31 December 2005

Favorite Albums of 2005

Here they are, in no particular order because I love them all, with random commentary.

Heavy Rotation

  • Sleater-Kinney, The Woods. Turn it up to 11. Buy new speakers. Best drummer in rock plays on this album. Entertain, indeed.
  • LCD Soundsystem, LCD Soundsystem. All the furniture is in the garage. Set them up, kid. Set them up. "Cowbell album of the decade."
  • The White Stripes, Get Behind Me Satan. 5 words...when you gonna ring it?
  • Kanye West, Late Registration. Crack music is both a track and a description of this album. Sonic masterpiece with hooks for the masses.
  • Wilco, Kicking Television. Considering my blogger identity and the fact that I was present at the recording, do I really even have to explain? I'm serious. I working on my abs. Stop shopping. Stop buying things. And, of course, spiders are filling out tax returns, on a private beach in Michigan. They laughed. They cried. They bled (at least Glenn did).
  • Spoon, Gimme Fiction. I love Britt Daniel's voice, especially the falsetto on "I Turn My Camera On." This was my introduction to Spoon and I was hooked immediately by the the interplay between vocals, piano, guitar, and drums. Musically economical, rhythmically interesting, minimalist pop masterpiece. Just buy it. You won't be disappointed.
  • The New Pornographers, Twin Cinema. Hooks and intelligent lyrics to spare. Plus, how can you not a band that was chose its name from a Pat Robertson quote that referred to rock music as the "new pornography." Those cheeky Canadians.
  • Bloc Party, Silent Alarm.
  • Death Cab for Cutie, Plans. The man with the voice of an angel sings songs about death, with hooks. Angst never sounded so beautiful. Allow me to sway for a moment.
Honorable Mention, which means they would probably in the group above had I not purchased so much music that I don't get around to listening to everything on my iPod as I should.
  • Okkervil River, Black Sheep Boy
  • Franz Ferdinand, You Could Have It So Much Better
  • Sufjan Stevens, Illinois
  • Wolf Parade, Apologies to the Queen Mary
  • Beck, Guero
  • Common, Be
  • My Morning Jacket, Z
  • M. I. A., Arular
  • Bright Eyes, I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning
Post Updated: After further review, remembering, and re-listening, moved Spoon and New Pornographers to Heavy Rotation, added Bloc Party to Heavy Rotation, added My Morning Jacket and Franz Ferdinand to Honorable Mention, and dropped Kaiser Chiefs off the list. They had some great singles on Employment, but after further review there were too many songs that were easy to skip to be included with the other albums on the list. In the interest of trying to not obsess over the picks, that slipped through.

Looking back, I should have at least listened to my Heavy Rotation picks. In fact, I might as well obsess.

Let's face it. This list will probably change again, but I'm only listening to the Honorable Mention picks to see if they belong in Heavy Rotation.

Sometimes, I wonder how I ever finish a playlist. : )

[updated 01/13/06: added Beck. duh. what was i thinking? too much good music in 2005.]
[updated 02/05/06: read GK's Grammy article. had to look at my best of one more time. added Bright Eyes. sometimes i forget about those January releases.

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Favorite Musical Discoveries of 2005

Thanks to recommendations by friends, selective headlining acts, and the indie tastemakers at Pitchfork, I found these bands this past year:
  • LCD Soundsystem
  • Spoon
  • Wolf Parade
  • Kaiser Chiefs
  • Okkervil River
If you haven't heard of them, check them out. You won't be disappointed. (Each of them had an album on Pitchfork's top 50 albums of 2005.)

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Things that make me smile


Bono. Eddie. Together. If you look real close you can see that Eddie is wearing a Love + Rockets t-shirt. Photo courtesy of pearljam.com.

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Zito yes. Tejada no.

The Tejada sweepstakes is one competition where the Cubs should be happy to finish second. Give me Barry Zito any day.
The Cubs, however, don't have enough pitching to part with Prior without getting another starter in return, especially with Kerry Wood's health an unknown factor at the outset of 2006. WGN-AM reported Friday the Cubs have been talking to Oakland about left-hander Barry Zito, though sources from both teams indicated the two sides have not spoken since early December.

Just as the Cubs aren't "shopping" Prior, the A's are not calling teams to ask what they want for Zito. But, like the Cubs with Prior, Oakland is willing to listen to anyone with interest.

Oakland reportedly will demand a major-league pitcher and at least one top prospect. Any team that acquires Zito could lose him to free agency after 2006, a risk the Cubs would not take unless they were certain they could re-sign him.
Zito, Zambrano, Prior sounds like a nice 1, 2, 3 to me. If Wood comes back healthy, even better.

Pitching. Pitching. Pitching. Speed. Defense. Smart baserunning. Fundamentals. That's what it takes.

Hendry's done good so far by solidifying the bullpen with Howry and Eyre, added speed and defense with Pierre and Jones. I'm not a huge fan of the Jacque Jones pick up, but I'll give him a chance. I have no doubts about his speed and defense, just his offensive production. Hopefully, he can return to 2003 form.

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30 December 2005

Outsourcing Torture

Via Daily Kos: The US and UK are using information obtained through torture in Uzbekistan. The former UK Ambassador to Uzbekistan has leaked the memos. Some key excerpts:
  1. We receive intelligence obtained under torture from the Uzbek intelligence services, via the US. We should stop. It is bad information anyway. Tortured dupes are forced to sign up to confessions showing what the Uzbek government wants the US and UK to believe, that they and we are fighting the same war against terror.
  2. I gather a recent London interdepartmental meeting considered the question and decided to continue to receive the material. This is morally, legally and practically wrong. It exposes as hypocritical our post Abu Ghraib pronouncements and fatally undermines our moral standing. It obviates my efforts to get the Uzbek government to stop torture they are fully aware our intelligence community laps up the results.
  3. We should cease all co-operation with the Uzbek Security Services they are beyond the pale. We indeed need to establish an SIS presence here, but not as in a friendly state.
The Bush rhetoric about liberating Iraqis from Saddam's torture chambers rings a little hollow when you find out, even after all of our claims that Abu Ghraib was an isolated incident perpetrated by rogue soldiers, we're still outsourcing torture to a regime that the State Department glowingly refers to as one of the most repressive in the world.

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Curb Your Enthusiasm

Pretty, pretty good post in the HuffPost 2005 review from one of my favorite people from 2005, Larry David. It is a story I can relate to, how Karl Rove and the Theocratic Republicans keep him awake at night. Here's an excerpt:
…Ah, what’s the use? Now I’m all revved up. This is what Rove wants. You’re playing right into his hands. Should I take a sleeping pill? Is that a slippery slope? It seems there are a lot more slippery slopes now than there used to be. Now everything’s a slippery slope...It’s so hot in here. I have to turn the pillow over. Why’s it so much cooler on this side? I don’t get that. I would think it would be a little cooler, but not this much cooler. No matter how hot it is, the bottom of the pillow still stays cool. One day I’d like to ask a scientist about that. Of course, I never really get to meet any scientists. You’d think I’d run into a scientist at some point. I like how they keep saying the science isn’t in on global warming. They just don’t know. No proof. But, of course, it’s in on God. Lots of proof on that. Tons of empirical evidence. They got God’s DNA. And Moses parted the Red Sea. He said, “Open sea,” and it opened. And Jesus walked on water. Those are some tricks. People must have been after Moses to do it again until he finally got sick of them and lost his temper. "No, I'm not parting it again, now leave me alone." "C'mon Moses, please?" "I said no, now get the hell outta here!" You'd think anyone who believes this stuff would be so embarassed they'd keep it to themselves. But those maniacs shout it from the rooftops and they're running our country. God talks to Bush all the time. I don’t care if you’re President, if you say God talks to you, you’re a schizophrenic and a menace to society. You should be on drugs in a mental institution, like the Son of Sam. What’s the difference between God or a dog talking to you? It’s still a voice in your head. That means you’re certifiably fucking crazy!
By the way, Curb Your Enthusiasm marathon on New Year's Eve on HBO. You must catch "The Christ Nail" episode.

Very nice.


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29 December 2005

Zero Tolerance

The Bush Administration has zero tolerance for annoying regulations that cause difficulty for campaign contributors.
Three years ago, President Bush declared that he had "zero tolerance" for trafficking in humans by the government's overseas contractors, and two years ago Congress mandated a similar policy.

But notwithstanding the president's statement and the congressional edict, the Defense Department has yet to adopt a policy to bar human trafficking.

A proposal prohibiting defense contractor involvement in human trafficking for forced prostitution and labor was drafted by the Pentagon last summer, but five defense lobbying groups oppose key provisions and a final policy still appears to be months away, according to those involved and Defense Department records.

The lobbying groups opposing the plan say they're in favor of the idea in principle, but said they believe that implementing key portions of it overseas is unrealistic. They represent thousands of firms, including some of the industry's biggest names, such as DynCorp International and Halliburton subsidiary KBR, both of which have been linked to trafficking-related concerns.

Lining up on the opposite side of the defense industry are some human-trafficking experts who say significant aspects of the Pentagon's proposed policy might actually do more harm than good unless they're changed. These experts have told the Pentagon that the policy would merely formalize practices that have allowed contractors working overseas to escape punishment for involvement in trafficking, the records show.
Even better. The "policy" they are dragging their feet on won't change anything. It will just "formalize practices" to allow contractors to avoid punishment for human trafficking. Here's the best part of the article.(Why is it usually at the bottom?)
In a joint memo of their own, Mendelson and another Washington-based expert, Martina Vandenberg, a lawyer who investigated sex trafficking for Human Rights Watch, told the Pentagon its draft policy "institutionalizes ineffective procedures currently used by the Department of Defense contractor community in handling allegations of human trafficking."

Without tough provisions requiring referrals to prosecutors, they said, contractors could still get their employees on planes back to the U.S. before investigations commenced, as they allege happened in several documented cases in the Balkans. They said some local contract managers even had "special arrangements" with police in the Balkans that allowed them to quickly get employees returned to the U.S. if they were found to be engaged in illegal activities.
Nice. Wouldn't want anyone to think the U.S. thinks human trafficking is wrong, would we?

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28 December 2005

The Matrix

Surprise, the Chicago Tribune creates one in order to justify supporting the war. They attempt to judge whether Bush misled us through the evaluation of nine arguments.

You say to yourself, "I know the Bush Administration kept changing their reasons to go to war, but before the war, but all I can remember is talk of WMDs, mushroom clouds, War on Terrah, and Al Qaeda. Certainly, all 9 arguments weren't given the same emphasis."

You're right, and the Tribune admits as much and then goes on to give them all the same weight in their matrix. So let's look at what the Tribune had to say about whether we were mislead on WMDs, mushroom clouds, the Iraqi link to the War on Terror, and Iraq-Al Qaeda links.
Biological and chemical weapons

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE SAID

The Bush administration said Iraq had stockpiled weapons of mass destruction. Officials trumpeted reports from U.S. and foreign spy agencies, including an October 2002 CIA assessment: "Baghdad has chemical and biological weapons, as well as missiles with ranges in excess of UN restrictions."

WHAT WE KNOW TODAY

Many, although not all, of the Bush administration's assertions about weapons of mass destruction have proven flat-out wrong. What illicit weaponry searchers uncovered didn't begin to square with the magnitude of the toxic armory U.S. officials had described before the war.

THE VERDICT

There was no need for the administration to rely on risky intelligence to chronicle many of Iraq's other sins. In putting so much emphasis on illicit weaponry, the White House advanced its most provocative, least verifiable case for war when others would have sufficed.
The Bush Administration didn't rely on risky intelligence. They only presented the intelligence that supported their position. Looks like Tribune is following the Bush lead or "mislead" here. Regardless of the Tribune's effort to muddy the verdict, it is clear on this argument that the Bush Administration mislead the American people on Iraq's biological and chemical weapons. Next argument, quest for nukes.
The quest for nukes

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE SAID

Intelligence agencies warned the Clinton and Bush administrations that Hussein was reconstituting his once-impressive program to create nuclear weapons. In part that intel reflected embarrassment over U.S. failure before the Persian Gulf war to grasp how close Iraq was to building nukes.

WHAT WE KNOW TODAY

Four intel studies from 1997-2000 concurred that "If Iraq acquired a significant quantity of fissile material through foreign assistance, it could have a crude nuclear weapon within a year." Claims that Iraq sought uranium and special tubes for processing nuclear material appear discredited.

THE VERDICT

If the White House manipulated or exaggerated the nuclear intelligence before the war in order to paint a more menacing portrait of Hussein, it's difficult to imagine why. For five years, the official and oft-delivered alarms from the U.S. intelligence community had been menacing enough.
All the proof I need that this whole editorial is a whitewash is the first 5 words of the verdict. "If the White House manipulated..." Are you f-ing kidding me?! If?! If?! From Condi's "mushroom clouds" comment to Cheney's flat out lie on Meet the Press that "We believe, in fact that Iraq has reconstituted its nuclear weapons program..." Read this interview if you don't believe me. Again, they cherry-picked the intelligence that served their fear-mongering best. It also happened to be the weakest intelligence. Next arguments, linking Iraq with the Global War on Terror.
Waging war on terror

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE SAID


Iraq was Afghanistan's likely successor as a haven for terror groups. "Saddam Hussein is harboring terrorists and the instruments of terror ... " the president said. "And he cannot be trusted. The risk is simply too great that he will use them, or provide them to a terror network."

WHAT WE KNOW TODAY

The White House echoed four years of intel that said Hussein contemplated the use of terror against the U.S. or its allies. But he evidently had not done so on a broad scale. The assertion that Hussein was "harboring terrorists and the instruments of terror" overstated what we know today.

THE VERDICT

The drumbeat of White House warnings before the war made Iraq's terror activities sound more ambitious than subsequent evidence has proven. Based on what we know today, the argument that Hussein was able to foment global terror against this country and its interests was exaggerated.
Finally, a straight up verdict from the Tribune. So we can all agree. The Bush Administration exaggerated the threat. They misled the American people. Next argument, the Iraq-Al Qaeda link.
Iraq and Al Qaeda

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE SAID

President Bush: "... Iraq and the Al Qaeda terrorist network share a common enemy--the United States of America. We know that Iraq and Al Qaeda have had high-level contacts that go back a decade.... Iraq has trained Al Qaeda members in bombmaking and poisons and deadly gases."

WHAT WE KNOW TODAY

Two government investigative reports indicate that Al Qaeda and Iraq had long-running if sporadic contacts. Several of the prewar intel conclusions likely are true. But the high-ranking Al Qaeda detainee who said Iraq trained Al Qaeda in bombmaking, poisons and gases later recanted.

THE VERDICT

No compelling evidence ties Iraq to Sept. 11, 2001, as the White House implied. Nor is there proof linking Al Qaeda in a significant way to the final years of Hussein's regime. By stripping its rhetoric of the ambiguity present in the intel data, the White House exaggerated this argument for war.
Wow, another straightforward guilty verdict from the Tribune. Now let's look at the other so-called arguments that the Tribune adds into its matrix to cloud up the issue a bit. I'll list them and you can read them for yourself. What I want to know though, is the Tribune seriously saying that these were arguments the Bush Administration could have used to sell this war?

Iraq rebuffs the world/Hussein rope-a-dope: In desperation to find arguments to cloud their overall verdict, the Tribune creates 2 historically ignorant, inconsistent and redundant arguments out of one historically ignorant and inconsistent argument. The Tribune is saying that Saddam Hussein ignores the UN. Well, far be it from me to let facts get in the way, but Hussein didn't kick the UN inspectors out before the war. Bush told them to leave because he was quickly realizing he would have no case if the inspectors were allowed to finish the job. In regards to ignoring the UN, Iraq has some company in that department. The U.S. ignores the UN. Israel ignores the UN. North Korea ignores the UN. Iran ignores the UN. This justifies a war? It might justify some UN reforms, but not necessarily a war. I highly doubt the American people would have supported a war on this argument, even if you wanted to make it into 2 arguments.

Reform in the Middle East: Ah, yes. Democracy. At the barrel of a gun. Other Arab countries falling in line, like for example, ummm, Iran? Yes, Syria is feeling some pressure, but that was because of the assassination of a beloved Lebanese leader by agents of Syria, which led the Lebanese to rise up against Syria's violent interference in their government. While we're speaking of democracy, why not require some reforms from our "friends" in the region, like, umm, Saudi Arabia? Democracy breaking out in Saudi Arabia? Suffrage for women? Might have to lose the corrupt monarchy first, which funds those democracy/freedom/America loving radical Islamic schools. Regardless, the American people would not sacrifice their sons and daughters for this argument. Let the Arabs fight for their freedom. What we could do is stop supporting corrupt regimes to begin with. Remind me, who was it that Rumsfeld was shaking hands with in the 1980s?

The Butcher of Baghdad: My favorite non-argument from the Tribune whitewash. The Bush Administration cares about human rights and ummm, torture. No seriously they do care. They care about ignoring human rights and supporting torture. Abu Ghraib, anyone? Gitmo, anyone? Kidnapping and rendering suspects to states like Egypt that are more than happy to torture for us? It is pure cynicism to include this in the list. Why would I say that you ask? What aren't are troops in the f-ing Sudan right now if we're all fired up about stopping butchers?

Iraqis liberated. Again, I'm happy for Iraqis that Saddam is gone, but are we in the business of deposing bad guys everywhere in the world now? Shouldn't we let Iraqis fight for their freedom? I'm also happy that they have the right to vote, but I think we're seeing how that's working out. Claims of election fraud from minority factions. A victory for the theocratic Shiites. Kurds setting up their own oil deals without involving the central government. Kurds in the Iraqi Army saying that they see themselves as Peshmerga first and would turn on their fellow soldiers if given the signal by their leaders. The Chicago Tribune might want to read an article by their fellow Tribune company employees at the L.A. Times. The opening line?
The myth of a unified Iraqi identity may have finally been laid to rest this month.
I'm sure the American people would have a little trouble saying our sons and daughters should die in the name of Iraqi liberation so that: a) a theocratic, Iran-friendly government can emerge in Iraq, or b) the country breaks into 3 separate states c) the civil war and sectarian violence can escalate, or d) all of the above.

So, you see. It's simple really. With the most widely used and fear-provoking arguments widely discredited by pesky facts, the Tribune had to find a few reasons that were both valid and not completely proven false in order to come to their pre-determined conclusion that Bush did not mislead the country into war and that they made the right decision in supporting the war.

To their credit, the Tribune even admits that all of the arguments were not given equal weight. What they neglect to explicitly mention is that each of the arguments that were given the most emphasis were false. What else did they have in common?

They were also the arguments designed to promote fear.

They were the only arguments the Bush Administration could use to sell the war to the American people.

It is only fair then, that we should judge the case by what Vice President Cheney said were the most important justifications for war on Meet the Press on March 16, 2003.

MR. RUSSERT: The Los Angeles Times wrote an editorial about the administration and its rationale for war. And let me read it to you and give you a chance to respond: “The Bush administration’s months of attempts to justify quick military action against Iraq have been confusing and unfocused. It kept giving different reasons for invasion. First, it was to disarm Hussein and get him out. Then, as allies got nervous about outside nations deciding ‘regime change,’ the administration for a while rightly stressed disarmament only. Next, the administration was talking about ‘nation-building’ and using Iraq as the cornerstone of creating democracy in the Arab/Muslim world. And that would probably mean U.S. occupation of Iraq for some unspecified time, at open-ended cost. Then, another tactic: The administration tried mightily, and failed, to show a connection between Hussein and the 9/11 perpetrators, Al Qaeda. Had there been real evidence that Hussein was behind the 9/11 attacks, Americans would have lined up in support of retaliation.”

What do you think is the most important rationale for going to war with Iraq?

VICE PRES. CHENEY: Well, I think I’ve just given it, Tim, in terms of the combination of his development and use of chemical weapons, his development of biological weapons, his pursuit of nuclear weapons.

Hmmm. No talk of Iraqi liberation, Butcher of Baghdad, Middle East democratic reform.

Thanks for your help clarifying the rationale for war, Dick.

Present day facts and old transcripts sure make it difficult to revise history, don't they? Damn internets.

At least the Bush Administration can take solace in the Chicago Tribune's obvious attempt to absolve the administration of any shred of responsibility for misleading our country into a war of choice, not necessity.

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27 December 2005

Music snobs unite!

2005 is the Year of Pitchfork, says GK.
It was a good year for grass-roots music journalism on the Internet, which continued to expand its influence as a tastemaker and instigator. It was an even better year for Chicago music fans, who enjoyed a banner summer of concerts in city parks.

Pitchfork, a Chicago-based Internet music magazine (pitchforkmedia.com), played a major role in both. After moving from the basement of editor Ryan Schreiber's Wicker Park apartment to a roomier office in Logan Square, the 10-year-old Web 'zine solidified its status as the single most influential voice in indie music.

The site draws 120,000 readers a day with its news coverage and music reviews, and in 2005 expanded its role even further when it teamed with independent promoter Mike Reed to stage the Intonation Festival in Union Park. The festival drew 30,000 fans from around the world on a July weekend to see two-dozen bands and deejays handpicked by Pitchfork.
All Hail Pitchfork!

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Capote

After reading this essay and hearing all the buzz about the movie, it looks I'll have to add re-reading In Cold Blood to my 2006 to-do list. I remember reading it in high school, but was probably too young to appreciate the groundbreaking nature of the work.
Capote was hardly the first writer to recognize that non-fiction need not be deadly earnest or helium-balloon breezy. Many of his predecessors, including Joseph Mitchell and Lillian Ross, engaged in this kind of reporting, but Capote's attempt to graft the techniques of imaginative literature onto a non-fiction story was more brazen, more unremitting, and on a larger scale. He came out of the gate firing away, claiming to have invented a new form: the non-fiction novel. Everything about it was innovative: his use of cinematic devices, the way he enters a scene as late as possible and gets out of it as early as possible, the cross-cutting, and especially the agonizing slow motion when he finally gets around to describing the crime itself. He was so successful in raising the bar that today we take his innovations for granted, losing sight of the revolutionary nature of immersing readers in the way people really talk, in a headlong rush, full of loops and asides, without a bunch of stilted "according to's" or other cumbersome, momentum-breaking devices.

The true theme of this book is seduction.

[...]

Capote earned $2 million in the first year "In Cold Blood" came out and became an international celebrity. If the killers' take from the murders could not have been more pathetic, the personal cost of telling the story could not have been higher for Capote. He invested his psyche in the project, and by the end he could no longer live with himself, or at least not with the song-and-dance routine that used the deaths of four real people to line his coffers and lubricate his social status. He said that he felt writing the book, or, more precisely, living with the details of that story so intimately for so long, catapulted him into ill health and led to the insomnia and substance abuse that dogged him during his final years. The author clearly tossed and turned as he grappled with the question: What is the price of art?


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Top 5 Shows in 2005

GK's list:
1. The Arcade Fire at the Riviera, Sept. 28, 2005
2.
Bruce Springsteen at the Bradley Center in Milwaukee, Aug. 7
3.
Kanye West at the UIC Pavilion, Nov. 14
4. The White Stripes at the Auditorium, Aug. 29
5. Pearl Jam and Robert Plant at House of Blues, Oct. 5 (oh, how i wish i were there)
My list:
1. (tie) Arcade Fire at the Riviera (so good I knocked my own contact out during Wake Up)/LCD Soundsystem at the Metro
2. Wilco at the Vic
3. The White Stripes at the Auditorium
4. Sleater-Kinney at the Metro
5. The Decemberists at the Metro

My favorites from Lollapalooza:
1. (tie) Arcade Fire, Spoon
2. Black Keys
3. Death Cab for Cutie
4. Kaiser Chiefs

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American Tragedy

Bruce:
... We forget that every adult was brought up on fairy tales so it's natural to go on and, politically for example, want to believe that your President is a nice, honest man. The inability to turn to an adult perspective once you get to the age where you have some political weight is a great tragedy, and this is a period of history when it seems the most obvious type of disguise is on display to the entire world and yet those are the people who are still in power.
(From Mojo via Daily Kos)

Time to lose the fairy tales, people. Of course, it would also help if the media would stop perpetuating the myths 24 hours a day, but then they might be putting their cocktail party invitations at risk.

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Happy Xmas (War Is Over)

My favorite Christmas song:
A very Merry Xmas
And a happy New Year
Let's hope it's a good one
Without any fear

And so this is Xmas
And what have we done
Another year over
A new one just begun
And so happy Xmas
We hope you have fun
The near and the dear one
The old and the young

A very Merry Xmas
And a happy New Year
Let's hope it's a good one
Without any fear
War is over, if you want it
War is over now
Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukkah, Happy Kwanzaa, Happy Festivus. Whatever you choose celebrate, may your holiday be a joyous one, spent with family and friends, and filled with hope for the new year.

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23 December 2005

Incompetent Presidency

King George breaks the law and we are still less safe than we were on September 12th, no matter what he says. We are also less prepared to deal with a catastrophe (see Katrina), natural or otherwise.

As Digby suggested, be sure to email this post to your Republican friends as a nice last minute gift.
"To protect us"?

Is that why the 9/11 Commission's report card earlier this month had a single "A" out of 41 categories, while the bottom was filled out with 12 "D"s and 5 "F"s? The President got a "D" on Securing WMD's, the supposed reason we're stirring up the hornets' nest in Iraq. Commission member and former republican governor of Illinois James Thompson said it straight: "Are we crazy? Why aren't our tax dollars being spent to protect our lives?"

It's never too late for a wake up call, except in the case of the most vigorous Bush kool-aid drinkers.



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Criminal Presidency

As Atrios pointed out, the issue is that he broke a law, regardless of whether you think the law is hindering law enforcement's ability to act quickly to protect Americans or not (hint: it isn't) or whether you think the executive branch has a constitutional right to spy on its citizens.

In a representative democracy, when you are President and you don't like a law, you ask Congress to change it, you don't just break the law and make up shit to justify your criminal act.

You ignored a Congressionally-enacted statute and engaged in actions specifically prohibited by that statue, George. Ever heard of "take care that the laws be faithfully executed"?

Rule of law. Rule of law. Rule of law.

How many f-ing times did I hear that during the impeachment proceedings against Clinton?

What will we tell the children?

That the President can pick and choose which laws he wants to follow, while the rest of us have to follow all of the laws?

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21 December 2005

The Baby Party

Yes, I believe it is time to have some adult supervision in our nation's capitol.
They won elections in the west and the south by swaggering around extolling the blessed Bill Of Rights and the need to keep the federal government at arms length because Real Men and Women don't need no Democrat sissy nanny state and her Big Brother taking away their rights.

9/11 changed everything. Suddenly the he-men of WalMart and the NRA leaped into Big Brother's arms and shrieked "save me, save me! Do what ever you have to do, they're trying to kill us all!" They now look to Daddy Government not to discipline the children, but to check under the bed for them every night, reassure them that the boogeyman won't hurt them and then read them a nice bedtime story about spreading freedom and democracy. It turns out that underneath all this swaggering bravado, the Republicans aren't the Daddy party --- they're the baby party.
The big f-ing baby party. Save me from the dreaded "Islamofascists" and all their friends in Greenpeace, PETA, the Democratic party, and the Catholic worker movement.

Boo! Scary, kids.

The baby party must have a boogeyman with a scary label, just like the McCarthy's communists in the 1950s. Take my liberties. I don't care. Spy on me. I don't care. Summon the ghosts of Nixon and Joe McCarthy if you must. What was that noise in the closet? A terrorist vegan soup homeless shelter volunteer?

Better wiretap Bono and Bill Gates too. Who knows what kind of terrorist connections they may have? They're helping out the poor in Africa.

What these big f-ing Rethuglican babies need is a good dose of Benjamin Franklin.
"Those that would give up essential Liberty to purchase a little temporary Safety deserve neither Liberty nor Safety."
What they also need is a bunch of prison cells for all the Republicans under investigation and indictment. I hear Gitmo is nice this time of year.

Maybe they'll finally feel safe behind bars, where they belong.

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I-L-L

I-N-I! 82-50. Questions?

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20 December 2005

Dodger Blue(s)


I'm happy for Nomar and Mia, and Dodger blue looks good on him, but all I'm left with is a case of the Dodger Blues. Maybe a new blue cap and jersey will clear that up.

It's always good to have a backup team when you're a Cubs fan.

I think we could have used some of the Jacque Jones money to keep Nomar, who could have played a bunch of different positions, pushed Ramirez's lazy ass, been an insurance policy for Cedeno, and would have played any position they asked him to, but then again I'm not the gm.

I love the Pierre pickup. Hardest working man in baseball. The anti-Corey. Considering what we gave up, we better sign him to a multiyear deal though.

Jones, not so thrilled. .249 last year? Averages 100+ K's/year? So what if he's left handed. We already have a guy with those numbers available for less money.

His name is Corey.

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A Friendly Reminder For King George

Sorry George. You're not king. Or Dictator.

Just a big f-ing liar.

Bush has drawn fire over a 2002 order enabling the National Security Agency to monitor, without a judge's go-ahead, the telephone and electronic mail of US citizens suspected of Al-Qaeda ties when they are in touch with someone abroad.

Critics have charged that the unprecedented move is an abuse of power and a violation of the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which requires court approval of wiretaps and electronic surveillance.

[...]

In 2004 and 2005, Bush repeatedly argued that the controversial Patriot Act package of anti-terrorism laws safeguards civil liberties because US authorities still need a warrant to tap telephones in the United States.

"Any time you hear the United States government talking about wiretap, it requires -- a wiretap requires a court order," he said on April 20, 2004 in Buffalo, New York.

"Nothing has changed, by the way. When we're talking about chasing down terrorists, we're talking about getting a court order before we do so," he added.

On April 19, 2004, Bush said the Patriot Act enabled law-enforcement officials to use "roving wiretaps," which are not fixed to a particular telephone, against terrorism, as they had been against organized crime.

"You see, what that meant is if you got a wiretap by court order -- and by the way, everything you hear about requires court order, requires there to be permission from a FISA court, for example," he said in Hershey, Pennsylvania.

But under Bush's super-secret order, first revealed Friday by the New York Times and details of which have been confirmed by Bush and other top US officials, the National Security Agency does not need that court's approval.

And, spying on Greenpeace? Catholic Worker Movement? PETA? Is that why you broke the law? Because you knew wiretaps for your paranoid and petty political purposes wouldn't be approved by the FISA court?

Drunk with power much?



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Liberal Media

The 'Liberal' NYT sat on the domestic spying story for over a year.
The New York Times first debated publishing a story about secret eavesdropping on Americans as early as last fall, before the 2004 presidential election.

But the newspaper held the story for more than a year and only revealed the secret wiretaps last Friday, when it became apparent a book by one of its reporters was about to break the news, according to journalists familiar with the paper's internal discussions.
Imagine that Bush would have been re-elected in the midst of this criminal act? Criminal act?

Yes.

Yes.

Atrios says it all.
So, the decision to publish a story should be dependent, in part, on the volume of partisan criticism you expect to receive. I guess that's how they approach the news now.
Forget that a crime has been committed. We can't do the story because those big bad wingnuts are going to call us 'partisan.' The truth is not partisan. The public's right to know isn't partisan. What a bunch of spineless hacks.

Journalism is dead. The criminal presidency reigns. Ask yourself if any of this could have happened under the watchful eye of a functioning media.

Selling a war with false and misleading information. Check.

Outing a CIA agent for political payback. Check.

Allowing people under investigation for this action to continue to work in your administration when you said you'd fire anyone involved. Check.

Naming your unqualified political sycophant to the Supreme Court. Check.

Torture in secret prisons. Check.

Spying on your own citizens. Check.

Summoning the editor and publisher of the NYT on December 6th to the Oval Office to please please please not tell the American people that their President thinks it is acceptable for a country to spy on its own citizens without judicial oversight. Check.

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19 December 2005

Nomar loves L.A.

It's official. Nomar is a Dodger. I have to start looking for the new L.A. Dodgers' Garciaparra jersey to wear to Wrigley.

We'll see you at Wrigley in September, Nomar. I'll be the one in the Dodgers' Garciaparra jersey. Wishing you all the best with your new team.

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18 December 2005

go dodgers?

Wishing you all the best in l.a., nomar, if that's where you end up. If I was gm, you'd still be a Cub.

It's just hard to believe there isn't a spot for a player with your character and work ethic on a team that still has Corey Patterson and Aramis Ramirez on it.

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music : snob

Allow me to indulge my inner music snob. I'm a big Greg Kot fan and look forward to his best of list every year, because inevitably I find something I missed. His top 5 from 2005:

1. Kanye West, "Late Registration"
2. LCD Soundsystem, "LCD Soundsystem"
3. Sleater-Kinney, "The Woods"
4. Common, "Be"
5. The New Pornographers, "Twin Cinema"

I'm feeling pretty confident about my music snob cred right now, because I already own all 5 of these albums. Maybe I'll find something new in numbers 6-20.

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