Weirdest night ever: Former President Bill Clinton and George W. Bush will square off on the same stage at Radio City Music Hall in February as part of a series pitting liberal and conservative thinkers. Prediction? Pain.
Tuesday, November 03, 2009
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
6:04 PM
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Labels: Bill Clinton, Bush, debates, politics
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
The Daily Show went back to the Bush well last night, and the results, it must be said, were pretty hilarious. (UPDATE: Forgot to mention Colbert went there too.)
Also: the Whole Foods Boycott and a fluff interview with one of the Superfreakonomics authors. Jon Stewart has apparently never watched a science fiction movie, because he thinks geoengineering can't go wrong.
The Daily Show With Jon Stewart | Mon - Thurs 11p / 10c | |||
George W. Bush Hits the Lecture Circuit | ||||
www.thedailyshow.com | ||||
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Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
11:23 AM
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Labels: boycotts, Bush, Daily Show, geoengineering, motivational speaking, politics, ridiculous money, science fiction, Whole Foods
Sunday, October 11, 2009
We're off to sample Detroit today. While we're waiting for showers to finish here are a few links I never got around to yesterday.
* Dollhouse 2.3, which I haven't seen yet, ticked upwards in the ratings, managing this week to beat reruns on ABC. Related: Ten TV Spin-offs That Were Better Than the Original Shows includes Angel—I agree in the main—Daria, Xena, DS9, and, The Simpsons. Also related: Flashforward is falling fast, endorsing Bill's thesis that the show is blowing it. Related and ridiculous: "Is science fiction becoming feminized?" Mary Shelley will be heartbroken.
* Josh Marshall on the Nobel: [T]he unmistakable message of the award is one of the consequences of a period in which the most powerful country in the world, the 'hyper-power' as the French have it, became the focus of destabilization and in real if limited ways lawlessness. A harsh judgment, yes. But a dark period. And Obama has begun, if fitfully and very imperfectly to many of his supporters, to steer the ship of state in a different direction. If that seems like a meager accomplishment to many of the usual Washington types it's a profound reflection of their own enablement of the Bush era and how compromised they are by it, how much they perpetuated the belief that it was 'normal history' rather than dark aberration. More from Steve Benen.
* Something, something, something, Detroit.
* The big Moon bombing appears not to have gone so well. Did the aliens step in?
* Iceland, an epicenter of the last financial crisis, looks to recover with data centers that offer free air-side cooling.
* The L.A. Times discusses the Fantastic Mr. Fox directing controversy. (via)
* Some bad news: Universe To End Sooner Than Thought.
* And more bad news: time has not ceased its unrelenting march.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
10:41 AM
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Labels: 9/11, a bunch of mindless jerks who'll be the first up against the wall when the revolution comes, aliens, Angel, apocalypse, Barack Obama, Bush, Detroit, Dollhouse, entropy, Fantastic Mr. Fox, Frankenstein, Friday night death slot, i grow old, Iceland, Mary Shelley, Nobel Prize, ratings, science fiction, spin-offs, the cosmos, the Village, they say time is the fire in which we burn, Wes Anderson, xkcd
Monday, September 21, 2009
One exam down links.
* Soundtrack for The Cloud Photographers, the Wes Anderson film Wes Anderson never made. I love this.
* Show us your birth certificate, Joe. Put the ID back in BIDEN.
* All your High Holy days belong to Glenn Beck.
* If Environmentalists Made Star Wars. This is early promotion for END:CIV, the film that asks: "If your homeland was invaded by aliens who cut down the forests, poisoned the water and air, and contaminated the food supply, would you resist?"
* Also in environmental news: the Yes Men distributed a fake version of the New York Post that actually had factual information inside of it today.
* Doing it wrong: Immigrants’ advocates have been complaining for months now that the Obama administration is cracking down hard on illegal immigration while doing nothing to help legalize their situations and create a workable immigration system.
* “This fellow is a man in his thirties,” he said, “a research physicist with us out here. As far as I can tell, he’s perfectly normal in every way except for a lot of crazy ideas about living part of the time in another world–on another planet. Washington sent him out to do a key job, and until a few weeks ago he was going great guns. But lately he’s out of contact with the work so much and for so long that something’s got to he done about it.” Isn't this the plot of Adam Strange? (via MeFi and Boing Boing).
* And from the Onion: 'George W. Bush Chuckles To Self Upon Thinking About How He Was President Of The United States For Almost A Decade.'
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
4:43 PM
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Labels: Barack Obama, birthers, Bush, climate change, ecology, hallucinations, hoaxes, immigration, Joe Biden, music, New York Post, politics, resistance, science fiction, Star Wars, The Onion, Wes Anderson
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Tuesday night!
* The buzzword at the heart of my dissertation got a bump today.
* 'Good Night and Tough Luck': a short web comic about the misery of insomnia.
* Good news/bad news: the total implosion of the global economy has caused CO2 emissions to plummet 6%, to 8.5% of 2005 levels.
* Corzine takes his first polling lead over Chris Christie in the New Jersey governor's race.
* Osama bin Laden blurbs a few of his favorite books, including Jimmy Carter's Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid and (apparently) Confessions of an Economic Hit Man. (via)
* American debt, the Chinese economy, and mutually assured financial destruction.
* The House passed a resolution of disapproval against Congressman Joe Wilson along strict party lines? You lie!
* When will the MSM break its silence on Obama's secret rat love?* 'Wealthcare': A brief history of Ayn Rand. Some talk at MeFi.
(The anti-government activist Grover Norquist has told a similar story from childhood, in which his father would steal bites of his ice cream cone, labelling each bite "sales tax" or "income tax." The psychological link between a certain form of childhood deprivation and extreme libertarianism awaits serious study.)* Conservative bloggers have truly outdone themselves in their efforts to hype the 9/12 rally; Steve Benen and Media Matters have the details on "the largest event held in Washington, D.C., ever." It's the greatest propaganda FAIL since they tried to pass off a picture of the Promise Keepers rally as being from last weekend.
* And this interview from one of Bush's last speechwriters has been linked by nearly every mainstream political blog I read: Ezra Klein, Matt Yglesias, Steve Benen, Kevin Drum, Atrios, Ben Smith, Think Progress, MetaFilter, and Crooks and Liars, each with their own favorite moment from the piece. The Palin line is sort of inescapable:
“I’m trying to remember if I’ve met her before. I’m sure I must have.” His eyes twinkled, then he asked, “What is she, the governor of Guam?”
Everyone in the room seemed to look at him in horror, their mouths agape. When Ed told him that conservatives were greeting the choice enthusiastically, he replied, “Look, I’m a team player, I’m on board.” He thought about it for a minute. “She’s interesting,” he said again. “You know, just wait a few days until the bloom is off the rose.” Then he made a very smart assessment.
“This woman is being put into a position she is not even remotely prepared for,” he said. “She hasn’t spent one day on the national level. Neither has her family. Let’s wait and see how she looks five days out.”
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
10:02 PM
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Labels: Ayn Rand, Barack Obama, blurbs, Bush, buzzwords, carbon, childhood, China, Chris Christie, climate change, debt, dissertation, ecology, FAIL, futurity, Glenn Beck, insomnia, Jimmy Carter, Joe Wilson, John McCain, Jon Corzine, Libertarians, mutually assured destruction, New Jersey, Osama bin Laden, politics, polls, recession, Sarah Palin, secret rat love, web comics, you lie
Friday, August 28, 2009
Friday!
* 'Decision to end Reading Rainbow traced to a ‘shift’ in priorities during the Bush administration.' That bastard!
* "Too big to fail" is so 2008. Via Ezra Klein.
J.P. Morgan Chase, an amalgam of some of Wall Street's most storied institutions, now holds more than $1 of every $10 on deposit in this country. So does Bank of America, scarred by its acquisition of Merrill Lynch and partly government-owned as a result of the crisis, as does Wells Fargo, the biggest West Coast bank. Those three banks, plus government-rescued and -owned Citigroup, now issue one of every two mortgages and about two of every three credit cards, federal data show.* No Senate Democrat has gone on record as opposing the public option. More and more I think the public option will pass using reconciliation. I haven't heard a single persuasive counterargument to doing it this way, and Obama and the Democrats are too all-in to let health care die altogether.
A year after the near-collapse of the financial system last September, the federal response has redefined how Americans get mortgages, student loans and other kinds of credit and has made a national spectacle of executive pay. But no consequence of the crisis alarms top regulators more than having banks that were already too big to fail grow even larger and more interconnected.
* Also in health care news: Steve Benen announces the death of the public option and the rise of the free pony option. Sounds a little bit like socialism to me.
* WAKE UP SHEEPLE. THE OLIGARHY IS REAL.
* Snow Leopard reviews. I've installed this on both our Macs and so far everything appears to be almost exactly the same as before. Disk Utility works much better, which is nice. And a few menus that used to be white are now black. Believe the hype.
* And io9 has your TV science fiction themes by the numbers. We are truly in the dark age of televised time travel.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
4:32 PM
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Labels: banking, Bush, Glenn Beck, health care, Macs, oligarhy, politics, ponies, public option, Reading Rainbow, science fiction, Snow Leopard, socialism, television, the Senate, time travel, too big to fail
Monday, August 24, 2009
I have it on good authority that my friend Traxus was totally making fun of someone else in this post on blogging styles. That said, some unhappy Monday links.
* As you've probably already heard, Michael Jackson's death has now been ruled a homicide. Let the feeding frenzy resume.
* Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. named a veteran federal prosecutor on Monday to examine abuse of prisoners held by the Central Intelligence Agency, after the Justice Department released a long-secret report showing interrogators choked a prisoner repeatedly and threatened to kill another detainee’s children. A good day for America (and for the rule of law). Hopefully this is the beginning and not the end.
* NJ-Gov: Christie's lead has all but disappeared in the face of weeks of bad press. More from TPM.
* Elsewhere in New Jersey news UPDATE: from 1970: Foster parents denied right to adopt because the father is an atheist.
In an extraordinary decision, Judge Camarata denied the Burkes' right to the child because of their lack of belief in a Supreme Being. Despite the Burkes' "high moral and ethical standards," he said, the New Jersey state constitution declares that "no person shall be deprived of the inestimable privilege of worshiping Almighty God in a manner agreeable to the dictates of his own conscience." Despite Eleanor Katherine's tender years, he continued, "the child should have the freedom to worship as she sees fit, and not be influenced by prospective parents who do not believe in a Supreme Being."People who love to tell New Atheists to sit down and shut up, take note.
* 'How to Kill a City': from an episode of Mad Men yesterday to the pages of the New York Times today. Via @mrtalbot.
* The Coin Flip: A Fundamentally Unfair Proposition.
* 12 Greenest Colleges and Universities, at Sustainablog. Vermont once again takes high honors.
* 'Runaway consumerism explains the Fermi Paradox.' (Via Ze.) This is actually an important plot point (with some nice twists) in a novel I've touted a few times here, Accelerando.
* And Fimoculous has your Curb Your Enthusiasm preview.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
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11:19 PM
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Labels: academia, Accelerando, atheism, Bush, Chris Christie, coin flips, consumer culture, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Eric Holder, Fermi paradox, Mad Men, Michael Jackson, New Jersey, politics, special prosecutors, sustainability, torture, Vermont
Thursday, August 20, 2009
From the you-don't-say files: Tom Ridge admits in his new book to succumbing to political pressure to raise the terror alert level on the eve of George Bush's re-election, claiming he was so angry he almost resigned over it. How almost brave of him.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
1:21 PM
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Labels: Bush, douchebags of liberty, homeland security, politics, Tom Ridge
Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Two book reviews from my household in the Indy this week: my review of Master of War: Blackwater USA's Erik Prince and the Business of War and Jaimee's review of Fred Chappell's latest book of poems, Shadow Box.
In a related sidebar, Lisa Sorg asks: "What's the difference between Daniel Boyd and Blackwater's Erik Prince?"
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
5:11 PM
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Labels: Blackwater, Bob Dylan, Bush, Don't mention the war, Fred Chappell, Iraq, Jaimee, my media empire, North Carolina, poetry, politics, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
I really won't be doing a lot of NJ-GOV blogging, but in light of my earlier post on the This American Life episode I find it interesting that Jon Corzine may have caught a break today in unsealed U.S. Attorney scandal emails that link Chris Christie to the Bush White House and Karl Rove.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
8:14 PM
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Labels: Bush, Chris Christie, Department of Justice, Jon Corzine, Karl Rove, New Jersey, politics
Sunday, August 09, 2009
Sunday links 2.
* For all you IJers out there, Infinite Summer has your David Foster Wallace humor minute.
* Hate crime protection for the homeless? Hate crimes are, in general, a very thorny legal issue, but in light of so much violence directed specifically at the homeless it makes sense to see them as a class in need of additional protection.
* Terminator 4 was so good they're going to make Terminator 5.
* Polling headline of the week: 'GOP's Rating with Latinos Falls to Margin of Error.'
* Rachel Maddow on the success of astroturfed right-wing protests since the Brooks Brothers riot in 2000. Via Cyn-C.
* And Eric Holder is still inching towards prosecution of the Bush administration, though in terms of scale and scope the proposed investigation remains far too cautious.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
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3:21 PM
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Labels: 2000, Bush, David Foster Wallace, demographics, Eric Holder, fake populism, Florida, hate crimes, homelessness, Infinite Jest, Infinite Summer, politics, polling, polls, Rachel Maddow, Republicans, Terminator
Friday, August 07, 2009
Friday night in Jersey links.
* My eighth Infinite Summer post this morning on brains, rats, happiness, and the problem of atheism drew some really great comments both from my regular readers and other IJ readers; check them out.
* From @cfoster, participating in that thread: news of Inherent August.
* Topher says Dollhouse season two will live in the shadow of "Epitaph One."
* When does a Prius have the same environmental impact as a Hummer? The 95 percent of the time it’s parked.
* Incredibly, President George W. Bush told French President Jacques Chirac in early 2003 that Iraq must be invaded to thwart Gog and Magog, the Bible’s satanic agents of the Apocalypse.
Honest. This isn’t a joke. The president of the United States, in a top-secret phone call to a major European ally, asked for French troops to join American soldiers in attacking Iraq as a mission from God. Via Boing Boing.
* And what do Slate readers fear? Their top five apocalypses.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
6:53 PM
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Labels: apocalypse, Bush, cars, Dollhouse, Don't mention the war, ecology, Epitaph One, Infinite Jest, Infinite Summer, Inherent Vice, Iraq, paved paradise, put up a parking lot, Pynchon
Sunday, July 12, 2009
Glenn Greenwald brings us more on the rumors that Eric Holder will appoint a special prosecutor for the Bush administration, with varying and conflicting reports about the possible scope and scale of the investigation.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
11:04 AM
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Labels: Barack Obama, Bush, Cheney, CIA, Department of Justice, Eric Holder, politics, special prosecutors, torture, truth and reconciliation commissions
Newsweek: Alone among cabinet officers, attorneys general are partisan appointees expected to rise above partisanship. All struggle to find a happy medium between loyalty and independence. Few succeed. At one extreme looms Alberto Gonzales, who allowed the Justice Department to be run like Tammany Hall. At the other is Janet Reno, whose righteousness and folksy eccentricities marginalized her within the Clinton administration. Lean too far one way and you corrupt the office, too far the other way and you render yourself impotent. Mindful of history, Holder is trying to get the balance right. "You have the responsibility of enforcing the nation's laws, and you have to be seen as neutral, detached, and nonpartisan in that effort," Holder says. "But the reality of being A.G. is that I'm also part of the president's team. I want the president to succeed; I campaigned for him. I share his world view and values."
These are not just the philosophical musings of a new attorney general. Holder, 58, may be on the verge of asserting his independence in a profound way. Four knowledgeable sources tell Newsweek that he is now leaning toward appointing a prosecutor to investigate the Bush administration's brutal interrogation practices, something the president has been reluctant to do. While no final decision has been made, an announcement could come in a matter of weeks, say these sources, who decline to be identified discussing a sensitive law-enforcement matter. Such a decision would roil the country, would likely plunge Washington into a new round of partisan warfare, and could even imperil Obama's domestic priorities, including health care and energy reform. Holder knows all this, and he has been wrestling with the question for months. "I hope that whatever decision I make would not have a negative impact on the president's agenda," he says. "But that can't be a part of my decision."
There's some discussion of this claim and what it means at MetaFilter and Greenwald, as well as reports tonight that Cheney ordered the CIA to lie to Congress.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
12:19 AM
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Labels: Barack Obama, Bush, Cheney, CIA, Department of Justice, Eric Holder, politics, special prosecutors, torture, truth and reconciliation commissions
Monday, July 06, 2009
Monday procrastination sensations.
* The Burnt-out Adjunct has some advice at Inside Higher Ed about the difference between adjuncts, add-junks, and instructors.
* 3 Quarks Daily has some thoughts from Timothy Fongon on building a viable American left:
Only about 25 percent of US citizens hold a passport. (See 2007 population data here and number of Americans with passports here.) A majority of Americans have never travelled overseas. Thus, any movement which makes appeals primarily on the basis of universalist/internationalist rhetoric is likely to have an audience significantly smaller than the majority of the US population.The whole essay strongly echoes a proclamation from the C.L.R. James I was reading just last night: "To Bolshevize America it is necessary to Americanize Bolshevism."
* A Feministe guestblogger describes the difficulties in filling out forms when one is transgender. The thread also introduces me to a term I've missed up to now, cisgender, denoting someone whose gender identity is aligned with their biological sex—which means I can now describe the forms Queen Emily discusses as cisnormative (which they are—no need for little boxes with prescribed answers when you could just have a blank line).

* Steve Benen has your bogus Obama scandal roundup.
Walpin was all the rage in conservative circles, right up until the "controversy" appeared baseless, and White House detractors were forced to move on.* Transformers II and racism. More from Ezra Klein.
But notice how this has happened quite a bit in the very young Obama administration. Remember when conservatives were convinced that the White House was closing car dealerships based on owners' political contributions? Or how about the not-so-scandalous Department of Homeland Security report about potentially violent extremists, which prompted some conservatives to call for Napolitano's resignation? Or about the EPA economist whose bizarre memo on global cooling was "suppressed"?
All of these caused widespread apoplexy among rabid anti-Obama activists. And all of these quickly fell apart after minimal scrutiny.
* And Michael Chabon has a nice essay in The New York Review of Books about the wilderness of childhood set against both adult nostalgia for the freedom of youth and contemporary overparenting and child endangerment hysteria. But the headline ("Manhood for Amateurs") is wrong under the article's own terms:
This is a mistaken notion, in my view. People read stories of adventure—and write them—because they have themselves been adventurers. Childhood is, or has been, or ought to be, the great original adventure, a tale of privation, courage, constant vigilance, danger, and sometimes calamity. For the most part the young adventurer sets forth equipped only with the fragmentary map—marked here there be tygers and mean kid with air rifle—that he or she has been able to construct out of a patchwork of personal misfortune, bedtime reading, and the accumulated local lore of the neighborhood children.Sloppy work from the editor there.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
11:25 AM
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Labels: academia, America, Barack Obama, Bush, C.L.R. James, childhood, cisgender issues, climate change, contingent faculty, jobs, Michael Chabon, Nate Silver, nostalgia, politics, race, Republicans, Sarah Palin, the Left, the Senate, the wilderness of childhood, Transformers, transgender issues, Won't somebody think of the children?
Monday, June 29, 2009
Change we can believe in: 'White House drafting indefinite detention order.' What a disaster.
About half of the remaining detainees have been reviewed for prosecution or release, it added, while the other half "present the greatest difficulty" because they cannot be prosecuted in either a federal court or a military trial.If you can't try them because Bush tortured them, say so, and then start prosecuting the Bush administration. This "solution" isn't remotely legal, much less ethically tenable.
Evidence against these detainees is either classified, was provided by foreign intelligence services or was obtained through harsh interrogation techniques approved by former president George W. Bush.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
11:05 AM
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Labels: Barack Obama, Bush, change we can believe in, Guantánamo, politics, torture, war on terror
Saturday, June 27, 2009
Late night Friday.
* As expected, Waxman-Markey passed the House earlier tonight, despite the usual deranged opposition. (Voting breakdown from FiveThirtyEight.) Ezra and Matt pour over a chart that demonstrates just how little this will cost, despite what Republicans are claiming, while Grist considers whether cap and trade has ever actually achieved its stated goals. I'm disappointed with the bill and terrified about what the Senate will pass.
* MoveOn will target Kay Hagan for her opposition to the public option. Good.
* Froomkin's last column at the Washington Post takes the media to task for completely failing us over the last few decade.
And while this wasn't as readily apparent until President Obama took office, it's now very clear that the Bush years were all about kicking the can down the road – either ignoring problems or, even worse, creating them and not solving them. This was true of a huge range of issues including the economy, energy, health care, global warming – and of course Iraq and Afghanistan.* But I think Ezra Klein makes the point more strongly:
How did the media cover it all? Not well. Reading pretty much everything that was written about Bush on a daily basis, as I did, one could certainly see the major themes emerging. But by and large, mainstream-media journalism missed the real Bush story for way too long. The handful of people who did exceptional investigative reporting during this era really deserve our gratitude: People such as Ron Suskind, Seymour Hersh, Jane Mayer, Murray Waas, Michael Massing, Mark Danner, Barton Gellman and Jo Becker, James Risen and Eric Lichtblau (better late than never), Dana Priest, Walter Pincus, Charlie Savage and Philippe Sands; there was also some fine investigative blogging over at Talking Points Memo and by Marcy Wheeler. Notably not on this list: The likes of Bob Woodward and Tim Russert. Hopefully, the next time the nation faces a grave national security crisis, we will listen to the people who were right, not the people who were wrong, and heed those who reported the truth, not those who served as stenographers to liars.
I think that analytically honest political commentators right now should be struggling with a pretty hard choice: Do you try to maximize the possibility of good, if still insufficient, outcomes? Or do you admit what many people already know and say that our political process has gone into total system failure and the overriding priority is building the long-term case for structural reform of America's lawmaking process? Put another way, can you really solve any of our policy problems until you solve our fundamental political problem? And don't think about it in terms of when your team is in power. Think of it in terms of the next 30 years, and the challenges we face.* Posthumously cleared after twenty-five years. Via MeFi.
* We had to lie about Sotomayor because we're still mad about Robert Bork. Right. Of course.
* More on how Obama forced Mark Sanford to shirk his responsibilities and flee the country. This is politics at its worst.
* I'm with Joe Strummer: If you don't like Springsteen you're a pretentious Martian from Venus. Via Shankar D.
* And of course we're still coming to terms with Michael Jackson:
Web grinds to a halt after Michael Jackson dies. Secret library of 100 songs could be released. Google mistakes the explosion of searches for an attack. Spike in SMS traffic outpaces 9/11. Will Bruno face a last-minute edit? (Some of these via @negaratduke.)
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
12:20 AM
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Labels: 9/11, a bunch of mindless jerks who'll be the first up against the wall when the revolution comes, actually existing media bias, America, Barack Obama, Bush, cap and trade, carbon, climate change, Dan Froomkin, denial, DNA, ecology, Google, health care, Internet, Kay Hagan, Mark Sanford, meat, Michael Jackson, MoveOn, North Carolina, politics, pretentious Martians from Venus, prison, Robert Bork, Sacha Baron Cohen, Sonia Sotomayor, South Carolina, Springsteen, the Senate, the Village, Waxman-Markey
Sunday, June 14, 2009
Naturally, there is one person to blame for everything that is happening in Iran right now, and that is Barack Obama. Except whatever good comes out it. That was all Bush.
UPDATE: Exactly.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
1:21 PM
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Labels: Barack Obama, Bush, Guy Smiley, Iran, Mitt Romney, politics, Republicans
Sunday, May 31, 2009
Sunday!
* Great Archie comics experiments of 1989-1990.
* This ruling of Sotomayor's, it must be said, was a little douchebaggy.
* "You almost get the sense guys like Thiessen are hoping for an attack so that they can blame Obama when it happens." Almost?
* Republicans who happily sat through three-and-a-half years of Bush vacations are outraged! that Obama took a night off.
* Tough times at Harvard U.
* Non-Whedon directors for the Buffy reboot. Wes Anderson snubbed again, though I bet Tarantino could do a good job with it.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
3:27 PM
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Labels: academia, Archie, Barack Obama, blogs, Buffy, Bush, comics, douchebags of liberty, endowments, film, free speech, Harvard, Joss Whedon, politics, reboots, Republicans, Sonia Sotomayor, Tarantino, time travel, Wes Anderson
Friday, May 22, 2009
More!
* Summer book reviews from both me and Jaimee in the Independent.
* As ubiquitous as pollution has become in the industrialized West, it remains largely invisible. That is not the case elsewhere in the world.
* Mitt Romney is a tool. A huge tool.
* "ICE does not keep records on cases in which detainees claim to be US citizens." Via MeFi.
* Everyone is reading Infinite Jest this summer. Are you? I really didn't like it the first time through, but DFW died and made me sad, so maybe I'll give it another shot.
* And, as always, morality is impossible without God.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
10:26 PM
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Labels: America, atheism, books, Bush, Catholicism, David Foster Wallace, ecology, globalization, immigration, Infinite Jest, Infinite Summer, Jaimee, Mitt Romney, my media empire, politics, pollution