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Tuesday, May 18, 2004
We're Americans. We have priorities...
If we are to believe that that Internet search popularity is an indicator of popular sentiment that "big media" ignores (at its own risk) in this country, then it looks like Nick Berg story has slipped off the national radar.
Yahoo's #1 sought after picture.
Beheadings are so last week...
posted by tbogg at 11:09 PM
And no Get Out of Jail Free cards for the evildoers...
Six million dollars and two years of research later, the Department of Homeland Security has decided that the Wheel O'Terror™ is a more effective tool than the Yahtzee Cup of Destruction Dice. Meanwhile, Tom Ridge recommends a new way to evacuate people from towers such as this that may be attacked.
posted by tbogg at 10:49 PM
Baby needs a new pair of Jimmy Choos
Finally! Relief for families who barely have enough to fill up the Hummer tank:
The House would not only make permanent the $1,000-per-child tax credit enacted as part of the 2001 tax cut but would dramatically increase the income limits for eligibility. Currently, married families with incomes of up to $110,000 receive the full credit; the bill would more than double the income ceiling, to $250,000. Under existing law, families with two children and incomes up to $149,000 receive a partial tax credit; the bill would make that partial credit available to families with two children and income of between $250,000 and $289,000; families with three children would be entitled to the partial credit up to an income of $309,000.
...and we all know how hard it is to get by on $289,000 a year. Don't we?
Well?
posted by tbogg at 10:33 PM
Not having a pledge week
I just wanted to point out that this blog is not having a pledge week, not that there is anything wrong with that (having one, I mean)...unless a certain blogger takes the money and immediately goes on a vacation like a certain other blogger has done...twice.
Now I just have to figure out what I'm going to do with a warehouse full of TBogg totebags....
posted by tbogg at 10:05 PM
Hold their manhoods cheap ...
I'd like to buy Roy Edroso a drink.
Where did you get the idea that freedom of the press, as an inalienable right, is something to be "allowed"?
There was a time (in my misty water colored-memory) when I used to enjoy reading Reynolds who, although I disagreed with him occasionally, was entertaining and thoughtful. But then he seemed to become unhinged by the neocon Iraqi war drumbeats (those drums...those infernal drums...aaiieeee..)and he decided to become both follower and leader in the Fighting 101st Keyboarders (We few, we happy few, we band of brothers who won't be fighting in this particular war. Thanks for asking, though...). Having painted himself into a corner as a supporter of the war, he now has nowhere to go without admitting that he might (just might) have been wrong. That it might be a quagmire. That we have lost a war for hearts and minds that would never have been ours. That the ever-shifting reasons for invading Iraq might have been a cover for a group of men with, in the deathless words of Dick Cheney, "other priorities". That they planned poorly, miscalculated immensely, and lie about it daily.
Harping on the French, "big media", the 9/11 Commission, and Oil-for-food, has become the last gasp attempts of someone who wants you to pay attention to the bald spots on the lawn because they don't want you to notice that the house is on fire....
Added) It looks like the Professor got the attention he wanted, although I can't imagine why he would want this kind of attention.
posted by tbogg at 9:09 PM
Setting out to prove a thesis statement
It's not like he didn't warn us. Lilek's writes:
I’ll tell you why I haven’t written more about this lately – it’s because there are others who do it so much better, have more to say, and have first-hand experience.
And just to prove his point, he writes:
Time magazine had a Brad-Holland-style cover illo of the prisoner in the Klan hat, and over the magazine’s logo the editors deployed this plaintive cry: How did it come to this?
The crucial word in that sentence is “It.” What is “it,” exactly? The Iraqi campaign? The world birthed on 9/11? The American experience? Us? Them? I suspect it’s intended to be all of the above. It is the promise and glory of America that took a horrid wrong turn and ended up with “this.” That’s the sum total of the planet, right there, a man in a pointy hood. The potential: it. The result: this. The postlapsarian dialectic, as the academics might say, if they wanted to impress their tenured peers.
The story of the prison abuse might have had a different impact if the media had chosen a different tack. The only news that hits the front page is bad news; the innumerable small fragments of good news don’t make A1 because papers have their standards, you see. We are expected to repair Iraq’s dilapidated electrical grid, so replacing an old generator and turning on the power to a neighborhood that’s had brown-outs for ten years is not news. Two Marines dead in an ambush is news because A) death leads, and B) that “mission accomplished” aircraft carrier photo op needs to be debunked, however subtly, as often as possible. The media has come to believe that reporting more good than bad somehow makes them suspect; it goes contrary to The Mission, which is to find out what’s wrong. I had the idea before Jarvis, but he was first to float it: a rebuilding beat. Every day, a story about what’s being accomplished large and small. I’d also pump for the occasional story of heroism, but I suspect that this would make editors uncomfortable. It might be true but it’s not . . . helpful. It would seem like cheerleading.
And we can’t have that.
This smothering gloom, this suppurating corrosion – this isn’t us. This isn’t who we are. If it is, well, we’re lost, because it contains such potent self-hatred that we’ll shrink from defending ourselves, because what we have built isn’t worth defending. Thanks for the push, al Qaeda! We’ll take it from here.
And with that, James gives credence to the Lilek Family Motto:
The unexamined life is probably a pretty good idea.
posted by tbogg at 8:56 PM
Monday, May 17, 2004
Point taken
I think that Non Sequitur has it in for a certain group of Americans.
Here's today's.
Here is yesterday's.
posted by tbogg at 8:22 AM
Sunday, May 16, 2004
Shorter Jeff Jacoby
Just because we've done a shitty job of explaining our opposition to gay marriage, doesn't mean that we don't have some pretty darn good reasons which probably have something to do with the children. We'll get back to you.
posted by tbogg at 11:14 PM
I was saddened by a singer who had no voice until I met a singer who had no career.
Far be it for me to defend tone-deaf Pop Tart Britney Spears, but what better way to get a little press than for a little known "Christian" singer to express sorrow over the way Spears career has gone.
Rebecca St. James, a star of the U.S. Christian music scene, said she was disappointed that role models from the world of music and movies such as Spears led youngsters astray with their message of "anything goes, if it feels good do it."
"The biggest thing I feel for Britney is I feel sad for her," she told Reuters in an interview on Saturday.
"I also feel sad for the nine or 10-years-old watching her who see her dressing in a very promiscuous fashion, almost asking for people to treat her as a sex object. They are going to start dressing that way too."
Australian-born St. James, who fronts the True Love Waits organization in the U.S. which urges teenagers to avoid pre-marital sex, is embarking on a whirlwind European tour during which she hopes to spread the group's message. Stacie Orrico (you may now say "Who?") tried this back in February.
America yawned.
Then again, Christian rock has that effect on people.
posted by tbogg at 10:36 PM
Lie down with shiksas, wake up with credibility problems...
In the footsteps of his dream date, Ann Coulter, it looks like the Virgin Ben's Big Ole Book O'Brainwashing has some credibility problems.
Shapiro says while his social conservatism stems from his upbringing as an Orthodox Jew, his financial conservatism comes more from researching – "You read up and figure out whether this is what I believe," he said.
He says he hasn't chosen a set style of writing yet but added, "I can do an Ann Coulter – one liners, very caustic ... Or less caustic, more factually oriented."
Looks like he's 0 for 2.
I bet he's even lying about being a virgin.
Then again, maybe not.
(Thanks for all of the emails regarding this)
posted by tbogg at 9:48 PM
After that first kiss, can the oral sex be far behind?
While you were celebrating the Sabbath, World O'Crap was checking out what the real Christians are up to. Just scroll down to Jesus Christ. You'll be glad you did.
posted by tbogg at 9:30 PM
Saturday, May 15, 2004
Pay for play...
Access, GOP-style:
As Bush "Pioneers" who had raised at least $100,000 each for the president's reelection campaign, or "Rangers" who had raised $200,000 each, the men and women who shot skeet with Cheney, played golf with pros Ben Crenshaw and Fuzzy Zoeller and laughed at the jokes of comedian Dennis Miller are the heart of the most successful political money operation in the nation's history. Since 1998, Bush has raised a record $296.3 million in campaign funds, giving him an overwhelming advantage in running against Vice President Al Gore and now Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.). At least a third of the total -- many sources believe more than half -- was raised by 631 people.
[...]
Of the 246 fundraisers identified by The Post as Pioneers in the 2000 campaign, 104 -- or slightly more than 40 percent -- ended up in a job or an appointment. A study by The Washington Post, partly using information compiled by Texans for Public Justice, which is planning to release a separate study of the Pioneers this week, found that 23 Pioneers were named as ambassadors and three were named to the Cabinet: Donald L. Evans at the Commerce Department, Elaine L. Chao at Labor and Tom Ridge at Homeland Security. At least 37 Pioneers were named to postelection transition teams, which helped place political appointees into key regulatory positions affecting industry.
A more important reward than a job, perhaps, is access. For about one-fifth of the 2000 Pioneers, this is their business -- they are lobbyists whose livelihoods depend on the perception that they can get things done in the government. More than half the Pioneers are heads of companies -- chief executive officers, company founders or managing partners -- whose bottom lines are directly affected by a variety of government regulatory and tax decisions.
When Kenneth L. Lay, for example, a 2000 Pioneer and then-chairman of Enron Corp., was a member of the Energy Department transition team, he sent White House personnel director Clay Johnson III a list of eight persons he recommended for appointment to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. Two were named to the five-member commission.
Lay had ties to Bush and his father, former president George H.W. Bush, and was typical of the 2000 Pioneers. Two-thirds of them had some connection to the Bush family or Bush himself -- from his days in college and business school, his early oil wildcatting in West Texas, his partial ownership of the Texas Rangers baseball team and the political machine he developed as governor.
"It's clearly the case that these networking operations have been the key driving Bush fundraising," said Anthony Corrado, a visiting scholar at the Brookings Institution and a political scientist at Colby College. "The fact that we have great numbers of these individuals raising larger and larger sums means there are going to be more individuals, postcampaign, making claims for policy preferences and ambassadorial posts."
Asked whether the president gives any special preference to campaign contributors in making decisions about policy, appointments or other matters, White House spokesman Trent Duffy said, "Absolutely not." The president, Duffy said, "bases his policy decisions on what's best for the American people."
A statement that caused polygraphs within a three hundred mile radius to burst into flames, injuring seven.
By the way, I find it extremely offensive that Nancy Brinker who founded the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation is a Pioneer. It must be nice to turn a blind eye towards the Bush administration's policies towards women, but what the hell, she got to play ambassador in Hungary which proves that most everyone has a price.
Some are just cheaper than others.
posted by tbogg at 10:33 PM
Friday, May 14, 2004
I mean, I've never been naked and forced to simulate sex, but I can't imagine it's that bad....in fact, I'm willing to give it a try. Please.
Scraping underneath the bottom of the barrel, Scarborough Country delivers up The Virgin Ben to talk about torture and being naked and moral equivalency and stuff:
Let me begin with you, Ben Shapiro. You wrote a book about brainwashing. A lot of middle Americans think that “The New York Times” and “Boston Globe” and other elite media outlets are really the ones that are brainwashed. How are they responding to this coverage, this uneven coverage, we‘re seeing?
BEN SHAPIRO, AUTHOR, “BRAINWASHED”: Well, I think clearly you‘re seeing a lot of uneven coverage. You‘re seeing a massive amount of coverage of the Abu Ghraib scandal and very little coverage of the Nick Berg beheading.
And it‘s incredible to me, because I think what this really does is promote a moral equivalency between the terrorists who are beheading Nick Berg and these soldiers who committed reprehensible abuses in Iraq. But clearly these are exceptions to a rule of an honorable U.S. Army in Iraq, while the terrorist photos are clearly representative of something much larger.
SCARBOROUGH: Well, you say there is a moral equivalency. If there were a moral equivalency, then they would be running stories on Nick Berg‘s execution and slaughter as much as they‘re doing on the prison scandal. It just seems like there‘s absolutely no perspective.
SHAPIRO: I think that‘s absolutely true.
I think what you‘re looking at is very much like what you see on campus. You‘re seeing a real bias towards one side and attempts to paint the U.S. military as evil, as the terrorists are, and you‘re seeing this clearly in the coverage of the Abu Ghraib scandal vs. the beheading of someone. I don‘t know how you equate getting some people naked and piling them up or possibly even abusing them in a reprehensible manner with beheading.
I think if you‘d give any of those people in the Abu Ghraib prison the choice between being beheaded and being forced to pose naked, I think they would choose being posing naked.
Yes. Scarborough really thinks that Ben actually wrote a book about 'brainwashing'. Hell, that's close enough to 'expert' for Joe....
Added Bonus Ben-Blast-From-The-Past
All you need to know about our little neocon is contained in this little snippet from this column he wrote in Feb. 2003:
If Western Europe has its way, this will never happen. France, Germany and their other accommodation-minded cohorts are in the palms of Middle Eastern Islamic dictatorships. For these countries that never experienced the tyranny of Communist rule during the Cold War, the idea of evil is anathema.(my emphasis)
Really makes you wanna go out and buy that Brainwashed book doesn't it?
Speaking of which, I've added it to my Amazon Wish List list if anyone else is willing to pay for it, since I won't...
(Thanks to reader Robert for the Scarborough link)
posted by tbogg at 10:21 PM
Next thing you know, they'll be telling us that Dr. Laura isn't really a therapist...
Honestly, I've never even heard of The Swan, but it's a reality show on Fox for crying out loud. I mean, Brit Hume has been playing pretend journalist for years.
Isn't this a bit like finding out the giant Mickey Mouse at Disneyland isn't really the real Mickey?
posted by tbogg at 10:09 PM
The Most Important Post You Will Read Today
is right here.
posted by tbogg at 10:06 PM
Accuracy is for wimps...
Looks like the Not Ready For A Good Paying Gig folks at NRO had a bad day today with, you know, facts...
KJL: I LIED! [KJL] Bob Newhart didn't attend CUA. His son did. Apologies. The rest of the list is accurate. Posted at 05:57 PM
Peter Robinson: OOPS [Peter Robinson ] From a reader: Dear Peter,
Clive James is Australian.
Cheers.
Posted at 05:40 PM
John Kill'em All Derbyshire: DERB QUOTE MESS [John Derbyshire] Egg on face. The Orwell quote I passed on from a reader -- "People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf" -- is bogus. See full details here.
In my defense:
(a) I was only passing it on from a reader. Can't stop to check everything. Not my chob.
(b) Orwell -- in the Kipling essay I started with -- passes very similar opinions, and would undoubtedly have agreed with the remark.
(c) True quote or not, the proposition ITSELF is true! Posted at 03:50 PM
NRO: We Make Shit Up...And Sometimes We Get Caught.
posted by tbogg at 9:44 PM
Dumbfest redux
Frank Lynch has some thoughts (Instapundit always says that. Even when he's referring to Lileks who never has any thoughts)
Brian Linse was thinking along the same lines.
...and none of us have a chair at any university anywhere.
posted by tbogg at 9:14 PM
Where once we biffed, now we just footle
It's Friday and that means that America's Worst Mother™ is back and ready to tell you that her children (Abercrombie, Stilton, Gatsby, and Grok) are like Greek or Homeric gods except for the fact that they're not from Greece or Homeria.
With a surprising nod toward popular culture (which would be anything that became popular after, say, 1959) Meghan acknowledges that Troy is being released to the unwashed masses which means that her son's name will soon be explained to all the riff raff, particularly those who associate him with that trashy rich slut whose video Mr. Meghan seems to have a fondness for.
"Aw, was he conceived in Paris?" comes the sidling and astonishingly intimate question from Group A. This group is made up of generally well-meaning people who have not been much exposed to classical themes. Group A will sometimes pursue the question by bringing up the surname Hilton. On these occasions my hand involuntarily closes around an invisible cudgel and it is a struggle to keep smiling.
Of course the more intimate question would have been: "Is he called Paris because he's the result of a broken Trojan®?", but that would have just given Meghan the vapors and she would have scarcely recalled it.
Anyway, the release of the movie (as opposed to her husbands release which created Paris) allows her to show off how classically trained she is, with mentions of Waugh, Sysiphus, Jupiter, harpies, bacchantes, and the Augean stables which she uses to remind everyone that, for a stay at home mom, she's a lousy housekeeper:
And whereas Hercules had the task of mucking out the Augean stables once, your average housewife digs through the grisly sediment in the corners of childrens' rooms every fortnight. Unlike Hercules she doesn't have the luxury of diverting a river to do her dirty work, and furthermore, for all the Augeanness of those mythological stables, I feel sure they did not contain mummified citrus fruits.
Perhaps if she put down the Proust and picked up the broom she wouldn't be having these problems and then she could invoke the Greek Goddess of Cleanliness: Domestica.
From there, Meghan (The Slovenly American Goddess of Self-Deprecating Bon Mots) reminds us that her life is not only like a Greek tragedy, but it has Biblical overtones too, because a plague o' locusts is about to plague her life:
According to news accounts, countless millions of nymphs have begun crawling out of their underground pods in the last week. As with the one we find, they grab on to something, let rip, and then, having emerged in cicada form, with tender wings, make their way into the trees. In a week or so, the air will be full of them.
And with any luck they will invade her house, like the ants in Leiningen Vs. the Ants leaving it cleaner than they found it.
Meanwhile, before the bug invasion her son gets in a quick manly lesson in that most manly of sports (tennis) while Meghan and her daughters "footle" (around in the park. Footle-ing being more girly than the gender neutral "biffing".
There's a shout from the courts, and Paris races off to play tennis. For the next 45 minutes, the girls and I footle about in the kiddie park, playing tag, and hide-and-seek, and find-the-cicada. At length, I unpack sandwiches and chocolate milk for them, deputize Molly, and stroll over to watch the last few minutes of the lesson.
As I arrive, Paris is practicing his serve.
"Not so hard, Bam-Bam," the instructor calls out, as the ball sails high over the fence and into the playground.
"What do you mean, Bam-Bam?"
"Bam-bam," the man repeats with a shrug, his voice trailing away. "Gee, I guess nobody watches The Flintstones anymore."
Other children are serving neatly over the nets, or into the nets, and balls are bouncing obediently within opposite service lines, when —
Thwap! Another ball soars into over the fence.
"That boy is like Hercules," I hear a father remark approvingly to the people standing with him.
"Actually," I call, casting the die, "His name is Paris."
"Oh, after the hero," he says, nodding.
"Well, yes," I reply, "And thank you."
As she gazes, Jocasta-like....
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