten off on the wrong track. Ugh.
Yes, that's it!
Morford clarifies why I've been feeling so good about the whole Obama campaign. Hint: It's not [just] him, it's me, and you, and you....
Another great thing about California

BevMo, oh BevMo - how will I ever live without thee? This burst of poetry could have only stemmed from BevMo's cherished 5-cent wine sale - which I took gleeful advantage of and managed to walk away with 12 pretty decent bottles for $60 (clearly I'm no connoisseur, but I do my best with my budget). Now it's dinner party time!
Thursday, April 03, 2008
Great column on U.S. v. Europe
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/03/opinion/03cohen.html?th&emc=th
More commentary later, but for now - just read it.
Willpower
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/02/opinion/02aamodt.html?em&ex=1207368000&en=389b01b889cd3fb2&ei=5087%0A
Just a lot of interesting observations about will power and what may be ahead in these hard economic times.
Just a lot of interesting observations about will power and what may be ahead in these hard economic times.
Wednesday, April 02, 2008
10th Anniversary of In The Aeroplane Over The Sea
...and these guys made videos. Check 'em out.
http://www.tomatoes-radiowire.com/
http://www.tomatoes-radiowire.com/
Monday, March 31, 2008
Sunday, March 30, 2008
I know this is going to come off as paranoid, but...
...there's some bad shit going on here. I can just feel it.
Also, the miniseries John Adams is fantastic. How have we strayed so far from such noble ideals at the beginning, and a willingness to give up comfort, security, wealth, even life so that our children may have a better future? Maybe we have nothing to fight against. Maybe we're totally in control and Americans will live in freedom and prosperity for generations to come. But again, I just feel like something is wrong. But maybe that's just Paul Giamatti getting me in the mood for a revolution - believe me, it doesn't take much.

Thursday, March 27, 2008
Bosnian snipers and a whole pack o' lies
Roger Cohen (who I'm liking more and more) delivers another wonderful column on the Clintons, McCain, foreign policy and campaign fibs. The conclusion was my favorite bit:
On issues that cross borders – terrorism, financial market volatility, global warming – and on Iran, Israel-Palestine, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq – three things are essential: a new moral authority in the White House, the capacity for original strategic thought, and a 21st-century understanding of the border-jumping networks that have knit humanity into new relationships.
Obama, in his speech on race, did important things. He confronted reality, thought big, probed division, sketched convergence. He took Americans and many people beyond U.S. shores to a different mental place. Imagine that capacity applied to GWOT, Iran, Russia, China and Israel-Palestine.
If you don’t like the sound of that, there’s always seasoned swagger of the sort that runs from imaginary snipers.
On issues that cross borders – terrorism, financial market volatility, global warming – and on Iran, Israel-Palestine, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq – three things are essential: a new moral authority in the White House, the capacity for original strategic thought, and a 21st-century understanding of the border-jumping networks that have knit humanity into new relationships.
Obama, in his speech on race, did important things. He confronted reality, thought big, probed division, sketched convergence. He took Americans and many people beyond U.S. shores to a different mental place. Imagine that capacity applied to GWOT, Iran, Russia, China and Israel-Palestine.
If you don’t like the sound of that, there’s always seasoned swagger of the sort that runs from imaginary snipers.
Monday, March 24, 2008
Money, the Iraq War and the Evils of Pandering
Bill Maher addresses what Eisenhower called the modern military-industrial complex in this article - and he makes a good point. Our government has never been quite so connected to the private sector as during the G.W. Bush years - years that also brought the terrible waste of taxpayer's money (and one of the biggest lies told to the people in American history) called the Iraq War.
Now, despite his support for the war, I don't dislike McCain; I actually think he's a generally good person. However, I think that coming so close to finally winning the presidency is changing him, and not for the better. As the race progresses toward November, I think we're going to see him make more and more moves to placate traditional GOP voters - moves that may be against his character, but can help him win. In short, we will see a lot of pandering, a lot of flip-flopping, a lot of mixed words. Now, many critics criticize Obama for being all talk and no action. But as I have mentioned before, talk comes before action. If a candidate can't get their story straight (as usually happens when they don't actually believe the stuff that comes spewing from their mouths), it's a pretty blatant sign they're either pandering or they haven't formed an opinion yet (in which case, they should just admit the truth, set a date by which they will have a proper response for the public and research the issue in order to form an educated opinion). While, in theory, a large part of being a politician is pleasing your constituency, voters want to see someone (particularly in the office of president) with a solid character whose words and actions accurately represent their own beliefs. This is one of the major problems I see in the candidacies of both Hillary Clinton and John McCain. They've been pandering, mixing up their words, contradicting themselves, tripping all over the issues. Pandering leads to deceived voters. Pandering leads to presidents whose actions don't match their words. Pandering leads to backroom arrangements, to secret alliances, to mistakes like the Iraq War. Because if there's anything that Iraq has taught us, it's that the president and those he or she aligns themself with will follow their true beliefs, not what they say in public.
On the other hand, Obama has been remarkably steadfast and consistent. His words and ideas lead me to believe (and I mean really BELIEVE) he is a person with a strong character who is speaking words he actually believes (and I mean really BELIEVES). Why do I think this? Well, for many reasons, but one of the biggest ones is that he has admitted mistakes, admitted ignorance, and provided arguments that are not necessarily the politically safe route. And it's worked out for him in the race, which gives me many warm and fuzzy feelings about the future. Because if it's worked out for Obama, even though he's taken non-traditional route, it means the old bag o' political tricks isn't working on the American people (at least on the Democratic side). Maybe (and I know this is quite optimistic) we're wising up. Maybe we've figured out that honesty, rather than always saying the right thing, really is the best policy. Maybe we can start trusting politicians again, even if it's just a little, and implicitly, that means we will start trusting each other. How great does that sound? And that's why Obama's message of personal accountability and citizens taking responsibility for change in America resounds like it does - because deep in our hearts, we know it's a self-fulfilling prophecy. If the majority votes for someone that trusts Americans to get involved in the political system, we'll trust each other and see that it's not pointless to get involved in the political system. Because if the president built his platform on American involvement in the political system, and he really believes it's the best way to progress into the future, he better back that up - which means not ignoring American desires. And that's what the lie about WMDs really was - it was the adminstration ignoring American desires in order to accomplish their own ends. It was pandering. Pandering was the reason we ended up spending $5,000 a second. So my point is, be very wary of pandering. Vote for someone you believe is telling the truth, because if recent history has taught us anything, it's that in the end, they're just going to do what they believe is right anyway.
Now, despite his support for the war, I don't dislike McCain; I actually think he's a generally good person. However, I think that coming so close to finally winning the presidency is changing him, and not for the better. As the race progresses toward November, I think we're going to see him make more and more moves to placate traditional GOP voters - moves that may be against his character, but can help him win. In short, we will see a lot of pandering, a lot of flip-flopping, a lot of mixed words. Now, many critics criticize Obama for being all talk and no action. But as I have mentioned before, talk comes before action. If a candidate can't get their story straight (as usually happens when they don't actually believe the stuff that comes spewing from their mouths), it's a pretty blatant sign they're either pandering or they haven't formed an opinion yet (in which case, they should just admit the truth, set a date by which they will have a proper response for the public and research the issue in order to form an educated opinion). While, in theory, a large part of being a politician is pleasing your constituency, voters want to see someone (particularly in the office of president) with a solid character whose words and actions accurately represent their own beliefs. This is one of the major problems I see in the candidacies of both Hillary Clinton and John McCain. They've been pandering, mixing up their words, contradicting themselves, tripping all over the issues. Pandering leads to deceived voters. Pandering leads to presidents whose actions don't match their words. Pandering leads to backroom arrangements, to secret alliances, to mistakes like the Iraq War. Because if there's anything that Iraq has taught us, it's that the president and those he or she aligns themself with will follow their true beliefs, not what they say in public.
On the other hand, Obama has been remarkably steadfast and consistent. His words and ideas lead me to believe (and I mean really BELIEVE) he is a person with a strong character who is speaking words he actually believes (and I mean really BELIEVES). Why do I think this? Well, for many reasons, but one of the biggest ones is that he has admitted mistakes, admitted ignorance, and provided arguments that are not necessarily the politically safe route. And it's worked out for him in the race, which gives me many warm and fuzzy feelings about the future. Because if it's worked out for Obama, even though he's taken non-traditional route, it means the old bag o' political tricks isn't working on the American people (at least on the Democratic side). Maybe (and I know this is quite optimistic) we're wising up. Maybe we've figured out that honesty, rather than always saying the right thing, really is the best policy. Maybe we can start trusting politicians again, even if it's just a little, and implicitly, that means we will start trusting each other. How great does that sound? And that's why Obama's message of personal accountability and citizens taking responsibility for change in America resounds like it does - because deep in our hearts, we know it's a self-fulfilling prophecy. If the majority votes for someone that trusts Americans to get involved in the political system, we'll trust each other and see that it's not pointless to get involved in the political system. Because if the president built his platform on American involvement in the political system, and he really believes it's the best way to progress into the future, he better back that up - which means not ignoring American desires. And that's what the lie about WMDs really was - it was the adminstration ignoring American desires in order to accomplish their own ends. It was pandering. Pandering was the reason we ended up spending $5,000 a second. So my point is, be very wary of pandering. Vote for someone you believe is telling the truth, because if recent history has taught us anything, it's that in the end, they're just going to do what they believe is right anyway.
Hillary's victimization
Another wonderful Slate piece on the Democratic race - this time, Melinda Henneberger asks, "What if Hillary Clinton gave a speech about gender? (And why she won't.)"
Really, really great insight into female attitudes toward men and themselves and the world in general. Also, it really tears into Clinton at the end, in my opinion, quite deservingly.
Really, really great insight into female attitudes toward men and themselves and the world in general. Also, it really tears into Clinton at the end, in my opinion, quite deservingly.
I wonder...
...why don't we have hydrogen-powered airplanes? Too dangerous? Capital investment for development too large? What? It seems like it'd be an easy solution to a bad problem that would result in easing both gas and ticket prices. If anyone knows, please enlighten. If not, I'll have to remember to look it up
Woot woot!
Richardson backs Obama!
I actually really like Richardson - it's such a shame there probably wouldn't be an Obama/Richardson ticket. Apparently, he's close with Bill Clinton (who did contribute a lot to furthering Richardson's career) - but I think this was a little dramatic:
The reaction of some of Mr. Clinton’s allies suggests that might have been a wise decision. “An act of betrayal,” said James Carville, an adviser to Mrs. Clinton and a friend of Mr. Clinton.
“Mr. Richardson’s endorsement came right around the anniversary of the day when Judas sold out for 30 pieces of silver, so I think the timing is appropriate, if ironic,” Mr. Carville said, referring to Holy Week.
Update: Succinct Slate commentary on the Richardson move. I specifically liked this part of the argument:
There's nothing wrong with making these arguments, and by the party's rules, it's perfectly legal for Clinton to reverse Obama's pledged-delegate lead with superdelegates. But in listening over the weeks to Clinton's advisers make their superdelegate case, you can feel the criteria changing as the conversation ensues. I am reminded of the movie Stripes. John Candy, playing a new Army recruit*, hoodwinks another member of his troop. "You gotta make my bunk," he says earnestly. "See, we're in Italy. The guy on the top bunk has gotta make the guy on the bottom's bunk. He's gotta make his bunk all the time. See, it's in the regulations. See, if we were in Germany, I would have to make yours, but we're in Italy, and you gotta make mine. It's regulations."
This whiff of hokum is one problem. The second problem for the Clinton pitch is that even if superdelegates buy it, no one on the Clinton team can explain why Obama's coalition of African-Americans, liberals, and first-time voters is going to buy it. In a recent CBS News poll, 92 percent of Obama supporters said they would feel disappointed and angry if Clinton won by superdelegates. When I asked Mark Penn how he would soothe these hurt feelings, he had no real answer other than hope: Democrats have come together before.
So, Clinton claims that Obama's campaign of hope that Americans can come together for a better future is unrealistic and just words etc. etc., even though thus far in the primaries it seems to be happening, at least in a small way. And he hasn't done anything to really offend the voters (I could be wrong, and I'm certainly biased, but Wright and Revko seem to be the shadiest parts of his life so far, and I don't think they're a big deal, personally). Clinton, on the other hand, expects to gyp Democratic voters out of representation (whether or not this is entirely true is irrevelant, the voters are going to FEEL betrayed) and then HOPES that come general election time, they'll put all of the petty primary crap out of mind and rally. This in a year when Nader is re-running. Yeah, that sounds like a GREAT idea. Ugh.
I actually really like Richardson - it's such a shame there probably wouldn't be an Obama/Richardson ticket. Apparently, he's close with Bill Clinton (who did contribute a lot to furthering Richardson's career) - but I think this was a little dramatic:
The reaction of some of Mr. Clinton’s allies suggests that might have been a wise decision. “An act of betrayal,” said James Carville, an adviser to Mrs. Clinton and a friend of Mr. Clinton.
“Mr. Richardson’s endorsement came right around the anniversary of the day when Judas sold out for 30 pieces of silver, so I think the timing is appropriate, if ironic,” Mr. Carville said, referring to Holy Week.
Update: Succinct Slate commentary on the Richardson move. I specifically liked this part of the argument:
There's nothing wrong with making these arguments, and by the party's rules, it's perfectly legal for Clinton to reverse Obama's pledged-delegate lead with superdelegates. But in listening over the weeks to Clinton's advisers make their superdelegate case, you can feel the criteria changing as the conversation ensues. I am reminded of the movie Stripes. John Candy, playing a new Army recruit*, hoodwinks another member of his troop. "You gotta make my bunk," he says earnestly. "See, we're in Italy. The guy on the top bunk has gotta make the guy on the bottom's bunk. He's gotta make his bunk all the time. See, it's in the regulations. See, if we were in Germany, I would have to make yours, but we're in Italy, and you gotta make mine. It's regulations."
This whiff of hokum is one problem. The second problem for the Clinton pitch is that even if superdelegates buy it, no one on the Clinton team can explain why Obama's coalition of African-Americans, liberals, and first-time voters is going to buy it. In a recent CBS News poll, 92 percent of Obama supporters said they would feel disappointed and angry if Clinton won by superdelegates. When I asked Mark Penn how he would soothe these hurt feelings, he had no real answer other than hope: Democrats have come together before.
So, Clinton claims that Obama's campaign of hope that Americans can come together for a better future is unrealistic and just words etc. etc., even though thus far in the primaries it seems to be happening, at least in a small way. And he hasn't done anything to really offend the voters (I could be wrong, and I'm certainly biased, but Wright and Revko seem to be the shadiest parts of his life so far, and I don't think they're a big deal, personally). Clinton, on the other hand, expects to gyp Democratic voters out of representation (whether or not this is entirely true is irrevelant, the voters are going to FEEL betrayed) and then HOPES that come general election time, they'll put all of the petty primary crap out of mind and rally. This in a year when Nader is re-running. Yeah, that sounds like a GREAT idea. Ugh.
Thursday, March 20, 2008
Great column on race
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/20/opinion/20cohen.html?th&emc=th
Cohen hits it spot on with a reaction to Obama's "Toward a More Perfect Union" speech.
Honesty feels heady right now. For seven years, we have lived with the arid, us-against-them formulas of Bush’s menial mind, with the result that the nuanced exploration of America’s hardest subject is almost giddying. Can it be that a human being, like Wright, or like Obama’s grandmother, is actually inhabited by ambiguities? Can an inquiring mind actually explore the half-shades of truth?
Yes. It. Can.
The unimaginable South African transition that Nelson Mandela made possible is a reminder that leadership matters. Words matter. The clamoring now in the United States for a presidency that uplifts rather than demeans is a reflection of the intellectual desert of the Bush years.
Cohen hits it spot on with a reaction to Obama's "Toward a More Perfect Union" speech.
Honesty feels heady right now. For seven years, we have lived with the arid, us-against-them formulas of Bush’s menial mind, with the result that the nuanced exploration of America’s hardest subject is almost giddying. Can it be that a human being, like Wright, or like Obama’s grandmother, is actually inhabited by ambiguities? Can an inquiring mind actually explore the half-shades of truth?
Yes. It. Can.
The unimaginable South African transition that Nelson Mandela made possible is a reminder that leadership matters. Words matter. The clamoring now in the United States for a presidency that uplifts rather than demeans is a reflection of the intellectual desert of the Bush years.
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
Obama's race speech
Commentary from the Huffington Post: Obama Cracks My TV in Half
I had several similar reactions when I read the text. I've yet to see the actual performance, but the video is up on his website and I'll be watching tonight. Just from reading, however, I teared up. It was... phenomenal. Now, a lot of people have been saying that all Obama offers is words. First of all, what words! But secondly, these people act like taking a public stance on a subject and commenting on it in such a way that it prompts the American people to reflect on their own beliefs is nothing. It's not nothing. Actions start with ideas, and ideas are conveyed in words. Many of these same critics say that he's putting forth a Utopian ideal, that the ideas are unrealistic. I've learned, over the years, to be wary of people pushing realism and nothing else. Realism leaves you with the present, with nowhere to go from there. If you aim for the most perfect world you can imagine, then even if you only make it one-tenth (or whatever) of the way, you've still progressed much farther than if you grounded all of your expectations (and yes, hopes and dreams) in reality. Plus, working toward your ideal just feels better than working toward someone else's idea of what is realistically possible. I believe that this concept is integral to Obama's campaign and appeal. I don't think it's a dishonest approach. I don't think it's a pointless pursuit. And I think honest, tasteful, insightful and moving speeches like the one Senator Obama gave yesterday are a great starting point for turning America from her current state, to one where a greater proportion of the people feel they're getting a fair deal, that they're represented. Because before we can change the country, I think we must change ourselves and the way we view America. And I don't think we can do that until we examine ourselves, the way we affect others, and the way the tough issues affect all of our lives. That's a good start. The race speech was a beautiful exercise in good starts. Let's continue...
I had several similar reactions when I read the text. I've yet to see the actual performance, but the video is up on his website and I'll be watching tonight. Just from reading, however, I teared up. It was... phenomenal. Now, a lot of people have been saying that all Obama offers is words. First of all, what words! But secondly, these people act like taking a public stance on a subject and commenting on it in such a way that it prompts the American people to reflect on their own beliefs is nothing. It's not nothing. Actions start with ideas, and ideas are conveyed in words. Many of these same critics say that he's putting forth a Utopian ideal, that the ideas are unrealistic. I've learned, over the years, to be wary of people pushing realism and nothing else. Realism leaves you with the present, with nowhere to go from there. If you aim for the most perfect world you can imagine, then even if you only make it one-tenth (or whatever) of the way, you've still progressed much farther than if you grounded all of your expectations (and yes, hopes and dreams) in reality. Plus, working toward your ideal just feels better than working toward someone else's idea of what is realistically possible. I believe that this concept is integral to Obama's campaign and appeal. I don't think it's a dishonest approach. I don't think it's a pointless pursuit. And I think honest, tasteful, insightful and moving speeches like the one Senator Obama gave yesterday are a great starting point for turning America from her current state, to one where a greater proportion of the people feel they're getting a fair deal, that they're represented. Because before we can change the country, I think we must change ourselves and the way we view America. And I don't think we can do that until we examine ourselves, the way we affect others, and the way the tough issues affect all of our lives. That's a good start. The race speech was a beautiful exercise in good starts. Let's continue...
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Marine protests in Berkeley on Daily Show
A little outdated, but this was a ridiculous experience (and proof that every Berkeley stereotype is pretty damn accurate). Protests have continued, and I just received a warning e-mail that there are numerous demonstrations planned for tomorrow. We'll see how the Code Pink saga unfolds...
p.s. Just to clarify, I think it's absurd to expect the Marines/other military branches to offer protection (not just in war, but in the event of an earthquake etc.) without allowing them a recruiting station. The complaint was supposedly largely due to the station's proximity to Berkeley High and UC-Berkeley, but it's not that close to either, really. It's just downtown, with everything else.
Google Bias
So, just out of curiosity - I wanted to see what images popped up first in a Google Images search of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. Here is Hillary:
#2: The "what went wrong?" shot - including Bill, the Clintons seem to be your average happy hipsters of their day. What happened? p.s. Bill's beard is FANTASTIC.


#1: the crazy b*tch shot


Now for Obama.
#1: Senate mug shot, pretty standard
#2: Topless shot, yes, that's right. Topless shot.

Now, I know I'm not alone in thinking Obama is a handsome guy - he is! But hot enough to be sandwiched between Penelope Cruz and Hugh Jackman? I don't know...
Anyway, the search pretty much revealed what I expected. The media bias against Hillary (it's pretty obvious) does indeed transcend traditional media outlets. However, I should make it clear that although there's a media bias against Hillary (c'mon - she's old news, Barack is a shiny, happy new and very interesting face), it shouldn't change either the way she runs her campaign or the way the public votes. Haven't we become smart (or jaded) enough to realize there will always be media bias and that we should only count on ourselves for opinion? I mean - 8 years of Fox News later, you think something would have sunk in. Thus, is there a media bias against Hillary Clinton? Yes. Is it the reason for HC losing? Nah, sorry, don't buy it.
Why superdelegates are a terrible idea: part 3,242 of a 23,048,320 part series
Superdelegate Sleaze: A Case Study
Wait, these superdelegates are using their voting power for personal gain? In politics? No, I don't believe it!
Wait, these superdelegates are using their voting power for personal gain? In politics? No, I don't believe it!
Victimhood
How much danger is the Democratic Party really in?
Generally decent article - but this is the part that disturbs me:
Many of Clinton's supporters, particularly women, also warn that they feel Obama has benefited from a free ride in the press and has taken advantage of barely veiled sexism. Clinton tellingly referred supporters to the analysis of ABC's Cokie Roberts, who said this of the reaction some women have to Obama: "Here is this woman, she's worked hard, she's done it all the way you're supposed to do it, and then this cute young man comes in and says a bunch of sweet, you know, nothings, and pushes you out of the way. And a lot of women are looking at that and saying, 'There goes my life.' "
What? What?! Here is the problem with this entire race - Clinton's arguments and ploys only work up to (down to?) a certain age group. In regard to the passage above, that is not my life. Nor is it the life of any of my female friends. And honestly, it feels like shit to be part of a group (the female gender) that would make important political decisions because they feel sympathy for the candidate, who is (schemingly, mind you) playing the victim. How can Hillary be tough enough to handle the White House (or the goddamn red phone) when she keeps whining about being a victim all the time? Why would women want our first representative in this historic role to be a) crazy and b) pathetic? Because that's what this victim argument is - crazy and pathetic. You win office because you're the best. Not because you've supposedly been shafted your whole life. If you come against someone who is better at the political game - well boo fucking hoo, either step it up or accept the fact that perhaps you're not president material. But don't complain about it and reinforce the stereotype of women as whining, pathetic, helpless little creatures. We're not. I certainly am not. Nor would I ever want to be put into a position of any sort because someone feels sorry for me. I can't think of a worse way to win (minus the 2000 elections, that was pretty bad). Women, particularly, I plead with you - don't vote for someone because you can relate, because you feel sorry for them, because she's a victim. If Hillary wins and history chooses her victimhood as the reason (because let's be honest, history is completely malleable), women will be set back significantly. My generation really is free from a lot of the old hang-ups (well, not completely free - that's still a way off, but I believe old attitudes toward these subjects hold very little sway in our minds) - be it gender, race, religion. From what I've seen, members of my generation have displayed a remarkable degree of tolerance - it warms my heart, it really does. My message to older voters would then be - please, really think about why you're voting for Hillary - if it's because you believe she truly is the best person for the job, then by all means! But if it's because you relate to her tale of woe (which is exaggerated), think again. There is an entire group of ladies who haven't felt victimized whatsoever in their lives. Women are doing extraordinary things, even in traditionally male industries (like mine). Don't reinforce an old, outdated stereotype. Hillary may have had a few rough patches in her life, but who hasn't? I don't know how you can look at this race, and believe that she is losing solely because she's a woman. And, for her to play that card, to manipulate voters into thinking they're evening the playing field, to set herself up as a victim - well, it makes the voters (particularly the women voters) look foolish and it proves what I've always suspected to be true - American voters vote with emotion, not reason. (Which, funnily enough, seems to be the argument against supporting Obama - we're too easily charmed - but that's nothing compared to the victim game.) Ladies, I'm talking to you - I think this is where we need to bring reason back. And reason clearly shows that Hillary cannot run a presidential campaign. To boil it down to its most concise form, which I know you've already heard, if you can't run a political campaign, you probably shouldn't be trusted with an entire country. Victim or not.
Generally decent article - but this is the part that disturbs me:
Many of Clinton's supporters, particularly women, also warn that they feel Obama has benefited from a free ride in the press and has taken advantage of barely veiled sexism. Clinton tellingly referred supporters to the analysis of ABC's Cokie Roberts, who said this of the reaction some women have to Obama: "Here is this woman, she's worked hard, she's done it all the way you're supposed to do it, and then this cute young man comes in and says a bunch of sweet, you know, nothings, and pushes you out of the way. And a lot of women are looking at that and saying, 'There goes my life.' "
What? What?! Here is the problem with this entire race - Clinton's arguments and ploys only work up to (down to?) a certain age group. In regard to the passage above, that is not my life. Nor is it the life of any of my female friends. And honestly, it feels like shit to be part of a group (the female gender) that would make important political decisions because they feel sympathy for the candidate, who is (schemingly, mind you) playing the victim. How can Hillary be tough enough to handle the White House (or the goddamn red phone) when she keeps whining about being a victim all the time? Why would women want our first representative in this historic role to be a) crazy and b) pathetic? Because that's what this victim argument is - crazy and pathetic. You win office because you're the best. Not because you've supposedly been shafted your whole life. If you come against someone who is better at the political game - well boo fucking hoo, either step it up or accept the fact that perhaps you're not president material. But don't complain about it and reinforce the stereotype of women as whining, pathetic, helpless little creatures. We're not. I certainly am not. Nor would I ever want to be put into a position of any sort because someone feels sorry for me. I can't think of a worse way to win (minus the 2000 elections, that was pretty bad). Women, particularly, I plead with you - don't vote for someone because you can relate, because you feel sorry for them, because she's a victim. If Hillary wins and history chooses her victimhood as the reason (because let's be honest, history is completely malleable), women will be set back significantly. My generation really is free from a lot of the old hang-ups (well, not completely free - that's still a way off, but I believe old attitudes toward these subjects hold very little sway in our minds) - be it gender, race, religion. From what I've seen, members of my generation have displayed a remarkable degree of tolerance - it warms my heart, it really does. My message to older voters would then be - please, really think about why you're voting for Hillary - if it's because you believe she truly is the best person for the job, then by all means! But if it's because you relate to her tale of woe (which is exaggerated), think again. There is an entire group of ladies who haven't felt victimized whatsoever in their lives. Women are doing extraordinary things, even in traditionally male industries (like mine). Don't reinforce an old, outdated stereotype. Hillary may have had a few rough patches in her life, but who hasn't? I don't know how you can look at this race, and believe that she is losing solely because she's a woman. And, for her to play that card, to manipulate voters into thinking they're evening the playing field, to set herself up as a victim - well, it makes the voters (particularly the women voters) look foolish and it proves what I've always suspected to be true - American voters vote with emotion, not reason. (Which, funnily enough, seems to be the argument against supporting Obama - we're too easily charmed - but that's nothing compared to the victim game.) Ladies, I'm talking to you - I think this is where we need to bring reason back. And reason clearly shows that Hillary cannot run a presidential campaign. To boil it down to its most concise form, which I know you've already heard, if you can't run a political campaign, you probably shouldn't be trusted with an entire country. Victim or not.
Monday, March 17, 2008
Wolfgang's Vault
Mmmmm... rock memorabilia. I remember my dad telling me about Bill Graham's warehouse full of archives several years ago. That man must have had one hell of a life. The sheer volume of it was hard to believe, and now parts are up for sale. Let's hope I get lucky in Vegas...
p.s. There are also recordings of historic concerts available for listening on this site - check it out! You have to register, but other than that - it's free.
p.s. There are also recordings of historic concerts available for listening on this site - check it out! You have to register, but other than that - it's free.
Friday, March 14, 2008
The Wire and Urban Decay
*From the Wall Street Journal
Urban Decay
By JULIA VITULLO-MARTIN
March 14, 2008; Page W11
"I'm a big fan of 'The Wire,' " Barack Obama told US Weekly last week. "It's not a happy show, but it's addictive." His fellow liberal intellectuals apparently agree. Called "the best TV show ever broadcast in America" by Slate's editor in chief, Jacob Weisberg, and "astonishingly sophisticated" by NPR media reporter David Folkenflik, the HBO series, whose finale was shown on Saturday, is a cops-and-criminals saga that brings its genre to an entirely new level. "No other program has ever done anything remotely like what this one does, namely to portray the social, political and economic life of an American city with the scope, observational precision and moral vision of great literature," wrote Mr. Weisberg last year. Conservatives such as National Review's Jack Dunphy and The Weekly Standard's Dean Barnett laud the show too. But conservatives may see in it a lesson that liberal viewers are unlikely to take to heart.
Set, written and produced in Baltimore, "The Wire" aired 60 episodes, with each of its five seasons focused on a different subject -- drug trafficking, the port, local politics, public schools and the city's newspaper. From the series' opening sequences filmed in "The Towers" -- huge public housing projects whose courtyards serve as drug bazaars -- through its depiction of the continuing devastation of neighborhoods by violent crime and unemployment, the Baltimore of "The Wire" becomes the poster child for six decades of failed urban policy. Its crumbling, corrupt Baltimore is in virtual free fall while the city's caretakers -- including nearly all its politicians -- feed at the public trough, cavorting and partying as Baltimore burns and children die. By season five, the city's fiscal situation is so dire that budget cuts cripple the already disheartened police department even further as police cars break down for lack of service.
A look at some real-life statistics shows how accurate this picture is. Surpassed only by Detroit in CNN/Morgan Quinto's 2006 ranking of the country's most dangerous large cities, Baltimore has traded places over the past few years with Detroit and Washington as the country's urban murder capital. With 282 homicides last year and a population of about 641,000, Baltimore had a homicide rate six times that of New York and three times that of Los Angeles. While crack usage faded in resurgent cities like New York, Boston and Chicago in the 1990s, it never lost its hold in many Baltimore neighborhoods, even as heroin became the new drug of choice. Addicts just used both. By 2000, the federal Drug Enforcement Agency said, Baltimore had the highest per-capita heroin consumption in the country.
Meanwhile the public schools deteriorated, graduating less than half their students. The Baltimore Housing Authority was put on HUD's troubled authority list and in the 1990s dynamited many of its high-rise projects.
Mr. Obama, like most of his fellow liberals, believes that poverty is at the heart of urban problems and that its eradication is a federal duty. "What's most overwhelming about urban poverty is that it's so difficult to escape -- it's isolating and it's everywhere," he commented as he released his plans last July to reinvest in impoverished neighborhoods. By this he means giving more public funding to after-school and job training programs, parental counseling, extended day care, and public-private business incubators. What Lyndon Johnson called "model cities" programs Mr. Obama refers to as "promise neighborhoods." The idea is that, freed from poverty, people who are now dealing drugs would be living productive lives. But Mr. Obama's favorite show puts forth a very different message: It is the crime that causes the poverty, not the other way around.
Just watch a few episodes and it becomes clear that brazen drug trafficking degrades everything it touches, seducing children with its lure of money and murderously punishing anyone who defies it. When the city blows up the federally funded housing projects whose density helped make drugs so profitable, trafficking becomes even more vicious as dealers war over the smaller territory that's left. Many favorite characters are murdered or set themselves on a clear path to death and disaster. Apparently no one is immune: Even "citizens" -- the cops' term for normal, law-abiding people -- are gunned down.
Crime prevents what little legal economic activity that exists from flourishing. The often overlooked second season of the show covers the port, its decline and deep corruption. One union boss who oversees the loading and unloading of cargo ships accepts bribes from corrupt importers to rename or "lose" containers in order to evade customs. He fools himself that by lining the pockets of his union brothers with this money he is protecting the mainly underemployed stevedores and their families. But as the port's decline worsens, the bribes are paid for increasingly brutal purposes -- such as human trafficking.
"The Wire" shows that there are other factors besides crime at the heart of Baltimore's problems (both real and fictional). The breakdown of the family and the horrendous urban schools are more significant than poverty itself as the source of urban decay. You would never know it, though, to hear all of the Democrats' talk of the income-inequality gap.
In one scene in "The Wire," a frail boy who was badly beaten in a street fight comes to Cutty, a former criminal, for boxing lessons and is pummeled in the ring by a smaller boy. When he cries bitterly that he's a failure "on the street," Cutty tries to comfort him, saying that the rules of the street aren't the same as those in the rest of the world. "But how do I get from here to the rest of the world?" asks the boy -- who has a missing father, a drug-using mother who ignores him, and a school that teaches him nothing.
Getting from teeming urban streets to the rest of the world has been the objective of generations of city dwellers -- and of urban policy. Yet the West Baltimore of "The Wire" may be more desperate, perilous and "isolating," to use Mr. Obama's word, than the worst of 19th-century slums. Those slum dwellers saw a way up and out. Characters on "The Wire" do not. Many are not even sure where "out" is, having never been beyond West Baltimore.
Even the show's longshoremen are unsure of how to get from here to the rest of the world. The days of well-paying industrial jobs are over, probably forever, the men's skills are limited, their futures dim. Their unions protected a few jobs at the cost of the overall economic health of the port, just as the public-school unions have favored teachers, including incompetent ones, over students.
The real lesson of "The Wire" is what New York's Mayor Rudy Giuliani and Police Commissioner Bill Bratton understood from day one: To restore a city and its neighborhoods, fight crime successfully and everything else will start to fall into place (though New York's public schools remain deplorable). And don't wait around for federal support. Take whatever money you can find.
Instead of advocating old-time Model Cities-type programs, Mr. Obama should propose The Wire Urban Agenda: Fight crime Bratton-style and resist the unions that stand in the way of prosperity. Now that would be true audacity of hope.
Ms. Vitullo-Martin is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute.
Urban Decay
By JULIA VITULLO-MARTIN
March 14, 2008; Page W11
"I'm a big fan of 'The Wire,' " Barack Obama told US Weekly last week. "It's not a happy show, but it's addictive." His fellow liberal intellectuals apparently agree. Called "the best TV show ever broadcast in America" by Slate's editor in chief, Jacob Weisberg, and "astonishingly sophisticated" by NPR media reporter David Folkenflik, the HBO series, whose finale was shown on Saturday, is a cops-and-criminals saga that brings its genre to an entirely new level. "No other program has ever done anything remotely like what this one does, namely to portray the social, political and economic life of an American city with the scope, observational precision and moral vision of great literature," wrote Mr. Weisberg last year. Conservatives such as National Review's Jack Dunphy and The Weekly Standard's Dean Barnett laud the show too. But conservatives may see in it a lesson that liberal viewers are unlikely to take to heart.
Set, written and produced in Baltimore, "The Wire" aired 60 episodes, with each of its five seasons focused on a different subject -- drug trafficking, the port, local politics, public schools and the city's newspaper. From the series' opening sequences filmed in "The Towers" -- huge public housing projects whose courtyards serve as drug bazaars -- through its depiction of the continuing devastation of neighborhoods by violent crime and unemployment, the Baltimore of "The Wire" becomes the poster child for six decades of failed urban policy. Its crumbling, corrupt Baltimore is in virtual free fall while the city's caretakers -- including nearly all its politicians -- feed at the public trough, cavorting and partying as Baltimore burns and children die. By season five, the city's fiscal situation is so dire that budget cuts cripple the already disheartened police department even further as police cars break down for lack of service.
A look at some real-life statistics shows how accurate this picture is. Surpassed only by Detroit in CNN/Morgan Quinto's 2006 ranking of the country's most dangerous large cities, Baltimore has traded places over the past few years with Detroit and Washington as the country's urban murder capital. With 282 homicides last year and a population of about 641,000, Baltimore had a homicide rate six times that of New York and three times that of Los Angeles. While crack usage faded in resurgent cities like New York, Boston and Chicago in the 1990s, it never lost its hold in many Baltimore neighborhoods, even as heroin became the new drug of choice. Addicts just used both. By 2000, the federal Drug Enforcement Agency said, Baltimore had the highest per-capita heroin consumption in the country.
Meanwhile the public schools deteriorated, graduating less than half their students. The Baltimore Housing Authority was put on HUD's troubled authority list and in the 1990s dynamited many of its high-rise projects.
Mr. Obama, like most of his fellow liberals, believes that poverty is at the heart of urban problems and that its eradication is a federal duty. "What's most overwhelming about urban poverty is that it's so difficult to escape -- it's isolating and it's everywhere," he commented as he released his plans last July to reinvest in impoverished neighborhoods. By this he means giving more public funding to after-school and job training programs, parental counseling, extended day care, and public-private business incubators. What Lyndon Johnson called "model cities" programs Mr. Obama refers to as "promise neighborhoods." The idea is that, freed from poverty, people who are now dealing drugs would be living productive lives. But Mr. Obama's favorite show puts forth a very different message: It is the crime that causes the poverty, not the other way around.
Just watch a few episodes and it becomes clear that brazen drug trafficking degrades everything it touches, seducing children with its lure of money and murderously punishing anyone who defies it. When the city blows up the federally funded housing projects whose density helped make drugs so profitable, trafficking becomes even more vicious as dealers war over the smaller territory that's left. Many favorite characters are murdered or set themselves on a clear path to death and disaster. Apparently no one is immune: Even "citizens" -- the cops' term for normal, law-abiding people -- are gunned down.
Crime prevents what little legal economic activity that exists from flourishing. The often overlooked second season of the show covers the port, its decline and deep corruption. One union boss who oversees the loading and unloading of cargo ships accepts bribes from corrupt importers to rename or "lose" containers in order to evade customs. He fools himself that by lining the pockets of his union brothers with this money he is protecting the mainly underemployed stevedores and their families. But as the port's decline worsens, the bribes are paid for increasingly brutal purposes -- such as human trafficking.
"The Wire" shows that there are other factors besides crime at the heart of Baltimore's problems (both real and fictional). The breakdown of the family and the horrendous urban schools are more significant than poverty itself as the source of urban decay. You would never know it, though, to hear all of the Democrats' talk of the income-inequality gap.
In one scene in "The Wire," a frail boy who was badly beaten in a street fight comes to Cutty, a former criminal, for boxing lessons and is pummeled in the ring by a smaller boy. When he cries bitterly that he's a failure "on the street," Cutty tries to comfort him, saying that the rules of the street aren't the same as those in the rest of the world. "But how do I get from here to the rest of the world?" asks the boy -- who has a missing father, a drug-using mother who ignores him, and a school that teaches him nothing.
Getting from teeming urban streets to the rest of the world has been the objective of generations of city dwellers -- and of urban policy. Yet the West Baltimore of "The Wire" may be more desperate, perilous and "isolating," to use Mr. Obama's word, than the worst of 19th-century slums. Those slum dwellers saw a way up and out. Characters on "The Wire" do not. Many are not even sure where "out" is, having never been beyond West Baltimore.
Even the show's longshoremen are unsure of how to get from here to the rest of the world. The days of well-paying industrial jobs are over, probably forever, the men's skills are limited, their futures dim. Their unions protected a few jobs at the cost of the overall economic health of the port, just as the public-school unions have favored teachers, including incompetent ones, over students.
The real lesson of "The Wire" is what New York's Mayor Rudy Giuliani and Police Commissioner Bill Bratton understood from day one: To restore a city and its neighborhoods, fight crime successfully and everything else will start to fall into place (though New York's public schools remain deplorable). And don't wait around for federal support. Take whatever money you can find.
Instead of advocating old-time Model Cities-type programs, Mr. Obama should propose The Wire Urban Agenda: Fight crime Bratton-style and resist the unions that stand in the way of prosperity. Now that would be true audacity of hope.
Ms. Vitullo-Martin is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute.
Hillary as Republican Manchurian Candidate
From the variety of nastiness that has emerged from the Clinton campaign, I still think this is the worst (because it's not about identity politics, but rather a genuine disregard for the future of our nation, our troops, our money - in short, a selfish betrayal of the American people):
'For the record, AmericaBlog documented her repeated endorsements of Senator McCain and, concurrently, her offenses against the Democratic Party:
"[McCain has] never been president, but he will put forth his lifetime of experience. I will put forth my lifetime of experience. Senator Obama will put forth a speech he made in 2002."
"I have a lifetime of experience that I will bring to the White House. I know Senator McCain has a lifetime of experience that he will bring to the White House. And Senator Obama has a speech he gave in 2002."
"Of course, well, you know, I've got a lifetime of experience. Senator McCain has a lifetime of experience. And you know, Senator Obama's whole campaign is about one speech he made in 2002."
Clearly, the senator's point was that if she doesn't win the nomination (and it's mathematically impossible at this point), she would prefer to see Senator McCain defeat Senator Obama in November. After all, and by her own admission, Senator McCain is more qualified and better equipped to defend the nation against the evildoers. What's more is that Senator Clinton has provided for the McCain campaign enough clips to launch a thousand fear mongering commercials.'
And check out this cozy little shot:

Thursday, March 13, 2008
Colbert on Clinton
"But they were wrong about her [Hillary] being inevitable, right? She was not inevitable - she is unkillable. You cannot stop her. You chop off her head, she’ll crawl toward you. Now, I think, I think, you know, in these dangerous days, that might be what we need in a president."
I need to start watching The Colbert Report again. And as brilliant as Stephen is, the quality is much improved since the writer's strike ended. Hooray.
I need to start watching The Colbert Report again. And as brilliant as Stephen is, the quality is much improved since the writer's strike ended. Hooray.
The difference between how wealthy we perceive America to be, and how wealthy she actually is...
Fabulous column from Herbert on our financial situation and the ever-widening income gap. I have many thoughts on the subject and how it relates to our current economic mess, but am unable to put them down now - hopefully soon!
"For years, families have been fighting weakness on the employment front with every other option imaginable. Wives and mothers have gone to work. People have been putting in more hours and working additional jobs.
"And Americans have plunged like Olympic diving champions into every form of debt they could find.
"As Andrew Stern, president of the Service Employees International Union, told me some months ago: 'Workers are incredibly, legitimately scared that the American dream, particularly the belief that their kids will do better, is ending.'"
Generally, I try to be as optimistic about our futures as possible (while still holding on to reality), but when I read that last sentence, some part of me shuddered at its truth. All is not lost, but I certainly don't think we're on the right track yet.
"For years, families have been fighting weakness on the employment front with every other option imaginable. Wives and mothers have gone to work. People have been putting in more hours and working additional jobs.
"And Americans have plunged like Olympic diving champions into every form of debt they could find.
"As Andrew Stern, president of the Service Employees International Union, told me some months ago: 'Workers are incredibly, legitimately scared that the American dream, particularly the belief that their kids will do better, is ending.'"
Generally, I try to be as optimistic about our futures as possible (while still holding on to reality), but when I read that last sentence, some part of me shuddered at its truth. All is not lost, but I certainly don't think we're on the right track yet.
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Holy crap.
http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/Vote2008/story?id=4440551&page=1
Wow. And I thought the Clinton campaign screw-ups couldn't get any worse...
Wow. And I thought the Clinton campaign screw-ups couldn't get any worse...
Monday, March 10, 2008
This is some nasty business right here.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/08/opinion/08herbert.html?th&emc=th
Hillary really should be ashamed.
"Mr. Kroft asked Senator Clinton if she believed that Senator Obama is a Muslim. In one of the sleaziest moments of the campaign to date, Senator Clinton replied: 'No. No. Why would I? No, there is nothing to base that on. As far as I know.'"
"More serious was Senator Clinton’s assertion that she was qualified to be commander in chief, and that John McCain had also “certainly” crossed that “threshold,” but that the jury was still out on Mr. Obama.
"In other words, if a choice on national security had to be made today between Senators Obama and McCain, voters — according to Mrs. Clinton’s logic — should choose Senator McCain."
Hillary really should be ashamed.
"Mr. Kroft asked Senator Clinton if she believed that Senator Obama is a Muslim. In one of the sleaziest moments of the campaign to date, Senator Clinton replied: 'No. No. Why would I? No, there is nothing to base that on. As far as I know.'"
"More serious was Senator Clinton’s assertion that she was qualified to be commander in chief, and that John McCain had also “certainly” crossed that “threshold,” but that the jury was still out on Mr. Obama.
"In other words, if a choice on national security had to be made today between Senators Obama and McCain, voters — according to Mrs. Clinton’s logic — should choose Senator McCain."
Sunday, March 09, 2008
The Presidio
Now, I'm fairly certain I'm not going to live in San Francisco forever. It's glorious, but my family is all the way on the east coast, and given my tendency to wander - it's just a safe assumption. So, while I do live here, I try and get as much enjoyment out of it as possible. One of the greatest things about this city is how quickly one can go from a wholly metropolitan environment to a surprisingly natural one (particularly given the city's small size: 7 mile X 7 mile square). I live quite near one of San Francisco's largest protected areas, the Presidio. I've taken to going on long weekend walks through the Presidio, among other SF locales that are pleasing to the eyes (you don't have to go far...). Anyway, just thought I'd share a few photos from yesterday's trek.
Does this look like a city to you? Me neither. And actually, I'm always surprised at how silent it gets on these trails. Sometimes you can hear the faint rumble of traffic, but mostly, it's like hiking anywhere else.I'm also fascinated by west coast flora. I can't remember seeing anything like this back east, or even when I lived in Colorado. Let me know if you know what this is, although I will be consulting my own plant expert - my mother.
This is Mountain Lake (where's the mountain?). Again, I never left the city. Also, I hit every "scenic overlook" listed in the website above, but I felt too touristy to take a picture there. Everyone else either looked like a hardcore weekend biker or a hardcore hiker. I tend to take off in a hoodie and jeans. Meh! I should probably learn to be less self-conscious about looking like a tourist - I'm not self conscious about much, but for some reason, that's one of my weaknesses. Good times anyway. Last weekend I went on a 15-mile walk that included crossing the Golden Gate Bridge (for the first time!) - I'll probably post pictures from that sometime soon. There's just so much to see - it's a bit overwhelming.
Friday, March 07, 2008
Websites to check out once you have some free time
www.openthegovernment.org
www.fedspending.org
www.opencongress.org
Also, download and watch this webcast after March 19.
www.fedspending.org
www.opencongress.org
Also, download and watch this webcast after March 19.
Recession for sure
Unfortunately, lots of bad news today:
Payrolls declined by 63,000 jobs.
Defaults on mortgages reached a historic high.
And Saturday Night Live is apparently back on the radar.
"'Saturday Night Live' has been in the news a lot lately, first for allegedly catering to Hillary Clinton's campaign with too-favorable skits and appearances, then for hiring Fred Armisen to portray Barack Obama even though Armisen is not black and, finally, for being cited as a catalyst - by way of a skit featuring fawning reporters asking Armisen/Obama softball questions - for tougher media coverage of the Illinois senator.
"To which we say: What? People are still watching 'Saturday Night Live'? Why? To kill time in a slow and unfunny manner? "
Also, see this post for some of the reasons I hate the entire "bitch is the new black" thing. Being a bitch is not a good thing! I find it absurd that I even need to type that. Remember, the origin of the word is a female dog - it's not exactly the type of description women should desire. And yes, I know it wasn't Hillary Clinton who invented the phrase, but one of her supporters - however, many of her [particularly female] supporters have embraced this motto. If another candidate appropriated a word into their campaign that applied to a specific demographic and had a negative origin, my guess is there would be a HUGE backlash. No matter how much I read, I still find it very hard to understand the Clinton campaign, particularly the feminist aspect, which she's been trying to play for all its worth. Hillary's campaign seems to alternate between accusing everyone else (the media, her opponents, the voters!) of misogyny and displaying it themselves. I cannot think of a better word to describe her entire campaign than "hypocritical".
Payrolls declined by 63,000 jobs.
Defaults on mortgages reached a historic high.
And Saturday Night Live is apparently back on the radar.
"'Saturday Night Live' has been in the news a lot lately, first for allegedly catering to Hillary Clinton's campaign with too-favorable skits and appearances, then for hiring Fred Armisen to portray Barack Obama even though Armisen is not black and, finally, for being cited as a catalyst - by way of a skit featuring fawning reporters asking Armisen/Obama softball questions - for tougher media coverage of the Illinois senator.
"To which we say: What? People are still watching 'Saturday Night Live'? Why? To kill time in a slow and unfunny manner? "
Also, see this post for some of the reasons I hate the entire "bitch is the new black" thing. Being a bitch is not a good thing! I find it absurd that I even need to type that. Remember, the origin of the word is a female dog - it's not exactly the type of description women should desire. And yes, I know it wasn't Hillary Clinton who invented the phrase, but one of her supporters - however, many of her [particularly female] supporters have embraced this motto. If another candidate appropriated a word into their campaign that applied to a specific demographic and had a negative origin, my guess is there would be a HUGE backlash. No matter how much I read, I still find it very hard to understand the Clinton campaign, particularly the feminist aspect, which she's been trying to play for all its worth. Hillary's campaign seems to alternate between accusing everyone else (the media, her opponents, the voters!) of misogyny and displaying it themselves. I cannot think of a better word to describe her entire campaign than "hypocritical".
One thing I never understood...
Why don't schools utilize Home Economics Class to provide more nutritious (and varied) lunch options? Cafeteria workers could supervise (because obviously kids cannot be trusted not to tamper with the food of their peers - although I think they should make whoever cooked it, eat it - to avoid moral hazard). And while not every dish would turn out edible, I feel like the vast majority would. And the Home Ec class doesn't need to eat an entire German chocolate cake, do they? Anyway, just a thought on improving efficiency - not to mention feeding the dreams of any inspiring chef. Pun intended.
Thursday, March 06, 2008
Izzy!

Lesson of Defeat: Obama Comes Out Punching

Wednesday, March 05, 2008
I'll be there.
One of life's most unfortunate "necessities"

Or you could short-cut right to the Andy Bernard version: "Name repetition, personality mirroring, and never breaking off a handshake."
Hey, it worked for him! Oh, wait...
Tuesday, March 04, 2008
For all The Wire fans out there...
http://timgoodman.blogspot.com/
Tim Goodman is also a San Francisco Chronicle writer, but this is his personal blog. Always great commentary on the creme de la creme of HBO.
Sidenote: Series finale Sunday - it's been a great lead-up so far, I'm beyond anticipation.
Tim Goodman is also a San Francisco Chronicle writer, but this is his personal blog. Always great commentary on the creme de la creme of HBO.
Sidenote: Series finale Sunday - it's been a great lead-up so far, I'm beyond anticipation.
David Brooks does it again!
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/04/opinion/04brooks.html?th&emc=th
This guy is brilliant. Great column.
This guy is brilliant. Great column.
This is important.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/04/opinion/04herbert.html?th&emc=th
My list for the new president
Goal #1: Stop hemorrhaging money!
My list for the new president
Goal #1: Stop hemorrhaging money!
Monday, March 03, 2008
Arcade Fire supports Obama
http://cemusic.blogspot.com/2008/03/arcade-fire-plays-for-barack.html
**good commentary on this site too
**good commentary on this site too
Nader, part deux
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/02/29/AR2008022902786.html?wpisrc=newsletter&wpisrc=newsletter&wpisrc=newsletter
Best part: "By now it is no secret that a large segment of the public has soured on "Washington." To denizens of the District, this can seem a childish, naive sentiment. It's not. What Americans have turned against is the broken two-party system. According to a poll taken last year by the firm I founded, Penn, Schoen & Berland, 61 percent of voters say that having a third-party candidate on the ballot in the presidential race would be beneficial to America. A poll by the Luntz Maslansky Group found that 81 percent of the electorate would consider voting for a third-party candidate."
Please, please - let's keep going with this! (Maybe not in this election, but in the next and the next and the next - who knows how many choices we could have - and by free market logic, more choices=more competition=increased efficiency - our political system needs more of this than perhaps any other abstract quality!) Although I'm still not sure about Nader, specifically; can anyone concisely explain his views to me (I'm just not that familiar...)?
Best part: "By now it is no secret that a large segment of the public has soured on "Washington." To denizens of the District, this can seem a childish, naive sentiment. It's not. What Americans have turned against is the broken two-party system. According to a poll taken last year by the firm I founded, Penn, Schoen & Berland, 61 percent of voters say that having a third-party candidate on the ballot in the presidential race would be beneficial to America. A poll by the Luntz Maslansky Group found that 81 percent of the electorate would consider voting for a third-party candidate."
Please, please - let's keep going with this! (Maybe not in this election, but in the next and the next and the next - who knows how many choices we could have - and by free market logic, more choices=more competition=increased efficiency - our political system needs more of this than perhaps any other abstract quality!) Although I'm still not sure about Nader, specifically; can anyone concisely explain his views to me (I'm just not that familiar...)?
Sunday, March 02, 2008
Saturday, March 01, 2008
The anti-Dowd
Gail Collins proves you can be a liberal female columnist, incorporate humor, and still sound like an intellectual human being - unlike Maureen Dowd who needs to stop writing and making women look like incompetent hacks. Gail Collins is not my favorite Times columnist, and maybe she's not as easy on the eyes as Dowd, but my goodness, she doesn't make me ashamed of my gender, and for that, I thank her.
*Just a small note, this is to contrast her with Maureen Dowd who I LOATHE. Loathe, loathe, loathe - for her ridiculous nicknames (Barry=Barack - what?!), weak arguments, false logic, and a million other wrongs. Women columnists are quite clearly in the newspaper minority, even in the liberal New York Times, and seeing Dowd alongside intimidatingly good columnists like Frank Rich and Paul Krugman makes my blood crawl. I'm not particularly inclined to be ashamed of my gender (I LOVE being a woman, truly) but the Dowd juxtaposition is too much to bear. It's like her role, in addition to being one of the token females, was to provide the "dumbed-down" column. It's disgusting. At least Coulter had the decency to be on the other side (politically) - Dowd supposedly represents my views. BLECH.
*Just a small note, this is to contrast her with Maureen Dowd who I LOATHE. Loathe, loathe, loathe - for her ridiculous nicknames (Barry=Barack - what?!), weak arguments, false logic, and a million other wrongs. Women columnists are quite clearly in the newspaper minority, even in the liberal New York Times, and seeing Dowd alongside intimidatingly good columnists like Frank Rich and Paul Krugman makes my blood crawl. I'm not particularly inclined to be ashamed of my gender (I LOVE being a woman, truly) but the Dowd juxtaposition is too much to bear. It's like her role, in addition to being one of the token females, was to provide the "dumbed-down" column. It's disgusting. At least Coulter had the decency to be on the other side (politically) - Dowd supposedly represents my views. BLECH.
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