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January 25, 2008

stimulate this

I really am mystified by the financial stimulus plan which it appears will be passed soon (well, soon by Congressional standards). Apparently the first things the Democrats bargained away were increases in the food stamp program and extension of eligibility for unemployment insurance. Excuse me? What is the scariest thing about a recession? That you’ll lose your job and won’t be able to feed your family, right? No, apparently it’s that you might not afford the gas to take your kids to soccer practice or (perish the thought!) keep current with your country club dues. I mean, WTF?

Don’t get me wrong—I’ll be happy to get a check if one comes my way. That baby will barely graze the mailbox before it gets cashed. But I think we’re seriously missing the boat here.

Update: Paul Krugman at the NY Times says it much better than I could (of course), with figures to back it up. The real mystery, of course, is where the Democrats’ collective spine has gone to. At this point we expect them to cave automatically on anything that could potentially paint them as weak on security—even when polls show as much as 70% of the American people would support their opposing the administration on certain issues. But though Krugman points out the administration’s complete lack of credibility on economic policy, it appears that once again the Democrats are running scared. I just don’t get it.

January 24, 2008

pursuant to the code of personal blogging

Henry & Mikey on the pillow

I can’t resist, even though if you don’t know Henry it may not be obvious. He’s the orange tabby with the little black cloud over his head. He loves the green pillow on the sofa by the lamp—that is his spot to sleep in from 5:00 or 6:00 in the evening until I go to bed. When he likes to sleep on my shins.

Anyway, Mikey unfortunately Fucked With The Routine (the first rule of cats is DFWTR) by curling up on the pillow. Henry eased himself down from the sofa arm, and even though Mikey is too crashed out to fight him, Henry is unhappy about sharing. These guys crack me up! Always entertaining.

I have now refreshed my status as a personal blog by putting up the obligatory cat posting. That should legally get me through the first half of 2008, doncha think?

January 21, 2008

shots from the messenger

Another milestone for the human race occurred last week with barely a ripple of notice: the Messenger spacecraft began a series of flybys of the planet Mercury, the first since Mariner 10 back in 1974. Messenger sent 500 MB of photos and scientific data back to NASA after the first of many flybys, and in three years it will settle into orbit around the planet. You can see photos and get lots of other info at a slick and easily accessible website. If you talk about bang for the buck, these unmanned space missions are an unbelievable bargain.

January 19, 2008

whoops!

How the World Works is a blog at Salon.com which deals with globalization issues, and reading it is generally time well spent. Last Tuesday, just after hearing on the news about Citigroup’s bailout by Abu Dhabi and Singapore government-controlled funds, I read this post about the ironies of free market capitalism being saved by state capitalism. Here’s an extended quote (emphasis in original):

The root of Wall Street's woes leads back directly to their own strategic missteps, greed, speculation-run-amok, and lack of appropriate supervision. The brightest minds in finance had exactly what they wanted, a playground where the monitors were looking the other way, and they blew it. When the China Investment Corp. pumps in $5 billion to Morgan Stanley, we are not witnessing the triumph of state capitalism, but rather, the embarrassing, humiliating failure of Reagan-Thatcher style unregulated capitalism. So now the U.S. buys Chinese toys at Wal-Mart, and China uses the resulting cash to buy American banks. Hey, anything's fair in love and war and free markets.

The magnitude of the disaster, from a free market apologist point of view, can hardly be overestimated. By abjectly failing to compensate or cushion the "losers" from globalization -- whether by boosting safety nets, improving healthcare, or investing significant resources in education and training -- the Bush administration guaranteed a growing groundswell of political opposition to global trade. And by failing to properly oversee financial markets, it provided an opportunity for foreign governments that may not share "American" values to become significant players in the heart of the global financial system. Talk about your legacies! The Bush administration not only may have crippled the Republican Party for a generation, but it also might have broken the free market! Whoops!

I think that pretty much says it all. Didn’t Marx say something about capitalists selling the rope to hang themselves?

that is so 10 days ago!

Did anyone else think it was a little too convenient that Iranian speedboats “threatened” US Navy ships just before Bush & co. went to the Middle East largely to try to convince Arab leaders that Iran is the Scariest Menace in the History of Scary Menaces? (I know I’m late on this one, but I’ve been busy.) While the Pentagon video was thoroughly debunked within a couple days, as usual the mainstream media have ignored this latest proof of the politicization of our military (and honestly, what can be scarier than that?). Anyway, Asia Times Online provides a thorough reconstruction of the events involved in the planting of a false story by the Pentagon, naming names and everything.

January 16, 2008

too cool to rule our school

Among the many depressing facets of our society these days is the dismal state of the press, especially when it comes to political reporting. It is mind-boggling to me that although it is basically a three-way race on the Democratic presidential race, the press all but ignores John Edwards. On the Republican side, though Ron Paul consistently outpolls Giuliani, he’s the one who is left out of the Michigan debate. As has been noted many times, the press acts like they’re still in high school, and if you’re not one of the cool kids, you simply don’t exist. Apparently Hillary Clinton only exists because they hate her so much.

Eric Boehlert at Media Matters has done an excellent job of dissecting this whole phenomenon in a piece titled “New Hampshire, the press, and incompetence.” Jon Stewart’s done some good stuff as well (thank god The Daily Show is at least partially back!). If I was on top of my game I would have all kinds of links here, but it’s late and I just wanted to point to the Boehlert article. It’s right on the money.

January 15, 2008

Democrats for Romney

A YouTube video. If I had been drinking coffee, I would be cleaning my screen now.

January 13, 2008

Fox News vs. reality

Political consultant Paul Begala attempts, in a friendly way, to correct a false story about himself airing on Fox News, only to be made to feel like a character in a Kafka novel. This might have been a bigger story (it’s not really news that Fox is the house organ for the Republican party, but this is blatant even for them), but instead it wound up buried in the gigantic flap over the news organizations’ premature burial of Hillary Clinton as a candidate. Begala provides transcripts of his email correspondence with a Fox reporter, and it is truly surreal.

January 12, 2008

truth in advertising

The Windows Vista commercial we’d like to see. I haven’t laughed that hard in weeks.

January 10, 2008

the cost of "winning"

Juan Cole comments on the WHO study which found the war in Iraq has cost an excess of 151,000 violent deaths over what one would expect without the American action. As horrible as this is, the study admits it did not take into account the most violent areas, because it was too dangerous to go there. This would make the estimate appear to be on the low side.

This finding is in contrast to the Lancet study which estimated Iraqi deaths at approximately 600,000. In contrast, the Lancet study did go into the most dangerous areas, and from what I have read from people who understand statistical rigor and reporting methods, there is every reason to believe the Lancet study is in fact the most accurate information we have, however repugnant that figure may be.

As Juan Cole notes, though, even the lower figure is horrendous (and does not take into account the estimated 2 to 4 million Iraqi refugees the war has caused). He ends his piece as follows: “Bush has gutted American civil liberties, and turned us into a hateful nation of spies, torturers, bigots, and colonialists occupying someone else's country…. And he has managed to unleash a maelstrom of violence in the Middle East that has wiped out the population of a medium-sized city. Surveying civilian deaths in Iraq is like walking through Lincoln, Nebraska, after it was hit by a neutron bomb, with everyone dead. Everyone.”

January 09, 2008

venus envy

I’m happy to announce that a recording project I’ve been working on has gone public. I did a four-song demo for a new band called Venus Envy, and they have now posted the songs on their MySpace page.

They needed a demo to get bar gigs, and I was happy to help them make one. I like the band a lot, but it’s been even better getting to know the individual members—they are four of the coolest women I know. I’m pleased to call them friends now.

I’m pretty happy with the mixes—which mostly survived MySpace’s quick-and-dirty Flash encoding—but constructive criticism is always welcome. Meanwhile, if you live in Kansas City, ask your local bar to book Venus Envy!

January 06, 2008

politics and sociology and stuff

Here’s some stuff I’ve been meaning to post for a while…. It’s political, yes, but it’s as much sociological as anything else. Despite my natural assumption of some sort of symmetry in motives and tactics between the political left and right, it doesn’t seem to work that way in practice, and as a former student of social psychology I find that fascinating.

From The Nation, an article titled “The New Right-Wing Smear Machine.” This is not about the so-called “right wing noise machine,” which is undeniably a real force in the country’s political discourse. As author Christopher Hays points out, that particular vehicle has a hierarchical structure (top down) and tends to use broadcast media (O’Reilly, Limbaugh, Drudge, et al.). Instead, Hays is talking about forwarded emails—we’ve all gotten them—which take on a life of their own. That’s what is so fascinating about them: these emails are passed around sometimes for years; sometimes the characters change according to the devil of the moment, as in the way emails from 2000 scourging Al Gore were recycled in 2004 demonizing John Kerry.

The vast majority of these emails support a right-wing view. Why? The author speculates that “For conservatives, these e-mails neatly reinforce preconceptions, bending the facts of the world in line with their ideological framework: liberals, immigrants, hippies and celebrities are always the enemy; soldiers and conservatives, the besieged heroes. The stories of the former's perfidy and the latter's heroism are, of course, never told by the liberal media. So it's left to the conservative underground to get the truth out.” I don’t know, but it’s an interesting phenomenon in any case.

If that’s not geeky and academic enough for you, here’s a real doozy: A Fascist Philosopher Helps Us Understand Contemporary Politics. It’s probably not for the casual web reader, but it goes deep into the soul of the Republican Party and why that body is the way it is. The article is about one Carl Schmitt, whose most important book was called The Concept of the Political, published in 1932.

I know, I know. But while it may seem like ancient history, Schmitt was once associated with Leo Strauss, generally considered to be the guru of all things neoconservative, especially the Bush administration. Oddly, though Schmitt joined the Nazi Party the next year, his reputation remained relatively unscathed and even more oddly, many of his ideas have been embraced by thinkers on the left as well as the right—though not the same ideas, and their interpretations are vastly different. Still, if you have any interest in the philosophical underpinnings of political thought, this is a really interesting read.

Finally, though I meant to link to this several weeks ago, it continues to be relevant. Maybe even more relevant than back then: The Huckabee Panic. It is amazing to see the leading right wiing pundits and leaders fall all over themselves to condemn the clear winner of Iowa’s Republican caucuses. Once again, it comes down to sociology. The article quotes a Kevin Drum post as follows:

But then along comes Huckabee, and guess what? He’s the real deal. Not a guy like George Bush or Ronald Reagan, who talks a soothing game to the snake handlers but then turns around and spends his actual political capital on tax cuts, foreign wars, and deregulating big corporations. Huckabee, it turns out, isn’t just giving lip service to evangelicals, he actually believes all that stuff.

My sense of gleeful schadenfreude is tempered by the fear that Huckabee could actually get somewhere in the nomination process. It’s not just that he would tear down what little remains of the wall between church and state, or the fact that he is a blithering idiot on any subject outside the borders of the US, but he’s right up there with Romney and Giuliani when it comes to the furthering of unchecked executive power and shredding the Constitution.

Incidentally, did you know that Privacy International has downgraded the US from an “Extensive Surveillance Society” to an “Endemic Surveillance Society?” That puts us in the same league with Russia and China. But then, I suspect that’s the subject for another post….

Have a good week, everyone!

January 01, 2008

Life in the Trenches part 8: the Chaos Bomb

Another in the occasional series…. This evening’s events have to do with the way a gig can turn from fun into a disaster in a matter of seconds.

Last Saturday we (the cover band I play with on weekends) were playing a club in Leavanworth for only the second time. Despite the fact it’s in Leavenworth (sorry, fans of NE Kansas miltiary towns—I have an unhappy history with clubs there), it’s a pretty fun gig and the owners seem determined to make it a good venue for live music. Our bass player, who sings about a third of the songs, had a bad cold and could barely talk, let alone sing. He joked about sounding like Satchmo, and I tried to give him a white hanky (okay, it was really a kleenex) to hold while he sang. But overall it was going pretty well. The crowd was on the small side, probably because of the snow and ice, but we had a pretty good momentum going.

We only had another 20 minutes to play, and invited a woman singer who’s a friend of the band to come up and sit in, and give our singer and the bass player a break. We were figuring out what song to do when suddenly one of the guitarists suddenly put down his instrument and left the stage. It turns out he had that stomach bug that is going around and suddenly felt so bad he had to go. Right then. Then he found couldn’t throw up and had to lie down in a booth until the situation could resolve itself. Those of us left decided we could get through Led Zeppelin’s “Rock’n’Roll” as a three-piece with singer.

I slogged through that impossible drum intro* as best I could, and as I did the final eighth notes to cue the rest of the band’s entrance, I managed to hit my glasses with one of my sticks. In the course of nearly 40 years playing the drums while wearing glasses, I have occasionally caught the temple piece with a stick and sent them flying, but I had a bad feeling about this one. Just the same, there didn’t seem any reason to stop and I played the song without glasses. As soon as we were done, I start feeling around on the floor. Bad news: I found the right temple piece and part of the lens frame, but nothing else. Of course they’re black glasses on a dark carpet on a darkish stage covered with equipment (and a Christmas tree behind the drums). I was crawling around , getting the band to look around because of course I was terrified someone would step on what was left of them. No luck. I ran out to my car (through the snow in a sweat-soaked t-shirt) to get my old glasses out of the glove compartment. I can literally only focus six inches in front of my face without glasses, so there was no possibility of doing without them. By that time there was only time to play one more song, and it was pretty flat, like someone had let the air out of the club.

Sometimes, it just feels like a chaos bomb has landed on the stage. Without warning we lost a guitar player and I was pretty freaked out, and the bass player had been struggling all night. It’s a little bizarre how an entire evening can turn in no time at all.

Incidentally, they eventually found the other part of my glasses behind one of the PA stacks, about 15 feet away. I actually lost money on that gig, because it’s going to take three weeks and cost over $100 to get them repaired.