Sunday, September 30, 2007

Opinion Roundup

This is something I've thought about making a regular feature of this blog, a roundup of some of the better opinion pieces I've read during the week. Sunday night seems to be a good time to do it. Tell me what you think about it.

Gail Collins started out talking about the generation gap between Barack Obama supporters and Hillary Clinton supporters and ended up getting in some pretty good jabs at Clinton...
The Democratic Party seems to be gradually acclimating itself to the idea that Hillary Clinton is going to be the nominee. It’s a little like that frog in a beaker of water that Al Gore talks about in his global warming speech — the one who won’t notice he’s being boiled to death if you turn up the heat ever so gradually. Day by day, debate by debate, poll by poll, the sense of Hillary’s inevitability seems to be seeping in.

She thinks she’s got it nailed as long as she doesn’t make any mistakes, and that can be a trap. It is possible to be so careful that you drive everybody crazy, make them so itchy for adventure, for a noble mission instead of a winnable hand of poker, that they’ll be willing to undo all your hard work just to juice things up.

During the latest Democratic debate, Hillary Clinton was exactly that kind of candidate. When she was asked if she favored lifting the cap on Social Security taxes (currently only the first $97,500 in income is taxed), all she would say was that she wanted to “put fiscal responsibility first.”

As opposed to all the other people who want to put it last.

When the moderator, Tim Russert, asked whether she was completely ruling out the idea of lifting the cap, this is what Clinton had to say:

“Well, I take everything off the table until we move toward fiscal responsibility and before we have a bipartisan process. I don’t think I should be negotiating about what I would do as president. You know, I want to see what other people come to the table with.”

This is an excellent example of how to string together the maximum number of weasel words in one sentence. It was also pretty typical of Hillary’s entire evening. It’s one thing to refuse to answer a hypothetical question about whether there is any circumstance under which you might ever use nuclear weapons against Iran. It’s another to refuse to commit on who you’d root for if the Yankees played the Cubs in the World Series. No young person is going to fall in love with politics because of a candidate who says: “I would probably have to alternate sides.”
Massachusetts recently passed a health insurance reform law which seems much like what Hillary Clinton has proposed for all of us, requiring everyone to purchase health insurance just like we are are required to buy auto insurance. (I say "seems like." It is hard to get details of proposals out of the media-ocraties. They'd much rather talk about how something is playing instead of the specifics of the proposals.) Two doctors, Steffie Woolhandler and David Himmelstein, analyze what's going on in Massachusetts and how the middle-class is ending up in the ranks of the uninsured...
IN 1966 - just before Medicare and Medicaid were launched - 47 million Americans were uninsured. By 1975, the United States had reached an all time low of 21 million without coverage. Now, according to the Census Bureau's latest figures, we're back where we started, with 47 million uninsured in 2006 - up 2.2 million since 2005. But this time, most of the uninsured are neither poor nor elderly.

The middle class is being priced out of healthcare. Virtually all of this year's increase was among families with incomes above $50,000; in fact, two-thirds of the newly uncovered were in the above-$75,000 group. And full-time workers accounted for 56 percent of the increase, with their children making up much of the rest...

While the middle class sinks, the health reform law has buoyed our state's wealthiest health institutions. Hospitals like Massachusetts General are reporting record profits and enjoying rate increases tucked into the reform package. Blue Cross and other insurers that lobbied hard for the law stand to gain billions from the reform, which shrinks their contribution to the state's free care pool and will force hundreds of thousands to purchase their defective products. Meanwhile, new rules for the free care pool will drastically cut funding for the hundreds of thousands who remain uninsured, and for the safety-net hospitals and clinics that care for them. (Disclosure - we've practiced for the past 25 years at a public hospital that is currently undergoing massive budget cuts.)

Health reform built on private insurance isn't working and can't work; it costs too much and delivers too little. At present, bureaucracy consumes 31 percent of each healthcare dollar. The Connector - the new state agency created to broker coverage under the reform law - is adding another 4.5 percent to the already sky-high overhead charged by private insurers. Administrative costs at Blue Cross are nearly five times higher than Medicare's and 11 times those in Canada's single payer system. Single payer reform could save $7.7 billion annually on paperwork and insurance profits in Massachusetts, enough to cover all of the uninsured and to upgrade coverage for the rest of us.

Of course, single payer reform is anathema to the health insurance industry. But breaking their stranglehold on our health system and our politicians is the only way for health reform to get beyond square one.
Maureen Dowd discussed American-Iranian relations and the reactions to Ahmadinejad's visit to New York...
We just can’t stop being nice to Iran.

First, we break Iraq and hand it over to the Shiites, putting in a puppet who leans toward Iran and is aligned with the Shiite militias bankrolled by Iran. Then, as Peter Galbraith writes in The New York Review of Books, President Bush facilitates "the takeover of a large part of the country by an Iranian-backed militia," with the ironic twist that "there is now substantially more personal freedom in Iran than in Southern Iraq."

And on top of all that, we help build up the self-serving doofus Iranian president, a frontman with a Ph.D. in traffic management, into the sort of larger-than-life demon that the real powers in Iran — the mullahs — can love.

New York’s hot blast of nastiness, jingoism and xenophobia toward its guest, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, only served to pump him up for his domestic audience. Iranians felt that their president had tied everyone in knots, including the "Zionist Jews," as Iranian state television said. The Times reports that Mohsen Rezai, a former head of the Revolutionary Guards, was on TV criticizing the rude treatment his president received: "It is shocking that a country that claims to be civilized treats him that way."
A related Memo from Tehran says that Iranians are puzzled by the U.S. focus on Ahmadinejad...
Since his inauguration two years ago, Mr. Ahmadinejad has grabbed headlines around the world, and in Iran, for outrageous statements that often have no more likelihood of being put into practice than his plan for women to attend soccer games. He has generated controversy in New York in recent days by asking to visit ground zero — a request that was denied — and his scheduled appearance at Columbia University has drawn protests.

But it is because of his provocative remarks, like denying the Holocaust and calling for Israel to be wiped off the map, that the United States and Europe have never known quite how to handle him. In demonizing Mr. Ahmadinejad, the West has served him well, elevating his status at home and in the region at a time when he is increasingly isolated politically because of his go-it-alone style and ineffective economic policies, according to Iranian politicians, officials and political experts.

Political analysts here say they are surprised at the degree to which the West focuses on their president, saying that it reflects a general misunderstanding of their system.

Unlike in the United States, in Iran the president is not the head of state nor the commander in chief. That status is held by Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader, whose role combines civil and religious authority. At the moment, this president’s power comes from two sources, they say: the unqualified support of the supreme leader, and the international condemnation he manages to generate when he speaks up.

"The United States pays too much attention to Ahmadinejad," said an Iranian political scientist who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal. "He is not that consequential."
Thomas Friedman discusses Wal-Mart, China, America, and the environment...
China today is entering a really delicate phase on the climate-energy issue — the phase I like to call “The Wal-Mart environmental moment.” I wish the same could be said of America and President Bush.

The “Wal-Mart environmental moment” starts with the C.E.O. adopting a green branding strategy as a purely defensive, public relations, marketing move. Then an accident happens — someone in the shipping department takes it seriously and comes up with a new way to package the latest product and saves $100,000. This gets the attention of the C.E.O., who turns to his P.R. adviser and says, “Well, isn’t that interesting? Get me a sustainability expert. Let’s do this some more.”

The company then hires a sustainability officer, and he starts showing how green design, manufacturing and materials can save money in other areas. Then the really smart C.E.O.’s realize they have to become their own C.E.O. — chief energy officer — and they start demanding that energy efficiency become core to everything the company does, from how its employees travel to how its products are manufactured.

That is the transition that Lee Scott, Wal-Mart’s C.E.O., has presided over in the past few years...

At such a key time, if the U.S. government adopted a real carbon-reducing strategy, as California and Wal-Mart have, rather than the obfuscations of the Bush team, it would have a huge impact on China and only trigger more innovation in America.

Mr. Bush will be convening his climate photo op — oops, I mean “conference” — in Washington tomorrow, which will include Chinese and Indian officials. But, as Rob Watson, the C.E.O. of EcoTech International, which works on environmental issues in China put it: “The Chinese are not going to take anything we say seriously if we don’t set an example ourselves.”

David Moskovitz, who directs the Regulatory Assistance Project, a nonprofit that helps promote green policies in China, was even more blunt: “The most frequent and difficult question we get in China with every policy initiative we put forward is: ‘If it is so good, why aren’t you doing it?’ It’s hard to answer — and somewhat embarrassing. So we point to good examples that some American states, or cities, or companies are implementing — but not to the federal government. We can’t point to America.”
And finally, Paul Campos wonders if Bill Kristol is respectable, comparing him to his former next-door neighbor, "an extremely successful pornographer"...
All of New York knew that Jay Gatsby was a gangster; all of Boulder knows the Porn King is essentially a glorified pimp. Yet just as much of fashionable society came to Gatsby's splendid parties, many an eminently respectable Boulderite enjoyed the generous hospitality of the Porn King's table.

I myself was more than once invited to partake of his food and drink, but politely declined. Still, I occasionally found myself engaged in a friendly stop-and-chat with my amiable neighbor. I always came away from these trivial moments of social intercourse with a slightly confused feeling. Was it, after all, a bit cowardly on my part to treat him as if I didn't know or care who he was?

All this came to mind last week when I glimpsed Bill Kristol's smooth and amiable face on the television, where it appears so often. Kristol - editor of The Weekly Standard, Fox News contributor, co-founder of the key neo-conservative group the Project For the New American Century, and current visiting professor at Harvard - is the very definition of a well-respected man about town, doing the best things so conservatively.

But how respectable is Kristol, really? Anyone who pays the least attention to him soon discovers that the ruling passion of Kristol's life is to involve the United States in as many wars as possible, with as many enemies as he can find or create.

In short, Kristol thinks about war in much the same way the narrator of Lolita thought about 12-year-old girls: with a constant, obsessive, perverse longing.

I choose this analogy with some care. An overwhelming lust for violence seems to be the common vice that links together Kristol, the various Kaplans (Lawrence, Fred, Robert), and other leaders of the contemporary neo-conservative movement.

All these men appear to genuinely love the idea of war for its own sake. The thought of their countrymen - not they themselves of course, as not one of them has ever come within a thousand miles of a live bullet - inflicting the horrific violence of modern warfare on various hapless foreigners is something that clearly excites these gentlemen quite a bit.

And that, when you think about it, is rather disturbing.
This is a rather long entry. I've also thought about making an "Opinion of the Day" feature instead of this type of opinion roundup. Thoughts? Opinions?

Saturday, September 29, 2007

This Week's Music Quiz

Another music quiz. The rules are simple: I hit the randomize button on my music player and these are the first ten that come up, with a few exceptions such as instrumentals and songs I've listed before. Also, if two songs by the same artist come up, I'll pick my favorite or the one with the better lyrics. Instead of just listing the songs, I'll post the lyrics. Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to name the artist and/or the song. No prizes, just the personal satisfaction that comes with being smarter than everyone else. I'll even give the year of release and tell you how a little about the song. Wanna play?

1. 2003 - You've probably never heard this band unless you listen to Contemporary Christian radio. Here's most of the song from the second verse on except for repeated choruses...
Winter, spring -- it's what love can truly bring
Ice turns to water; water flows to everything
You can lose your mind
Maybe then your heart, you’ll find
I hope you won’t give up what’s movin' you inside -- no

So if you’re waitin' for love
Well, it’s a promise I'll keep
If you don’t mind believing that it changes everything
Time will never matter
(Time will never matter)
(x2)

If the car won’t start when you turn the key
When the music comes on, all your cold, cold heart can do is skip a beat

It’s a promise I'll keep when you’re waitin' for love
If you don’t mind believing that it changes everything
Time will never matter
(Time will never matter)
2. 1998 - Ooh, a drastic change from the previous song. This is the only song I like by this particular artist. A rock radio hit. This is the first and third verses, minus the chorus.
Dead I am the one, exterminating son
Slipping through the trees, strangling the breeze
Dead I am the sky, watching angels cry
While they slowly turn, conquering the worm

Dead I am the light, digging through the skin
Knuckle cracked the boat, twenty-one to win
Dead I am the dog, hound of hell you cry
Devil on your back, I can never die
3. 1986 - Very, very obscure. There was another song on this album, the only one recorded by this duo, that got a lot of airplay back in the day. This is the song from the beginning to the section that mentions the title.
Fifteen long years on a losing streak
And a lot of bodies unburied
There comes a time you cannot turn the other cheek
You have got to ride the ferry
Past the battered old bodies of dead, dead dreamers
Past the tethered and fettered and desk-bound schemers
The punks and the drunks and the bad guitar players
And the dewy-eyed, teenage dragon slayers
You come to this place where you can say I
I just want to work with you
As we do the things that we know we have to do
Ever hopeful and ever blue
We do the things that we know we have to do
4. 2007 - This Canadian band has been around a while, but they're pretty new to me. I'm still trying to decide how much I like them. I don't listen to the radio much these days, but I think this has gotten some airplay. First verse...
I hold on so nervously
To me and my drink
I wish it was cooling me
But so far has not been good
It’s been shitty
And I feel awkward as I should
This club has got to be
The most pretentious thing
Since I thought you and me
Well I am imagining
A dark lit place
For your place or my place
5. 1997 - Another drastic musical change of pace. An album track by a Canadian artist (another one) who has had a few hits. First verse...
The winter here's cold and bitter
It's chilled us to the bone
We haven't seen the sun for weeks
Too long, too far from home
I feel just like I'm sinking
And I claw for solid ground
I'm pulled down by the undertow
I never thought I could feel so low
Oh darkness, I feel like letting go
6. 1970 - A rock n' roll classic. No way you're not getting this one. This is all you need to figure it out...
Well, I've got to run to keep from hidin',
And I'm bound to keep on ridin'.
And I've got one more silver dollar,
But I'm not gonna let 'em catch me, no,
7. 1995 - An album track from the first solo album from a fairly famous band's frontwoman. This is the end of the song...
My love is gone
She suffered long in hours of pain
My love is gone
Now my suffering begins
My love is gone
Would it be wrong if I should
Surrender all the joy in my life,
Go with her tonight?
My love is gone
She suffered long in hours of pain
My love is gone
Would it be wrong if I should
Just turn my face away from the light,
Go with her tonight?
8. 1990 - A worldwide hit from a New Wave band that hung around for years and years. The first and second verses minus the chorus and another bit thrown in for good measure...
You had something to hide
Should have hidden it, shouldn't you?
Now you're not satisfied
With what you're being put through

Things could be so different now
It used to be so civilised
You will always wonder how
It could have been if you'd only lied

Never again is what you swore
The time before
Never again is what you swore
The time before
9. 1977 - This artist has been around for a few decades and has recorded many hits. This is an album track from his first solo record. Second verse...
We've tried a handful of bills and a handful of pills
We've tried making movies from a volume of stills
The words fell like hailstones,
bouncing at our feet,
Covering our feelings with a frozen sheet.
A chance to move, I take a shot
I get cold - you get hot
We look outside, lyin' awake
See birds breaking surface on a silent lake.

But don't get me wrong, I'll be strong
When I'm back on the Isle of Avalon
10. 2003 - One of my favorite newer bands. The title doesn't actually show up in the song, so here's a big chunk. These lyrics might not be exact. It's hard to say...
Without habitation,
You'll never find a soul inside
No life, but nothing's died
No lights, but quite the show
Just as long as no one ever knows
All motion is pantomime

As waves of plastic fame go out of fashion
You're going out, going out forever unknown
These waves of plastic fame go out of fashion
(These waves of plastic fame are drying up and I smile)
You're going out, going out
(Because you're dying to become forever unknown, unknown)

From above, a rain of ashes (descends anathema)
I will remain, forever will remain
From below, in my seclusion
Look up to the sky to see - see wings and watch them burn

Dancing in the rain of descending ash
Dancing on your grave, I'll see you all falling
Dancing in the rain of descending ash
Dancing in your dust, I'll see you all falling
I'd stop it, had you a heart
I'd stop it, had you a heart

Answers to Last Week's Music Quiz

Here are the answers to last week's music quiz.


1. Sort of obscure. Here's a big chunk of lyrics from the middle of the song...

I want to be a Lawyer, I want to be a scholar,
But I really can't be bothered with just anything...
Gimme it quick, gimme it, gimme, gimme, gimme, gimme.
Some say that knowledge is ho ho ho
Some say that knowledge is ho ho ho
Some say that heaven is hell, some say that hell is heaven,
I must admit, just when I think I'm king (I just begin)
Just when I think I'm king, I must admit (I just begin)
Just when I think everything's going great (I just begin)
I get the break
Hey I'm gonna take it all, (I just begin,)
When I'm king (just begin.)
I'm not sure that these are the exact lyrics, especially at the "can't be bothered with just anything..." point, but this is what most lyrics sites have. At other places in the song she sings, "Some say that knowledge is something that you never have. Some say that knowledge is something sat in your lap." Kate Bush - "Sat in Your Lap"

2. An easy one. First verse...
Come over here
All you got is this moment
The 21st Century's yesterday
You can care all you want
Everybody does yeah that's okay

So slide over here
And give me a moment
You moves are so raw
I've got to let you know
I've got to let you know
You're one of my kind

I need you tonight cause I'm not sleeping
There's something about you girl
That makes me sweat
INXS - "Need You Tonight"

3. Another pretty easy one. Part of verse one...
(It starts with one)
One thing I don't know why
It doesn't even matter how hard you try
Keep that in mind -- I designed this rhyme
To explain in due time
(All I know)
Time is a valuable thing
Watch it fly by as the pendulum swings
Watch it count down to the end of the day
The clock ticks life away
(It's so unreal)

...I tried so hard
And got so far
But in the end
It doesn't even matter
I had to fall
to lose it all
But in the end
It doesn't even matter.
Linkin Park - "In the End"

4. A newer song. First verse and part of the chorus...
Looking back at me I see
That I never really got it right
I never stopped to think of you
I'm always wrapped up in
Things I cannot win
You are the antidote that gets me by
Something strong
Like a drug that gets me high

What I really meant to say
Is I'm sorry for the way I am
I never meant to be so cold
Crossfade - "Cold"

5. Another song from this century. A good chunk of lyrics from the middle of the song...
I think about your face
And how I fall into your eyes
The outline that I trace
Around the one that I call mine
Time that called for space
Unclear where you drew the line
I don't need to solve this case
And I don't need to look behind

Close my eyes
Let the whole thing pass me by
There is no time
To waste, asking why

(I'll run away with you) by my side (by my side)
(I'll run away with you) by my side
I need to let go, let go, let go, let go of this pride, yeah
Trapt - "Echo"

6. No way to give lyrics that don't include the title of the song...
Free,
you'd better love me.
In time,
you'll run away,
from all your yesterdays!

Speak the truth, or make your peace some other way.
I never knew, but I believe that your trust in me,
Oh, will speak to me.
Godsmack - "Speak"

7. Second verse and chorus...
I'm frightened by what I see
But somehow I know that there's much more to come
Immobilized by my fear
And soon to be blinded by tears
I can stop the pain if I will it all away
If I will it all away.

Don't turn away
(Don't give in to the pain)
Don't try to hide
(Though they're screaming your name)
Don't close your eyes
(God knows what lies behind them)
Don't turn out the light
(Never sleep, never die)
Evanescence - "Whisper"

8. A golden oldie to me, but very, very obscure...
Move - move - I’ve got the gift of life
Can’t you see it in the twinkle of my eye
I can’t stand up and I can’t sit down
I gotta keep movin’ - I gotta keep movin’
All the time that gets wasted hating
Why don’t you move together and make your heart feel better

Groove - groove - to the beat of this drum
Feel it in the wind and the warmth of the sun
Don’t sit down and don’t stand up
Keep on movin’ - keep on movin’
The Jam - "The Gift"

9. Very, very easy...
Your inside is out and your outside is in
Your outside is in and your inside is out
So come on (Ho) come on (Ho)
Come on is such a joy
Come on is such a joy
Come on let's make it easy
Come on let's make it easy
Make it easy (Hoo) make it easy (Hoo)
Everybody's got something to hide except for me and my monkey
The Beatles - "Everybody's Got Something to Hide Except Me and My Monkey"

10. Another song that's a golden oldie to me, but actually very, very obscure...
All my books lay on the table
Waiting to unfold
I sit and stare at my reflection
While the darkness chills my bones
My head fills like a junk shop
In desperate need of repair
The path of least resistance leads to the
Garbage heap of despair...
I think I'd better get back in bed

I'm just a symptom of the moral decay
That's gnawing at the heart of the country
I'm just a symptom of the moral decay
That's gnawing at the heart of the country
The The - "The Sinking Feeling"

TN: Smokers Targeted

On July 1, Tennessee's cigarette tax increased from 20 cents to 62 cents per pack. All eight states that border Tennessee now have lower cigarette taxes. Tennesseans have been traveling to neighboring states and stocking up and the Tennessee Department of Revenue is now taking aim. Agents had been staking-out out-of-state stores to “get a feel where problem areas are." Now, they're getting serious... (Knoxville News Sentinel)
The idea is for the monitoring agent to spot a person buying cigarettes in volume at an out-of-state market, then departing in a vehicle with Tennessee license tags. Starting today, monitoring agents spotting such a suspect will call an arresting agent who will stop the car when it enters Tennessee, he said.

The agents will work “in roving teams at random times,” he said.

“This shows once again that Reagan Farr and the Department of Revenue are more interested in turning Tennessee into a police state than doing their job of collecting taxes,” said Drew Johnson, president of the Tennessee Center for Policy Research.

Farr said the program is partly an “education initiative” to make people aware of tobacco tax provisions in state law and a response to complaints from Tennessee tobacco retailers about “streams of Tennessee license plates crossing the border” from out-of-state retailers.

“I don’t think (Johnson) or anyone else wants to see the commissioner of revenue deciding which laws passed by the Tennessee Legislature to enforce and which not to enforce,” Farr said. “If that were the case, they (legislators) could just tell the commissioner ‘get me $11 billion’ wherever you think best.”
WARNING: If you are a Tennessee resident and transport more than two cartons of smokes into the state without paying Tennessee taxes, you are breaking the law. You could be fined, imprisoned, and even have your car seized.

Thursday, September 27, 2007

What Do You Do When You're Branded?

The votes have all been counted. If you'll remember, Mark Ecko, who bought Barry Bond's record-setting home run ball at auction, left it to the public to decide the fate of the ball. The choices were to send it to the Baseball Hall of Fame at Cooperstown, New York, send it to Cooperstown with an asterisk branded into it, or launch it into space. The public has spoken. The ball is getting a brand.

The final tally: 47% said brand it, 34% said bestow it unmarked, and only 19% chose the space option. Or, as the website figured it, "80 percent of voters believed the ball should go to Cooperstown (47% opting to mark the ball; 34% without), and two thirds felt that doubts surrounding the record needed to be recognized (47% for the asterisk; 19% for space)."

Monday, September 24, 2007

Olbermann Rocks

If you're not watching Countdown with Keith Olbermann nightly on MSNBC, you're not really watching the news. And now a Special Comment...
So the President, behaving a little bit more than usual, like we would all interrupt him while he was watching his favorite cartoons on the DVR, stepped before the press conference microphone and after side-stepping most of the substantive issues like the Israeli raid on Syria, in condescending and infuriating fashion, produced a big political finish that indicates, certainly, that if it wasn’t already – the annual Republican witch-hunting season is underway.

“I thought the ad was disgusting. I felt like the ad was an attack not only on General Petraeus, but on the U.S. Military.”

“And I was disappointed that not more leaders in the Democrat party spoke out strongly against that kind of ad.

“And that leads me to come to this conclusion: that most Democrats are afraid of irritating a left-wing group like Moveon.org or more afraid of irritating them, than they are of irritating the United States military.”

“That was a sorry deal.”

First off, it’s “Democrat-ic” party.

You keep pretending you’re not a politician, so stop using words your party made up. Show a little respect.

Secondly, you could say this seriously after the advertising/mugging of Senator Max Cleland? After the swift-boating of John Kerry?

But most importantly, making that the last question?

So that there was no chance at a follow-up?

So nobody could point out, as Chris Matthews so incisively did, a week ago tonight, that you were the one who inappropriately interjected General Petraeus into the political dialogue of this nation in the first place!

Deliberately, premeditatedly, and virtually without precedent, you shanghaied a military man as your personal spokesman and now you’re complaining about the outcome, and then running away from the microphone?

Eleven months ago the President’s own party, the Republican National Committee, introduced this very different kind of advertisement, just nineteen days before the mid-term elections.

Bin Laden.

Al-Zawahiri’s rumored quote of six years ago about having bought “suitcase bombs.”

All set against a ticking clock, and finally a blinding explosion and the dire announcement:

“These are the stakes - vote, November 7th.”

That one was ok, Mr. Bush?

Terrorizing your own people in hopes of getting them to vote for your own party has never brought as much as a public comment from you?

The Republican Hamstringing of Captain Max Cleland and lying about Lieutenant John Kerry met with your approval?

But a shot at General Petraeus, about whom you conveniently ignore it, was you who reduced him from four-star hero to a political hack, merits this pissy juvenile blast at the Democrats on national television?

Your hypocrisy is so vast that if we could somehow use it to fill the ranks in Iraq you could realize your dream and keep us fighting there until the year 3000.

The line between the military and the civilian government is not to be crossed...

Saturday, September 22, 2007

Straight to the Moon, Alice

Fashion designer Marc Ecko, who bought the ball that Barry Bonds hit to set the all-time home run record (No. 756), is letting the public decide the fate of the ball. Vote now! Your choices are to send it to the Hall of Fame at Cooperstown, to send it to the Hall of Fame with an asterisk branded on it, or blast it into space.

Ben Padnos, owner of the record-tying ball (No. 755), is now also letting the public decide the fate of that ball. Vote now! Your choices are to save it or smash it.

Even though I believe that Bonds took steroids and didn't legitimately break the record, I would like to see both balls go to the Baseball Hall of Fame and be preserved for posterity. And I don't see the need to tarnish the balls further by branding them with asterisks. Everyone knows the story and has their own opinion as to the legitimacy of the record. Save 'em.

Music Quiz

Back in the day, I would occasionally do a Random 10 entry. Start up the old music player, randomize the playlist, and list the results. Quite a boring entry. I've decided to spice things up a bit by making a Name that Tune-type quiz out of the results. The rules are simple: These are snippets of lyrics from the Random 10 from my playlist. Name the song and/or artist. There are no prizes, except the personal satisfaction of knowing that you're smarter than the average bear. Most of these songs will be rock music, most will lean toward the alternative side of things, but other genres might occasionally be represented. Lyrics might sometimes contain naughty words. Leave answers in comments. And away we go...

1. Sort of obscure. Here's a big chunk of lyrics from the middle of the song...
I want to be a Lawyer, I want to be a scholar,
But I really can't be bothered with just anything...
Gimme it quick, gimme it, gimme, gimme, gimme, gimme.
Some say that knowledge is ho ho ho
Some say that knowledge is ho ho ho
Some say that heaven is hell, some say that hell is heaven,
I must admit, just when I think I'm king (I just begin)
Just when I think I'm king, I must admit (I just begin)
Just when I think everything's going great (I just begin)
I get the break
Hey I'm gonna take it all, (I just begin,)
When I'm king (just begin.)
2. An easy one. First verse...
(Come over here)
All you've got is this moment
The 21st century's yesterday
You can care all you want
Everybody does, yeah, that's okay

So slide over here
And give me a moment
Your moves are so raw
I've got to let you know
I've got to let you know
You're one of my kind
3. Another pretty easy one. Part of verse one...
(It starts with one)
One thing I don't know why
It doesn't even matter how hard you try
Keep that in mind -- I designed this rhyme
To explain in due time
(All I know)
Time is a valuable thing
Watch it fly by as the pendulum swings
Watch it count down to the end of the day
The clock ticks life away
(It's so unreal)
4. A newer song. First verse and part of the chorus...
Looking back at me I see
That I never really got it right
I never stopped to think of you
I'm always wrapped up in
Things I cannot win
You are the antidote that gets me by
Something strong
Like a drug that gets me high

What I really meant to say
Is I'm sorry for the way I am
5. Another song from this century. A good chunk of lyrics from the middle of the song...
I think about your face
And how I fall into your eyes
The outline that I trace
Around the one that I call mine
Time that called for space
Unclear where you drew the line
I don't need to solve this case
And I don't need to look behind

Close my eyes
Let the whole thing pass me by
There is no time
To waste, asking why

(I'll run away with you) by my side (by my side)
(I'll run away with you) by my side
I need to let go, let go, let go, let go of this pride, yeah
6. No way to give lyrics that don't include the title of the song...
Free,
you'd better love me.
In time,
you'll run away,
from all your yesterdays!

Speak the truth, or make your peace some other way.
I never knew, but I believe that your trust in me,
Oh, will speak to me.
7. Second verse and chorus...
I'm frightened by what I see
But somehow I know that there's much more to come
Immobilized by my fear
And soon to be blinded by tears
I can stop the pain if I will it all away
If I will it all away.

Don't turn away
(Don't give in to the pain)
Don't try to hide
(Though they're screaming your name)
Don't close your eyes
(God knows what lies behind them)
Don't turn out the light
(Never sleep, never die)
8. A golden oldie to me, but very, very obscure...
Move - move - I’ve got the gift of life
Can’t you see it in the twinkle of my eye
I can’t stand up and I can’t sit down
I gotta keep movin’ - I gotta keep movin’
All the time that gets wasted hating
Why don’t you move together and make your heart feel better

Groove - groove - to the beat of this drum
Feel it in the wind and the warmth of the sun
Don’t sit down and don’t stand up
Keep on movin’ - keep on movin’
9. Very, very easy...
Your inside is out and your outside is in
Your outside is in and your inside is out
So come on (Ho) come on (Ho)
Come on is such a joy
Come on is such a joy
Come on let's make it easy
Come on let's make it easy
Make it easy (Hoo) make it easy (Hoo)
10. Another song that's a golden oldie to me, but actually very, very obscure...
All my books lay on the table
Waiting to unfold
I sit and stare at my reflection
While the darkness chills my bones
My head fills like a junk shop
In desperate need of repair
The path of least resistance leads to the
Garbage heap of despair...
I think I'd better get back in bed

I'm just a symptom of the moral decay
That's gnawing at the heart of the country
I'm just a symptom of the moral decay
That's gnawing at the heart of the country
Answers next weekend...

Friday, September 21, 2007

Populist Social Darwinism

An excerpt from Sore Winners (and the Rest of Us) in George Bush's America by John Powers (Doubleday, 2004)

"America is increasingly a country where Winners' kids attend private schools and the Losers' go to fading public ones, where Winners shop at specialty grocers and Losers buy their food at Wal-Mart or Costco, where Winners fly business or first class while Losers are stuck in economy sections and treated with flagrant, lunch-in-a-doggie-bag contempt, where Winners choose from a smorgasbord of jobs and Losers like Jessica Lynch enlist in the military because they couldn't get a job at Wal-Mart. The chances of upward mobility have shrunk vastly in the last thirty years; BusinessWeek says the odds have dropped by 60 percent. In that same period, the richest 1 percent of the population has doubled its ownings. It now possesses as much as the bottom 40 percent, and the richest 13,000 families own as much as the poorest 20 million households. As Al Franken vividly put it, this is like Bemidji, Minnesota, having more income than all the residents of New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston, Philadelphia, and Phoenix combined. While Bush didn't create this situation, his policies are making the divisions far more extreme. He's institutionalizing a New Gilded Age in which the state gives financial assistance to the very wealthy - Bill Gates personally saved $82 million in the first year of the dividend tax cut - while showing little concern for those who do not. What compassionate leader could preside over the loss of more than two million jobs - many among the middle class, whose positions have permanently moved abroad - and still be obsessed with cuts to the estate tax? In 2003, Bush racked up a $480 billion budget deficit while cutting programs like Head Start and AmeriCorps, the entire budget of which was only three times Gates's dividend tax cut. Convinced in the inherent goodness of the free market - a religion he embraces more deeply than Christianity - he evidently thinks it normal for Winners to take what they want. The Losers be damned.
"In this, he merely reflects the prevailing values of what Robert Frank has dubbed the 'Winner-Take-All Society,' in which a small number of star performers reap ever-greater rewards while the majority receives less and less. You can see it in the retail world, where the Wal-Mart store on the outskirts of a small city devours the business of its entire downtown. You see it in pop culture, where the sales of one Harry Potter novel dominates bookstore revenues for an entire summer, and a single hit franchise like Law and Order can keep an entire network in the black. ('There are only two kinds of TV shows,' an industry honcho once told me. 'Hits - and the ones that don't matter.') You see it in the media, which keeps churning out Power Lists, Hot Lists, Cool Lists, and It Lists, makes sure every kid knows which movie is #1, and even bombards us with stories about precocious young Winners like the eighteen-year-old novelist Nick McDonell, who wrote the 2002 novel Twelve, a Manhattan knockoff of Less Than Zero, and fifteen-year-old Nicki Reed, screenwriter of the rancid girls-gone-bad teenflick Thirteen. And naturally, you can see it in business, where (depending on the source) corporate CEOs make 282 to 400 times more than their hourly workers, seven times higher than when Reagan took office."

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Why Do Repubs Hate Our Troops

43 Senate Republicans and Joe Lieberman voted against Senate Amendment 2909, an amendment brought by Jim Webb (D-Va.), who has a son serving in Iraq. The amendment falls four votes short of the sixty needed to avoid a filibuster. The amendment would have given troops the same amount of time at home as they serve in deployments in Iraq.

Why do Repubs hate our troops? Why do they continue to enable the president?

These Repubs (and Joe) hate our troops:

Alexander (R-TN)
Allard (R-CO)
Barrasso (R-WY)
Bennett (R-UT)
Bond (R-MO)
Brownback (R-KS)
Bunning (R-KY)
Burr (R-NC)
Chambliss (R-GA)
Coburn (R-OK)
Cochran (R-MS)
Corker (R-TN)
Cornyn (R-TX)
Craig (R-ID)
Crapo (R-ID)
DeMint (R-SC)
Dole (R-NC)
Domenici (R-NM)
Ensign (R-NV)
Enzi (R-WY)
Graham (R-SC)
Grassley (R-IA)
Gregg (R-NH)
Hatch (R-UT)
Hutchison (R-TX)
Inhofe (R-OK)
Isakson (R-GA)
Kyl (R-AZ)
Lieberman (ID-CT)
Lott (R-MS)
Lugar (R-IN)
Martinez (R-FL)
McCain (R-AZ)
McConnell (R-KY)
Murkowski (R-AK)
Roberts (R-KS)
Sessions (R-AL)
Shelby (R-AL)
Specter (R-PA)
Stevens (R-AK)
Thune (R-SD)
Vitter (R-LA)
Voinovich (R-OH)
Warner (R-VA)

The New York Times Finally Gets It Right

Ding, dong, the witch is dead. Which old witch? The wicked witch! Hurray, Times Select is no more. If you don't know what I'm talking about, the New York Times had put Paul Krugman, Maureen Dowd and several other of their popular columnists and their archives behind a subscriber firewall. About fifty bucks a year or eight bucks a month. Now, even though they were making about $10 million a year off the deal, they decided that "projections for growth on that paid subscriber base were low, compared to the growth of online advertising.” Now, we can finally access those columnists online again.

Wait, the news gets better. The Times has also opened up part of their archives to the general, freeloading public. You can access any article from 1987 to the present. Even better, the Times has opened up its archives from 1851 to 1922, which are in the public domain. Some articles in the other years - 1923 to 1986 will be free. This means a Civil War junkie like myself can now see what the Times wrote about..oh, say, the Battle of Chickamauga back in the day. (I might have been able to do this already since these articles are in the public domain. Don't know. Not sure.)

And one more thing. Most of the columnists now have their own blogs in addition to their columns. I've already saved Paul Krugman's in my RSS reader.

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Mission Statement

"Professions of impartiality I shall make none. They are always useless, and are besides perfect nonsense, when used by a newsmonger; for, he that does not relate news as he finds it, is something worse than partial; and...he that does not exercise his own judgment, either in admitting or rejecting what is sent him, is a poor passive tool."

-- William Cobbett, editor of the 1800s British newspaper Political Register

While I make no claim to being a "newsmonger" I vow to never be impartial here.

What's News

When I have an extended absence from the Internet, it always takes me quite a while to get back up to speed. When I try to use almost any program, it begins frantically announcing that there's a new version available that I need to download or there are patches or new definitions or something that has to be done before any work can be accomplished. For instance, after about a year or so offline, I headed to the Microsoft site to see if I had missed any critical updates to Windows XP. A few? Only 47!!! Yikes. Then, less than 24 hours later, my computer automatically downloaded two more.

After a couple of days, I'm slowly starting to make the rounds again. Trying to find out what's what. Here's a sampling of some things that have caught my eye on the news sites. No O.J. or Paris or Britney here, but some things that might actually be news...

I guess everyone that cares has heard by now that President Bush has chosen Michael Mukasey to replace Gonzo as attorney general. And miracle of miracles, he's a conservative judge, but not some hardcore Kool-Aid drinking ideologue, but someone Dems can actually get behind. But Bush might not have avoided the bruising confirmation fight after all, Patrick Leahy and Charles Shumer "vowed today to use the nomination to pressure the White House into turning over information that the Senate Judiciary Committee has been seeking on the domestic wiretapping program and the government’s treatment of military detainees. 'All I want is the material we need to ask some questions about the former attorney general’s conduct, on torture and warrantless wiretapping, so we can legitimately ask, "Here’s what was done in the past, what will you do?" ' Mr. Leahy, the committee chairman, told reporters. Whether that is a negotiating tactic, or a threat that could turn into an all-out battle, was unclear today. But Mr. Leahy did say he had told the White House counsel, Fred F. Fielding, that the nomination could not go forward without the information, and that 'cooperation with the White House would be central' to scheduling hearings." (NY Times)

Congress has been tied up in knots over the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) for quite a while. In Tennessee, CoverKids is almost out of money and is set to expire on September 30. In Georgia, the situation is worse. The state's version of SCHIP, PeachCare, has been out of money for quite a while and has now wracked up quite a deficit. They stopped accepting applications for adding new children to the program in March. Finally, the House and Senate are almost ready to send a bill to President Bush, "who has denounced similar legislation as a step 'down the path to government-run health care for every American.' Tony Fratto, a White House spokesman, said Sunday, 'The House and the Senate still appear to be far away from legislation that we would find acceptable.' Republicans will come under political pressure to support the compromise. But if the president vetoes it, he will probably have enough votes in the House to sustain his veto, Republicans say." (NY Times)

Many people don't realize that in addition to the 160,000 or so troops we have in Iraq there are also about 129,000 contractors there too. Most are doing the logistical jobs that the military used to do on its own -- cooking the meals, washing the clothes, driving the trucks, etc. But about 4600 of these contractors are doing combat roles. In other times, they have been called mercenaries. The largest of these firms is Blackwater and they're now being kicked out of the country. "Interior Ministry spokesman Abdul-Karim Khalaf said eight civilians were killed and 13 were wounded when contractors believed to be working for Blackwater USA opened fire on civilians in the predominantly Sunni neighborhood of Mansour in western Baghdad. 'We have canceled the license of Blackwater and prevented them from working all over Iraqi territory. We will also refer those involved to Iraqi judicial authorities,' Khalaf said. He said witness reports pointed to Blackwater involvement but added that the shooting was still under investigation. One witness, Hussein Abdul-Abbas, said the explosion was followed by about 20 minutes of heavy gunfire and 'everybody in the street started to flee immediately.' U.S. officials said the motorcade was traveling through Nisoor Square on the way back to the Green Zone when the car bomb exploded, followed by volleys of small-arms fire that disabled one of the vehicles but caused no American casualties...In one of the most horrific attacks of the war, four Blackwater employees were ambushed and killed in Fallujah in 2004 and their charred bodies hung from a bridge over the Euphrates River. But Iraqis have long complained about high-profile, heavily armed security vehicles careering through the streets, with guards pointing weapons at civilians and sometimes firing warning shots at anyone deemed too close. And Iraqi officials were quick to condemn the foreign guards. Al-Maliki late Sunday condemned the shooting by a 'foreign security company' and called it a 'crime.' Interior Minister Jawad al-Bolani described the shooting as 'a crime about which we cannot be silent. Everyone should understand that whoever wants good relations with Iraq should respect Iraqis. We are implementing the law and abide by laws, and others should respect these laws and respect the sovereignty and independence of Iraqis in their country.' Defense Minister Abdul-Qadir al-Obaidi told Iraqi television that 'those criminals' responsible for deaths 'should be punished' and that the government would demand compensation for the victims' families. Despite threats of prosecution, government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh told Alhurra television that contractors cannot be prosecuted by Iraqi courts because 'some of them have immunity.' (Yahoo! News)

The problem with global warming is that everyone is too focused on the negative. Every cloud does have a silver lining. For centuries European explorers sought the fabled Northwest Passage, the trade route that they were sure would cut through the American continent and offer a more direct path to the Orient than having to sail around South America or Africa. Now, "The Arctic's sea covering has shrunk so much that the Northwest Passage, the fabled sea route that connects Europe and Asia, has opened up for the first time since records began. The discovery, revealed through satellite images provided by the European Space Agency (Esa), shows how bad the consequences of global warming are becoming in northerly latitudes. This summer there was a reduction of a million square kilometres in the Arctic's ice covering compared with 2006, scientists have found. As a result, the Northwest Passage that runs between Canada and Greenland has been freed of the ice that has previously blocked it and that, over the centuries, has frustrated dozens of expeditions that attempted to sail northwest and open up a commercial sea route between the Atlantic and the Pacific. (The Guardian)

Monday, September 17, 2007

Idiot of the Month: Tn. State Rep. Rob Briley

Like the Photo of the Day which might not be daily, this might not actually be something I do every month. I guess it depends on how often the idiots rear their heads. Some months I might have to do a poll listing three or four and take votes on who gets the prize. I hate that I have to give the inaugural award to a Democrat.

Let's hear it for Tennessee State Representative Rob Briley (D-Nashville) who led police on a 100-mph chase before eventually being arrested for DUI, evading arrest, vandalism (he kicked out a window of the police cruiser) and several lesser offenses. The punchline? Until Saturday, he was the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee and was also on a study committee to recommend changes in the state's DUI laws. He remains a state representative but has stepped down from the committees. Lawmakers are said to be "mixed" on his legislative future.

Of course, someone has posted the dashboard camera video of his arrest on YouTube...



Like most of us, he handled things really well until they snapped the handcuffs on. If you didn't get enough on Part 1, there's also a Part 2 of the video.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Life, the Universe and Everything

So here's a new blog. Just what the world needs, right?

And the title is not exactly original. I ripped it off from a Douglas Adams book, but the title encompasses a small fraction of the stuff I hope to talk about here.

I've been blogging since 2003, starting at AOL Journals with "Progressive Musings: Partisan Ravings in a 'Fair and Balanced' World," which was a liberal political thingy as you might surmise from the title. I first came to Blogspot in 2004 with "sotto voce USA," which was mainly a political journal at first. I then began writing about politics with a very talented group of people at The Blue Voice. I've added a couple of other journals over the years, dealing with photography, the Civil War, and sports. You can expect to see those topics and others here. It is my plan to consolidate all my other blogs into this blog. I'll be moving blog posts from the other blogs here, then deleting them from the original blogs. A lot of original, new material (I hope) will be mixed in.

Who am I? Just call me fdtate. I'm nobody in particular. I'm just an average guy with an average life. I live in a very small town which is literally right down the road from Chattanooga, Tennessee. I've lived in the metro Chattanooga area for most of my life. I have a wife, three grown kids, and a grandchild. I have a college education, but no degree. Well, that's not entirely accurate. I do have an associate degree in computer programming, but know just enough to make a minor computer problem a whole helluva lot worse. I'm a liberal who is counting the minutes and seconds until the reign of George W. Bush is over. But enough about me for now.

I hope you'll come by and sit a spell from time to time.