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Wednesday, May 28, 2003

old guard

"The US remains a liberal democracy, but those who have hoped for progressive policies at home and enlightened policies abroad may be forgiven if they have become deeply discouraged by a not-so-benign soft imperialism, by a fiscal and social policy that takes good care of the rich but shuns the poor on grounds of a far from "compassionate conservatism," and by the conformism, both dictated by the administration and often spontaneous among the public, that Tocqueville observed 130 years ago. Some will say that it could have been worse; but a blunter form of domination might have resulted in sharper and more organized opposition."

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peace out


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Tuesday, May 27, 2003

attack machine

"LiberalOasis
Interviews Sidney Blumenthal"

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Monday, May 26, 2003

even potheads get the blues

high concept political weblog from the people that brought you The Cannabis Cup. shouldnt they be too unmotivated to update regularly?

via mouse musings


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whore able

"An internal e-mail by Judith Miller, the paper's top reporter on bioterrorism, acknowledges that her main source for such articles has been Ahmad Chalabi, a controversial exile leader who is close to top Pentagon officials. Could Chalabi have been using the Times to build a drumbeat that Iraq was hiding weapons of mass destruction?"

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flower power

"In the first of two part interview, "LINDA" a former call-girl recounts meeting and then working for the New York madam, Sydney Biddle Barrows, in the late seventies. Following her arrest, the press annointed the pearl and power suit wearing Biddles, "The Mayflower Madam." About hookers, Biddles once said, "A call girl is simply someone who hates poverty more than she hates sin."

via gawker


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Sunday, May 25, 2003

monetary poliseed

"PARIS, May 25 (UPI) -- A senior member of Saddam Hussein's government handed Baghdad over to U.S. troops in exchange for a pay-off and a safe exit from Iraq, Le Journal du Dimanche claimed Sunday.

Citing a senior Iraqi source, the French newspaper reported that Soufiane al Tikriti, head of the Special Republican Guard in Baghdad, ordered his troops not to defend the capital against attack by U.S. and British forces, and particularly to hold fire against coalition helicopters circling over the city.

In exchange, Le Journal claimed, Tikriti was paid several hundred thousand dollars and, along with 20 family members, was ferried in a U.S. aircraft out of the country on April 8."

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Thursday, May 22, 2003

24

"There are no innocent parties in "24" because, in the show's vision, everyone plays a part in that fate. When Edward Rothstein claimed in the New York Times last week that "24" presented a "pop-thriller version of power-drunk war mongers [that] resembles Noam Chomsky's nightmare version of America" in which "terrorist guilt is mitigated," he couldn't have been more wrong. No one's guilt is mitigated in "24" and, unlike Chomsky's view, in which we are powerless in the face of the military-industrial-media complex, every character in "24" has a chance to affect the course of the country by their actions. That sounds like the very definition of citizenship to me -- and the very opposite of a self-hating view of America as a neofascist empire that has reduced its citizens to puppets. What may have upset Rothstein is that "24" did not simply presume that the enemies of the republic lurk exclusively without."

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Wednesday, May 21, 2003

nic fit

anti-smoking forces chastise nicole kidman for lighting up at a cannes press conference. wouldnt want those adoring fans to get the wrong idea...

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Tuesday, May 20, 2003

heir force one

"LeBron James, the most publicized and arguably greatest high school basketball player of all time, is about to claim a new title: owner of the richest initial endorsement contract in basketball history.

The Akron, Ohio, 18-year-old is expected to choose a shoe deal by Thursday that should net him between $100 million and $140 million before incentives, according to two sources with intimate knowledge of the process. The deal will run between seven and 10 years, the sources said."

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free buffett lunch

warren buffett exposes the class welfare inherent in the dividend tax debate. how unfortunate that noones listening. maybe the senate democrats should find a cheap motel in oklahoma to hole up in for a while, or at least scream 'stop thief' at the top of their lungs.

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catacombs

looks like catherines been blogging since the dark ages in the previous millennium. (does pitas still exist?) lots of indie chatter. reminded me about slatch too.

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Monday, May 19, 2003

cocktailor addresses

not feeling hipster enough? read the black table. and what could be more unhip than a new york times article about your weblog?

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speakeasier

"Just a couple of hours after White House press secretary Ari Fleischer announced he was standing down, the prime minister's official spokesman Godric Smith revealed he too was quitting.

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homer drone

"Dallas Mavericks fans who tried to buy tickets online to the first two games of the series in San Antonio have been frustrated in recent days when the orders were canceled because their credit card billing address did not come from areas apparently specified by the San Antonio Spurs."

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Friday, May 16, 2003

strike oppose

hitchens brief response regarding impeachment machinations in blumenthals book.

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Thursday, May 15, 2003

wiggin out

ahh. much cooler than that annoying yet earnest wil wheaton is wiley wiggins of dazed and confused fame. he also did some animation for linklaters Waking Life.

via mefi


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ray of hope

rg has given me a shout out on his tiger cafe blog. and i couldnt be more pleased to be considered "very cryptic," or at least my reliance on lower case letters is. how could he have known that i had my shift keys amputated at the end of the preceding millennium in blog war 2: the final deletion. i would say more but our lord and webmaster google is all seeing and its threatened to "recall" my code in any number of scathing emails. just know this, the capital will be ours again one day, we wont be indexed into oblivion forever.

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boob toobin

i really need to watch more tv. then i would have known that monica lewinsky was co-hosting on jimmy kimmel this week. and she still cant keep her mouth shut. and dont forget that conan claymation tomorrow. two reason to stay up late and then later wonder why you stayed up late to watch this crap.

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eeeak!

im going to stop linking to newstories and just keeping thanking other bloggers for their blogrolling me. my q rating is bound to shoot through the roof. and i know frank likes it, who wouldnt want to make him happy? okay, im fighting back the mouseketears. do you have a hanky, chief?

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Tuesday, May 13, 2003

underdogging it

ive been remiss in my contributions to american samizdat. for a while it kept crashing my computer whenever i would load it so i stayed away, but now i see that its working fine and has been redesigned. looks good.

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hiz and hers

"(YellowTimes.org) – The war between Israel and Hizbullah was not simply born. It was conceived in a seething cauldron of all the things that make the Middle East a snake pit of unending bloodshed, unrivaled bitterness, and unfathomable duplicity.

To understand how this violent relationship might evolve in the future, and how the international community can most effectively seek to keep it under control, it is best to start at the beginning - the real one, rather than the red herrings bred by a mainstream media that is alternately guilty of gross ignorance and shameless fabrication."

via gush-shalom


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più pasta, per favore

a shake of the collander to the well regarded mac-a-ro-nies for the link.

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Monday, May 12, 2003

blair ink

neal pollacks pulling double duty on the times jayson blair fabulist story, once here for his peeps and another for some real scratch.

and gothamist has all the required links in case you slept in this weekend.

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backscratchers


more blogwatching howdy doos --

angry bear
hegemony
karmelized


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blog nation

alright, i made the world a better place to blog. okay, well, at least The Nation. sent them an email asking for permalinks for their blog entries and they have rapidly complied. who says the system doesnt work?

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kick start

"(Saturday, April 26, 2003) - "Beckham Wants to Be Big in United States," blared the headline from a Reuters story this week, commenting on David Beckham's interview in the European edition of Time magazine.

The Mad Brit nearly choked on his Cadbury Chocolate Easter egg when he read that stunner. Is it really true that Beckham, the great English bender of balls, would ever consider crossing Atlantic to display his skills for a club under the Stars and Stripes?"

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still unsettled

"Secretary of State Colin Powell visited Israel and the Palestinian areas over the weekend, ostensibly to spur momentum for the blueprint, which calls in its first phase for a Palestinian halt to violence and security crackdown and an Israeli freeze on Jewish settlements. But Mr. Powell was forced to admit that he had made little progress on the outposts issue, telling journalists it would be discussed further during this week and during Mr. Sharon's visit to the US."

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unsettlements

"Settlers know they could be caught in the diplomatic crossfire if post-war America loses its patience with Mideast squabbling. In fact, never before have settlers and their rightist allies worked harder to put their case at center stage in a bid to cement past and present gains and keep from becoming what they fear most: the price that America and the Palestinians will exact for progress toward a return to a viable peace process."

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peacrock

"NEW YORK, May 12 (UPI) -- NBC announced a fall 2003 line-up in New York Monday that includes new shows starring Whoopi Goldberg, Alicia Silverstone and John Larroquette.

The new lineup -- announced at the Metropolitan Opera House -- will also feature such stars as Christine Baranski, James Caan, Rob Lowe and Ryan O'Neal. The network revealed its plans for the upcoming prime time season at the "upfronts" -- the annual meetings with advertisers at which the major networks announce their programming schedules and pre-sell as much advertising time as they can."

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drugdeal

OTTAWA— The federal government has backed off plans to make pot possession a mere ticketing offence, the Star has learned.

Instead, sources say the Liberal government will keep simple possession of marijuana on the books as a criminal offence under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act.

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matchmaker

heres a couple new blogs ive found through that blasted matcher machine.

incoming signals
dj martian

and one more trolling about -- doublethink.

also, the sixth rectangle on the left (not including the purple square at the top but i didnt need to tell you that) has all new links, although ive linked to many before. you all can read shorthand, non?


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our daily dread

in the land of reciprocity, i shine a light on thee.

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Saturday, May 10, 2003

babbling brook

brookings review: spring 2003

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throw down

"NBC plans to air an entire installment of its "Late Night with Conan O'Brien" in stop-motion clay animation for next Thursday's broadcast of the show, the network said on Friday."

via technorati's breaking news


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neo's matrix

"Strauss also emphasized that one of the great errors of modernity was the faith that human beings could, through an assertion of will, overcome nature and fortune; Strauss, while far from existentialism in most ways, shared in its insistence on human limitation. Strauss might therefore believe that the war on Iraq was morally justified – and I doubt he’d have had that much patience for talk of the legal authority of the UN – and the term ‘regime change’ might have been music to his ears, with it’s invocation of classical theories concerning the nature of regimes. However, I think Strauss would’ve been rather more cautious than some contemporary neo-con publicists. But this is, perhaps, the difference between a philosopher, and intellectuals or would-be statesmen."

via matt yglesias


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Friday, May 09, 2003

bloogle call

"Google is to create a search tool specifically for weblogs, most likely giving material generated by the self-publishing tools its own tab."

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getting defensive

may have linked to this carlyle group page before but i just saw this book about them so........

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cutting remarks

"WASHINGTON (CNN) -- After nine hours of deliberations, the Senate Finance Committee on Thursday night emerged with a tax bill that largely resembles the agreement reached a day earlier among committee Republicans.

In a 12-9 vote, primarily along party lines, the committee approved a 10-year, $438 billion tax bill. Arkansas Democrat Blanche Lincoln, up for re-election in 2004, voted with committee Republicans for final passage of the bill."

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Thursday, May 08, 2003

iraq pax

"Mosul, IRAQ -- The U.S. Army issued orders for troops to seize this city's only television station, leading an officer here to raise questions about the Army's dedication to free speech in postwar Iraq, people familiar with the situation said. The officer refused the order and was relieved of duty."

new post up from salam pax.


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delay tactics

"Coming out of the election, everyone thought impeachment was dead," Congressman King told me later. "I didn't hear anyone discuss impeachment. It was over. Then DeLay assumed control. In most districts in the country, a majority was against impeachment, maybe a majority of Republicans. But a majority who voted in Republican primaries was for impeachment. When you put individual members under the gun, a lot of them could get killed in a primary. That was the way he did it. I heard of Christian radio stations going after Republicans. Right-wing groups were stirring it up in parts of the country outside of the Northeast. Most of the pressure went through the Christian right network. It happened over a ten-day period. The whole world changed. I remember talking to people like Rick Lazio and Mike Forbes [both Republicans of New York] and they were saying this is nuts. Then suddenly they were holding news conferences saying their consciences were torn."

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wondertwin powers

"ET - "So we're hanging out ... The Bushes were underage drinking at my house. When I checked outside, one of the Secret Service guys asked me if they'd be spending the night. I said no. And then I go upstairs to see another friend and I can smell the green wafting out under his door. I open the door, and there he is smoking out the Bush twins on his hookah."

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wail of the century

"My novel, set at a fictitious magazine called The New Century, is called "The Fabulous New Century." It's been kept under such tight wraps that my publisher, HarperCollins, doesn't even know it exists. I've sent several bookstores hard-bound copies, each with a different byline and a different title, accompanied by a note reading "Don't tell anyone about this, or I'll kill you." I wrote the entire thing longhand, then typed it out, then copied it back out to longhand, then typed it out again. Man, it's a lot of work writing a novel about yourself!

Over the course of the next few days, or until I get bored, I'll present excerpts from this book, which serves both as my confession and my damnation. I'm sorry for all the terrible things I did at The New Republic, but I also curse the memory of those I knew there. They treated me so horribly, and they didn't even know how or why. Their names have been changed to protect them, but mine has remained the same to vindicate me."

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staggering geniuses

"As for the title of the piece—"The Snarky, Dumbed-Down World of Book Reviewing"—Ms. Julavits said that "you should know that people give you titles, and titles happen to you," she said. "Titles are different from the animal—and you know that."

Perhaps Mr. Eggers wrote the headlines to juice up the cover?

"No," she replied, "all I’m saying is headlines serve a different purpose than the piece."

Finally, she confessed to having written it herself: "I’m guilty of doing it, yes."

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lets go to the hop

hop on over to the pond and lick some frog 'n' blog. and much obliged for the bogrollink to the cowboy.

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Wednesday, May 07, 2003

sub sonic

i thought sub pop wasnt happening after the mid nineties but theyve released alot of good stuff lately which i would label alt.folk. i see theyve called some of it urban folk. maybe its a little bit dream pop too. whatever it is, i like it, especially Fruit Bats, The Shins, Iron and Wine, the Baptist Generals, Beachwood Sparks and Holopaw. Ugly Cassanova an offshoot from Modest Mouse are more straightforward janglepop while Postal Service mix in 80s lofi keyboards with their indiepop but theyre also a pretty good listen. this link heads to a list of the bands but each individual page has at least one mp3 on it. i going to see Fruit Bats and Holopaw at The Mercury Lounge on Sunday if anyone is interested.

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entheogenesis

"What I did that day should not be illegal. Adults seeking solace or insight ought to be allowed to consume psychedelics such as LSD, psilocybin, and mescaline. U.S. laws now classify them as Schedule 1 drugs, banned for all purposes because of their health risks. But recent studies have shown that psychedelics—which more than 20 million Americans have ingested—can be harmless and even beneficial when taken under appropriate circumstances."

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view from abridged


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Tuesday, May 06, 2003

pearly gates

"In "Health, Wealth, and Bill Gates," a NOW with Bill Moyers special edition, airing Friday, May 9, 2003 at 9 P.M. on PBS (check local listings), NOW provides a fascinating look into the mind, motivations, and philanthropy of Bill Gates. Recorded in front of a live audience at an event presented by Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health, the Bill Moyers' interview provides a rarely seen view of Gates and traces the journey of discovery that led him to dedicate his fortune to sharing advances in health with the global community. The 60-minute broadcast features the interview with Gates and includes produced segments that provide context to major public health issues facing the globe."

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uss columbia

"MIAMI -- Opening a new front in the war on terrorism, Colombian soldiers trained by the US military have killed or captured at least six guerrilla leaders as part of a ''decapitation strategy'' to defeat the country's rebel groups and strike a blow against the drug trade, American military and intelligence officials told the Globe.

A new commando unit began tracking rebel commanders in the jungles of Colombia about three weeks ago and carried out some of the attacks in recent weeks. It is the first unit in the Colombian Army to receive US special-forces training under a new program approved by President Bush expanding US military assistance from fighting drug cartels to battling insurgent groups that the administration considers ''narco-terrorists.''

via what really happened


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in blume

excerpts from former clinton aide sidney blumenthals book are posted at salon. worth a look.

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horsing around

"Gen. Georges Boulanger cut a fine figure; he looked splendid in uniform, and magnificent on horseback. So his handlers made sure that he appeared in uniform, astride a horse, as often as possible.

It worked: Boulanger became immensely popular. If he hadn't lost his nerve on the night of the attempted putsch, French democracy might have ended in 1889.

We do things differently here — or we used to. Has "man on horseback" politics come to America?"


"Some background: the Constitution declares the president commander in chief of the armed forces to make it clear that civilians, not the military, hold ultimate authority. That's why American presidents traditionally make a point of avoiding military affectations. Dwight Eisenhower was a victorious general and John Kennedy a genuine war hero, but while in office neither wore anything that resembled military garb.

Given that history, George Bush's "Top Gun" act aboard the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln — c'mon, guys, it wasn't about honoring the troops, it was about showing the president in a flight suit — was as scary as it was funny.

Mind you, it was funny. At first the White House claimed the dramatic tail-hook landing was necessary because the carrier was too far out to use a helicopter. In fact, the ship was so close to shore that, according to The Associated Press, administration officials "acknowledged positioning the massive ship to provide the best TV angle for Bush's speech, with the sea as his background instead of the San Diego coastline."

A U.S.-based British journalist told me that he and his colleagues had laughed through the whole scene. If Tony Blair had tried such a stunt, he said, the press would have demanded to know how many hospital beds could have been provided for the cost of the jet fuel.

But U.S. television coverage ranged from respectful to gushing. Nobody pointed out that Mr. Bush was breaking an important tradition. And nobody seemed bothered that Mr. Bush, who appears to have skipped more than a year of the National Guard service that kept him out of Vietnam, is now emphasizing his flying experience. (Spare me the hate mail. An exhaustive study by The Boston Globe found no evidence that Mr. Bush fulfilled any of his duties during that missing year. And since Mr. Bush has chosen to play up his National Guard career, this can't be shrugged off as old news.)

Anyway, it was quite a show. Luckily for Mr. Bush, the frustrating search for Osama bin Laden somehow morphed into a good old-fashioned war, the kind where you seize the enemy's capital and get to declare victory after a cheering crowd pulls down the tyrant's statue. (It wasn't much of a crowd, and American soldiers actually brought down the statue, but it looked great on TV.)

Let me be frank. Why is the failure to find any evidence of an active Iraqi nuclear weapons program, or vast quantities of chemical and biological weapons (a few drums don't qualify — though we haven't found even that) a big deal? Mainly because it feeds suspicions that the war wasn't waged to eliminate real threats. This suspicion is further fed by the administration's lackadaisical attitude toward those supposed threats once Baghdad fell. For example, Iraq's main nuclear waste dump wasn't secured until a few days ago, by which time it had been thoroughly looted. So was it all about the photo ops?

Well, Mr. Bush got to pose in his flight suit. And given the absence of awkward questions, his handlers surely feel empowered to make even more brazen use of the national security issue in future.

Next year — in early September — the Republican Party will hold its nominating convention in New York. The party will exploit the time and location to the fullest. How many people will dare question the propriety of the proceedings?

And who will ask why, if the administration is so proud of its response to Sept. 11, it has gone to such lengths to prevent a thorough, independent inquiry into what actually happened? (An independent study commission wasn't created until after the 2002 election, and it has been given little time and a ludicrously tiny budget.)

There was a time when patriotic Americans from both parties would have denounced any president who tried to take political advantage of his role as commander in chief. But that, it seems, was another country."


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taking a flyer

"Last week, though, the president all but wore a "Kick Me!" sticker on the back of his flight suit when he decided to land on the deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln in the co-pilot's seat of an S-3B Viking jet.

Imagine the derisive merriment in the columns and on the chat shows if former President Bill Clinton revived the skirt-chasing issue by touring a sorority house or if Gore delivered a lecture to the engineers at Netscape Communications Corp. Think of the snickering and the sardonic rehash of history.

But for Bush in flyboy attire, a discreet silence. The only voices I encountered raising this issue were David Corn in the Nation; Newsday columnist Jimmy Breslin, who asked, "Tell me if you ever heard of anybody with as powerful a resistance to shame as Bush..."

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Saturday, May 03, 2003

infinite largesse

"On a warm, windblown evening in late March, David Foster Wallace showed up at an old-style Mexican place in Pomona called El Ranchero. He was wearing shorts and a Pomona College sweatshirt with the sleeves cut off, so that he looked like a faintly menacing guy you might see late one night at a 7-Eleven buying Gatorade.

Wallace, the author of, most famously, the 1996 brick of a novel called "Infinite Jest," is finishing his first year as the Roy Edward Disney Professor of Creative Writing at Pomona. He's a literary star -- MacArthur Foundation "genius" grant winner, compared before he was 35 to Pynchon, to DeLillo -- newly arrived in Southern California."

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passive tense

"As a rule, passive tense equals at least some level of manipulation. Any decent writer knows to avoid it, precisely because it's confusing -- but editors often rely on passive tense to keep uncomfortable questions about individual and collective responsibility (including their own) at bay"

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Friday, May 02, 2003

do dah day

one year toke free tomorrow so today i celebrated with a membership to crunch. now i need to sweat off those 10-15 pounds i put on as a result. for year three i plan to get some color back in my lily white corpus dilapitus.

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Thursday, May 01, 2003

plane down, no survivors

this seems more than a little bit perverse for a may day celebration --

"NOW, THEREFORE, I, GEORGE W. BUSH, President of the United States of America, do hereby proclaim May 1, 2003, as Loyalty Day. I call upon all the people of the United States to join in support of this national observance. I also call upon government officials to display the flag of the United States on all government buildings on Loyalty Day."

via matt yglesias


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flight risk


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vacation pot

"OTTAWA - Jean Chrétien drew applause and a few whoops of joy at a fundraising dinner Tuesday night when he said that legislation decriminalizing possession of marijuana in Canada would soon be announced.

"Don't start to smoke yet," he quickly cautioned the celebrants in the audience.

"We're not legalizing it, we're decriminalizing," said Chrétien who points out he has never smoked a joint."

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Wednesday, Apr 30, 2003

war reader, come out and play

"Our idea for this site is to continue the intellectual journey started with our first book, The Gulf War Reader (Times Books, 1991) and especially to continue the narratives that make up the second book. That is, we want to keep exploring the history of the collision of the West and the Arab and Muslim worlds; keep digging into the real facts of U.S.-Iraqi relations and history; keep pondering the wisdom of the Iraq War and the policies behind it (from all sides) and keep a sharp eye on what this means for Iraq's future and the future of America's role in the world."

via cursor


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