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| - Music:Chant of the Ever Circling Skeletal Family - David Bowie
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| - Music:The One You Really Love - The Magnetic Fields
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| Дорогой Интернет, я не говорю русского и хотя я желаю я имел время, I can' t идет к Babelfish перевести. Так если ваш журнал не написан в английском, I вероятно won' t добавляет вас назад. | |
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A classic torch song performed by a nearly forgotten genius.
- Tags:music
- Music:True - James Booker
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| Yeah, I knew better than to expect an authentic New Orleans style po-boy from a chain, even one billing itself as "New Orleans Kitchen." After all, their signature dish is called "Bourbon Chicken," which is not a dish I had ever tried or even heard of in the 40 years I lived in New Orleans. And this po-boy wasn't bad, per se, it just wasn't a New Orleans-style po-boy. First of all, it was served on a kind of submarine roll, not French bread--not even close! Nothing beats Leidenheimers French bread, and I wasn't expecting it. Nor was I expecting the foot-long dimensions of a real po-boy. This sandwich was about 6 to 8 inches long. The shrimp themselves, although predictably on the small side, weren't terrible either, even though there were only about 8 or 9 on this sandwich. They were just heavily battered in a too-spicy batter. The fried shrimp on the best New Orleans po-boys aren't spiced up. The batter is generally very light, just flour and egg. Down home, we like to let the food speak for itself. It's wrong to think that New Orleans food is always heavily spicy. The farthest this place went from authentic was in the lettuce on this sandwich: it was covered in a kind of spicy mustard salad dressing, with black olives instead of tomatoes. This made me almost laugh out loud! In every New Orleans po-boy shop, you're asked if you want your sandwich "dressed," which is the local word for "with lettuce, tomato, pickle, and mayonnaise." So I can imagine some corporate Yankee-type thinking "dressed" means "salad dressing on your lettuce." This lunch special came with 2 sides. I can never understand where this chain gets its ideas about New Orleans food from. I chose red beans and rice (which tasted like the red beans by grade-school cafeteria served) and green beans, which at least were fresh and not canned. But neither had anything authentically New Orleans about them. Needless to say, the sandwich I ate looked nothing like this:  Now that's a real po-boy. Dressed! Look at how many shrimp are on it! If you want it "undressed," it's usually served with butter and lemon. | |
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| Gregory Isaacs died today of cancer at the age of 59. Unless you're a fan of reggae music, you probably never heard of him. But his unique voice and style were unforgettable. He was one of the original greats, called the Cool Ruler for his smooth but confident style.
- Tags:music
- Music:Night Nurse - Gregory Isaacs
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| I could tell almost immediately what was going through Christine O'Donnell's mind this week during the First Amendment controversy in her debate with Chris Coons. O'Donnell is a literalist. She was trying to argue, like many conservative Christian politicians do, that the words "separation of church and state" are not in the constitution. She is right, in a literal sense. But everyone who thinks beyond the literal words knows that the Establishment Clause ("Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion") are the words that effectively separate church and state. If the constitution prohibits congress from making laws regarding religion, there is no way the state can establish a state religion. Every reasonable person with a minimum of intelligence understands this, including almost every judge. But I wonder why no one in the Media pointed this out. All the liberal talking heads on MSNBC simply laughed at O'Donnell and never actually explained her literalism. Rachel Maddow came close, but she didn't explain it the way I did above. O'Donnell's literalism is a kind of logical fallacy, similar to equivocation. It is similar to the fallacious reasoning of the Birthers, who think that President Obama's "Certificate of Live Birth" is not his "Birth Certificate" because it isn't called a birth certificate. But by O'Donnell's reasoning, one could argue that it's okay for Christians to lie because there is no Commandment among the famous Ten that uses that word, no commandment that literally says "Thou shalt not tell a lie.". According to this line of reasoning, "bear false witness" is not the same as "tell a lie." And O'Donnell still doesn't seem to understand the difference. She thought she had caught her opponent in a gaff, not that she was simply misunderstanding the meaning of the Establishment Clause. | |
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| No--I don't vote for Republicans. Ever. | |
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| What are we to make of this example? Brand: Put a good face on. Example: "Okay, so we polluted the groundwater by failing to follow those finicky safety regulations. How should we brand it?" And of course, people are no longer considered resources to be treasures but capital to be spent: Human Capital: Human Resources, previously Personnel. Example: "Human Capital is on the fifth floor." | |
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| - Tags:music
- Music:Down By The Train Line - Stranger & Patsy
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| These are from about two weeks ago. Most of this snow has whittled down to a slippery gray sludge.  Winnemac Park ( Live Country Western MusicCollapse )- Music:Tropical Hot Dog Night - Captain Beefheart
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| I know I'm biased, but I'm often amazed or amused that some of my friends have little or no Internet presence. It's not necessarily just a generational gap, either. Just different lifestyle choices. Those people not on social networking sites probably have more fulfilling lives than many of the people I interact with every day through this computer. But I sure do miss them! ( winter sunset, River ParkCollapse ) | |
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| 1,000 Umbrellas Open to Spoil the View: XTC's English Legacy By James Thurston DavisI first encountered XTC around 1982, probably their English Settlement album, probably in my friend Marc's tiny bedroom with the Roger Dean posters on the wall and the cedar chest stuffed with vinyl. I like to think the first thing I remember about that album was Andy Partridge's snarling vocals on "No Thugs in Our House," or the aural explosion of "Jason and the Argonauts," but what really struck me immediately was the overwhelming sense of Englishness that came over me the moment the needle dropped on "Runaways." I've been an Anglophile for as long as I can remember, and growing up, all of my favorite bands were English: Beatles, Moody Blues, Gentle Giant, David Bowie, Pink Floyd, Yes, Genesis, King Crimson. Most of these bands made music that had little to do with the blues, the primary basis of American rock and roll. These bands had a different set of influences, both lyrically and musically. Progressive rock came out of the English tendency to absorb varied influences, new flavors, weird clothes, and outrageous time signatures. The Beatles made the sitar seem English, and they were one of the primary influences on progressive rock. Am I saying XTC was a progressive rock band? No, but they were certainly influenced by it. To me, the Englishness I heard so loudly on English Settlement was the same cultural signature I heard in Gentle Giant and Moody Blues. While XTC didn't have a mellotron, no two songs sounded quite alike. In many ways, their sound was a lot like progressive rock with short hair and skinny ties, especially when I look at the whole of their career. But the XTC sound, no matter the period, is definitively English. It borrows influences widely from home and abroad and mixes its own identity in the shed. Most people don't know that XTC—and by that I mean Andy Partridge and Colin Moulding—started as a prog band in 1972, although they quickly switched to a more New York Dolls/glam rock style. That prog influence continued throughout the band's career. I hear it everywhere: in the songwriting, in the playing, and in the arrangements.It's no accident that the band's history mirrors the Beatles' history, the way XTC stopped touring to work exclusively in the studio, the way their sound evolved from caveman basics to baroque pop symphonies. Some fans today even call them "the Fab Three." In 1983, Andy Partridge, the real genius of the group, wanted to concentrate on studio recording, so he drummed up a fluky story about stage fright (later revised to a tale about his wife dumping his supply of drugs down the loo, robbing him of his mojo) to get out of the annoying obligation to perform his music live. But this somewhat perplexing decision (at the time anyway) turned out to be a great gift to music lovers, because pound for pound, XTC was the best band of the last 30 years. Their early music was superb, but every studio creation after they stopped touring is a masterpiece. Like the Revolver-era Beatles, by 1983 XTC was making records that were too challenging to reproduce faithfully on stage, where they were a great guitar band. The sound palette on English Settlement was already much deeper than merely guitars-bass-drums. ( Read more...Collapse ) | |
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| An entry I made in grammarpolice just got spammed. It was a comment by a user in China that is trying to sell t-shirts. Has anyone else experienced this? Are we now going to see an influx of sockpuppet journals from China whose only purpose is to spam people's journals and communities in comments? Oi! - Music:Future Is In The Future - Electric Six
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| I'LL COME RUNNING
Brian Eno, from album Another Green Word
Music transcribed by Gary Von Colln
(Dedicated to Ritva Saarikko's Shoes and Ian Macdonald's Polish)
E - D - B - E -
E D
I'll find a place somewhere in the corner
B E
I'm gonna waste the rest of my days
E D
Just watching patiently from the window
B
Just waiting seasons change,
A E
Some day ,oh oh, my dreams will pull you through that garden gate.
E D
I want to be the wandering sailor
B E
We're silhouettes by the light of the moon
E D
I sit playing solitaire by the window
B
Just waiting seasons change,
A E
Ah ah, You'll see, one day these dreams will pull you through my door
N.C. D B
And I'll come running to tie your shoes
N.C. E
I'll come running to tie your shoes
N.C. D B
I'll come running to tie your shoes
N.C. E
I'll come running to tie your shoes
Solo
E D
I'll come running to tie your shoes
B E
I'll come running to tie your shoes
http://www.chordie.com/chord.pere/tabfu.thudspace.net/e/eno_brian/ill_come_running.crd- Music:I'll Come Running - Brian Eno
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| Many think Hurricane Katrina was just an unavoidable natural disaster. And it was, if you only look at the Mississippi Gulf Coast. In the city of New Orleans, Katrina was a man-made disaster, caused by the worst failure of civil engineering in history. All of the flooding in the city was caused by a failure of flood walls designed and constructed with federal money by the US Army Corps of Engineers, who admitted that the flood walls were hurricane protection "in name only." This 11 minute video (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wln_iq5bc8k), produced by www.levees.org, explains what really happened to New Orleans. To me, the America I had been taught about my whole life died that day. My country was too busy squandering billions of dollars and thousands of lives destroying another country, and still refuses to take the necessary and morally correct steps to rebuild its greatest cultural treasure. Politicians have offered nothing but platitudes. It's been said that a nation is judged by how it treats its weakest and most defenseless people. We can talk about America's deathly-ill, profit-driven health care system to see how America treats the weak. But we can also look at the city of New Orleans four years after the federal levees broke. Some progress has been made, almost entirely because of local initiatives, but so much more needs to be done. The America I used to know would never have waited a week to send disaster relief. And the America I used to know, the same country that rebuild Europe and Japan after World War Two, would never have wasted four years on rebuilding New Orleans. President Obama has continued the policy of his predecessor and offered only empty promises. The many friends and family I know who still live there have cautious hope. But so much more needs to be done. Don't forget that the flooding in New Orleans was a man-made disaster, and the city will never recover without more help. The struggle continues. | |
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| The rest of the world has taken the profit out of health care, and the vast majority of people like it just fine. But here in the United States, we are backward and quickly falling behind, mostly because many politicians and lobbyists lie about reform and its consequences.
The fact remains that profiting from someone's health problems is immoral. The current private-insurance-based system in the United States is immoral. The profits made by drug companies and health insurance companies are immoral.
For the last few months, politicians in Washington who are more interested in what lobbyists have to say and are deaf to what the people need have been "compromising" away our basic human right to affordable health care. We cannot let this happen.
A "reform bill" that lacks a comprehensive public option is completely unacceptable.
President Obama insists on "bi-partianship" in this process, but he is wrong. The Democratic Party won the last election and now has strong majorities in both houses, which means that bi-partianship is unnecessary and undesirable. And given the dirty tricks, the incessant lying, and the complete lack of understanding demonstrated by the vast majority of Republican politicians, their input will only hurt the general public. If Obama fails to lead in this reform, he will lose my confidence. Good intentions do not belong in political debates. Democrats are way too nice, and their desire to "do the right thing" by including the opposition in the bill is not what the country needs right now. | |
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| Open Letter to the Drivers of Chicago
Dear fellow citizens,
Many Chicago drivers have no idea how to conduct themselves on the streets of this great city. As a life-long defensive driver, please allow me to make a few suggestions that will make our lives much less stressful and much safer.
1. Alleys are not through streets, which is why most have no posted speed limit signs or stop signs. Over the course of Chicago's colorful history, the city leaders had the foresight to insist on including service alleys on almost every block. These alleys are meant to service the homes and businesses around them. They were not meant as alternate routes or short cuts. So even if CPS closes a street between two adjoining schools, drivers do not have a good reason for using the alley way. Also, if you see a moving van or delivery truck parked in an alley and blocking your short cut, you do not have a right to stand on your horn until the truck is moved or to insist in a loud and belligerent voice that "I HAVE TO GET THROUGH!" Unless you are an emergency vehicle, you have to back up and take the street. If you saw the alleyway blocked, why did you drive all the way through the block and stop before the truck parked in the alley?
1.1 Speaking of alleys, if you have to take one and you see a blind entrance to the alley ahead, of which in Chicago there are many apartment buildings that are flush with the sidewalks, blowing your horn to warn pedestrians of your approach is not appropriate and is definitely not a substitute for coming to a complete stop before the sidewalk. Instead of disturbing with your horn blowing the dozens of residents who live near these alleys, you should slowly approach the end of the alley, then come to a complete stop and wait a few seconds before proceeding. Pedestrians will see your car stopped there, and you will be obligated to allow them to pass.
2. Pedestrians have the right of way when they are crossing the intersection within the clearly marked pedestrian crossings. This means you have to stop and let the walkers cross the street. You do not have the right to yell at innocent people who have the right to cross the street. There is no such law that makes automobile drivers the royalty of Chicago. Slow down and look out for pedestrians.
3. Likewise, bicyclists have a right to all roads except expressways. You do not have the right to blow your horn at bicyclists who are minding their own business in the right-hand lane. Contrary to popular belief, sidewalks are not bike paths. In fact, bicyclists over the age of twelve are prevented by city ordinance from riding on sidewalks. If you are approaching a bicyclist on a side street clogged with parked cars on both sides, you should not crowd the cyclist, blow your horn to announce your presence, or harass the cyclist in any way. Just be patient and regard the 20 mph speed limit on side streets. Most intersections in Chicago have four-way stop sighs, so you will have the opportunity to pass at an intersection. On most side streets, there is room for two rows of parked cars, a cyclist on the right, and your car to pass. Do so slowly. There is room on the streets for all of us. And if you park anywhere in the city, please look out for cyclists before opening the street-side door.
4. Your horn is an emergency feature that should be used as a last resort, not a device used to express your frustration or impose your will on other drivers and pedestrians. Blowing your horn at the traffic in front of you that is clearly slowed down or stopped because of a busy intersection ahead is not going to make the traffic move faster. In fact, your horn blowing only makes the other drivers resent you even more, increasing the stress of driving in the city.
5. Likewise, do not blow your horn at intersections when the cars in front of you are clearly allowing pedestrians to cross the street. Do you want the driver ahead to run over a pedestrian so you can save a few minutes on your commute?
6. Passing on the right is illegal and very dangerous. Just don't do it. Also, don't pull into the right-hard turning lane at traffic lights only to get a jump on the traffic ahead by accelerating aggressively when the light turns green. This move is equally illegal and dangerous.
7. Drivers can make right turns on red lights but only after coming to a complete stop. This rule applies to all vehicles, including massive 18-wheelers. I saw one yesterday make a high-speed right turn without stopping or slowing at a busy intersection flanked by a bike path. I feel lucky to be alive today!
8. Cab drivers and bus drivers are subject to the same traffic laws as all other vehicles. Likewise, bicyclists are also expected to follow traffic laws, including stop signs.
Following these simple suggestions, most of which are based on actual LAWS, will make driving in the city much less dangerous and stressful.
Sincerely,
James | |
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| - Tags:poo paper
- Music:Dear Jenny - Dresden Dolls
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| Gunman blocks NY center's door, kills 13, self
By WILLIAM KATES, Associated Press Writer William Kates, Associated Press Writer
BINGHAMTON, N.Y. – A gunman barricaded the back door of a community center with his car and then opened fire on a room full of immigrants taking a citizenship class Friday, killing 13 people before apparently committing suicide, officials said.
Investigators said they had yet to establish a motive for the massacre, which was at least the fifth deadly mass shooting in the U.S. in the past month alone.... Of course, everyone knows it's illogical to suggest the recent shootings may be connected to the surge in gun sales following Obama's election. Those two things couldn't possibly be connected. | |
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| - Music:The State I Am In - Belle and Sebastian
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| Yes, I'm convinced Mayor Richard M. Daley is insane. I've noticed the trend for some time now. Watch him closely during his press conferences and you'll see a man whose power has completely robbed him of rational thought.
His most recent incident occurred last week, in the wake of the season's first significant snowfall. Daley appeared on TV last week to complain that removing that half-inch of snow cost the city almost $1 million. So, according to Daley, because of the economic downturn and tighter municipal funds, the city will no longer have an unlimited snow removal budget.
In introducing this policy, Daley has embraced the Third Rail of Chicago Politics! He's placed his political future on the whims of the weather!
Snow removal is a big deal in Chicago. Daley has forgotten the fate of his father's successor Michael Bilandic, who failed to clean up the snow after the Blizzard of '79 and was booted out of office in the very next election.
After he announced that more snow would stay longer on the streets, Daley got lucky. Chicago saw about 2 inches fall on Saturday, and sure enough, but Monday, while the main streets had been plowed, most of the side streets had not been. Daley's luck came yesterday and today, when warm rain removed most of that side-street snow for free.
But it isn't even winter yet. Had this been January, that snow would not have melted but would have frozen in place, making the side streets ice rinks! It's going to be a fun winter in Chicago. I'm so glad I don't own a car! | |
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| Ah, the Saga of Rod "Blowmeubitch" Blagojevich, also known as The Hairdo, has come to a head with his "arrest" early this morning. A few things come to mind.
First, how does one arrest a governor? Was he taken away in handcuffs, booked at a police station? Blagojevich was never a very likable character. I voted for him twice, but I wasn't happy about it. I was, like millions of Illinois voters, faced with a choice between a right-wing ideologue and a slimy Democrat. I was faced with a similar choice back in Louisiana in 1991 when Fast Eddie Edwards defeated David Duke for governor. A famous bumpersticker at the time read "Vote for the Crook--It's Important." The same dilemma occurs in Illinois every election cycle!
Second, the generally corrupt nature of Illinois politics naturally taints Barack Obama. Of course anyone should be considered innocent until proven guilty. Obama is not a typical, home-grown Illinois politician. He chose Chicago and isn't a product of the corruption and back-room deals that have characterized local politics since before anyone can remember. Obama will suffer from guilt by association. He has too many local ties not to be, so it's up to him to concentrate on serving the public and explain how the rotten system can be reformed.
Third, Blagojevich is not only arrogant, but dumber than most! And there are few things worse than a cocky idiot, as George W. Bush was so gracious to remind us for the last eight years! Blagojevich has known he's been under federal investigation since he was first elected governor, and he has to have known that Obama's election as POTUS had to have resulted in increased scrutiny of every Illinois politico. Yet he seems to have gone ahead with business-as-usual in trying to sell Obama's senate seat! Incredible! Almost as mind-blowingly stupid as Bill Clinton's getting caught with his oar in the water. Blagojevich seems also to have been worried about his financial future, trying to use his office to illegally procure high-paying, post-office positions for himself and his wife. But he had no reason to abuse his power for such ends. Isn't any politician leaving office virtually guaranteed with job offers and consultation fees and public speaking contracts? I don't understand his reasoning there.
Fourth, the media keeps reporting how "today is such a sad day for Illinois." Are they really that naive? The sad thing is that the people of Illinois have been electing crooks and liars for generations. One gets the leaders one deserves. That's democracy. I think it's really a good day for Illinois. Maybe now the people will stop electing crooks. But then again, just how naive can I be! | |
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| Don't laugh... Some of us really think like this:  Two Wrongs (the Christians are more like Bridge Mix)  The American Dilemma:  And gooooooood riddance!  I guess you can map anything.  Here's a link to the Map of the Lands of Human Sexuality because you need to look at it closely to truly appreciate it's wonders. http://www.obsidianfields.com/lj/sexmap1.1.gif | |
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| Spread the news: Jimmy Edney of Hendersonville, NC, is a bigot and an idiot.  - Tags:poo
- Music:Dance Rock - Bunny Wailer
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| Governor Bush admits his presidency is an epic failure. He even goes so far as to endorse Obama: "[I]f our nation continues on this course, the economic damage will be painful and lasting." McCain, meanwhile, by now used to Governor Bush treating him like the lap dog that he is, decides to play a game of semantics, hoping to distract the Great Stupid Majority from his utter lack of ideas: "The first thing I would do is say, 'Let's not call it a bailout. Let's call it a rescue." That's the first thing you would do, Senator? Personally, I wouldn't even call it a handout, but what it is: corporate welfare. Across the aisle, House Democrats search for a way to bow down to the unpopular Governor Bush and not play politics or seek justice. What struck me the most about yesterday's vote was that the Democrats mostly went along with the handout. In 2006, voters across the country gave the Democrats a majority in Congress because most wanted to see Governor Bush pay for his high crimes and misdemeanors, but since assuming the role of Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi has refused to put impeachment on the table. Consequently, her bill of fare and her popularity have been thin on calories and heavy on political wimpiness. This economic crisis is solely the result of Republican policies of deregulation, policies the Democrats have been traditionally against, but recently have been supporting for political gain. Bush and the Republicans were originally hoping to sabotage the federal government and roll back decades of New Deal social safety nets and controlled growth. They thought amassing huge budget deficits would cripple Social Security, Medicare, and unemployment benefits, the kind of entitlement programs they have railed against since the 1930s and that most Americans have come to rely on when the going gets tough. But the plan backfired. Now international banks are threatening to stop lending money to the United States and may even be considering calling in their loans. This is what happens when you cut taxes to the rich and shift the tax burden onto the middle and lower classes. This is what happens when you go to war without sacrificing any of your lavish, SUV-driven lifestyle. So instead of voting to protect their economic interests and keep the safety nets in place, many Americans have been voting on fear and clinging to myths. Many have been voting to overturn abortion rights and to create a Christian theocracy, two things that would be political suicide to any clear-thinking politician. I have to hand it to the Republicans: they are masters of manipulation. So what will happen next? I have no idea. I'm not an economist, merely a critical thinker. But I have always believed that we Americans have been living way beyond our means. I have also believed, as I've stated in this journal before, that only another Great Depression will cure the middle class of its infatuation with Republicans, morality in government, and the myth that taxes and government are the problem and not the solution. No political system is ever going to be perfect, but our nation must realign its priorities toward social justice instead of naked economic freedom. - Tags:politics
- Music:Sloop John B - The Beach Boys
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| Pascal's Wager  and  | |
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| http://www.votenobailout.org/Demand that the Bailout Legislation Be Rejected
We are witnessing a bankers' coup d’etat. In the name of saving the economy from a crisis created by their own greed and immense profits, the biggest bankers have taken a country and a people hostage.
“Give us your money and tear up what’s left of your Constitution or we will sink your economy,” is the message from Wall Street and the Bush Administration. “Give us the power and money we demand or you will be left jobless from a new economic depression."
Under the pretext of the banking crisis, the Bush Administration is changing the way this country operates. This is not simply taking trillions of dollars from the people and giving it to the richest bankers to do with as they see fit. - Tags:politics
- Music:Bardo - Todd Rundgren
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| The following Power Point presentation was prepared by LJ user ed_dirt: * If you grow up in Hawaii, raised by your grandparents, you’re “exotic, different.”
* Grow up in Alaska eating mooseburgers, a quintessential American story.
* If your name is Barack you’re a radical, unpatriotic Muslim.
* Name your kids Willow, Trig and Track, you’re a maverick.
* Graduate from Harvard law School and you are unstable.
* Attend 5 different small colleges before graduating, you’re well grounded.
* If you spend 3 years as a brilliant community organizer, become the first black President of the Harvard Law Review, create a voter registration drive that registers 150,000 new voters, spend 12 years as a Constitutional Law professor, spend 8 years as a State Senator representing a district with more than 750,000 people, become chairman of the state Senate’s Health and Human Services committee, spend 4 years in the United States Senate representing a state of 13 million people while sponsoring 131 bills and serving on the Foreign Affairs, Environment and Public Works and Veteran’s Affairs committees, you don’t have any real leadership experience.
* If your total resume is: local weather girl, 4 years on the city council and 6 years as the mayor of a town with fewer than 7,000 people, 20 months as the governor of a state with only 650,000 people, then you’re qualified to become the country’s second highest ranking executive.
* If you have been married to the same woman for 19 years while raising 2 beautiful daughters, all within Protestant churches, you’re not a real Christian.
* If you cheated on your first wife with a rich heiress, and left your disfigured wife and married the heiress the next month, you’re a Christian.
* If you teach responsible, age appropriate sex education, including the proper use of birth control, you are eroding the fiber of society.
* If, while governor, you staunchly advocate abstinence only, with no other option in sex education in your state’s school system while your unwed teen daughter ends up pregnant, you’re very responsible.
* If your wife is a Harvard graduate lawyer who gave up a position in a prestigious law firm to work for the betterment of her inner city community, then gave that up to raise a family, your family’s values don’t represent America’s.
* If your husband is nicknamed “First Dude,” with at least one DWI conviction and no college education, who didn’t register to vote until age 25 and once was a member of a group that advocated the secession of Alaska from the USA, your family is extremely admirable. | |
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|  We've been living through a long, illegal occupation of a foreign country, Iraq, where, although casualties are down in the last year or so, many Americans have died and billions of dollars have been squandered. We're also occupying another foreign country, Afghanistan, but progress has been very slow for a long time, and more blood and treasure has been squandered. Both of these foreign adventures are unpopular both here and abroad. Indeed, they have been counter-productive, as a recent poll shows that even moderate Muslims have a disfavorable view of the United States. The American economy has been slowed by one crisis after another, from housing and banking to the weakest dollar in world markets since the Great Depression in the thirties. The job market is stagnant, and wages have failed to keep up with the cost of living. Inflation has significantly returned for the first time since the late seventies, and the price of food and fuel have risen greatly in the last year. The price of gasoline is higher than it's ever been, forcing many people to change long-standing lifestyle habits and putting further strain on an already slow economy. The national debt is at an all-time high. In the past, all of these factors, but especially the domestic economic ones, would have ensured that the political party in power in the White House would be in serious danger of losing the next election by a landslide. In recent memory, this happened in 1980 and again in 1992. But these economic problems are the most serious facing the country since before World War II. Many of the problems are the direct result of Bush Administration policies. But the opinion polls in September show a very close race. After leading for most of the summer, Democrat Barak Obama finds his campaign on the defensive, while Republican John McCain's campaign is benefitting from a huge convention bounce, due for the most part because of his choice of Sarah Palin as his running mate. Palin is an ultra-right-wing politician with less experience than Obama. But she appeals to the voting public because they can relate to her. She's telegenic. She's made many people forget the economic pressure they are struggling under, even though she agrees with the failed policies that got us into this mess. The economic climate, in the historical sense, should produce a landslide victory for the opposition party. But many Americans are stupid. They vote for the pretty face instead of the fresh political solution. What appeared to be a bad decision (Palin's selection) has turned out to be a brilliant stroke. Rovian strategy ignores the critical thinkers in the voting public and appeals, always, to the lowest common denominator. But the biggest thing I fear about this election, and the real reason Obama is not way ahead of McCain in the polls, is racism. All over the country this November, thousands of people will be voting with their inner Archie Bunkers. | |
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| At GOP convention, context and facts go missing from message of the day
By JIM KUHNHENN | Associated Press Writer 10:48 PM CDT, September 3, 2008 ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) _ Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and her Republican supporters held back little Wednesday as they issued dismissive attacks on Barack Obama and flattering praise on her credentials to be vice president. In some cases, the reproach and the praise stretched the truth.
Some examples:
PALIN: "I have protected the taxpayers by vetoing wasteful spending ... and championed reform to end the abuses of earmark spending by Congress. I told the Congress 'thanks but no thanks' for that Bridge to Nowhere."
THE FACTS: As mayor of Wasilla, Palin hired a lobbyist and traveled to Washington annually to support earmarks for the town totaling $27 million. In her two years as governor, Alaska has requested nearly $750 million in special federal spending, by far the largest per-capita request in the nation. While Palin notes she rejected plans to build a $398 million bridge from Ketchikan to an island with 50 residents and an airport, that opposition came only after the plan was ridiculed nationally as a "bridge to nowhere." ( Read more...Collapse ) Commentary: As I mentioned in a previous post, I don't watch the political conventions. Both sides lie, but the Republicans have to lie more to fool poor working class people into voting against their economic interests. I especially avoid the Republican convention because I don't want to end up throwing a shoe through my television screen. So I only caught Gov. Palin's speech through Internet headlines. Nevertheless, I was tickled by her assertion that she would "stand up against the Washington elite...". Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't John McCain the epitome of the Washington elite? This kind of smoke and mirrors goes on all the time in politics. But if you listen closely enough, you'll hear the Republicans' true philosophy seeping through. And this is why I think theirs is a very dangerous way of thinking. Any political party that thinks government in and of itself is part of the problem and not part of the solution is not fit to govern. - Tags:politics
- Music:I Didn't Know I Was Looking For Love - Everything But the Girl
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- Music:Ocean Rain [Live] - Echo & the Bunnymen
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- Music:It's All Over Now, Baby Blue - Bob Dylan
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| I appreciate that anyone I do not know would add me, although why anyone would want to read my boring journal is beyond me.
However, if your journal is written primarily in another language, I will not add you back. I only read English fluently. I cannot understand Cyrillic words. I already have over 200 journals on my friends list, so adding another that I cannot even read makes no sense to me. Only about 5 percent of my posts are public, and those are almost always news articles or op/eds. | |
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| Diamonds May Have Jumpstarted Life on Earth
by Robert Roy Britt, LiveScience Managing Editor
LiveScience.com One of the greatest mysteries in science is how life began. Now one group of researchers says diamonds may have been life's best friend.
Scientists have long theorized that life on Earth got going in a primordial soup of precursor chemicals. But nobody knows how these simple amino acids, known to be the building blocks of life, were assembled into complex polymers needed as a platform for genesis.
Diamonds are crystallized forms of carbon that predate the oldest known life on the planet. In lab experiments aimed to confirm work done more than three decades ago, researchers found that when treated with hydrogen, natural diamonds formed crystalline layers of water on the surface. Water is essential for life as we know it. Also, the tests found electrical conductivity that could have been key to forcing chemical reactions needed to generate the first birth.
When primitive molecules landed on the surface of these hydrogenated diamonds in the atmosphere of early Earth, a few billion years ago, the resulting reaction may have been sufficient enough to generate more complex organic molecules that eventually gave rise to life, the researchers say.
The research, by German scientists Andrei Sommer, Dan Zhu, and Hans-Joerg Fecht at the University of Ulm, is detailed in the Aug. 6 issue of the American Chemical Society's journal Crystal Growth & Design. Funding was provided by the Landesstiftung Baden-Wurttemberg Bionics Network.
Another theory, called panspermia, holds that life on Earth arrived from space, as organisms rained down inside tiny meteors or giant comets.
The new research does not conclusively determine how life began, but it lends support to one possible way.
"Hydrogenated diamond advances to the best of all possible origin-of-life platforms," the researchers contend. - Tags:science
- Mood:It's My Birthday
- Music:Have You Made Up Your Mind - Paul Weller
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| What Makes Obama Run?
Lawyer, teacher, philanthropist, and author Barack Obama doesn't need another career. But he's entering politics to get back to his true passion--community organization.
By Hank De Zutter
Chicago Reader - December 8, 1995 When Barack Obama returned to Chicago in 1991 after three brilliant years at Harvard Law School, he didn't like what he saw. The former community activist, then 30, had come fresh from a term as president of the prestigious Harvard Law Review, a position he was the first African-American to hold. Now he was ready to continue his battle to organize Chicago's black neighborhoods. But the state of the city muted his exuberance.
"Upon my return to Chicago," he would write in the epilogue to his recently published memoir, Dreams From My Father, "I would find the signs of decay accelerated throughout the South Side--the neighborhoods shabbier, the children edgier and less restrained, more middle-class families heading out to the suburbs, the jails bursting with glowering youth, my brothers without prospects. All too rarely do I hear people asking just what it is that we've done to make so many children's hearts so hard, or what collectively we might do to right their moral compass--what values we must live by. Instead I see us doing what we've always done--pretending that these children are somehow not our own."
Today, after three years of law practice and civic activism, Obama has decided to dive into electoral politics. He is running for the Illinois Senate, he says, because he wants to help create jobs and a decent future for those embittered youth. But when he met with some veteran politicians to tell them of his plans, the only jobs he says they wanted to talk about were theirs and his. Obama got all sorts of advice. Some of it perplexed him; most of it annoyed him. One African-American elected official suggested that Obama change his name, which he'd inherited from his late Kenyan father. Another told him to put a picture of his light-bronze, boyish face on all his campaign materials, "so people don't see your name and think you're some big dark guy."
Obama, running to be the Democratic candidate for the 13th District on the south side, was also told--even by fellow progressives--that he might be too independent, that he should strike a few deals to assure his election. Another well-meaning adviser suggested never posing for photos with a glass in his hand--even if he wasn't drinking alcohol. ( Read more...Collapse ) | |
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| I guess the slaves will have to wait for McSame to free them. The only people to blame for this mess are the two state committees who ignored the national party and broke the rules. Dem lawyers: Fla., Mich. can't be fully restored By NEDRA PICKLER, Associated Press Writer
A Democratic Party rules committee has the authority to seat some delegates from Michigan and Florida but not fully restore the two states as Hillary Rodham Quixote wants, according to party lawyers.
Democratic National Committee rules require that the two states lose at least half of their convention delegates for holding elections too early, the party's legal experts wrote in a 38-page memo.
The memo was sent late Tuesday to the 30 members of the party's Rules and Bylaws Committee, which plans to meet Saturday at a Washington hotel. The committee is considering ways to include the two important general election battlegrounds at the nominating convention in August, and the staff analysis says seating half the delegates is "as far as it legally can" go.
Saturday's meeting is expected to draw a large crowd, with Quixote supporters among those encouraging a protest outside demanding that all the states' delegates be seated. Proponents of full reseating have mailed committee members Florida oranges and pairs of shoes to get their attention.
DNC officials are concerned about a potentially large turnout at the "Count Every Vote" rally outside the event and have asked the hotel staff to increase security to keep everyone safe. The DNC says the roughly 500 seats available to the public inside were taken within three or four minutes of becoming available online Tuesday. ( Read more...Collapse ) | |
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| Funny that: One argument I've heard from the Clinton camp is that she's pressing on with her hopeless campaign anticipating that Obama will commit some kind of gaffe and have to bow out. But it is Clinton who keeps committing the gaffes. Clinton regrets Kennedy assassination remark By DEVLIN BARRETT, Associated Press Writer
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton quickly apologized Friday after citing the June 1968 assassination of Robert F. Kennedy as a reason to remain in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination despite increasingly long odds.
"I regret that if my referencing that moment of trauma for our entire nation and in particular the Kennedy family was in any way offensive. I certainly had no intention of that whatsoever," the former first lady said.
The episode occurred as Clinton campaigned in advance of the June 3 South Dakota primary.
Responding to a question from the Sioux Falls Argus Leader editorial board about calls for her to drop out of the race, she said: "My husband did not wrap up the nomination in 1992 until he won the California primary somewhere in the middle of June, right? We all remember Bobby Kennedy was assassinated in June in California. You know I just, I don't understand it," she said, dismissing the idea of abandoning the race.
Clinton said she didn't understand why, given this history, some Democrats were calling for her to quit.
Her remark about an assassination during a primary campaign drew a quick response from aides to Democratic presidential front-runner Barack Obama.
"Senator Clinton's statement before the Argus Leader editorial board was unfortunate and has no place in this campaign," said Obama spokesman Bill Burton.
Clinton spokesman Mo Elleithee said the senator was only referring to her husband and Kennedy "as historical examples of the nominating process going well into the summer and any reading into it beyond that would be inaccurate and outrageous." ( Read more...Collapse ) | |
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| The Handy Reference Guide to Bush Disasters, Incompetencies, and Lies by Guy Reel (reelg@winthrop.edu.) The other day, as I was musing aloud about notion that George Bush is the worst president in U.S. history, an acquaintance interrupted, “What’s been so bad?” I stammered for a moment, unable to get my mind around such a large question. It was sort of like trying to summarize the mysteries of the universe: The topic is so big one doesn’t know where to start. So I decided to compile a handy reference guide to the failed policies, worst decisions, irrational practices and outrageous lies of the Bush administration.In compiling this list, I made the rule that it cannot be an inventory of policy differences between liberals and conservatives; it must differentiate between rational and irrational policies, between truth and lies, between successes and failures. In other words, this should not be a partisan list but an attempt to chronicle the failures, catastrophes and ruinous policies that are apparent to impartial observers. Contributions are welcomed.
1. Lies about an optional war. Some may argue that Bush wasn’t lying about the weapons of mass destruction — that he, and many others, believed they were there. The problem is, he, and most everyone in his administration, misrepresented (lied) about the nature of the intelligence that (they claimed) led us into war. Within the intelligence community — yes, Bush’s own intelligence community — there was much, much more disagreement about the nature and threat of these weapons (and even whether they existed) than what Bush-Cheney-Rice-Rumsfeld claimed. Also in the category of outrageous lies, it is now clear that Bush, during the run-up to the war, was routinely lying when he said he had made no decision about going to war, that he was trying to exhaust all diplomatic options. Memos and staffers have since made it clear that Iraq was a target for war even before 9/11.
2. The optional war itself. It was clear that an invasion of Iraq was not tied to 9/11 and that it would not do anything to deter terrorism and that, in fact, it would make terrorism worse. Bush and his followers might believe otherwise, but I would argue that this is empirically true. The vote for the war authorization was pushed right before a midterm election, and Bush was demanding its passage, clearly making war a political issues. That alone is outrageous conduct for a president. But I would be happy to eliminate this one from the list, if enough readers think I should.
3. The fiasco in handling the optional war that was started from lies. Even John McCain, military strategists and such right-wingers as Pat Buchanan acknowledge this one. Because of arrogance, ignorance and just plain stupidity, the war was mismanaged from the start. It led to countless unnecessary deaths, a disastrous loss of prestige and diplomatic clout for America , and, predictably, it became an al-Qaeda training and recruitment tool.
4. Tax cuts that overwhelmingly favor the rich in a time of war. It is possible, as far as policy goes, to argue for tax cuts, even in the face of crushing deficits. It may be possible to argue, in a supply-sider’s dream, that it is appropriate for the rich to garner most of the benefits for the tax cuts. But it is nearly impossible, unless one lacks sufficient powers of reasoning, to argue that we should enact tax cuts that disproportionately favor the wealthy, when war demands sacrifices and sufficient revenue to be waged successfully.
5. Trillions in new debt, and annual deficits in the half-trillion-dollar range. This may be paired with the item above. Bush and the Republicans have not only failed to pay for the tax cuts they so eagerly handed out to rich supporters who then gave them campaign contributions, they also put forth billions in new spending, making Democrats look like chumps when it comes to pork-barreling. Oh, and by the way, they also enacted the biggest entitlement program in history since Social Security, the pharmaceutical drug bill, that provided billions to drug companies while restricting drug price competition. Also, the Bush administration lied to members of his own party about the cost of the 2003 Medicare bill, just so they could be tricked into voting for it.
6. The weakening of the dollar. Again, this may be paired with the items above. Many experts have speculated that the dollar’s reign as the world currency may end fairly soon, and its displacement can be directly tied to Reagan-Bush-Bush policies favoring vast debt, massive gaps in wealth between the rich and middle class, a weakening of the manufacturing economy, and changing the U.S. from the largest creditor nation in history to the largest debtor nation in history. I won’t give Bill Clinton a pass on this one, since the manufacturing sector decline continued under his watch and, some might argue, accelerated as a result of NAFTA. But it is clear that idea that taxes are heresy under Republicans — even at the expense of the nation and at the collapse of the dollar — has taken on its Biblical status under George W. Bush.
7. The aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Here was a president so disengaged that American citizens were left stranded, and people died, during his inaction. Yet, in his words, “Brownie, you’re doing a heckuva job.”
8. The suspension of habeas corpus. This has taken several forms under George Bush — by executive decision, through legal opinion by the likes of hack John Yoo and by the establishment of prisons to hold prisoners without charge or trial. But one moment Americans should never forget is the passage of the Military Commissions Act of 2006. Congress must share the blame on this, but without Bush’s “leadership,” it never would have passed. The law cast aside the Constitution and the principle of habeas corpus, which protects against unlawful and indefinite imprisonment. The Congress also gave the president absolute power to designate enemy combatants, and to set his own definitions for torture.
9. “Enhanced interrogation”/torture/extraordinary rendition. Bush said he knew and approved of the harsh tactics that led to such outrages as Abu Ghraib. Bush says the U.S. doesn’t torture because it doesn’t torture. Whatever you call it, it amounts to an illegal usurping of executive authority. John McCain was against it before he was for it. Some Americans may believe terrorists deserve torture in some cases, and I won’t disagree; however, it is clear that, under George W. Bush, America tortured some innocent people, and in some cases it transported prisoners to other countries so they could be tortured there.
10. Halliburton/Blackwater. These companies are by symbols for the privatization of war. Military contractors, often having no accountability to anyone, have stolen billions, wasted more billions, and kidnapped, raped and murdered in the name of the United States .
11. Guantanamo. While military prisons are routine in wartime, the problem with Gitmo is that it has been set up to hold terrorists as well as the innocent. And because of the end of habeas corpus, there is no way for the innocent to be set loose. In addition, it has undoubtedly created terrorists out of innocent people; even setting loose the innocent has become a grave risk, thanks to George W. Bush. But Guantanamo is not the only place where the innocent are held. Just last month, the U.S. released AP photographer Bilal Hussein after holding him in Iraq for two years without trial.
12. Presidential signing statements. Bush has made unprecedented use of these extra-legal statements in which he declares all or part of a law unconstitutional because (he says) it encroaches on executive authority. Therefore, he’ll sign the bill but ignore the parts he disagrees with. These statements have been used on a limited basis by other presidents in particular situations. But George Bush has claimed the authority to disobey more than 750 laws. Among them, reported the Boston Globe, are “military rules and regulations, affirmative-action provisions, requirements that Congress be told about immigration services problems, ‘whistle-blower’ protections for nuclear regulatory officials, and safeguards against political interference in federally funded research. Legal scholars say the scope and aggression of Bush’s assertions that he can bypass laws represent a concerted effort to expand his power at the expense of Congress, upsetting the balance between the branches of government.”
13. The Healthy Forests Initiative — would allow more logging and development in our national parks.
14. The Clear Skies Initiative — would weaken many parts of the Clean Air Act to allow more pollutants in many areas. Aside from what these laws do is the Orwellian Newspeak — giving names to policies or laws that are, at best, misleading. (Read: Patriot Act.)
15. Mining safety. Bush cut funding for mining safety and stacked the Mine Safety and Health Administration with industry executives, who fought against better regulations to protect lives and limbs. In 2006, forty-seven coal miners died on the job, the most in any full year since 1995, when forty-seven also were killed. Thirty-three were killed last year. Not all the deaths can be blamed on Bush and his industry-friendly appointees, but most assuredly, some can.
16. The U.S. attorney scandals. In this case, seven U.S. attorneys — Republicans — were fired in 2006. The reasons for the dismissals remain unclear, but allegations were that they were made for partisan political purposes. Anyone who doubts that partisanship (see Monica Goodling) was a factor — which, by the way, undermines the justice system of the United States — has not been paying attention to the way George Bush operates. Investigations into the matter have been impeded, but it is without question that the scandal has eroded morale in the Justice Department.
17. Stop loss. This U.S. military policy amounts to a back-door draft. While legal, it erodes morale, weakens the military and subjects soldiers to repeated danger and the possibility of physical and mental problems. Apparently, a weaker military is a policy of this administration, since it has overextended personnel and refused to provide adequate body armor to troops. In addition, Bush favored cutting funding for Veterans’ Administration, denying crucial medical care to the troops that he sent to war.
18. Alienation of U.S. allies.
19. Cutting of food stamps. This could be an ideological difference, so many might argue it’s not fair game in a list of Bush disasters. However, one aspect of the Bush prescription drug plan related to this issue can’t be viewed as ideological: as reported by Salon, “More bad news about that prescription drug plan: Seniors who use it may lose their food stamps.”
20. “So?” Dick Cheneys’ response to a question noting that the vast majority of Americans believe Iraq was a mistake and want the troops to come home.
21. FISA/illegal wiretapping. Bush still claims that violating the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act is okay because he’s fighting the terrorists. But there’s nothing in the law that prevented wiretapping; it allowed temporary wiretapping until warrants could be issued. That didn’t matter to Bush; he’d rather violate the law when possible.
22. 9/11. Bush and his administration ignored repeated warnings that a major terrorist act was pending on U.S. soil. Richard Clarke said he tried for months to have Bush and Condaleeza Rice make terrorism a priority, but they ignored him. Whether you believe Clarke or not, the fact is that there was a memo about bin Laden being determined to strike in the U.S. , and Bush went on vacation to Crawford , Texas , shortly before the Twin Towers fell.
23. Global warming. Bush now admits it’s a problem, although Bush officials trashed science by redacting independent governmentally commissioned studies on the issue. But even though he says it’s a problem he has no proposals to do anything about it in the near term.
24. Health care. More children (9 million) are without health insurance today than when Bush took office. The nation is facing catastrophic health care costs for the next century; Bush has ignored the problem.
25. Energy policy. The records of Dick Cheney’s task force on energy are secret, so we don’t know how much of the nation’s energy policy was dictated by energy companies. But it is certain that it was a great deal; Bush’s pattern in this area is the same as in others; i.e., put oil and gas officials in charge of energy policy; put pharmaceutical companies in charge of drug policy; let health industry lobbyists write health policy legislation. Gas prices have soared and record profits are now routine business for the oil companies; people think their taxes are lower under Bush, but they are paying more for gas, food and other basic necessities - and they are also paying more state and local taxes because of federal budget cuts.
26. Immigration. For Bush or against him on this issue, it can hardly be argued that he has put forth a successful policy.
27. The Pentagon information apparatus designed to praise George Bush’s war by touting military officers — paid by private contractors — as objective observers. This was a deliberate attempt to lie to the American people through a compliant and incompetent mass media.
28. Plants in press conferences. Jeff Gannon, a right-wing gay escort, was given press credentials and allowed to lob softball questions at Bush during White House news conferences.(Let’s hope that’s all he lobbed. Gannon was running around the White House at night ,all night, unescorted, on fourteen separate occasions. Ed)
29. A weaker America — we are weaker militarily, economically and on the world stage than the day George Bush took office. Some Republicans seem to fear Democrats because they say the Democrats want to destroy America . But it is hard to imagine a series of policies that have done more to hurt America than those forced upon us over the last seven years. Three-fourths of Americans know the country is on the wrong track, yet half of them support “more wrong track,” as Bill Maher put it. This is because the Republicans are very good at distracting large numbers of people from the disasters that this administration has fostered. One method they use is that they claim that criticisms of policy, particularly war policy, amount to criticisms of America . I want to make it clear that this tactic won’t work here. The above criticisms are not criticisms of America ; they are criticisms of George W. Bush. It is because I love this country that this list was compiled. It was George Bush, not America , who brought us to this place.
30. A divided America. After 9/11 Bush had that rare opportunity to unite the nation, and the world, to defeat terrorism. Instead of using this goodwill - instead of bringing us all together to fight a common enemy — he squandered it. A generation has been lost to Bush’s petty petulance and his unilateral, misguided use of executive power. One would think that most conservatives, and most Republicans, would worry about expanded executive power. But many of them haven’t. One wonders how they will feel about it when a Democrat takes office.
Guy Reel is an assistant professor of mass communication at Winthrop University . He may be reached at reelg@winthrop.edu. | |
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| OF WAR & GOLF Posted: Wednesday, May 14, 2008 9:30 PM by Countdown The President has resorted anew to the sleaziest fear-mongering and mass manipulation of an administration of a public life dedicated to realizing the lowest of our expectations.
And he has now applied these poisons to the 2008 presidential election, on behalf of the party at whose center he and Mr. McCain lurk.
Mr. Bush has predicted that the election of a Democratic president could, quote, "eventually lead to another attack on the United States."
This ludicrous, infuriating, holier-than-thou and most importantly bone-headedly wrong statement came yesterday during an interview with Politico.com and online users of Yahoo.
The question was phrased as follows:
"If we were to pull out of Iraq next year, what's the worst that could happen, what's the doomsday scenario?"The President replied:
"Doomsday scenario of course is that extremists throughout the Middle East would be emboldened, which would eventually lead to another attack on the United States.
"The biggest issue we face is, it's bigger than Iraq, it's this ideological struggle against cold-blooded killers who will kill people to achieve their political objectives."
Mr. Bush, at long last, has it not dawned on you that the America you have now created, includes 'cold-blooded killers who will kill people to achieve their political objectives'?
They are those in, or formerly in, your employ, who may yet be charged some day... with war crimes.
Through your haze of self-congratulation and self-pity, do you still have no earthly clue that this nation has laid waste to Iraq to achieve your political objectives?
'This ideological struggle,' Mr. Bush, is taking place within this country.
It is a struggle between Americans who cherish freedom, ours and everybody else's, and Americans like you, Sir, to whom freedom is just a brand name, just like "Patriot Act" is a brand name or "Protect America" is a brand name. ( But wait, there's moreCollapse ) | |
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