Bookmarks for September 12th

Some additional reading September 12th from 16:10 to 16:10:

  • James Fallows – The Palin Interview – “What Sarah Palin revealed is that she has not been interested enough in world affairs to become minimally conversant with the issues. Many people in our great land might have difficulty defining the “Bush Doctrine” exactly. But not to recognize the name, as obviously was the case for Palin, indicates not a failure of last-minute cramming but a lack of attention to any foreign-policy discussion whatsoever in the last seven years.”

Bookmarks for September 6th

Some additional reading September 6th from 00:14 to 00:14:

  • A tangled Web at the RNC – Clicked – msnbc.com – I can name one piece of legislation Obama’s had a hand in and, at least on the Internet, it is part of a relatively famous story. What’s more, it actually came up last night at the Republican National Convention, apparently completely unnoticed in the glare of Palin’s performance: The Coburn-Obama Transparency Bill a.k.a. The Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act of 2006.Carly Fiorina, former Hewlett-Packard chairwoman and vociferous McCain advocate mentioned this in her address to the convention: “In his first year in office, he [McCain] will subject every government agency to a top to bottom review and post the results on the Internet for all Americans to see.”

Bookmarks for November 5th

Some additional reading November 5th from 13:33 to 13:33:

  • TidBITS Just for Fun: Top 10 Screensavers for the 21st Century – Love interesting screensavers myself. Am adding about 6 of these to my rotation”When I went in search of new and interesting screensavers, I was looking for three things: screensavers that could change and develop over time, screensavers that made use of input devices or updating information, and screensavers that put a fun twist on age-old tricks like clocks or photo slideshows”

Bookmarks for November 30th through December 2nd

A few interesting links for November 30th through December 2nd:

  • Media Matters – Wash. Times and Pittsburgh Tribune-Review publish false Heritage Foundation claims about autoworker compensation – " In recent days, The Washington Times and the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review published op-eds by members of the Heritage Foundation containing the false claim that union autoworkers earn $75 an hour in wages and benefits. In fact, according to General Motors, these claims are based not only on current workers' hourly wages and benefits, such as health care and retirement, but also retirement and health-care benefits that U.S. automakers are providing for current retirees."
  • NBC and McCaffrey's coordinated responses to the NYT story – Glenn Greenwald – Salon.com – General Barry McCaffrey has been corrupt for a long time (he was the drug Czar, remember?), and NBC was quite happy employing him in his role as defense contractor shill.
    More here
    http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/2008/12/01/mccaffrey/index.html
  • Daily Kos: Who Rules Mark Halperin's World? – "Number of references on Mark Halperin's website, thepage.time.com, for each of the following, according to Google:

    Rush Limbaugh: 113
    Sean Hannity: 77
    Matt Drudge: 56
    Bill O'Reilly: 34
    Huffington (Post or Arianna): 23
    Keith Olbermann: 14
    Rachel Maddow: 9
    Daily Kos: 0"

  • Daily Kos: Defending The Media From Halperin's Tin-Foil Attack – " I assembled a list of 92 articles published by the NYT in 2007 and 2008 (see below). As you can see, none of thes articles show any signs of "extreme bias" or "extreme pro-Obama coverage."

    I'm not saying the articles prove any sort of systematic anti-Obama bias. But they do invalidate Halperin's claim about the NYT, in the process exposing his claim that coverage of the 2008 campaign represents "the most disgusting failure of people in our business since the Iraq war" as totally unsubstantiated.

    Given Halperin's utter lack of specifics to support his claim, the real question is this: why did he choose to throw the media under Rush Limbaugh's bus?"

  • Bargain gifts for the culture vulture – 2008 Gift Guide – Salon.com – ". On the leading edge of an incoming tsunami of art-house-flavored releases is the first-ever batch of Blu-rays from the Criterion Collection, available for preorder now and pre-Christmas delivery. It's an eclectic and intriguing blend, from Nicolas Roeg's deliciously culty "The Man Who Fell to Earth"($27.95), starring the 1976 androgynous version of David Bowie, to Carol Reed's sinister, black-and-white Vienna Brit-noir "The Third Man"($28.99), Wong Kar-wai's winsome 1994 romance "Chungking Express" ($27.95) and Wes Anderson's debut indie heist caper "Bottle Rocket" ($27.95). (Bertolucci's "The Last Emperor" ($23.99), exactly the kind of eye-popping spectacle you'd expect to see in a new format, will be along in January.) No telling yet whether technophiles will kvetch or kvell about the hi-def transfers, but to you and me they'll look stupendous."

Bookmarks for November 30th

Some additional reading November 30th from 21:00 to 21:40:

  • War Machine – "On NBC and in other public forums, General McCaffrey has consistently advocated wartime policies and spending priorities that are in line with his corporate interests. But those interests are not described to NBC’s viewers. He is held out as a dispassionate expert, not someone who helps companies win contracts related to the wars he discusses on television.

    But rather than focusing on McCaffrey and his issues, it’s worth contemplating the breathtaking lack of integrity on display from the television networks here. As I said, Barstow published a piece on this back in April. None of the TV networks addressed the issue he raised in anything resembling a serious manner. And, again, we now have NBC News caught flat-out in the midst of corruption, deceiving their viewers. And NBC News isn’t sorry. They’re not apologizing. They’re not ashamed. Because they’re beyond shame. They never had a reputation for honor, so they don’t even see this sort of thing as damaging."

  • The ongoing disgrace of NBC News and Brian Williams – Glenn Greenwald – Salon.com – "Still, what was — and remains — most incredible about Barstow's April, 2008 exposé was that, to this day, the networks which featured these highly conflicted "analysts" have never uttered a word about the controversy over the Pentagon's program, despite the fact that it was the subject of an enormous front-page NYT story; members of Congress accused the Pentagon — rightfully so — of operating a potentially illegal propaganda operation and demanded information directly from the networks; both Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton spoke out against the Pentagon's program; and even the Pentagon felt compelled to terminate the program in the wake of the controversy. None of that merited a mention by any of the networks, despite (more accurately: because of) the fact that their own reporting was so directly implicated by the controversy."

Bookmarks for November 28th through November 29th

A few interesting links for November 28th through November 29th:

  • Lawmaker to Homeland Security: Don't forget to credit God for keeping Kentuckians safe – "A lawmaker is upset with his state's Department of Homeland Security for its lack of credit to a "higher power" for its work in protecting the state's citizens.

    Kentucky State Rep. Tom Riner, a Southern Baptist minister who helped establish a requirement that the federally funded agency credit God with keeping the state safe, is upset that under Gov. Steve Beshear, the department's 2008 annual report did not do so."

    I don't know what to say in response to this Christian Taliban silliness.

  • Gapers Block : A/C : Chicago Arts & Culture – Friday Flickr Feature – "In case you were dreaming of a white Thanksgiving, swanksalot provides your fix."
  • People Who Need People – "Jimmy Carter’s circle regarded Johnson, who mired the nation in Vietnam and then handed the White House to Nixon, as a failure. They weren’t about to have any “Johnson people” in their White House. Clinton’s circle regarded Carter, who allowed himself to be paralyzed by a few hundred Iranian “students” and then handed the White House to Reagan, as a failure. They weren’t about to have any “Carter people” in their White House.

    It didn’t seem to occur to either crowd, Carter’s or Clinton’s, that old hands, far from being eager to repeat the errors of the Administrations of which they had been a part, would be especially keen to avoid them. Also, they would know in detail what those errors were."

  • Good old Christian charity again | The Green Atheist – "After contacting the ACLU and filing a lawsuit, Bell and McCord became the subjects of hatred and even violence. Bell’s house was burned down by a firebomb. McCord’s 12-year-old son’s prize goats were slashed and mutilated with a knife. Bell was assaulted by a school cafeteria worker who smashed her head repeatedly against a car door. (School authorities praised the cafeteria worker, and she was forced to pay a $10 fine and Bell’s hospital bills, community residents raised donations on the assailant’s behalf.) McCord and Bell were both mailed their own obituaries.

    Don’t make assumptions though: McCord and Bell were not atheists, although they were accused of being atheists. They just belonged to Christian churches that weren’t part of the dominant Baptist sect in the area. "

    Insane! Simply insane. There should be no place for religious freaks in public schools.

  • Civic Literacy Report – Additional Finding – "Among the 2,508 respondents, 164 say they have been elected to a government office at least once. This sub-sample of officeholders yields a startling result: elected officials score lower than the general public. Those who have held elective office earn an average score of 44% on the civic literacy test, which is five percentage points lower than the average score of 49% for those who have never been elected. It would be most interesting to explore whether this statistically significant result is maintained across larger samples of elected officials"
  • U.S. judge sentences noisy offenders to Barry Manilow – Yahoo! News – A U.S. judge has hailed as a success a new form of punishment for people who go to court for being too noisy — an hour of listening to Barry Manilow or the theme tune from the children's TV show "Barney and Friends." Judge Paul Sacco said he decided to try something new after noticing that violators brought before his Colorado court for playing their stereos too loudly, or disturbing neighbors with band rehearsals, kept doing it again. …

    He said his methods had cut the number of repeat offenders appearing in his court.

    But offenders who are found to enjoy facing the music will have the songs taken away from them. Sacco says these people must listen to music they don't like, because that's what they impose on others.

    Court officials take surveys after each session, and if it turns out that many of the offenders happen to like a particular song, that tune is removed from the playlist.

  • “Bush’s Greatness” – "t’s obvious not only that George W. Bush has already earned his Great President badge (which might even outrank the Silver Star) but that much of the opposition to Bush has a remarkable and very special quality; one might be tempted to call it “lunacy.” But that’s too easy. The “special quality” of anti-Bush opposition tells a more significant, stranger story than that.

    Bush’s greatness is often misunderstood. He is great not because he showed America how to react to 9/11 but because he showed us how to deal with a still bigger event–the end of the Cold War. The collapse of the Soviet Union in 1989 left us facing two related problems, one moral and one practical. Neither President Clinton nor the first Bush found solutions–but it’s not surprising that the right answers took time to discover, and an event like 9/11 to bring them into focus."

    Bwha-ha-ha

  • China executes man for ant-breeding scheme – No bailout in this tale of white collar crime:

    "China has executed a businessman convicted of bilking thousands of investors out of $416 million in a bogus ant-breeding scheme, state media reported Thursday.

    The official Xinhua News Agency said Wang Zhendong, who was found guilty of fraud and sentenced to death in February last year, was executed in north China's Liaoning province on Wednesday.

    The death penalty is used broadly in China. Though usually reserved for violent crimes, it is also applied for nonviolent offenses that involve large sums of money or if they are seen to threaten social order."

  • Axe falls on historic Dijon mustard factory – The factory, set up in 1911 by the descendent of a long line of master vinegar makers from Dijon, produced the brands Amora and Maille. The pungent range of Maille mustards dates back to the 18th century when its founder boasted that his antiseptic vinegar could help fight off a plague threatening the south of France.

    But the multinational Unilever, which took over the brands in 2000, said it was closing the site and two others in Burgundy to consolidate in the difficult economic climate. The company said production at the Dijon factory had dropped by 42% since 2002. Mustard production will continue at Unilever sites elsewhere in France.

    The price of mustard grains has risen by 144% in one year.

  • The Left Coaster: Purchasing The Plantation – "Under the bill, employers would not be able to obtain insurance on employees who are not considered key personnel, such as owners or partners – anyone whose death would cause financial loss to the company. No policy could be taken out on rank-and-file workers unless they gave written consent. If they did not consent, employers could not retaliate against them. "They must agree to it, you have to inform them and not come and harass them if they don't want to be insured by you," Fairley said before the vote.

    Last year, Wal-Mart Stores Inc. settled a lawsuit over the practice. The six families who were part of the lawsuit argued that Wal-Mart never told workers about the life insurance policies, something the company disputed. Wal-Mart is one of many large U.S. companies in recent years that have taken out policies on the lives of employees, ranging from executives to workers on the bottom rungs of the pay ladder, with the goal of collecting benefits when the employees die."

Bookmarks for November 28th

Some additional reading November 28th from 12:18 to 16:48:

  • Another milestone: Obama 1st president who's got game — chicagotribune.com – ""There is an aspect of improvisation within a discipline that I find very, very powerful," Obama told HBO's Bryant Gumbel last year. "I can't imagine more fun than having a good pickup basketball game, when everything's going right and people are passing the ball and you're actually hitting some shots."

    Yes. Exactly. And as you're doing it, you're probably telling yourself, "Yes, we can."

  • David Byrne – 11.22.08: Gas Wars – "Last week GM — once one of the largest, most powerful companies in the whole world — went begging for a government bailout, along with the other 2 big U.S. automakers. …These companies do not have the country’s best interests at heart — for years they have fought tooth and nail against fuel economy, defeating 2 bills in congress that would have resulted in cars that use less gas and burn cleaner. They saw that they could sell the macho U.S. car buyers on gas-guzzling giant SUVs and pickup trucks, and got the government to exempt those vehicles from many of the rules that apply to cars — and we’re supposed to help these guys? They could give a shit about us!

    I feel bad for the working stiffs who will be and have been laid off by the thousands — though I didn’t see too many of the unions fighting hard for fuel efficiency and smaller cars — they mainly fought for more pay for less work and they aren’t getting much public sympathy either as a result."

Bookmarks for November 27th

Some additional reading November 27th from 22:18 to 22:31:

  • How the media talks about torture and the rule of law – "noted the sly way that asshole Mazzetti slides from "the CIA's secret detention program remains a particularly incendiary issue for the Democratic base" — because, of course, only those wacko lefties worry about war crimes — to the completely bogus assertion that said concerns have made it "difficult for Mr. Obama to select someone . . . who has played any role in the agency’s campaign against Al Qaeda since 9/11" (emphasis mine). So, according to the New Pravda (sometimes known as the New York Times) to criticize crimes against humanity is to oppose the entire campaign against the people responsible for 9/11. Dick Cheney couldn't have put it better. Now THAT'S some sleazy journalism we can believe in."
  • Eight Is Enough: Comment: The New Yorker – "You might think that an organization that for most of the first of its not yet two centuries of existence was the world’s most notorious proponent of startlingly unconventional forms of wedded bliss would be a little reticent about issuing orders to the rest of humanity specifying exactly who should be legally entitled to marry whom. But no. The Mormon Church—as anyone can attest who has ever answered the doorbell to find a pair of polite, persistent, adolescent “elders” standing on the stoop, tracts in hand—does not count reticence among the cardinal virtues. Nor does its own history of matrimonial excess bring a blush to its cheek. The original Latter-day Saint, Joseph Smith, acquired at least twenty-eight and perhaps sixty wives, some of them in their early teens, before he was lynched, in 1844, at age thirty-eight. "
  • Death to film critics! Hail to the CelebCult! – "A newspaper film critic is like a canary in a coal mine. When one croaks, get the hell out. The lengthening toll of former film critics acts as a poster child for the self-destruction of American newspapers, which once hoped to be more like the New York Times and now yearn to become more like the National Enquirer. We used to be the town crier. Now we are the neighborhood gossip.

    The crowning blow came this week when the once-magisterial Associated Press imposed a 500-word limit on all of its entertainment writers. The 500-word limit applies to reviews, interviews, news stories, trend pieces and "thinkers." Oh, it can be done. "

Bookmarks for November 26th

Some additional reading November 26th from 11:22 to 22:42:

  • Bad times demand big thoughts – "As the media spaces have been filled of late with the FDR-like public works talk that was a part of summer blog discussions, I’ve been struck by the lack of vision exhibited by most mass media yakkers on this topic and am curious to provoke blogosphere free-wheeling of a type similar to what Mr. Obama must be provoking amongst his assembling presidential posse.

    Big Changes for a Big Century could include the much discussed ideas of wind farms and electric cars but I know your clever readers and writers might have a few other ideas for the economic recovery melting pot.

    Here are a few of mine

    -A transcontinental wide-body maglev or high velocity rail system"

    Rail! yes, yes, yes! We need a good national rail system, please!

  • Matt Bonner of the San Antonio Spurs sees himself as 'boring guy' – "Despite making $2.978 million this year and $3.256 next year, Bonner remains frugal. Former Spurs guard Brent Barry, who is now with the Houston Rockets, remembers a time in Sacramento when Bonner was getting a snack at his favorite spot: Subway.

    “Matt had a coupon for half off a sandwich, which said: ‘Valid at participating stores only,'” Barry said. “The owner said we're not ‘participating stores' and Matt was like ‘Well aren't you a Subway? I walk outside and I see the name ‘Subway.'” After 10 minutes, he talked his way to half off a turkey sandwich. He saved like $2.16.”

    Added Bowen: “It's not about what you make, it's about what you keep. He understands that motto perfectly.”"

Bookmarks for November 24th through November 25th

A few interesting links for November 24th through November 25th:

  • Silly Porn Stills – These *are* great fun. Plot? What's that?
    "opening stills from porno flicks rather amusing. I can't pick a favorite, but #3 is like what Vermeer would do if he were a porn director. …

    And don't worry–totally safe for work, except for the word "porn." "

    As far as I know, none of these films are available via Netflix though.

  • Woman may lose house for sex while she was a high school student 12 years ago – Boing Boing – Yet another reason to avoid Georgia. What a backwards place.
    "Twelve years ago, when Wendy Whitaker was barely 17, she performed oral sex on a high school classmate who was about to turn 16. The state of Georgia convicted her of a sex crime and she was sentenced to 10 years in prison.
    As a registered sex offender, Whitaker's freedom is severely restricted. She and her husband bought a house within 1000 feet of an unadvertised church daycare service, and a judge has decreed that she has to vacate by Thanksgiving.

    In 2006, she and her husband scoped out neighborhood surrounding the Harlem, Georgia home they eventually purchased to be sure they were in compliance with Georgia’s sex offender law at the time. That law prohibited offenders from living within 1,000 feet of any area where children congregate. Despite their efforts, they had overlooked a nearby church, which was running an unadvertised daycare service."

Bookmarks for November 22nd through November 23rd

A few interesting links for November 22nd through November 23rd:

  • A Modest Mormon Proposal – A lot of religions, starting with Catholicism, think that Mormons are cultists, what with thinking Jesus is the brother of the devil and that Jesus married his mom, Mary, and two other women. So why isn't granting Mormons tax exempt religious status a violation of the religious beliefs of Catholics and other Christians? The state is quite literally legitimizing, and subsidizing, what many other religions consider a cult. … And how is any of this different from the state legitimizing, but not subsidizing, the marriage of gay couples?

    So, using Mormon and religious right logic, shouldn't we at least put the rights of Mormons (and religious right Republicans) up to a majority vote? If the Mormons can convince 51% of Americans that they're not a cult, and that their views of Jesus and the forced conversion of Jewish Holocaust victims to Mormonism should be subsidized by the American taxpayer, then they get their tax exemption. Isn't anything else un-democratic?
  • The Truth About Vermouth: The secret ingredient in today's top cocktails remains misunderstood – "Vermouth's commercial origins date to 1786, when Antonio Benedetto Carpano began marketing the aromatized wine he produced in Turin, but the consumption of vermouth and its precursors stretches back centuries. Typically made from neutral-character dry white wines that have been flavored with herbs, roots and barks – typically including cardamom, cinnamon, marjoram and chamomile – and then fortified with a neutral grape spirit, vermouth is classically made – and named – for another botanical: wormwood (the plant's name in Old High German is Wermud)."

Bookmarks for November 21st

Some additional reading November 21st from 10:27 to 10:47:

  • Viral e-mail of the day – "HOW SMART IS YOUR RIGHT FOOT?

    You have to try this please, it takes 2 seconds. I could not believe this!!!

    This will boggle your mind and will keep you trying over and over again to see if you can outsmart your foot, but, you can't. It's pre-programmed in your brain!

    1. Without anyone watching you (they will think you are GOOFY……) and while sitting at your desk in front of your computer, lift your right foot off the floor and make clockwise circles.

    2. Now, while doing this, draw the number '6' in the air with your right hand. Your foot will change direction.

    I told you so!!! And there's nothing you can do about it! You and I both know how stupid it is, but before the day is done you are going to try it again, if you've not already done so."

  • Minnesota Public Radio: Challenged ballots: You be the judge – "Representatives from the campaigns of Sen. Norm Coleman and Al Franken have been challenging ballots across the state.

    It's your turn to play election judge. Tell us how you would rule in the case of these challenged ballots. Use this Minnesota state statute as your guide."

    You can examine the votes and cast your own (non-binding) vote.

Bookmarks for November 20th

Some additional reading November 20th from 17:46 to 20:58:

  • Apple – Support – Discussions – Pictures automatically attach to e-mail? … – "Please help! I took my husband's i-phone and found a raunchy picture of him attached to an e-mail to a woman in his sent e-mail file (a Yahoo account). When I approached him about this (I think that he is cheating on me) he admitted that he took the picture but says that he never sent it to anyone. He claims that he went to the Genius Bar at the local Apple store and they told him that it is an i-phone glitch: that photos sometimes automatically attach themselves to an e-mail address and appear in the sent folder, even though no e-mail was ever sent. Has anyone ever heard of this happening? The future of my marriage depends on this answer! "

    and the answer, of course, is no, your husband is cheating on you, and came up with a lame excuse.

  • What Might Have Been – " a quiet triumph for Pelosi. Without her tacit support, Waxman’s campaign would have quietly died. Meanwhile, few in the House will forget that she tried to solve this problem months ago by letting Dingell remain at Energy and Commerce and creating a new Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming. Dingell fought her efforts, and managed to neuter the new committee. It has nothing more than an advisory role. But it’s now clear that what looked like a win for Dingell was actually prelude to a much larger loss. He not only loses jurisdiction over global warming, but over health care and most everything else."

Bookmarks for November 19th

Some additional reading November 19th from 09:12 to 20:40:

  • Media still trying to delegitimize MN recount – "Media outlets don't typically emphacize how much elections cost; they certainly don't emphacize how much individual aspects of elections cost. (When was the last time you saw a newscaster announce "election workers rolled voting machines out of storage this morning, at a cost to taxpayers of …"?)

    And that's all this recount is: it is one part of the elections process. Its cost is, simply put, irrelevent. Elections are worth doing correctly no matter how much they cost. Not only that, but $86,000 is, even in the midst of a struggling economy, an utterly trivial amount of money for the state of Minnesota to spend in order to get the results of an election right.

    How trivial? The $86,000 cost comes out to 1.7 cents per Minnesota resident. One point seven cents. It's a mere three cents per vote. Anybody out there think making sure each vote is counted correctly isn't worth three cents? Anyone at all?

  • Auto officials nailed on private jets: The Swamp – "Rep. Brad Sherman, a California Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee asked at today's hearing on a potential bailout for the struggling U.S. auto industry asked the Big Three's chief executive officers which of them had flown by private jet into Washington for the hearing. All three raised their hands.

    Then he asked which would be heading home commercially. None of the three raised his hand."

  • FiveThirtyEight.com: Politics Done Right: An Interview with John Ziegler on the Zogby "Push Poll" – Republican mind-set, encapsulated. Wow, just wow.
    "Ziegler was responsible for commissioning a Zogby International survey of Barack Obama supporters, which took the form of a multiple choice political knowledge test, stating a "fact" to the respondent and asking them which of the four major candidates (Obama, McCain, Biden, Palin) the statement applied to. Because I believe that many of the statements on the survey are questionable or false but are misleadingly presented as factual to the respondent, I characterized the survey as a "push poll" in an article posted early this morning."

    You should read this transcript if you are up for a good laugh. The RNC pays this guy Ziegler?

Bookmarks for November 18th

Some additional reading November 18th from 14:16 to 22:25:

  • Life magazine photo collection goes online | – Awesome news, really.
    "One of the biggest photo collections in the world that ranges from the 1880s through to the seminal moments of the 20th century and on into the present day was made available to the public online yesterday.

    The bulk of the archive is from Life magazine, the premier platform for photojournalists in the 20th century. About 10m images will eventually be available, from Marilyn Monroe and JFK to Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton. About 97% of the pictures have never been seen before."

  • Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens loses re-election bid – Yahoo! News – "The crotchety octogenarian built like a birch sapling likes to encourage comparisons with the Incredible Hulk, but he occupies an outsized place in Alaska history. His involvement in politics dates to the days before Alaska statehood, and he is esteemed for his ability to secure billions of dollars in federal aid for transportation and military projects. The Anchorage airport bears his name; in Alaska, it's simply "Uncle Ted."
    Tuesday's tally of just over 24,000 absentee and other ballots gave Begich 146,286, or 47.56 percent, to 143,912, or 46.76 percent, for Stevens."
  • Interesting Times: George Packer: Online Only: The New Yorker – Dylan on Obama – Ahh, Bob, you wordsmith you…

    "Bob Dylan Quote of the Night from November 4th : “I was born in 1941. That was the year they bombed Pearl Harbor. I’ve been living in darkness ever since. It looks like things are going to change now.”"

  • Interesting Times: George Packer: Online Only: The New Yorker – After Kristol – "The real grounds for firing Kristol are that he didn’t take his column seriously. In his year on the Op-Ed page, not one memorable sentence, not one provocative thought, not one valuable piece of information appeared under his name. The prose was so limp (“Who, inquiring minds want to know, is going to spare us a first Obama term?”) that you had the sense Kristol wrote his column during the commercial breaks of his gig on Fox News Sunday and gave it about the same amount of thought.

    In one sense, this mental shallowness and literary poverty come as a surprise from the son of Irving Kristol and Gertrude Himmelfarb, the student of Harvey C. Mansfield, the devotee of Leo Strauss, and the colleague of Robert Kagan, David Brooks, et al. Kristol was never an intellectual—he’s always been a Republican strategist with various public platforms, including government office"

    I say fire the punk! His columns are not a good reflection on the NYT, and aren't interesting either.

  • Daily Kos: Why It Matters – "In the end, the Lieberman fight isn't entirely about Lieberman. Yes, people want to see consequences doled out for the perennially back-stabbing Senator who formed his own political party when his own Democratic voters voted him out, who used his committee as a protectorate of the abuses of the Bush administration, and who — for God's sake — campaigned for McCain and Palin, even when their campaign reached its most rancid lows.

    But more to the point, people in America want a change from the Bush years — desperately. And they voted for it, delivering a thumping mandate for Obama. They want things to change, and that's why this minor battle has taken on so much meaning, and why people are so peeved: this was the first test of mettle, and it showed no mettle at all."

  • The Cure, 4:13 Dream – "What has been done to this record is not new; in fact, it's all too common these days. But it is particularly egregious here, and the Cure are just going to have to take one for the recording industry as a whole. This CD is very loud. Without getting into a lot of technical stuff (which is explained well here), past a certain point, the only way to make a CD's average volume louder is to make most of it quieter–i.e., digitally reduce the difference between the loudest sounds and the quietest ones–so that you can turn everything up. If it's done judiciously, the record sounds louder, but not a whole lot worse to the untrained ear. If it's done carelessly or ham-fistedly, it fucks everything up. My ear is not very well-trained, but this is the most fucked-up record I've heard."
  • Weekend America: Fan Free Agent – "How about this: I am now a fan free agent. I contacted teams all over the league to see if they wanted to sign me as a fan now that I was on the open market. An overwhelming number of them did not respond. But some did!"
  • 11 Surefire Landscape Photography Tips – Some not-bad tips:
    "There’s something about getting out in nature with the challenge of capturing some of the amazing beauty that you see. Perhaps it fits with my personality type – but I loved the quietness and stillness of waiting for the perfect moment for the shot, scoping out an area for the best vantage point and then seeing the way that the light changed a scene over a few hours."