Sunday, November 29, 2009

Thursday, November 05, 2009

Wednesday, November 04, 2009

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

OLD GEEZER Jams the Blues ..... NICE DAY

Woodrow gets gets down. Woodrow gets funky.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Blogging takes too many words.

My mind is being systematically reduced to creating utterances of 140 characters or less.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Thursday, January 22, 2009

FriendFeed

In order to bring this blog forward, let me simply share this bit about Friendfeed:

FriendFeed

See your friends' discoveries

See the web pages, videos, photos, and music your friends are sharing from around the web.

Share automatically

FriendFeed automatically picks up the stuff you share on over 40 web sites, like YouTube and Flickr.

Awesome discussions

Discuss that great new TV show, that political editorial, or that hilarious cat video with the people you know.


Saturday, November 15, 2008

Wednesday, November 05, 2008

Joe the Plummeter


Joe Lieberman cum Joe Loserman cum Joe the Plummeter

OBAMA WINS! "It's like living and going to heaven!"


CHARLOTTE, NC President-elect Barack Obama mourns the death of his grandmother, on the day before he is elected President of the United States.

While thinking about what a Democratic sweep would be like, the thought, "It's like dying and going to heaven."...but then I thought, "No, it's like living and going to heaven...which is true. The hard part is that the heaven is up to us to create. One must imagine Sisyphus happy...

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

McCain or Fontaine?


"Hello Joe. Hello Mr. Dennehy, he he he..."

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Bank of America CEO's got a talent for making money - USATODAY.com

Who is Ken Lewis?

Time magazine put Bank of America CEO Kenneth Lewis on its 2007 list of the world's 100 most influential leaders, but for 2008, the one-year wonder was expunged from the list like a bad loan.

Lewis is back. His influence is undeniable after BofA's (BAC) rescue of Countrywide Financial in January and of Merrill Lynch this week. He should be among the world's Top 10 most influential, says Hugh McColl, 73, the BofA CEO who retired in 2001 to make way for Lewis.

"This is one of the most powerful financial institutions in the world," says McColl, who then pauses to correct himself. "Most powerful in the world would be more accurate."


MORE

Sunday, September 07, 2008

Floods are Weird

I haven't even written my 9/11 story, and now a flood wedges itself within the queue. What am I to do? And though I grant that 9/11 made a bigger splash, the transformative muddy baptism of recent days, has shown itself to be a sort of personal 9/11, with only the chosen few marked for dunking, and the concomitant traumas.

9/11 was about decay, and its removal, at least according to the I Ching...which makes me think of a line by Wallace Stevens which says that Life is the elimination of what is Dead. Not sure yet what messages I will take from the undinal songs of this minor inundation...although several have already presented themselves.

In progress...

Sunday, August 31, 2008

Sly fox George W. Bush quietly seeks to make war powers permanent, by declaring indefinite state of war

excerpt:

The New York Times' page 8 placement of the article in its Saturday edition seems to downplay its importance. Such a re-affirmation of war carries broad legal implications that could imperil Americans' civil liberties and the rights of foreign nationals for decades to come.

It was under the guise of war that President Bush claimed a legal mandate for his warrantless wiretapping program, giving the National Security Agency power to intercept calls Americans made abroad. More of this program has emerged in recent years, and it includes the surveillance of Americans' information and exchanges online.

"War powers" have also given President Bush cover to hold Americans without habeas corpus -- detainment without explanation or charge.


LINK

One Million Flee "Mother of All Storms", Gustav

NEW ORLEANS — Spooked by predictions that Hurricane Gustav could grow into a Category 5 monster, an estimated 1 million residents fled the Gulf Coast Saturday — ahead of the official order to get out of the way of a storm taking dead aim at Louisiana.

Residents took to buses, trains, planes and cars — clogging roadways leading away from New Orleans, still reeling three years after Hurricane Katrina flooded 80 percent of the city and killed about 1,600 across the region.

LINK