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February 20, 2009

Goodnight, Jim O’Toole

"And then I thought of Jim O'Toole and I felt both strange and sad. When I took the cab to the airport in Cincinnati I got into a conversation with the driver and he said he'd played ball that summer against Jim O'Toole. He said O'Toole was pitching for the Ross Eversoles in the Kentucky Industrial League. He said O'Toole is all washed up. He doesn't have his fastball anymore but his control seems better than when he was with Cincinnati. I had to laugh at that. O'Toole won't be trying to sneak one over the corner on Willie Mays in the Kentucky Industrial League.
 Jim O'Toole and I started out even in the spring. He wound up on the Ross Eversoles and I with a new lease on life. And as I daydreamed of being the Fireman of the Year in 1970 I wondered what the dreams of Jim O'Toole are like these days.”

- Jim Bouton, Ball Four

I’m filing this missive from the guilt-soaked excesses that come from privilege, resting in a four-room suite with a hot-tub spa waiting for me as I recline in an overstuffed chair in a complimentary terrycloth robe.

It’s more than I deserve and more than I can bear.

Normally, this wouldn’t be a problem. As is often the case, I find myself providing sessions to throngs of waiting students as part of the annual winter convention circuit. It comes with a complimentary room, a nice meal with friends on someone else’s dime and an honorarium or something else.

This time, the convention coordinator didn’t need the giant suite the hotel threw in to sweeten the pot, so it went to me. I was stunned to the point of calling out “Is anyone home?” when I entered the room. It was freakishly large with a TV large enough to see from the street and a gift bag that included a  “sleepy time” CD and vanilla lavender linen spray.

The night came to an end after a three-hour dinner with a medium-rare bison steak at one of the best restaurants in town in which a friend and I discussed the state of the economy and our field. Even with our grousing about the bankers who drove this recession further into the hearts of most Americans, we didn’t feel all that bad about each ordering a $9 dessert before waddling home through a snowstorm .

The problem this time comes from a man I’ll call Jim.

About six months ago, the Missus and the Midget were heading home from some place when they were stopped at a light and summarily rear-ended. The impact was severe enough that the Midget still tells us every so often that “The lady in car no pay attention!” It also crushed the entire front end of her car, making it a total loss. Fortunately for us, we had the truck and the tow hitch absorbed the majority of the impact. She bent the hitch, messed up the bumper a bit and scratched the hell out of the back end of the truck. Still, it was drivable and things could have been worse.

The driver of the car was an 18-year-old student at the U. She had no insurance, it was her dad’s car and we live in a state now where it’s not a crime to drive around uninsured. The uninsured motorist coverage on our car meant we’d pay more to file the claim than to fix the truck. After the fear subsided that my family might have been hurt, the next emotion was anger. I wanted the car fixed, the lady wasn’t returning phone calls and my insurance agent was and still is a lazy moron. The more I pressed the issue, the more the Missus told me to back off.

“If they don’t have insurance,” she reasoned, “they probably don’t have money to fix our car. Let it go. You can’t get blood from a stone.”

Still, I was in a mood and wanted satisfaction. I finally got the agent to pay attention to me. I picked up three estimates and told him to put on the full-court press until at least we HEARD from someone. I felt that this was someone dodging the problem. I’d seen these kids in my classes, often laughing about how they shirked some responsibility or how they were hiding something from their parents (usually a tattoo…). I told the agent that if this was her parents’ car, the parents should be dealing with this. Get the dad on the line and see if we can fix it.

Nothing came of it for months and I pretty much had resigned myself to the fact that I’d never hear from these people. I wish that had been the case.

Yesterday, I was lying on the couch with a sick Midget sleeping on me when the phone rang. The guy asked if I was the person involved in the accident with this lady. I said I was.

“I’ve got to call you back,” he said. “This phone is good for shit.”

Two more tries later, he finally found a way to keep the phone operational.

“This is Jim,” he said. “I’m her dad. I got these estimates and I don’t know what you want from me.”

“I want my truck fixed,” I said rather coldly.

“I don’t know what to tell you,” he said. “I got nothing for you.”

He lived in a town north of us that was supported almost entirely by a soon-to-be non-existent paper operation. He’d lost his job last year and was going to be foreclosed on as soon as the bank got around to it. His daughter was supporting herself with school loans and two jobs, both of which she had to quit after the accident when the car was totaled. He had 11 kids and his wife didn’t work because she had lost her job too. The reason he hadn’t called was because the phone had been shut off and he finally got enough money to get that up and running.

It was the recession in a nutshell. It was the worst of everything I could imagine and this guy was living it.

“You know,” he said. “I wish I could do something but you can’t get blood from a stone.”

He was right. The Missus was right. The Midget started to stir with a cough.

“Look,” I said quietly. “There’s no point in any of this. The truck still works and you don’t have any insurance. Just let it go. If you get a chance to help someone else out somewhere along the way, just do that and we’ll call it good.”

“I’ve got 11 kids, pal,” he mumbled. “There’s a long line.”

He never said thank you but he talked about some other random things that didn’t make much sense. His voice hung heavy with a mix of resignation and sadness. It was the sound of someone who knew that what was happening wasn’t good, but there was nothing he could do about it.

So here I sit in this expansive room, a drawn jet-tub waiting with an ice bucket and drinks chilling nearby, trying to make sense of how I got this lucky and how he managed to make it through today.

The set up here is beyond my wildest dreams but it’s something that’s more than a little hard to enjoy. I wish I could let Jim have the room for a night, have him enjoy the big-screen TV and the giant tub and say, “I wish I could do more.” I wish his 11 kids could have bison steaks and elk burgers and whatever else is likely not on their Wal-Mart dinner menu. I wish I hadn’t pushed so hard to get what I thought I deserved.

The first night in any hotel, I usually have a restless night and a short, dreamless sleep. Tonight will likely be the same, although the reasons, I imagine, will be much different.

I wonder how Jim is sleeping tonight.  I wonder about his dreams.

I hope he has at least one good one. He deserves that and more.

She'll Wait and Hope and Pray: Galactica Thread

Starbuck.adama

Jacob:

"Someone contaminated the amniotic fluid in which we were maturing all the Daniel copies. And then corrupted the genetic formula. I knew it was John. Envious, sadistic." Cavil totally changes the subject to how he's a total sadsack and blah blah: "If I'm so irredeemable, if I'm such a mistake, if I'm so broken, then whose fault is that?" It's your fault, you stupid motherfucker. Even Kara Frakking Thrace has figured this out, and you're like this computer genius robot thing? "It's my maker's fault. And that's not God, that's you! This is on you!" All I hear is wah, wah, wah. ( Did I request thee, Maker, from my clay to mould Me man? Did I solicit thee from darkness to promote me?)

If this show's about the cycle of vengeance, if this show's about who you become when the world ends, if this show's about now what, well, now what? How do you decide when to stop blaming what made you for who you are? And if you don't like who you are, is it ever a better use of your time being angry at what made you, instead of just spending your crazy-ridiculous-short time on this planet fixing yourself up?

I ask an honest question here because I'm not sure, because I'm torn a lot of the time between this very everyone-would-say-normal need to put everything out on the table and make sure everybody knows the score, my own desire that the people I hate be miserable, concern that the people I hate could be out making other people do insane things for shitty reasons, and an enduring need to get work done.

And don't we talk all day long about the reason the present assholes get away with it is because the ones immediately prior never answered for their crimes? And doesn't Cavil have a point here? But is having a point, the point? I'm not being cute, I'm asking: where does justice end and vengeance begin? Is the former ever not the latter? Do I have to go back to The Winslow Boy to make this make sense? ("Easy to do justice. Hard to do right.") I don't understand this all of a sudden and it's weird, because I'm Catholic, this is mother's milk to us. This show keeps screwing with my head.

There actually is a show, by the way, with spoilers inside and a hot space chick with tattoos and an old man with a gravelly voice. C'mon:

Continue reading "She'll Wait and Hope and Pray: Galactica Thread" »

Marry Me, Robert Gibbs, Do It Right Now

Baby baby baby.

A.

Even If I Buy Your Defense, You're Still Indefensible

About the NY Post editorial cartoon. In the debate over whether it's racist (really, NY Post, you can't imagine how anybody could take it that way? REALLY?) the point largely lost is that it brings nothing new to the debate whatsoever and thus in addition to garnering AUTOMATIC RACISM FAIL it also fails on the level on which the NY Post is now insisting it was meant. I mean, just for kicks let's assume the NY Post is telling the truth and the point of its cartoon was that the stimulus bill was so dumb and incomprehensible a monkey could have written it.

That's ... umm, okay, a point I have heard everywhere else including from my Mom and from Jay Leno a week ago. We're saying the stimulus bill is hard to understand? It's gibberish? That's ... seriously, someone got paid to make that point? The people on the Green Line last night were making it for free. So ... ha ha, I guess? You lose twice?

I mean, even taking the NY Post at its own word, they ran a potentially offensive cartoon that in addition to being potentially offensive, was also not funny or interesting or contributing something to the public's understanding of an issue at all. As always, when racist hacks open their mouths to defend themselves, they wind up making matters worse.

A.

Bobke shaved

Bob Roll shaved his head and it all started with a blog. From the Fat Cyclist blog:

Here’s How It Happened
I talked to Chuck Ibis (Scot Nicol of Ibis, the guy who made it possible for us to give away the Silk Carbon SL last year) a couple of days ago and told him that Bob Roll needs to shave his head — get rid of that fluff on top.

“Give him a reason to,” said Chuck.

So I said, “How about this. We’ll set him up a LiveStrong Challenge page (on Team Fat Cyclist: Fighting for Susan of course). If we raise $5,000 on his page before the end of the Tour of California, Bob shaves his head.

Scot ran the idea by Bob. Bob didn’t bat an eye. He’s in.

They raised the money in 24 hours. And here is the result....

OMG Kerry Heart Hamas!!!11!

The usual suspects freak out impressively:

Given how Kerry beat up his fellow GI's in Vietnam,can you almost understand how he will beat up Israel with the rubble of Gaza.

Watch, The MSM will suck up the excrement that's going to flow from his mouth when he gets back. It's the first cycle of hanging Israel out to dry.


Maybe, though? Not so much:

GAZA, Feb 20 (Reuters) - Hamas denied on Friday it had given U.S. Senator John Kerry a letter for President Barack Obama when the senator visited the Gaza Strip this week.

Have a Happy Kerry Photo:

Happykerryphoto

A.

Friday Ferretblogging

I don't know who put the crack in his cornflakes this morning but Puck got up ready to GO GO GO, wrassle wrassle wrassle, nip nip nip, kiss kiss kiss, all morning long.

A.

On the road...

I'm heading out across state lines for the purpose of teaching students something of importance, so I'll be out of pocket until tonight. I'll give you all the update and such once I land.

And to take a page from Jude's playbook, I've got one of those "big deal" things happening early next week and I'm not sure how it will turn out, so wish me luck, pray for me or do whatever it is y'all do to send the good karma and juju.

See you in a few.

Doc

The Engine You Built With Your Blood

Naturally it's the people who RUN THE PRESSES, naturally it's all their fault:

The Star Tribune asked a federal bankruptcy judge late Thursday to cancel the labor contract for its 116-member pressmen's union and impose new language that would save the debt-laden newspaper $3.5 million a year.

The Star Tribune asserted that the pressmen's union, a member of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, has failed to enter serious negotiations for concessions needed because of a sharp decline in advertising revenue as well as debt from the 2007 acquisition of the newspaper by Avista Capital Partners for $530 million.

The company wants the pressmen to accept lower wages and new work rules that would reduce staffing and overtime requirements on the presses.

Star Tribune publisher Chris Harte expressed frustration with the Teamsters local, noting that the company had successfully negotiated tentative concessionary agreements with other unions in the plant while implementing cost reductions with non-union employees, including a recently announced wage freeze extension, elimination of the 401(k) match and a freeze on the company's pension plan.

"This was not the course we wanted to take, but the lack of progress left us with no choice," Harte said in a memo to employees that accompanied the filing.

I can't imagine why the union wouldn't make concessions on wages and overtime to people who shockingly mismanaged finances and then wanted to blame the men and women who actually print the actual paper. I mean, I'm sorry, I know this is serious but I'm sick of everybody in a given situation pretending that management's bullshit is reality. I don't know how you say this shit with a straight face:

The Star Tribune asserted that the pressmen's union, a member of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, has failed to enter serious negotiations for concessions needed because of a sharp decline in advertising revenue as well as debt from the 2007 acquisition of the newspaper by Avista Capital Partners for $530 million.


Because certainly no major geniuses like A DUMB GIRL WITH A WEB SITE who went to state school before working at papers nobody ever heard of saw that coming, so there's no way the people who run the Star Tribune could have, either. The newspaper crash was well on its way to getting here in 2007, but management continued to spend and now wants to whine that it's the union's responsibility to bail them out. As it always seems to be, somehow.

A.

February 19, 2009

Employee Buyout

It startles me this isn't discussed more often as a solution.

I mean, if we're expecting the reporters to solve all the problems anyway, by writing shorter or longer or more about celebrities or less about celebrities or with more "interactivity" or with more "old school flavor" or whatever the fuck buzzwords are getting bandied around by consultants these days (ever notice how there's always money for news consultants but never for retaining employees?), then the employees might as well own the thing for which they're being made to feel responsible.

A.

Their Entire Argument In One Easy, Yelly, Loud, Obnoxious Brain Fart

This is it, guys. This is the culmination of it. This is the apotheosis of the asshole dude we all know at the party, sitting there sure that if all the imaginary undeserving dicks in his head just disappeared he'd be king of the fucking mountain. This is the entire GOP argument of the past 40 years, that the reason we are always vaguely and sometimes explicitly screwed up as a country is that somebody out there is getting what you deserve and even though you don't know who that is, hey, you should be really fucking pissed off!

(And by the way, if you don't know who that is, we'll gladly tell you. I think today it's the gays again, but it might be welfare queens. Nobody called from Asshole HQ with the lottery numbers yet.)

And from that argument — DO YOU WANT YOUR TAX DOLLARS SUPPORTING SOMEBODY WHO PICKS HIS NOSE? WHO HAS FOUR HUNDRED BABIES? WHO'S TOO LAZY TO PAY THE MORTGAGE? WHO COULD BUY FRUIT FOR HIS KIDS BUT FEEDS THEM GROUND UP GLASS INSTEAD? WELL? DO YOU? — issues every other one, about government spending and pork (otherwise known as infrastructure projects in towns not your own but paid for with money you could otherwise use to become king) and contraception/family planning (otherwise known as fixing mistakes made by dishonest slutty girls not your daughters with money you could otherwise use to become king) and wars of choice (fought against people who don't look like us and therefore want to take our shit and actually, this time we could have used that money to become king, because it cost just that much, so DAMMIT) but this is it:

You are worthy. Everybody else is getting away with it. Everybody else is just some lazy asshole who's scamming people dumb enough to work for it. Everybody else is your enemy, and I feel for these people, honestly, because it's got to be so exhausting living constantly under siege like this, but my sympathy stops at the vague desire they'd get some therapy. I don't intend to reward their pathetic horseshit with legislation, come on.

What's truly interesting to me, as this morning's poll numbers indicated, was that this argument, so stunningly effective for decades now, has suddenly stopped working. People don't believe they're the only worthy ones any more. People don't believe the mortgage crisis was caused by poor people buying houses or by ACORN. People don't believe our economy will get better if we just deport all the Mexicans everywhere, even the ones in Mexico. They aren't buying this shit anymore, and while I'd like to put it down to the fact that we're finally coming around to a more realistic and compassionate view of the world, I think what's actually happening is that enough of us are fucked enough that the lies don't hold up the way they used to. EVERYBODY knows at least ten people who are monumentally hosed right now, EVERYBODY. You can't say, "That isn't happening where I live."

I mean, c'mon, even Peggy Noonan caught which way the wind was blowing when the Talbot's closed.

A.

This Would Distress Brian Williams

But I'm gonna post a cat video to distract everyone from the VERY SERIOUS ISSUES FACING OUR COUNTRY TODAY:

Via LJ.

A.

Media Recognition of G.O.P. "Leadership"

Executivetalent

Let's start with this bit of Kabuki theater--the headline trumpets the avowals of several governors--including mine--that ideological purity trumps fiscal sanity, and they must, regrettably, reject stimulus funds (aside: easy to say when their own government issued paychecks aren't in danger of being cut.)

Of course, the loud squawking is a cover for the mere symbolism of their action. Buried in the article are paragraphs pointing out that outright rejection of funds will likely be limited to small measures, and that State legislatures can override a governor's refusal anyway.

And believe me, the States, including mine, need the money. Turning down funds would be sheer lunacy (note: I work for the state, and can tell you that myself and my coworkers are VERY concerned about what will happen in the next fiscal year. We've already been asked to submit any ideas re: cost cutting measures, and there are rumors of possible layoffs.) But you wouldn't know this from reading the article or scanning the headline. Instead, the media dutifully relays the G.O.P. message (which has been thoroughly discredited anyway.)

Speaking of discredited, you'd think the AP might note that ANY Republican criticism of alleged "spending abuse" in the stimulus bill might ring a bit hollow--can you say "three hundred tonnes of missing cash" in Iraq...and god knows how much more filtered through contracts and whatnot, plus the general fiscal mismanagement of the Bush administration and for the most-part-GOP-controlled legislature...but Charles Babington can't be bothered...it's as if the last eight years have been chucked down the memory hole.

Finally, there's this gem, the thrust of which is that President Obama has been in office an entire month but Democrats aren't criticizing him for a lack of focus on New Orleans and the Gulf Coast like they did with Dear Leader George W. Bush...

Give. Me. A. Break.

While it certainly WOULD be nice if President Obama assessed the needs of the Gulf Coast and New Orleans, and, speaking for myself, I've been disappointed that there hasn't been more focus on the region, the guy's been in office for one month. The Bush administration had almost his entire second term to address the matter...and their response spoke volumes: tepid, disinterested bureaucratese...

I can't help but contrast their utter disregard for the Gulf Coast with their responses to first, the Terry Schiavo tragedy, which managed to accomplish the impossible--Shrub cutting short a vacation--and second, the economic meltdown, where administration officials were suddenly more than willing to play fast and loose with the rules, something they NEVER did in response to Katrina and the flood (with a single exception--Bush suspended the Davis-Bacon prevailing wage law for the cleanup.)

Anyway...oh, and it's not like the Associated Press or any news organization did much by way of follow up on the various broken promises made by the previous administration. But suddenly, one month into an Obama administration, they can't wait to point out that New Orleans and the Gulf Coast are still quite a mess. How perceptive.

You know, with water carriers like the Associated Press, you'd think the Republican Party was still in charge.

Stupidest. Conservatives. Ever.

Damn, Utah:

And even though Buttars says in the documentary interview,..."the ACLU - bless their black hearts...," it’s his other comments which may get the strongest reaction.

Like this one which the documentary maker confirms is about gays.

"They're mean. They want to talk about being nice. They're the meanest buggers I have ever seen."

And just seconds later, Buttars draws a comparison between some gays and radical Muslims.

“It's just like the Muslims. Muslims are good people and their religion is anti-war. But it’s been taken over by the radical side.”

Buttars also claims he's "killed" every gay rights bill in the legislature for the last 8 years.

He also talks about gay marriage being the beginning of the end.

Buttars: "What is the morals of a gay person? You can't answer that because anything goes."

And finally, this is how senator Buttars refers to the "radical gay movement."

"They're probably the greatest threat to America going down I know of."


That's right. Yes, that's right, you chewy little creep. Two dudes getting married is the greatest threat to America "going down" that you know of. A bigger threat, say, than the total annihilation of a city by a suitcase nuke, or somebody flinging a vial of smallpox into Times Square, or newspaper ads calling Gen. Petraeus mean names. It's still gays, gays, gays, with the music and the buttsex and THE AIDS. Has nobody updated this guy on the Wingnut Priority Rankings since 1992? He's still on people shoving stuff down his throat:

Now, in the interview, senator Buttars also talks about a certain type of reported gay sexual activity which he claims is taking place.

But ABC 4 does not consider that appropriate for its news content.


Must ... resist ... cheap ... "Buttars" joke ...

Must ... resist ... cheap ... how the hell does he know what new techniques are happening in the gay sex scene ... comment ...

Ah, fuck it. Seriously, not everybody who hates gays is a closet case, some of them are just jerks, but anybody who thinks this much about who's doing what to who in a seekrit, sexy subculture that the world may not know of has a real problem he needs to work on with a therapist or possibly a dominatrix.

While we're on the subject, anybody want to clue me in as to what this new type of gay sexual activity is? I try to stay on top (must ... resist ...) of all Internet traditions but lately nobody's sent out the postcards listing the new positions we're all supposed to try with men, women and pets before the ACLU meeting and flag-burning party. Help me out here.

Via ONTD.

A.

February 18, 2009

BWAHAHAHAHAHA

I'm sorry, I'm sorry. I should be a bigger person than this. I should be a better person than this. But still:

BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA.

Do you approve or disapprove of the way Republicans in Congress are handling the economy?

33% approve
59% disapprove

Dig the way they frame this question how much is Barack Obama is doing to cooperate with the Republicans in Congress Is he doing

too much 6%
not enough 30 %
the right amount 62%

Are the Republicans cooperating with Obama

too much 5%
not enough 64%
the right amount 27%

Hee.

Cheats

A.

Happy Democrat Photo: Reader Pr0n Edition

Sebelius

Just for joejoejoe. Because he luuuuurrves her.

A.

If I Could Eat Right Now

Without feeling queasy in the extreme, I'd run right out and get me some of this:

I, my taste buds, my waistline, and my wallet all salute those artists who have gifted the human race with banana-curry, champagne, balsamic strawberry and rosemary-caramel fine chocolates.

Still, Escazu is a single-origin dark chocolate, which to me is at its best when at its purest. The chocolate is sold in bars, a format which conveys clarity, and I do think that the pure dark bar is a serious accomplishment. The chocolate is clean and true, with a dusky characteristic I can best liken to a medium-roast Guatemalan coffee. Among the flavored bars, Escazu is at its best when true to the aesthetic of Latin American flavors: the troika of dark chocolate, chili and pumpkin is rendered with a true artist's touch, as is the deft duo of chocolate with coffee beans. Of other flavor pairings, sea salt was the one I liked best. I was surprised to find tiny bursts of velvety salt crystals not at odds with the chocolate. I can't say that I think salt enhances the taste, but it doesn't tussle with it.

Chocolate, chili and pumpkin? OM NOM NOM.

A.

"Powerful people with powerful allies"

Day after tomorrow will be one month since Obama took office. 

A month.  It's early yet, and as watchful citizens, we can almost still keep track (as much as is possible from our outside vantage point) of the balls in the air: economy writ large as well as industry-specific, Social Security and other entitlements, health care, energy, and of course, the war(s).

Which is why I get, in theory, the let's-not-waste-time-and-momentum-on-looking-backward thing. I do and I realize wholesale investigation and prosecution of Bushco et al is a mind-bendingly ginormous undertaking that could subsume not just the Executive, the Judicial, the Legislative, but also you and me and our pets.  I get that and I'm as pragmatic as [at least half of] most folks. 

I still don't get, however (and I'm not going to shut up, moreover), how we can be expected to swallow the failure to investigate and prosecute torture.  Closing Gitmo=good.  Trying to wrap judicial minds around what we now do with detainees=sort of good, if we're actually doing that. Stating intent to not investigate/prosecute low-level functionaries=debatable but not entirely the worst thing.  With me so far?  Okay then, no surprise that I agree that lack of investigation/review/prosecution of Administration officials responsible for torture policies and practice=bad. Very much so.

But how naive of me to have thought that would be the worst of it.  How naive of me to not have believed earlier hints that our new president might actually carry on some of the worst of the worst (and that's saying a whole lot right there) of the Bushco Regime's Patently Unsuccessful Practices in the Dark Arts of Enhanced Interrogation. 

Charlie Savage in the NYTimes:

the nominee for C.I.A. director, Leon E. Panetta, opened a loophole in Mr. Obama’s interrogation restrictions. At his hearing, Mr. Panetta said that if the approved techniques were “not sufficient” to get a detainee to divulge details he was suspected of knowing about an imminent attack, he would ask for “additional authority.”

<...>

Mr. Panetta also said the C.I.A. might continue its "extraordinary renditionprogram, under which agents seize terrorism suspects and take them to other countries without extradition proceedings, in a more sweeping form than anticipated.

Before the Bush administration, the program primarily involved taking indicted suspects to their native countries for legal proceedings. While some detainees in the 1990s were allegedly abused after transfer, under Mr. Bush the program expanded and included transfers to third countries — some of which allegedly used torture — for interrogation, not trials.

Mr. Panetta said the agency is likely to continue to transfer detainees to third countries and would rely on diplomatic assurances of good treatment — the same safeguard the Bush administration used, and that critics say is ineffective.

First of all, allegedlyReally?

Secondly, relying on "diplomatic assurances of good treatment" implies that the US is trading with legitimate diplomatic currency, but how exactly does that work when, with the other hand we are devaluing that currency, and the lofty idea of returning to our former international prestige, by continuing on with some of the same outlaw Bushco practices?


During her confirmation hearing last week, Elena Kagan, the nominee for solicitor general, said that someone suspected of helping finance Al Qaeda should be subject to battlefield law — indefinite detention without a trial — even if he were captured in a place like the Philippines rather than in a physical battle zone.

Ms. Kagan’s support for an elastic interpretation of the “battlefield” amplified remarks that Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. made at his own confirmation hearing. And it dovetailed with a core Bush position. Civil liberties groups argue that people captured away from combat zones should go to prison only after trials.

Continue reading ""Powerful people with powerful allies"" »

Go Kids

42-reg-2112966-1367320.mi_embedded.prod_affiliate.3

While there's an epic level of bitching going on in supposed professional newsrooms about making billions instead of millions, about not knowing how to use the Internet properly, about OMG PEOPLE DON'T READ NO MORES, student journalists continue to show everybody how it's done:

Booted from their newsroom, reporters and editors spent the next several hours huddled under a nearby streetlight in temperatures that hovered around the mid-30s.

Using the campus wireless network, they texted, Twittered and tapped away on their laptops. And they poked around campus while police put on a rare, visible display of force, shotguns at the ready.

"By 10 p.m., I could tell we wouldn't be able to wander around campus," recalled Allison Nichols, the DTH's editor in chief, who had shivered through the ordeal in flip-flops, on Monday. "There were a lot of police with big guns, and they were getting increasingly irritated with us. They were trying to do their jobs and we were a bunch of kids trying to figure out what we could do."

For hours, the paper's Web site, kept up to date by that small huddled mass under the streetlight, was a UNC-CH student's best source of information.

More from the Tar Heel's site.

It staggers me that there's not more discussion, online and off, about college journalism in mainstream media crit. This is where the next generation of journalists is being nurtured and trained, and yet most wankerrific discussions of WHITHER THE PRINTED PAGE ignore college papers completely. I don't know if that's because they don't consider them "real" newspapers (and to be fair, some of them aren't, but the Washington Times keeps getting taken seriously, so ...) or the institutions putting these weekend Jerkoff Retreats together don't consider giving a call to the kids who work down the hall to participate, or what. I can't think of a better group of people to put the question to than the ones who'll be doing the job next: What do YOU want?

A.

Aerosmith Fail

Whoops.

A.

Not all Texans suck. And here's a reason why:

As a people, we have an innate, near-Borgesian, affinity for the surreal.

Which may, or may not, be entirely subconscious. 

I'm in the middle of the audiobook of Carrie Fisher's Wishful Drinking, which is partly a total squicky trainwreck and partly genius gutbusting funny.

And that makes this, below, even trippier and more inspiringly godawful tacky than it already is.

Debbie Reynolds, b. El Paso, in the first American Scopitone video. Made, not so incidentally, by her own Harmon-ee Productions company.



February 17, 2009

Through Being Cool

Via Adrastos, here's a prime example of the kind of crap that drove me out of daily journalism:

Reporting, though, is only part of the equation: The motto around the Politico newsroom is to “win the morning, win the afternoon” — by which editors mean that Politico’s stories need to be the most talked-about and cited in that day’s news cycle. One measure of winning is getting stories linked on sites like Drudge Report and The Huffington Post, which leads to appearances on the cable shows. Politico employs three publicists who routinely send out links to bloggers and producers.

Now I know why those slimy creeps are everywhere. I guess the drive to win the morning and the afternoon is what leads you to do things like opine that a deadly hurricane will be TOTALLY TEH ROXXORZ for the GOP, completely exonerating Bush and the entire federal government for any and all unnecessarily dead people in the previous dangerous storm. I guess that's why they make the big bucks, being "provocative" and most of all accessible. I wouldn't mind having three publicists. I wouldn't mind having a half of one for a month or two. If First Draft had three publicists not only would Scout be on all the Sunday shows but Jude would be president.

But if the price of working someplace hip like Politico is to do nothing but obsess over who blew you at the virtual cocktail party, I'm sorry, fuck that. I lost patience with that crap four years ago. Being a professional jackass on TV has fuck-all to do with your journalism, and while it may bring attention to the stories you're doing, more often than not it just brings attention to you. Which is nice, I mean, I'm an attention whore, I get it, but we have a limited amount of time on this planet, people. We can either spend it doing good work or we can spend it chasing after vapid preppy horseshit like winning the morning and the afternoon.

As New York Times executive editor Bill Keller points out later in the article, however, the drawback to this circus of meaningless scooplets is that no one can remember a single fucking thing Politico ever wrote. Then again, Politico may turn a profit in six months, at which time the NYT may not exist.

Ugh. And imagine having to work with Mike Allen everyday! His “Playbook” is like the 4chan of political reporting, written for an exhausted Washington press corps that — if it stopped working on the latest nonsense for a few hours — would come to realize how much it hates itself.

At the meeting, staffers received a memo written by Allen explaining Politico’s journalism philosophy. “We are not the AP or The New York Times. … If we ONLY do what those two great organizations do, WE WILL NOT SURVIVE AND WE WON’T HAVE JOBS,” the memo read, according to a copy provided to The New Republic. “THE REWARD for cracking this code,” the memo concluded, “is that you’re part of an enterprise … that is one of a tiny handful of news organizations in the WORLD that is actually GROWING.”

The above makes me ashamed of myself for every time I've used ALL CAPS for EMPHASIS.

SCHMUCKS.

A.

ps. Apologies for the lack of new posts today. What I HOPE is food poisoning — and not the especially nasty flu currently rampaging through my Grandma's nursing home — put me out of commission for about 12 hours and is still kind of kicking my ass. In case anybody was wondering, being able to stomach only pretzels and Diet Coke is an extremely effective diet plan! I feel slimmer already!

Subcontracting to Zombies

I know I should be debunking wild Republican claims about the stimulus bill-- Didja know that 80 billion tax dollars are going towards a supertrain connecting Las Vegas to Octumom's vagine? It's an outrage!!-- but my 2 year old, Pearlgirl Deuce, is recovering from a tonsillectomy, so my time is short today.

Instead I will link to the American Zombie, a stalwart friend and ally, who outlines some background information about the latest in Louisianan anti-science stupidity-- a stupidity that may spread. 

Happy Obama Photo: Signing Edition

Political-pictures-barack-obama-duct-tape

Bipartisanship this, already.

A.

February 16, 2009

BOOK GOOD

Joe the Plumber gets reviewed at Barnes and Noble:

I had a hard time putting the book down. The book echos the every day struggle that we, as American Citizens, deal with each and every day of our lives. Joe is a very down to earth person with strong moral values, one that "every day Americans" can relate to and identify with. Having said that, I can see why the liberal main-stream media and liberal government officals find him to be such a threat: Joe speaks the truth and people listen. They do not want the people of our nation to know the truth! I highly recommend this book for everyone, especially our youth, for they are the ones that are going to deal with our "mess" for decades to come.

---

Joe overcame the many obstacles in his life and grew up to inspire millions of Americans to stand up for what's right for themselves and their country. It's an inspiring true story that is never dull.

---

This book is for anyone who wants to know how a sudden burst into celebrity can help but also hurt the people closest to you. This book details how a small turn of events in a simple day can change your life forever.

I recommend this book highly.

And at Amazon:

I had some major goosebumps several times. Read this book! You will be truly inspired. --Margaret, Jenkins, KY

I just finished reading Joe s book and all I can say is WOW! I love how he thinks and expresses himself. I laughed during every chapter - it was so entertaining! --Glynis, Biddeford, ME

The book is fantastic and I read it in two days. Keep working for our country Joe! --C. W., Flowery Branch, GA

But the liberal media in the form of tags DISAGREE:

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Good times.

A.

Expanding Our Threat

We've moved on from killing journalism to killing politics. Take it away, Alexandra Pelosi:

I think that the blogs have poisoned the political atmosphere in such a way that I never saw this kind of anger and hatred in 2000. In 2008, I was impressed by how angry it got. But you know elections have gotten nasty. I do think that blogs have really given people a place to, I don't know, maybe it's therapeutic for them. But it’s really gotten them fired up in a way. They talk to each other online and then they get worked up and then they go meet each other at rallies. And I just feel like the Internet has really changed the climate at the political rallies. Because I remember the Bush rallies as being fun. But you know, a lot's happened. 9/11 and all that poisoning the well. The whole partisan Bush years and the war poisoned the well. A lot of other things contributed. You can't just blame the blogs.

I was hoping my film was going to be an artifact of a moment in time. There is a lot of talk about change. Even John McCain was talking about change. But change is always going to be harder for some than for others. And there's always going to be those who are not ready. And you see people in my film saying, "I'm not ready. Hey, I'm a redneck, I'm proud of it, I'm more backwards than the rest of you, and I'm just not ready. Not ready for a black president, not ready for change, I'm just not ready." In four years, in eight years, you may look back at this, and it may be something totally new. Like a Jewish president or a gay president or who knows? And this will all seem like nothing. I'm not giving an infomercial for Barack Obama's change. I'm just saying that this will be interesting in the future to see people who just weren't ready for this. They may be wrong, but they may be right.

A.

I Would Like To Be Referred To As A Supermodel

If you don't mind, you can all start calling me Elle Macpherson.

A., I mean E.

Today on Tommy T's Obsession With The Freeperati - whining and submission edition


Good morning, everybody!
Thanks again to the good people at First Draft for putting up with me, and to you readers for not making me swing the phone over my head and scream like a chicken.

Let's get our drastic plastic fantastic anti-stupidity protection on and hit the oozy Free Republic repository of ninnyhammerus unbelievabulous , shall we?

First up - "One of the hottest things on stage" = "Loser"?


Will Farrell: What a Loser
Jumping in Pools ^ | 2/9/2009 | Matthew Avitabile
Posted on Monday, February 09, 2009 1:52:12 PM by orfannkyl
After blowing his career on Saturday Night Live, former star Will Farrell has decided to attempt to recreate his career by doing an act that made him famous-- like ten years ago. The actor, who has been in about 45 movies since 2002, but has achieved but one hit (Elf), is hitting Broadway to play President George W. Bush. This play, called "You're Welcome America: A Final Night with George W. Bush," is one of the hottest things on stage, as effete chardonay drinkers pretend to get something in common with the average serf.
And looking for the laughs that he hasn't been getting since leaving Saturday Night Live, he really pulls no punches


The funny thing is, that even though Dubya often comes up for thrashing on Free Republic (mostly about how he fooled them by pretending to be a conservative,  although admitting that you were fooled by someone with the personality and I.Q. of an eggplant would seem to be too embarrassing to admit), they won't stand for any more of this consarned BDS, by cracky!:

To: orfannkyl
Respect, morality and character are as alien to these lunkheads as quantum physics.

2 posted on Monday, February 09, 2009 1:54:25 PM by gimme1ibertee ("No pale pastels,but bold colors".....Ronnie,we sure do miss you,sir!)



To: orfannkyl
Will Farrel may be as stupid as his father is..

4 posted on Monday, February 09, 2009 1:55:32 PM by hosepipe (This propaganda has been edited to include some fully orbed hyperbole....)



To: orfannkyl
Didn’t think he was funny on SNL, never paid to see anything he’s been in since.
No plans to do so in the future.

6 posted on Monday, February 09, 2009 1:56:13 PM by Badeye (There are no 'great moments' in Moderate Political History. Only losses.)



To: orfannkyl
I always thought of him as a no-talent jerk. Not the least bit funny.

14 posted on Monday, February 09, 2009 2:05:38 PM by ETL (Smoking gun evidence on ALL the ObamaRat-commie connections at my newly revised FR Home/About page)


And now, a seriously conflicted Freeper.
You see, Ferrell is just doing this to make money, which means he's a capitalist, which is good.
He's also excersizing his right to free speech, which is not like the Russkies, which is also good.
However, he is under the impression that Hollywood Communists limit salaries for entertainers, which is bad.
And he's a maggot, which seems to tie it all in together somehow.



To: orfannkyl
He is using his celebrity presence to promote the Left’s “Hate Bush” sentiment and making cash...he is a capitalist.
The problem I have is that the same free market that allows freedom of expression, despite how awful and wrong it may be, is the exact opposite of the Left and their goals of Communism.
Trust me, when actors are under a Marxist pay scale, their dreams of Trotsky will vanish.
He is a maggot anyway, F him.

7 posted on Monday, February 09, 2009 1:57:50 PM by wac3rd (In the end, we all are Conservative, some just need their lives jolted to realize that fact.)

Well, there you have it.
Bad, but good for all the wrong reasons.

I'm going to sit down for a minute, because that last stream of illogic sprained my brain.
I'll be with you right after the ...

Continue reading "Today on Tommy T's Obsession With The Freeperati - whining and submission edition" »

Happy Birthday To Mr. A

A.

February 15, 2009

This Boy's Born To Be A Bureaucrat

BERJAYA
Tally me banana.


Yep. Starting next Monday, I'll be living like Hermes Conrad.

Huzzah!

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