Tuesday, March 06, 2007

Giuliani son: "I have problems with my father, but it doesn't mean he won't make a great President."

Rudy Giuliani's son, Andrew, told ABC that he has 'problems' with his father. Andrew stressed he still loves his father and said "we are both working on our relationship.

Young Giuliani's comments are a reminder of the extremely messy and public fracas that accompanied Giuliani's divorce from his second wife, the lovely Donna Hanover. According to The Daily News "New Yorkers grew used to" their mayor's sewer of a personal life. But then New Yorkers get used to a lot of things that would revolt the rest of the country. Believe me. I lived there five years.

Maybe Gothamites can hold their noses, but Rudy's reputation may not play so well in places like Terre Haute, St. Paul, or Cheyenne, or just about anywhere in the bible belt. In those places, it may not be a sign of your machismo when you publicly have a sexual relationship with another woman while your wife and children sit home at Gracie Mansion.

Hey Republicans: enjoy your front runner!
---o0o---

Poem: Truism 1


You don't shop
For a cop.
---o0o---

Monday, March 05, 2007

Caption of the week: "Coulter's Ugly Crack"






To learn more about the incident, click here.
---o0o---

Poem: Changes 38/Opposition


1
The flame burns upward
The lake seeps downward
The earth shimmies and quakes

2
When people live in opposition
They cannot carry out
Great undertakings in common

Opposition obstructs
But when it represents polarity
Within a gestalt

It has important functions
Like a catalyst
Or a fuse

Like heaven and earth
Spirit and nature
Man and woman

Light and dark
In and out
Or you and me

3
If you lose your horse
Do not run after it
It will come back of its own accord

The horse goes farther away
When you run after it
So too when someone who belongs with us

Is estranged because of misunderstanding
They will return of their own accord
If we let matters run their course

So too with the evil ones among us
You cannot shake off the evil by force
You must endure

And the evil will collapse
Like a house of cards
Into its own darkness

4
The wagon is dragged back
The oxen halted
And a man's hair and nose are cut off

You can easily overcome
A bad beginning
But a good end lasts forever

5
If you find yourself among people
From whom you are separated
By inner opposition

You become isolated
But meeting someone
Who at the core of their being

Is your kin overcomes isolation
And when the companion is revealed
You face the darkness together.
---o0o---

Sunday, March 04, 2007

74 years ago today, FDR became President


. . .Click President Franklin Delano Roosevelt to enlarge. . .


On March 4, 1933, with the depression in full swing, Franklin Delano Roosevelt was inaugurated as the 32nd president of the United States. His inaugural speech promised a "New Deal," e.g., expansion of the federal government as an employer and the establishment of a national "saftey net," as well call it these days. During the first nine months of FDR's stewardship, we were still Dry-- a nation under The Volstead Act,. Not until December could alcohol again be legally sold or drunk. The ban on alcohol lasted 13 years and it was perhaps even less effective the bans on marijuana today.

The majority of Americans stood behind the President and his radical measures to repair the economic climate. He was re-elected three tiemes.

His long term in office led congress and the states to pass the 22ndAmendment to the U.S. Constitution, which limits Presidents to two consecutive elected terms in office.

My favorite quote about President Roosevelt came from none other than Governor Mario Cuomo--who was sitting in the same seat FDR occuped as Governor. This is from his magnificent speech (the entire text appears on All This Is That) at the 1984 Democratic Convention in San Francisco:

"We Democrats believe in something else. We democrats believe that we can make it all the way with the whole family intact, and we have more than once. Ever since Franklin Roosevelt lifted himself from his wheelchair to lift this nation from its knees -- wagon train after wagon train -- to new frontiers of education, housing, peace; the whole family aboard, constantly reaching out to extend and enlarge that family; lifting them up into the wagon on the way; blacks and Hispanics, and people of every ethnic group, and native Americans -- all those struggling to build their families and claim some small share of America. For nearly 50 years we carried them all to new levels of comfort, and security, and dignity, even affluence. And remember this, some of us in this room today are here only because this nation had that kind of confidence. And it would be wrong to forget that."
---o0o---

Front-runners Clinton and McCain losing ground fast/All This Is That's dark horses are mired in the back of the pack


click to enlarge the front runners, climbers,
fallers, & dark horses.

A Newsweek magazine poll released on Saturday shows Republican presidential hopeful Rudolph Giuliani (more or less tied with John McCain in a January poll) with a 25-point lead over Arizona Senator McCain. Republicans--59 percent--said they backed the former NYC mayor and 34 percent chose McCain. That doesn't leave much for Mitt Romney, who I still feel is a viable dark horse, and who has yet to really emerge from the pack. The magazine notes that ""Most registered Republicans are not familiar with Giuliani's positions on key social issues," mentioning specifically his support for abortion rights and gun control.

Another (Newsweek) poll of registered Democrats shows Sen. Barack Obama chiseling away at fellow Senator Hillary Clinton's lead. In the latest poll, it's 52% Clinton vs. 38% Obama. Again, not much room in there for the dark horse, John Edwards. Or the rest of the vast pack, including Bill Richardson, et al.




Click to enlarge - The real dark horse? Al, if
you do run, bring back the beard. It makes you
look more avuncular, and it's been 91 years
since the last bearded man (Charles Evan
Hughes) ran for President.

Perhaps the real dark horse on the Dem side is the 800 pound gorilla and Oscar winner, Al Gore. He's being coy about a run, but he keeps showing up in all the right places. Is he just laying low, waiting for Obama and Clinton to cut each other to ribbons and/or self-destruct? We may not know for a few months.
---o0o---

Saturday, March 03, 2007

Ann Coulter calls Presidential Candidate Edwards A "Faggot" & Howard Dean Fights Back









Ultra-conservative lawyer and columnist Ann Coulter, the pinup girl for rednecks, called John Edwards a "faggot" yesterday in a speech to the Conservative Political Action Conference. The audience at CPAC seemed to find her comments hilarious. See a You Tube clip of the speech above. . .





After her "hate-filled and bigoted" speech, Democratic boss Howard Dean issued a press release.


Dean demanded that Republican presidential candidates denounce the conservative columnist after her remarks. “While Democrats and Republicans may disagree on the issues, we should all be able to agree that this kind of vile rhetoric is out of bounds. The American people want a serious, thoughtful debate of the issues,” the press release read.
---o0o---

Poem and Photograph/Collage: The Grey Convoy Flies Over the UFO Crash Site


. . .click the photograph to enlarge. . .

The Greys fly
Over the crash site
Murmuring
"There but for the Grace
Of God. . ."
---o0o---

Fantastic new photos of Saturn from the Cassini-Huygens mission

All photography credits are NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory/Space Science Institute. The photos were all shot by the Cassini spacecraft a couple miles from Saturn (well, 800,000 miles, actually).


Click to enlarge - "Magnificent blue and gold Saturn floats obliquely as one of its gravity-bound companions, Dione, hangs in the distance. The darkened rings seem to nearly touch their shadowy reverse images on the planet below. This view looks toward the unlit side of the rings from about 9 degrees above the ring plane. The rings glow feebly in the scattered light that filters through them. Dione is 1,126 kilometers (700 miles) across. The image was taken in visible light with the Cassini spacecraft wide-angle camera on Feb. 4, 2007, at a distance of approximately 1.2 million kilometers (800,000 miles) from Saturn. Image scale is 75 kilometers (47 miles) per pixel. "


Click to enlarge - this clip from a movie sequence captures Saturn's rings "during a ring plane crossing--which Cassini makes twice per orbit--from the spacecraft's point of view. The movie begins with a view of the sunlit side of the rings. As the spacecraft speeds from south to north, the rings appear to tilt downward and collapse to a thin plane, and then open again to reveal the un-illuminated side of the ring plane, where sunlight filters through only dimly. "


click to enlarge - "Surely one of the most gorgeous sights the solar system has to offer, Saturn sits enveloped by the full splendor of its stately rings. Taking in the rings in their entirety was the focus of this particular imaging sequence. Therefore, the camera exposure times were just right to capture the dark-side of its rings, but longer than that required to properly expose the globe of sunlit Saturn. Consequently, the sunlit half of the planet is overexposed. Between the blinding light of day and the dark of night, there is a strip of twilight on the globe where colorful details in the atmosphere can be seen. Bright clouds dot the bluish-grey northern polar region here. In the south, the planet's night side glows golden in reflected light from the rings' sunlit face. "
---o0o---

Friday, March 02, 2007

Earthquake!: Shakin' All Over In Berkeley


click map to enlarge—the red square is this 'quake

An hour after I arrived in Berkeley tonight, and settled into my hotel, the building started to rock and roll. The 4.2 earthquake, centered in Lafayette, while not so bad, was felt all around the Bay Area. Berkeley was the site (and epicenter) of another earthquake just last week.

Kron-TV says that "The earthquake shook basketball fans at Haas Pavilion on the University of California's campus in Berkeley. The crowd issued a collective "Oooh," as the building briefly shuddered during a timeout in Cal's game against Arizona, then cheered loudly while officials briefly delayed resuming the game."

We experienced dozens of earthquakes when we lived here, especially our year in married student housing in the Berkeley Hills. The Hayward fault ran--literally--through our backyard, and straight through the U.C. campus. We felt little earthquakes every day while we lived there. Fortunately, we had moved to Seattle by the time of the big quake of '89.

When I was 11, the Seattle April 29, 1965 earthquake (epicenter: Shelton) registered a 6.5 magnitude. I was outside at elementary school and watched the massive waves roll through the streets and saw cars bouncing up and down. I was in San Francisco during the April 24, 1984 Morgan Hill earthquake. I worked on the 10th floor of a 1905 skyscraper on Market Street. In that 6.2 quake, my building rocked for several minutes after the quake. It was 15 years 'til I experienced my next big one--the Seattle Nisqually earthquake on February 28, 2001--a 6.8 magnitude temblor, still vivid in my memory. While it's happening all you can think is "when's it going to stop?" As your intestines turn to jelly, you begin to wonder if this is finally the one we've all dreaded; if this is The Big One.
---o0o---

Thursday, March 01, 2007

Correction: "Does Al Gore Use Twenty Times More Energy Than The Average U.S. Household?" Misstated An Obvious fact

When I posted Does Al Gore Use Twenty Times More Energy Than The Average U.S. Household? on Tuesday, I characterized The Tennessee Center for Policy research as "an independent, nonprofit and nonpartisan research organization." Right.

Jeff, a/k/a Dogbowl, a friend, and astute political analyst wrote—without even looking it up—that this was clearly a hit piece. He was, of course, right. They may be nonprofit, but they are indeed partisan—something my defective BS detector should have picked up. They are known for stirring up trouble with the left. The timing alone should have rung my bells.

I stand corrected.


Ed Begley and long time friend Bill Clinton - click to enlarge


That being said, I still have some doubts about people buying green offsets to make everything right. Yeah, I get how it works, but I still have to wonder if it wouldn't be better not to use the energy in the first place.

As a former poor kid, I have a knee-jerk reaction to rich people buying their way out of the various pickles they create. Do you remember from your history of the middle ages how people would pay for "sin-eaters" to erase their sins? Or how at various points and places in history, people were able to buy their way out of military service by paying a poor kid's family to send him in their stead? This has that same sort of vibe for me.

Yes, I get how it works, and how buying offsets helps a great deal. On the other hand, I have to totally admire the likes of Ed Begley, Jr.— about as green as you can be without living in a tent—who has to hop on his electricity generating stationary bicycle and ride a few minutes whenever he wants to make a couple pieces of toast!
---o0o---

Another found photo from 10Eastern.com


click photograph to enlarge


This is another fantastic found photo from 10Eastern (one of my favorite web sites). One of the best things about all the photos gathered there is that they have no context! And this photo--the costumes, Welsh Independence, Ninjas?, sort-of-cheerleaders with orange feather headdresses, and the somewhat laughable, somewhat spooky dude in the gold lame costume? What's not to like?---o0o---