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Friday, Jan 04, 2002

eminence gris

the ny times moves ahead with its new building project on 8th avenue.

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prow voyager

Freedom Ship today exists only on paper. But some 3,000 families and businesses have already signed on to live and work on it. When it does launch, in 2006, this leviathan of comfortable living will travel a lazy circuit around the world every two years.

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pot shots

Illegal or not, domestic pot cultivation has made marijuana America's No. 1 cash crop, and proof is beginning to show in Washington.
Unprecedented fund raising and increasing national support for marijuana-policy reform has led the Washington-based Marijuana Policy Project to increase its full-time staff from five to 11 in just three months.
The project credits several unnamed "major donors" for doubling the project's budget from $500,000 in 2001 to more than $1 million this year. Now, organizations seeking to change state and federal marijuana laws — articulating tactics and strategies to regulate marijuana similarly to alcohol — will be eligible for first-of-a-kind grants of up to $50,000 each under a new program administered by the project.
We also see where longtime political strategist Billy Rogers, former fund-raising director for former Texas Gov. Ann Richards, has become the pot project's new director of state policies. In 1998, Mr. Rogers served as campaign manager for Texas Democratic gubernatorial nominee Garry Mauro, and prior to that helped launch and served as editor in chief of the Moscow Guardian, the first English-language magazine in Russia.

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Tuesday, Jan 01, 2002

gnomenclature

gnome liberation society

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youre gonna make it after all

(enough bubbly for me. those folks at canada dry have that carbonation thing down to a science.) ok. im really committed to this new year thing. ive taken everything down off the fridge that was held up by magnets. i might even get rid of some of the magnets. frayed looking magnets just wont do in 2002. you can see i mean business. so look out world, here i come! (wait? whats that? theres a gidget marathon on tv? ummm, world? ill have to get back to you. i really like that episode where shes a flying nun...)

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Sunday, Dec 30, 2001

hail hail

im really enjoying this taxi marathon on wpix. i watched a bunch last night and came across it this morning. meet the press be damned! i dont think ive seen a significant number of episodes since the eighties. they really hold up well.

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no exit

wall cam

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magilla guerrilla

"It is a well-known and widely accepted fact that, during wartime, news companies and governmental representatives fuse their voices together into one univocal beam of support for the national military objective. And, while, for many, this is a vital aspect of institutional patriotism, it is also a very dangerous and troubling reality. For, if the news media have abandoned their responsibility to objectively inform the population, then our concept of a democracy (which is founded on the ability for all citizens to choose their nation's destiny based on a full spectrum of information) is in desperate peril."

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man bites dog

this story made me think of two things. first, slow news week. second, reminds me of bin laden. you train a dog to attack and then let it loose who knows whats going to happen.

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Thursday, Dec 27, 2001

shopportunities

When the Berlin Wall fell, it was supposed to have buried this epic narrative in its rubble. This was capitalism’s decisive victory. Ideology is dead—let’s go shopping. The end-of-history theory was understandably infuriating to those whose sweeping ideas lost the gladiatorial battles, whether it was global communism, or, in bin Laden’s case, an imperialist version of Islam. What is becoming clear post-September 11, however, is that history’s end also turned out to be a hollow victory for the U.S. cold warriors. Since 1989, many of them have missed their epic narrative as if it were a lost limb. Without ideology, shopping was just shopping.

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