Which One Are You?
Posted on November 5th, 2010 in Uncategorized | 2 Comments »
How cell phone users see themselves—and are seen by others.
(Thanks, Gizmodo.)
How cell phone users see themselves—and are seen by others.
(Thanks, Gizmodo.)
The media/enviro organization has a show on Sunday, “Great Migrations,” which you can pretty much figure out what it’s about.
Here’s a snippet on how they filmed sperm whales. How great would that be, to be the guy in the water?
It’s called: WhatthefuckhasObamadonesofar.com.
And it’s genius.
I kinda wish that this was turned into a 30-second ad that ran nationwide for a month before the election. Just turn the “fuck” into “*&$@” and you’re ready to go….
They hired college kids to harass Democratic members of Congress, hoping to make their lives so unpleasant that they would retire.
And then they lied about it.
Can a political party behave with this level of sleaze and immaturity and then hope to govern?
Or is that just too much cognitive dissonance?
In the Dallas Morning News, Neal Gabler (full disclosure, he’s a great writer and an old friend) writes about the timidity of American governance. (This was published pre-election.)
For better or worse, Americans are a timorous bunch who only press their government to act when they think national security is at stake. That’s how Eisenhower sold the interstate highway system, how LBJ sold Vietnam and how George W. Bush sold the Iraq war. When we aren’t defending ourselves, government just can’t seem to muster a consensus to do much of anything.
…Because change is only a slogan, because Americans don’t have the political will to encourage their government to act boldly when necessary, and because we shrink from addressing the things that assail us, we aren’t likely to get the car out of the ditch we’re in anytime soon. And while Americans cling to their self-image of intrepidness here in the land of the free and the home of the brave, we are on target to demonstrate at the polls that we are anything but.
I think about this when I hear Republicans and the Tea Party People shout that “we’re going to take we’ve taken our government back!” in that slightly rabid way they have, like they’re thisclose to violence if you turn out to be a longhair or a queer or something equally threatening.
I think, what exactly does that mean, take our government back? Who has it—the people who were, oh, democratically elected within the last six years? It’s not like they stole it. In fact, it’s probably more likely that the people who anonymously funded the Tea Party and the GOP stole it. In any case, the mantra clearly doesn’t mean, you know, we’re going to elect more Republicans than Democrats. It means something more than that, something deeper and angrier. But at the same time, since it’s never spelled out, it also means rather less.
Manwhile, in the Financial Times, Bob Rubin writes sagely—and insipidly—about where we go from here.
Thus, our most fundamental challenge is the effectiveness of our political system. Despite substantial legislative actions over the past year and a half, there is widespread and serious concern about the willingness to work across party and ideological lines and to make the tough decisions, necessary to meet our challenges. The historic resilience of our political system, our economy, our culture and our society is a hopeful augur. We have risen to difficult challenges many times in the past and we can do so again. But there is much to do.
So, so true.
Also: If there is a more certain sign of a ghostwriter than the use of the word “augur” as a noun, I have not yet seen it. “Sign” will do just fine, thank you.
And finally, former Harvard money man Mohamed El-Erian writes in the Washington Post today about “what’s next for the economy.”
El-Erian makes the case against political gridlock. The case for it, he says, is that with government paralyzed, capitalism can do what it does best: Make money and put people to work. But that’s not true now, he writes, because capitalism is still recovering from years of financial shenanigans.
This world speaks to a different characterization of private-sector activity - rather than able and willing to move forward unhindered if the government simply gets out of the way, this is a private sector that faces too many headwinds. In these circumstances, high economic growth and job creation require not only that the private sector moves forward but also that it attains critical mass, or what Larry Summers, the departing head of the National Economic Council, called “escape velocity.”
(Escape velocity? Hilarious.)
Simply put, these realities make it necessary for Washington to resist two years of gridlock and policy paralysis. Democrats and Republicans must meet in the middle to implement policies to deal with debt overhangs and structural rigidities. The economy needs political courage….
Which brings us full circle, to Neal Gabler’s point: Maybe we just don’t have the balls. We say we want real change, but then, when someone tries to implement it, we “refudiate” it. Instead, Americans vote in a bunch of candidates with empty promises and absent spines.
Things are getting crazy in this country, and not in a good way. But I guess we’ve seen it before, haven’t we?
Because today, we really need it.
Sunset over the Indian Ocean, early October.
—”I’ll answer those questions when I’m the senator.”
Nevada GOP senatorial candidate Sharron Angle, who has refused to talk to reporters for months, explaining to a local TV reporter why she wouldn’t talk to the reporter.
As President Obama tried to give a campaign speech at a rally in Bridgeport, CT, on Saturday, he was interrupted by 30 protesters—apparently Yale and Harvard students—who want more money for AIDS.
…several minutes after the President took the stage, his speech was punctuated by demonstrators shouting, “Fund global AIDS!”
While Obama’s speech came to a halt for several minutes, he took it as an opportunity to address the protesters directly.
“These folks have been — you’ve been appearing at every rally we’ve been doing. And we’re funding global AIDS, and the other side is not. So I don’t know why you think this is a useful strategy,” Obama responded, after telling the group to “listen up.”
How about “shut up”?
It’s three days before a midterm election which looks like it will go very badly for the President and his party. Do these morons think what they’re doing will help? The more news they make, the worse it is for Obama and the Democrats.
Do they think the Tea Party People—and the right-wing GOPers like Sharron Angle—give a damn about AIDS?
Or do they just like to hear themselves shout?