Archive for May, 2005

They’re slowly awakening…

Monday, May 23rd, 2005

Please check out this article in yesterday’s San Francisco Chronicle. No really, trust me. I know it’s San Francisco. I know. But you’ll thank me for it. It’s called “Leaving the Left: I can no longer abide the simpering voices of self-styled progressives — people who once championed solidarity.”

Choice quotes include:

“This past January, my liberalism was in full throttle when I bid the cultural left goodbye to escape a new version of that oppressiveness. I departed with new clarity about the brilliance of liberal democracy and the value system it entails; the quest for freedom as an intrinsically human affair; and the dangers of demands for conformity and adherence to any point of view through silence, fear, or coercion. “

“A left averse to making common cause with competent, self- determining individuals — people who guide their lives on the basis of received values, everyday moral understandings, traditional wisdom, and plain common sense — is a faction that deserves the marginalization it has pursued with such tenacity for so many years. “

And, dear God, this one:

“These days the postmodern left demands that government and private institutions guarantee equality of outcomes. Any racial or gender “disparities” are to be considered evidence of culpable bias, regardless of factors such as personal motivation, training, and skill. This goal is neither liberal nor progressive; but it is what the left has chosen. In a very real sense it may be the last card held by a movement increasingly ensnared in resentful questing for group-specific rights and the subordination of citizenship to group identity. There’s a word for this: pathetic. “

Quick Sith Review

Monday, May 23rd, 2005

This was my emailed review of Revenge of the Sith. Thought I should post it here since with the box office gross this weekend, no one who wants to see it hasn’t seen it. Not that this is spoiler-ridden, but I don’t want anyone to say there was no warning.

I liked it. I really liked it.

Hated Anakin + Padme together.

Liked them apart.

Loved Obi-Wan Everywhere.

Yoda is Da Man.

Emperor is a bad bad dude.

Needs more Vader.*

Chewy!!!!

In all, certainly didn’t suck

*I think this applies to nearly everything

Quick Post Monday MediaCritique

Monday, May 23rd, 2005

It seems that President Bush’s string of election victories, begun with the Afghani elections, continues in Germany, if John Fund at WSJ Opinionjournal is correct. I wonder if the rest of Europe is paying attention.

I was listening to Laura Ingraham on the drive to work this morning, as is my wont, and she was talking to Howard Fineman, Deputy Washington, D.C. Bureau Chief for Newsweek, regarding the Kuran Kurfuffle and he made an interesting comment about Michael Isikoff, the writer of the brief piece in question and the man inexplicably charged with cleaning up the mess with the able help of Evan Thomas.

Please forgive what paraphrasing may exist as I don’t have a transcript, and I am relying on my increasingly faulty reporter’s memory.

“I can assure you that Mike has no idealogical agenda other than making life difficult for whoever is in power,” Howard Fineman, Laura Ingraham 5/23/05 radio program.

While Fineman admitted that a blind-spot exists in the MSM coverage of the military because few reporters have any experience or acquaintances with experience in the military, but here he reveals a blind-spot about the role and duty of journalism [hmm... a bit of a non-sequitor there, but I'll leave it -ed.] He doesn’t seem to understand that the role of the journalist is not, or rather shouldn’t be, “speaking truth to power;” it is, or should be, reporting the facts, in appropriate context, in a timely and newsworthy manner. By “newsworthy,” I mean that some stories, while true and extant, don’t merit publication because they are so common as to be assumed or are simply unnecessary gadfly-ism. “Making life difficult for those in power” falls into the latter category. Not every story is Watergate and not every war is Viet Nam. The inimitable James Taranto ably describes such adversarial journalism here, here, here and the follies it brings here.

If your entire ideology consists of antagonizing those in power (a common pasttime when those in power are Republicans), then you can’t help but introduce bias by your story selection, article tone and editorial review. If all Isikoff wants to do is make the Administration in power squirm, he is going to be a little quick on the trigger to fire off a story from a trusted but anonymous source with an axe to grind against those in power. This is how stories like the Texas Air National Guard memos and the Koran flushing, the leaked Election Day raw exit poll data and the “missing” Iraqi weapons stores (and where did that story go, I wonder?) got released too early and came back to bite the reporters in the ass.

Patience, circumspection and accuracy should be the motto of any reputable news organization, not “You heard it here first!” and “Late-Breaking Exclusive!”

So much for a quick note. This has been your Monday MediaCritique… as good a choice for recurring Monday category as any I suppose.

Cleaning out the ThoughtBucket, or Long OverDue Blog Referral

Monday, May 23rd, 2005

I was searching for a relevant quote for another post about 3 weeks ago (maybe the aborted religion post, I’m not sure) and chanced across his quotes page, which contains some interesting and thought-provoking quotations. I noticed a blog link at the bottom and followed it. Tremendously interesting stuff. I am not sure if is a “minarchic” Libertarian or “anarchic” Libertarian, but based on the posts on the front page, I would be tempted to go with the latter, especially considering the a priori assumptions he uses in this post about arguments, assumptions, assertions and fallacies. His foundational belief seems to be that until a convincing argument for the legitimacy of the State’s existence is made, it should not be assumed. Logical and Reasonable. This, I believe, puts him in the category of Big-L Libertarian, and more toward the anarchic side at that. I don’t know that I believe in the inherent illegitimacy of the State, but as I don’t have a reasonable argument for my assertion, I do not choose to engage him on this.

He is intelligent, fond of the color black, witty and curious. All of which makes for good, if eye-straining, reading. I highly recommend reading him regularly, and he is hereby added to the blogroll.

P.S. He proudly displays pictures of his wife in alluring poses (certainly with her consent) which can only benefits us, the viewers. To borrow an exclamation from the Aussies, good on ya mate!

Ring the Bells

Monday, May 23rd, 2005

Congratulations are in order to Mean Mr. Mustard. Russ just proposed to his dear Michelle, and fool that she is, she said yes. Best of luck to them both. We’ve been waiting for him to pop the question for some time. He has chickened out once or twice, but to paraphrase Samuel Johnson, “Nothing focuses the mind like knowing he is flying 2500 miles away from his lady love in the morning.” Russ leaves for his DC internship today.

As I told him, without Mrs. Bixby (Not her real name) I would long ago have starved, died of malnutrition or simply have gotten lost and never made it home. As I tell everyone, Everyone needs a wife. Congrats to him on getting his.

Blog-pology

Sunday, May 22nd, 2005

I feel like a schmo starting a new blog at a new site with a ripped off new look. However, as indicated in my work blog, I have been obscenely busy at work lately opening a new call center and trying to keep up with the real part of my job. My partner in grime is also involved on a big project and more and more has fallen on my plate lately. Sadly, I don’t get paid to blog, and I do get paid for 24/7 support, so most of my time in front of the PC lately has been for work.

Ripped Off Friday Funnies

Friday, May 20th, 2005

Store Wars Meet Cuke Skywalker and Chewbroccoli…
Although, I think Darth Tater hash has been better done

Moveon.org tried to get into the Star Wars Ripoff game too, but I agree with James Taranto, not as well. Frankly, moveon.org should take some of their own advice.

How to determine YOUR Star Wars name:

Your New First Name:
1. Take the first 3 letters of your 1st name.
2. Add the first 2 letters of your last name.

Your New Last Name:
3. Take the first 2 letters of your Mom’s maiden name.
4. Add the first 3 letters of the city you were born in.

Your Star Wars Honorific Title:
1: Take the last three letters of your last name and reverse them
2: Add the first three letters of the make or model of your first car
3: Insert the word “of”
4: Tack on the name of the last medication you took.

So Sayeth Paubi Tuel, Ybxthu of Tylenol

Sith has biggest opening day EVER! COOL! Take THAT Shrek 2!

In related news, $627 million of productivity was estimated lost today with Sith Flu.

For the record, I saw the movie, and the geek in me is pleased. As a writer, there were some elements or transitions that could have been played better, or differently, but that is par for the course for the newest trilogy. However, Lucas has money he hasn’t even counted yet, so who am I to talk?

work blog

Wednesday, May 11th, 2005

Despite all of Bill Dennis’s advice (see #12), I’m blogging about work.

Ready?

AAAAAGGHHH!!! SO MUCH!!!!THE BURIAL IT HURTSES US!!!

that is all… I now return you to your regular schedule of ignoring my blog.

Late Friday Funnies

Saturday, May 7th, 2005

Kids with too much booze, time and not enough sense = this. Also missing is y’know, a fire extinguisher.

Thanks to Mr. Sun, I am now thoroughly disillusioned. Apparently, the Bixby letter written by President Lincoln to a distant ancestor of mine, the story of which has been treasured as known fact for generations, is apparently a matter of some doubt. There is some question about whether Mrs. Bixby actually lost all of her sons (as indicated in the letter and stated in the movie Saving Private Ryan), and whether Lincoln or his secretary John Hay or some unknown forger wrote it. My whole world is in shambles.

Poor Tony Blair. He called an election for his party and lost them 47 seats: 33 to the Tories and 11 to the LibDems (and three to “Other”). It seems that the Iraq War was too much for the Brits and they couldn’t continue to support him and his policies. Of course, it appears his domestic record wasn’t all that grand either. I wonder if the Labour and Conservative Parties can form a strong enough coalition to hold the government together.

The Heritage Foundation has provided a handy-dandy calculator to determine what your likely Personal Account will contain when you retire based on what you and/or your spouse and what your benefit payment will probably be.

A less glowing review for Star Wars than Kevin Smith’s. It’s still positive overall, but it seems more realistic to me that Hayden Christiansen is wooden and has no chemistry with the charismatic and lovely Natalie Portman.

This story reports that the earth is getting brighter, i.e., because we have done such a fantastic job of cleaning the air from the last 300 years of industrial revolutioning that we’ve had. Really cool right? Shouldn’t the Earthy types be all over this? Shouldn’t they just be thrilled? No. In fact, they are bitching that the greater solar penetration is (wait for it…) actually accelerating global warming. So what do you want? Clean air or no global warming… it seems we may not be able to have one withouth the other.

By the way, a ninja pays half my rent. Awesome!!

UPDATE: One more thing, this is my 100th post. Go me.

WordPress Trackback

Thursday, May 5th, 2005

I have been trying to send trackback pings to Done with Mirrors for my previous post, but I can’t seem to do so using the inline trackback ping on the wordpress write post form. He uses haloscan. Is there a known issue in communicating between haloscan and wordpress?