Thursday, August 16, 2018

I Forgot that I Had this Blog

Well, that's not entirely true. I knew that I had had it, but for the last god knows how many years, I've assumed that it must have been locked or deleted or in some other way rendered inoperable.

But so I guess not.

If only I had something to say. Maybe I can say something that will be politically toxic in 10 years and for which, at that time, I will then be fired by whatever the decade-from-now equivalent of #metoo is.

Meh, probably not. I'm not that imaginative.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

It's Certainly Not the Christopher Walken

Everyone should follow christoFoWalken on Twitter. There was a time when the person was posting as 'cwalken' with a picture of actor Christopher Walken, but I guess that cover has been blown. Nevertheless, funny posts.

Tuesday, June 02, 2009

Over Two Years

That's how long since I last wrote an entry here. Time flies when you have a baby. Her name is Sandra. She's pretty frickin' cute.

Friday, April 13, 2007

Festival of Incompetence

I honestly wish I had time to blog seriously, but unfortunately, I don't have the time. So, for example, right now I have the seeds of what I believe could be a solid post about the need to emphasize competence in government, but rather than lay out evidence and present a persuasive case and contribute in my small way to the nation discussion, I have to content myself with merely sketching.

Much has been made over the course of the last 4 years of Bush Administration incompetence, and there's no surprise there. However, what hasn't really been discussed is the remedy. No, I'm not really talking about impeachment, not directly anyway, but I am talking about taking some steps rhetorically and possibly, legislatively, to make incompetence a punishable offense. It should be anyway, but as this administration has shown time and again, the People, absent any nudging by the media or the opposition party, are willing to cut people in power a lot of slack.

As but two examples, take the recent assertion by Karl Rove's attorney that "...Rove had no idea the e-mails were being deleted from the server, a central computer that managed the e-mail," and the leak of Valerie Plame's identity to the press in the run-up to the war.

  • In the case of the Plame leak, there is a statute called the Intelligence Identities Protection Act that criminalizes any act that "intentionally discloses any information identifying" a covert agent. Unfortunately, "intentionally" gives the Bush Adminstration a lot of cover, which is being used effectively by both the Vice President and Karl Rove.
  • In the case of Rove's e-mails, there is the Presidential Records Act of 1978, which requires that "the President shall take all such steps as may be necessary to assure that the activities, deliberations, decisions, and policies that reflect the performance of his constitutional, statutory, or other official or ceremonial duties are adequately documented and that such records are maintained as Presidential records."
In both cases, it's clear that the Executive branch fucked up royally. However, in both cases, they are hiding successfully behind an incompetence defense, and this is what really needs to be addressed. We're talking about the President of the United States of America and his staff, not the night manager at Arby's; is "incompetence" really an adequate excuse for these people to escape the consequences of their actions?

And when did the conservative movement in this country, the movement of "personal responsibility" and "you'll go as far as your talent will take you" start settling for much less defending this kind of ineptitude?

When you're job is this important, shouldn't incompetence be just as criminal and just as disqualifying as deliberate acts of sabotage? The legislative remedy to this problem is to make no allowance for "mistakes". If Karl Rove was sufficiently afraid of the PRA, all he would have to do is make sure he saved every one of his emails; it's not that difficult.

Oh, and while I'm semi-on the subject, how is it we can even have these two simultaneous perceptions running around our national debate?


  • Karl Rove is the genius who engineered sweeping GOP victoriees in 2000, 2002, and 2004...
  • Karl Rove inadvertently deleted emails that he should have saved in violation of the PRA and only incidentally was using a non-White House RNC email server for 95% of his messaging, and only coincidentally do all of those emails appear to have something to do with one scandal or another, be it the firing of US Attorneys who did not sufficiently politicize their positions or the outing of a CIA operative whose husband was poking holes in your case for war...

Given that the first statement is almost universally accepted as true (even if Rove isn't a "genius", most people will still accept that he's a canny dirty-trickster, and that requires...well, being canny), it's almost impossible that the second one is true, so while the guy is innocent until proven guilty, let's all please accept that there is a massive case to be made against him.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

The Dreadedness of the Dreaded Religious Right

The blogger Tristero at Hullabaloo has a seven-part (at least) series on, for lack of a better term, the Religious Right. He co-opts the word "Christianists", which I believe Dan alerted me to as an invention of Andrew Sullivan's. Still, everything comes back to the blogs these days, so it's not entirely absurd to think Sullivan stole it from Tristero. Anyway, Tristero's series is long and involved, but it's worth slogging through. Here are the links for the brave:

Part I
Part II
Part III
Part IV
Part V
Part VI
Part VII

Anyway, he mentions some tidbits that give you an idea just how powerful the RR is:

One other point. You may think Rushdoony’s ideas as to be beneath serious notice. Therefore, please note that a major funder of Rushdoony's Christian Reconstrucion, billionaire Howard Ahmanson, funded the “intelligent design” creationism initiative at the Discovery Institute (Ahmanson sits on the board). That's correct: Major funding for "Intelligent design" creationism is linked directly to the ideas you will encounter here.Ahmanson also funds the Claremont Foundation, a rightwing cultural thinktank, and funded the recall initiative of California's governor Gray Davis. These are only a few of the initiatives Ahmanson has taken to advance the rightwing, and often specifically Republican, agenda.

Intelligent Design, as you may or may not have seen, is a warmed over re-write of Creationism designed to give the appearance of scientific validity to theology which recently met with a satisfying court defeat in Dover, PA. It's good that it lost the case, but it's a testament to the power of the various octopus appendages of the RR that such junk even got that far. And this is really the kind of thing that I fret over when it comes to the RR. It's not just that they're assaulting the Constitution or even Enlightenment ideas; it's that they're assaulting the very concepts of reason and rationality, gradually and generationally eroding the capacity of the masses for critical thinking, thereby making the masses ever less able to resist their pernicious influence.

A few further notes on the question of their influence are:
(1) Monica Goodling, former senior counsel to Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales who recently took the Fifth in the Congressional Hearings regarding the not-going-anywhere-and-possibly-the-downfall-of-the-Bush-Administration US Attorney purge scandal, was a graduate of Messiah College and Regent University (http://www.dailykos.com/story/2007/3/27/74143/0793). Regent U. is operated by Pat Robertson, and according to their site, 150 graduates currently serve in the Bush Administration
(2) "The Republican War on Science" by Chris Mooney has some examples of RR folks being appointed to key positions in the Executive Branch under Bush who immediately proceeded to politicize their offices and disseminate scientific and medical misinformation in the service of their religious agenda. For example, (http://oversight.house.gov/features/politics_and_science/example_breast_cancer.htm) the National Cancer Institute removed a note from its website which stated the accepted medical community consensus that there is no link between abortions and increased risk of breast cancer and instead added a note suggesting that whether or not abortion causes breast cancer is still an open question.

In short, though the number of regular citizens who could be counted as among the RR may still be pretty small, their influence on the levers of power shouldn't be underestimated. They are, as zealots by definition are, determined, tenacious, well-funded, and well-organized and efforts to counter-act their pernicious influence should be high on the list of things that need to get done in this country over the next 20 years.

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

The Most Sinister Commercial Ever?

This gem from Budweiser came out somewhere in the early- to mid-nineties (I remember, because I was dating Earth Mother, and she and I were done by 1996). It's only 30 seconds, please watch.




Now, I remember being immediately fascinated that the ad had gotten on the air, because it was so blatantly sexual as to be almost vulgar. I mean, come on, the "bottle" upended into the "hole" followed by "Do a little dance. Make a little love. Get down tonight." ...not to mention the music causing a rhythmic pulsing around the bottle, moving the earth, even. The intercourse reference could only have been clearer if they had shown the neck of the bottle sliding slightly in and out of the hole in time with the music, and I'm willing to bet that in early cuts of the commercial, the bottle did just that. Could anyone possibly miss it? I remember being flabbergasted when Earth Mother's sister-in-law, RN, confessed plainly that she had "never thought of it that way." Christ, if the commercial had consisted of a guy going to the store to buy some bud, then going home, pounding one, and screwing his girlfriend, it couldn't have been more obvious what the message was.

But the vulgarity of the commercial doesn't stop with its thinly camouflaged sex-act. The real master-stroke is the use of the ants. Can you think of any way that the Establishment could more nakedly mock the Working Class? The ant is the epitome of mindless and tireless work in service of another, in their case, the queen or maybe the colony, and while RN interpreted the commercial as "You work hard; you deserve to let your hair down a little, and Bud can help you do that," it's hard for me to believe that the advertising executives were unaware that the logical extension of that subtext is "You are an indistinguishable peon laboring tirelessly for the benefit of others, but it will help you forget about the emptiness of your lot in life if you buy our beer, get drunk, and fuck."

It takes something special to craft a commercial that is so contemptuous of the demographic at which it's directed and yet still works on that demographic without them being aware of the insult. It's like it was fun for Budweiser to openly taunt its clientele and dare them to even notice, much less care, that they were being derided.

Congratulations Budweiser. This post's for you.

Sunday, February 04, 2007

I Woke Up

I dreamt there was something in bed with me...us, my wife and I. It was small. Moving? The bedroom had a drop-ceiling, one of the tiles was gone. The thing in the bed, it occurred to me, was a rat. I kicked it from the bed. The room was very dark; in the ceiling, exposed by the missing tile, there was squirming. More rats. In the ceiling. The bed was alive with them. I didn't find it pleasant and thought it would be a good idea to get out of bed. They went into a frenzy, 6 or 7 biting me at once.

It woke me up.