Fafblog, on the Yankees and Sox:
“Well Giblets does not want to live in a world without laws of objective truth!” says Giblets. “A world where the Yankees don’t suck is a world of celestial anarchy!”
Indeed, Giblets. Indeed.
Fafblog, on the Yankees and Sox:
“Well Giblets does not want to live in a world without laws of objective truth!” says Giblets. “A world where the Yankees don’t suck is a world of celestial anarchy!”
Indeed, Giblets. Indeed.
A NYT article about the faith-based presidency Bush has given us includes the following passage:
[an introducing supporter] said he ”looked to God” and said what was in his heart. ”The United States is the greatest country in the world,” he told the rally. ”President Bush is the greatest president I have ever known. I love my president. I love my country. And more important, I love Jesus Christ.” The crowd went wild, and they went wild again when the president finally arrived and gave his stump speech. There were Bush’s periodic stumbles and gaffes, but for the followers of the faith-based president, that was just fine. They got it — and ”it” was the faith. And for those who don’t get it? That was explained to me in late 2002 by Mark McKinnon, a longtime senior media adviser to Bush, who now runs his own consulting firm and helps the president. He started by challenging me. ”You think he’s an idiot, don’t you?” I said, no, I didn’t. ”No, you do, all of you do, up and down the West Coast, the East Coast, a few blocks in southern Manhattan called Wall Street. Let me clue you in. We don’t care. You see, you’re outnumbered 2 to 1 by folks in the big, wide middle of America, busy working people who don’t read The New York Times or Washington Post or The L.A. Times. And you know what they like? They like the way he walks and the way he points, the way he exudes confidence. They have faith in him. And when you attack him for his malaprops, his jumbled syntax, it’s good for us. Because you know what those folks don’t like? They don’t like you!” In this instance, the final ”you,” of course, meant the entire reality-based community.
It’s a long article, but it’s worth reading.
We’re so fucking doomed. People are idiots.
Fafblog, of course, does it better than we could:
Dick and Lynne Cheney are right to be outraged [. . . ]. And this outrage comes not because they feel that homosexuality is shameful or icky or full of cooties. It is because they know that the greatest shame one can bring to a lesbian is to note their existence. Before John Kerry’s terrible words, Mary Cheney only had to be gay to her family, her friends, the Coors Corporation, the staff of Bush/Cheney Re-Elect, and the gay community at large to whom she acted as a liason. But John Kerry made her gay to the entire world, effectively making her more gay than ever before. (Emph. in original)
I can’t seem to find an answer for this, so I may as well post here. I’m probably fucked, since I think I’m very nearly the most technical person who reads this damn thing, but hey, a man can dream.
For the last 6 months or so, I’ve been wholly unable to use the new builds of Firefox or Thunderbird. Either tool launches fine, and works great for its first run — but only that. If I quit and restart, the tool comes up fine, and even shows an appropriate window, but all the menus to the right of the application menu are gone, and keyboard shortcuts that would trigger functions from those menus are similarly impotent. Trashing the profile directory will make it work again, but that’s a bit too much of a PITA for me. I’m running Mac OS X (10.3.5), and I’ve observed no other weirdness.
Any advice?
Our quote-of-the-day mailing list sent us this gem, from the CNN crawl earlier today:
“PUBLIC SPLIT ON WHETHER BUSH IS A DIVIDER”
Sinclair’s so hot to get this on the air, so MMfA decided to review the film and document a few of its lies. “Facts are stupid things,” Reagan famously said; if only the media and the public would pay more attention to them.
The Justice Department has intervened to delay the discovery and despositions in a 2002 New Hampshire felony election fraud case until after the election. Said discovery is almost certain to be embarrassing to the GOP, since it’s likely to involve the actions of one Jim Tobin, a so far unindicted co-conspirator in the case (two others have already entered guilty pleas, and their statements name Tobin). Tobin is New England regional chair for BC’04.
Josh Marshall has more, including cites to local paper coverage.
If you vote for Bush, remember what you’re voting for.
Presumably, everyone who reads Heathen is just as puzzled as we are about the right-wing response to Kerry mentioning that Mary Cheney is gay. I mean, the woman’s been out for years, and did outreach work into the gay/lesbian community for Coors. Being gay is part of her resume. She’s also got a high-profile job with BC’04, so it’s not like she’s not political.
It occurs to us that perhaps they only reason they’re (pretending to be) pissed off about this is because the GOP thinks being gay is something to be ashamed of.
As always, Josh Marshall has more, and there’s a fairly even-handed treatment from the wires over at Salon.
UNITED NATIONS – The United States has refused to join 85 other heads of state and government in signing a statement that endorsed a 10-year-old U.N. plan to ensure every woman’s right to education, health care, and choice about having children. President Bush (news – web sites)’s administration withheld its signature because the statement included a reference to “sexual rights.” cite
The title quote is Bush, speaking about Osama bin Laden. This is what Kerry was talking about in the debate. Of course, around the same time, Bush was doing his level best to get us to attack someone who hadn’t actually threatened us. Some might call this a lack of focus.
Josh Marshall, of course, has more, as does Atrios, who references a Washington Post story worth noting for its unusual focus on the degree to which Bush has simply ignored bin Laden in favor of his hard-on for Saddam.
A bit more: MediaMatters notes the bizarro-world spin some major media outlets put on the obvious falsehood. What’s that about the “liberal media” again?
Operation Truth has a fine ad worth watching. (Link to host page; Quicktime and Windows Media available.)
PlanetOut became the first gay-directed business to trade on a major stock exchange today. Its symbol, of course, is LGBT. Coverage at — shocking! — the SF Gate. (Via BoingBoing.)
Remember those Choose Your Own Adventure books? Now you can make your own online, as if vanity sites weren’t doing that already in a more holistic way. Of course, most of those don’t feature an “interactive fiction engine,” which sounds pretty buzzword-compliant to us.
IScrewRepublicans is just plain rude, but damn if we’re not laughint. Where else will you find Ann Coulter’s lady parts are dirty“, not to mention other hits headlines like “Senator Zell Miller turns his back on more than just his party” and “Man-Whore Pony Rides for Ralph Reed“? Heh.
Reports out of Nevada are that a private, GOP-affiliated voter registration firm has been surrepticiously shredding the registrations of those they believe to be Democrats. Kos has it, and points to coverage at a local TV station.
Approximately a jillion people have passed this TinyRevolution post our way in the last day or so. Precis: Sy Hersh spoke in Berkeley last week, and had a very disturbing story to relate passed to him by a soldier in Iraq. Hersh, for those with short memories, also wrote the more authoritative pieces on the Abu Grahib scandal.
Shining City on a Hill? Who, us?
CNet is reporting that the DOJ has requested sweeping new powers to prosecute piracy. Not the “Arrr!” kind, but the kind where you copy a CD or a movie. Heretofore, these pursuits have been the responsibility of the rightsholder; now, that powerful lobby is trying to get the government to stack the deck in their favor even more.
This is a profoundly bad idea, but so was copyright extension, and Congress bent over for the RIAA/MPAA cabal then, too — this time, it’s even more attractive to the Feds, since it means more power for them. Remember, once governments get power, they’re loathe to give it up — which is why laws like RICO, PATRIOT, and provisions like these are such bad ideas.
It seems our friend Slacktivist is both an Evangelical and a VU fan.
(The post in question is actually a follow-up to this one.)
I noticed my machine was slowing down, so I checked the activity monitor tool. I’d loaded a large (2.5MB) document into Word, but wasn’t using it at the moment — nevertheless, Word was chewing up TWENTY PERCENT of the CPU despite being a background task.
What the hell is wrong with those people in Redmond?
If I hadn’t heard stuff just as stupid: ClientCopia: a compendium of stupid things said to web developers and designers.
MobileWhack points out that you can now use Google vis SMS.
You can use Google via SMS now, thanks to Google SMS. Use Google to get listings or query things for you in a variety of ways: Simply sending “pizza 02906” to 46645 will get you the pizza joints in my neighborhood. And yes, 46645 is GOOGL. Cooler still are the tipsheets and Froogle price lookups all available via SMS. I think Google just became the killer app for mobile phones.
So now I’m en route back to Houston. The DC Metro is a lovely thing, but you can never account for train delays, so in planning for a slow trip I of course generated a quick one (two trains, no waiting). I figured I’d call Nogators Ground Transportation Coordinator Willis to confirm that the flight was on time, but discovered that my provider of choice does not in fact, um, provide at Washington National. I can’t make a call for love or money. I have, as folks say, “no bars” (and never mind that I’m typing this in a bar of sorts).
No problem, I thought. I’ll just use the Prez Club’s Wifi and send my esteemed colleague and DC host an email asking him to call Erin to confirm on-time departure, etc. Once in the club, though, I counted myself clever for realizing I could text-message Erin from the T-Mobile site (of course, I only realized this after sending the aforementioned mail; I’m thinking of it as a belt-and-suspenders sort of thing).
About this time, the bartender — a charming woman of middle age who used to live in our fair city — asked what I was doing, so I told her. Her response was “I have free weekends and no long distance; do you want to use my phone?”
I did.
Moral: Bartenders can solve all problems, even some whose solutions are not found in the consumption of certain potent potables. Tip accordingly.
Want some good headphones, or at least headphone advice? Try http://headroom.headphone.com/. They rule. Really.
Doh-Doh Island: the Tiki Play-Doh set. From Cory at BoingBoing, natch.
The Disfunctional Family Circus archive is now online. Enjoy.
Researchers think they may have found a new kind of gorilla in the Congo. Said gorillas are TWO METERS TALL.
I for one welcome our new gorilla overlords.
We were going to do something clever about the passing of Derrida yesterday, but Fafblog beat us to it.
We are deeply sorry for what we did last night. We know that many people — some of them our dear, dear friends — enjoy a dram or two of Bushmill’s from time to time, but as a result of our actions in a Washington, D.C., Irish pub last night, we regret to inform you that there is no more Bushmill’s to be had, as we have drunk it all.
We’re really sorry. I blame Tony.
Dred Fucking Scott? What the Hell?
From the Well, we discover two interesting points:
You just can’t make this shit up.
Letterpress may die in our lifetimes, or if not ours, then that of our progeny.
Watch this, about Firefly Press, to see how cool it is. (7+MB Quicktime)
They’re made from SPACE STUFF. Must. Have.
Cnet has a whole pile of stories on the subject. Seriously, use something else.
We know we need at least one of these. Maybe more.
From Salon. It’s long, but good. The bad part is that it’s hard to start now, but the season 1 DVD comes out this month.
Doom 3? Pre-release Half-Life 2? Nope. It’s Kingdom of Loathing, where currently we’re a third-level accordian thief. CNet has more…
It’s toys like Topobo that make us almost wish we were kids again.
Of course, it’s worth noting that we could just buy the damn toy anyway, which we may well do.
If you liked Spinal Tap, then you may enjoy listening to some actual idiot-musician-in-studio ranting from The Troggs. This is all over the net this morning, but it’s stilll pretty funny.
Janet Leigh, dead at 77.
Fox News is now making shit up to post about Kerry. They’ve since retracted the story, but, I mean, damn. Unlike with CBS, there’s not any room for “we were duped” in this one.
All from the good folks over at BoingBoing:
Diebold, the slimeballs whose faulty voting machines threaten the basis of US democracy, tried to silence its critics, a group of activists who were publishing leaked memos detailing the company’s malfeasance, by falsely claiming that they were violating Diebold’s copyright. Now a court has ruled that Diebold knowingly abused copyright and the DMCA when it sent nastygrams to the activists’ ISPs, and has awarded the activists damages and court costs.
And now one bad one: A St. Louis court has ruled in Blizzard’s favor and against the EFF in the “BNETD” case concerning open source game servers. Fair use? What’s that?
According to this PIPA study, Bush supporters typically misunderstand many of his policy positions, while Kerry supporters’ understanding of their candidate’s positions tend to be more accurate.
We suggest trying a stealth Lynndie.
(Note: we’re pretty sure this one is opposed by the ASPCA even if it’s not technically a Geneva Convention violation.)
Fred Clark shows us why James Fallows would make a better president than Bush.
“I even take the position that sexual orgies eliminate social tensions and ought to be encouraged,” Scalia said.
A significant portion of the PATRIOT Act has been declared unconstitutional:
U.S. District Judge Victor Marrero, in the first decision against a surveillance portion of the act, ruled for the American Civil Liberties Union in its challenge against what it called “unchecked power” by the FBI to demand confidential customer records from communication companies, such as Internet service providers or telephone companies. Marrero, stating that “democracy abhors undue secrecy,” found that the law violates constitutional prohibitions against unreasonable searches. He said it also violated free speech rights by barring those who received FBI demands from disclosing they had to turn over records. Because of this gag order, the ACLU initially had to file its suit against the Department of Justice under seal to avoid penalties for violation of the surveillance laws.