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Sheldon Update: Page 21 is UP!Nov. 22nd, 2004 @ 11:48 pm
As noted on the Sheldon blog, page 21 of "Into the Woods" has been published on the Interwebby thingy. Go. Read. Enjoy.

And as noted on the Sheldon blog, I hope to put up a new page on a weekly basis until the story is done—which should be by page 28. Yes, yes...promises, promises...but this time I mean it, baby; I'm a changed cartoonist. After all, I yain't got no job!

No Shit.Nov. 22nd, 2004 @ 09:22 pm
What Nathan Newman said.

(For more on Posner, a UK conservative site posts Larissa MacFarquhar's great New Yorker profile from three years ago. You can also check out this fan site.)

This Week's Cartoon (11/22/04)Nov. 22nd, 2004 @ 01:31 am


I feel this cartoon requires footnotes. So here goes.

Panel one refers to last week's Monday Night Football game, during which ABC ran a spot featuring "Desperate Housewives" star Nicolette Sheridan coming on to football star Terrell Owens; at the end, Sheridan drops her towel and leaps naked into Owens' arms, a prelude to what the viewer should presume is a night of what The Dating Game used to call "making whoopie." This apparently offended all those culture warriors out there still frothing about Janet Jackson's nipple. You can read more about all this bullshit here.

Panel two is one of the photos taken at Abu Ghraib.

Panel three, Howard Stern. Panel four, Tom Delay. I hope those are obvious.

Panel five: dumbest censorship ever? Maybe. Panel six refers to the shooting by a U.S. marine of a wounded Iraqi insurgent in Fallujah. I assume y'all have heard all about that.

I think it goes without saying that the beheading of Margaret Hassan is too obscene for words. Or cartoons. So I left it alone.

Credibility CompromisedNov. 19th, 2004 @ 11:36 am
Outgoing Secretary of State Colin Powell says Iran is attempting to rig missiles with nucular weapons. Well, shoot, if Powell says it, it must be true, right? Right?

Um, maybe not. Even better, Powell's assertion may have been unscripted, putting on the spot the BushAdmin, which prefers to handle disinformation on its own terms, thankyuhveddymuch. Oops.

(First link courtesy of [info]unrendered.)

From the SketchbookNov. 18th, 2004 @ 04:02 pm
I call it "A Shooting."

Other entries
» Phundy Pharmaceuticals
[info]arasay recently wrote to pharmacy chains, asking them what policies they had to deal with conflicts between an employee's personal morality and a woman's right to access prescriptions relating to her reproductivity. Go check out the results. The good news: CVS regards that case in Texas as an aberration. The bad news: Walgreens leaves it up to the individual pharmacist. As if the judgement of a physician and an adult patient weren't good enough? Oy.
» Counting the Dead
After the election, the Lancet study, which alleged that the war in Iraq has caused 100,000 excess deaths among noncombatants, disappeared from public notice, mostly due to the criticisms of research methods used to arrive at such an astonishing figure. Writing for The Baltimore City Paper, Edward Ericson contends the study's critics have been premature in their dismissal, because they hadn't bothered to read it in depth and because they were more interested in the researcher's political preferences. Perhaps Ericson missed Fred Kaplan's treatment in Slate, which indeed went in depth. But forgive the lapse: the article makes a strong case for taking the study seriously.
» Color Coded
Adobe Bookshop in San Francisco has a novel way to organize its library—by color:
For one amazing week in November, Adobe Bookshop in San Francisco has agreed to allow its estimated 20,000 books to be reclassified by color. Shifting from red to orange to yellow to green, the books will follow the spectrum continuously, changing Adobe from a neighborhood bookshop into a magical library—but only for one week.
Well, it looks really cool. Artist Chris Cobb reveals his muse—and explains how he'll put it all back.

(Found via Sheila Lennon)
» (No Subject)
Sunday Newday reports the White House has horder Porter Goss to "purge" the CIA of anyone considered disloyal or involved in leaking to the media info that contradicts the BushAdmin position on Iraq and the Wur on Turrer.
"The agency is being purged on instructions from the White House," said a former senior CIA official who maintains close ties to both the agency and to the White House. "Goss was given instructions ... to get rid of those soft leakers and liberal Democrats. The CIA is looked on by the White House as a hotbed of liberals and people who have been obstructing the president's agenda."
The NY Times reports today that Goss has sent out a memo laying out the "rules of the road" for intelligence gathering:
"As agency employees we do not identify with, support or champion opposition to the administration or its policies," Mr. Goss said in the memorandum, which was circulated late on Monday. He said in the document that he was seeking "to clarify beyond doubt the rules of the road."

While his words could be construed as urging analysts to conform with administration policies, Mr. Goss also wrote, "We provide the intelligence as we see it - and let the facts alone speak to the policymaker.''

The memorandum suggested an effort by Mr. Goss to spell out his thinking as he embarked on what he made clear would be a major overhaul at the agency, with further changes to come. The changes to date, including the ouster of the agency's clandestine service chief, have left current and former intelligence officials angry and unnerved. Some have been outspoken, including those who said Tuesday that they regarded Mr. Goss's warning as part of an effort to suppress dissent within the organization.
As if George Tenet's "slam dunking" wasn't bad enough. Molly Ivins explains why even those of us who don't like the CIA should be alarmed:
That's what I was most afraid of in the next four years: the complete closing of the circle, the old Bush emphasis on loyalty as the first and most important asset, above brains, judgment or expertise. Bush has been making this mistake for years, and it is clear it will now get worse. The clash of ideas is not welcome in his office. He wants everything solved in a one-page memo. This effectively limits him from being exposed to anything but obsequious third-rate thinking. It's precisely how he got into Iraq.

One of Bush's personal weaknesses is his tendency to go with his "gut" when both facts and logic are against him. This used to be just an intellectual failing, one that led many who know him to conclude he cannot think very well.

It is more alarming to find that those around him are so familiar with the phenomenon that they have now invented a sort of justifying philosophy for it. According to Ron Suskind's much-noted New York Times Magazine article, some White House staffers now refer slightingly to "reality-based" decision-making, as though it were quite inferior to delusional thinking. This bodes poorly.

» Potrzebie!
Hey, did anyone notice that Mad Magazine has gotten more political as of late? I didn't, mostly cuz I haven't paid much attention to Mad since high school in the '80s. I had seen the Gulf Wars: Episod II poster, which is hilarious; and I had seen some of Drew Friedman and Peter Kupers' respective contributions. But check out this preview of "The Strange Similarities Between the Bush Administration and the World of Dr. Seuss." I haven't seen them this pissed off since Reagan was elected.
» People People People
I didn't need Jonathan Franzen to convince me that Alice Munro is worth reading. Her short fiction won me over years ago. But even if you're a Munro-head, Franzen's essay on her recent novel is snarky good fun.
» This Week's Cartoon (11/15/04)

» This Is My Playground
The New York Times declares speculation about a stolen election dead "and buried." And bloggers are to blame for creating the beast of conspiracy theory in the first place. Damn bloggers. Why can't you let mainstream traditional news media handle the spreading of misinformation and wild speculation? Who do you think you are, Judith Miller?
» Nagging Question
Is that Ted Olson's real hair?
» David Corn on Election Fraud
Over at The Nation, David Corn takes a skeptical look at the various charges of election fraud currently circulating among us leftoids. He agrees election reform and investigations into the performance of the paperless voting machines are necessary; and he supports the call by representatives John Conyers, Jerrold Nadler and Robert Wexler for the Government Accountability Office to investigate the election. But he is far from endorsing the theories proposed by Dick Morris, Greg Palast and others, and seems to hold Bev Harris at arm's length. I have always like Corn's reporting, so I take his judgment seriously. Have at it.
» Recounts Demanded in Ohio and New Hampshire
Keith Olbermann, who is quickly becoming my favorite mainstream journalist for his skepticism and his attention to detail, recently reported that recounts are being demanded in Ohio and New Hampshire by "two candidates who got far more grief than votes during the presidential election"—Green Party candidate David Cobb and Ralph Nader, who Olbermann notes does a "surprisingly high-quality Richard Nixon impression."Click to read extended excerpt )
» Life Goes On, Bra
I could say something about the death of Yassir Arafat, but I was more struck by the news that an online poll ranks "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da" by The Beatles as the worst song ever. Um, hel-lo—"Your Mother Should Know," anyone?
» From the Sketchbook

» Bush Picks Torture Memo Guy
Ashcroft resigns; long live Ashcroftianism. They went for Gonzales, who helped find ways US forces could use torture. Go-go-go!
» Buffalo and Erie County Might Lose Libraries
According to the Buffalo & Erie County Public Library site, funding for the system's operating budget was cut by $19 million for 2005—80% from 2004! That will shut down all 52 libraries. The Board of Trustees has more on this issue. I encourage any fellow Western New Yorkers, current and former, reading this humble blog to write a letter (the site provides a handy advocacy letter you can download and copy) to whichever public official responsible for the library you patronize (or, if you no longer live in WNY, pick the Central Library.)

Western New York has been struggling to overcome economic hardships that have plagued the region since the great migration of Big Industry in the late 70s and early 80s. The recent recession and the statewide impact of September 11th have only made things worse. People who have lost their job need the public library to find new work, start a new career or simply to negotiate the ins-and-outs of unemployment laws—to name only a few issues they face. Losing the whole library system would be a serious blow to the economy and to the future prospects of the region.

But y'all know that already, so I'll stop preachifying.

(Danke to [info]arasay for the info.)
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