2004-11-28

Mathew Gross: The Politics of Victimization

Democrats as abuse victims? I'm taking the second half of the post, go read the first half. It's interesting.

First, you must admit you are a victim. Then, you must declare the state of affairs unacceptable. Next, you must promise to protect yourself and everyone around you that is being victimized. You don’t do this by responding to their demands, or becoming more like them, or engaging in logical conversation, or trying to persuade them that you are right. You also don’t do this by going catatonic and resigned, by closing up your ears and eyes and covering your head and submitting to the blows, figuring its over faster and hurts less is you don’t resist and fight back. Instead, you walk away. You find other folks like yourself, 56 million of them, who are hurting, broken, and beating themselves up. You tell them what you’ve learned, and that you aren’t going to take it anymore. You stand tall, with 56 million people at your side and behind you, and you look right into the eyes of the abuser and you tell him to go to hell. Then you walk out the door, taking the kids and gays and minorities with you, and you start a new life. The new life is hard. But it’s better than the abuse.

We have a mandate to be as radical and liberal and steadfast as we need to be. The progressive beliefs and social justice we stand for, our core, must not be altered. We are 56 million strong. We are building from the bottom up. We are meeting, on the net, in church basements, at work, in small groups, and right now, we are crying, because we are trying to break free and we don’t know how.

Any battered woman in America, any oppressed person around the globe who has defied her oppressor will tell you this: There is nothing wrong with you. You are in good company. You are safe. You are not alone. You are strong. You must change only one thing: stop responding to the abuser. Don’t let him dictate the terms or frame the debate (he’ll win, not because he’s right, but because force works). Sure, we can build a better grassroots campaign, cultivate and raise up better leaders, reform the election system to make it failproof, stick to our message, learn from the strategy of the other side. But we absolutely must dispense with the notion that we are weak, godless, cowardly, disorganized, crazy, too liberal, naive, amoral, “loose”, irrelevant, outmoded, stupid and soon to be extinct. We have the mandate of the world to back us, and the legacy of oppressed people throughout history.

Even if you do everything right, they’ll hit you anyway. Look at the poor souls who voted for this nonsense. They are working for six dollars an hour if they are working at all, their children are dying overseas and suffering from lack of health care and a depleted environment and a shoddy education. And they don’t even know they are being hit.


In other news, I wish I could post a poll here. There's probably some way to do so, but I don't have the time to figure out how right now. What do I do if I don't get into grad school? New York? Washington? If I'm as serious as I keep saying I might be about getting involved in politics, Washington seems to make more sense than New York, but who wouldn't want to leave in New York as a twentysomething?

Sigh. Back to the history paper dungeon.

2004-11-27

I think this is cool.

I may have mentioned this before. But, if not, I think the Wikimedia Foundation is cool, and that there projects are also quite cool. Although I'm a little bothered by the slogan of the WikiSpecies project: 'WikiSpecies if free. Because life is public domain!' For now it is, anyway. Hopefully it'll stay that way.

I love when...

...historians oh-so-subtlely contradict themselves. For example, in one chapter, the author suggests that dowries were no longer focused on helping the couple to set up shop on thier own, citing the decline in useful, tool-like items that could be used to help the couple subsist. In the next chapter, however, the author suggests that the dowry was still very much about property. What is property if not a way to subsistance? And why don't I get any dowry inventories? I don't care if only 2% of dowries in eighteenth-century São Paulo included a townhouse, as opposed to 40% of dowries in the seventeenth century. This doesn't tell me anything if I don't know what the other 98/60% of dowries were like. I know they had townhouses, but did they tend to include things that might take the place of a townhouse? Did those families have a townhouse to give?

That's all. I know I shouldn't complain if this is the worst of my complaints.

2004-11-26

Blog outsourcing...

Communhealth, from Atrios...

Mrs. Atrios and I spent two months in Barcelona in summer 2003. You may remember the good old days when the corrente crowd was posting. While we were there Mrs. Atrios had a wee stomach bug, enough to necessitate a trip to the doctor. After a bit of hunting we found a local health clinic. After a bit of discussion they took her passport number at reception, sat us down, and a half hour or so later she saw a doctor. The doctor inquired about her insurance. My wife explained that we had travel insurance, and the way it worked was that we'd just cover any costs and then submit them upon our return. This troubled the doctor greatly, not because of the cost of the exam, which turned out to be free, but because of concern about the cost of the drugs which were to be prescribed.

We took the prescription, went to our local pharmacy, and had it filled.

Cost?

About 3 bucks.

Spain spends about 7.5% of its GDP on health care. We spend about 13.9%. About 4% of our GDP is spent on a subset of health care called... 'health care administration.'

This raises the obvious question -- why do they hate freedom?


Yeah. Not much to say on that one. Stuffing, anyone?

2004-11-25

Results...

He-Man
You are He-Man from Masters of the Universe! You
take life very seriously, and you should,
considering you are the keeper of all that is
good and right in the universe! However, your
nonstop suspicion of Skeletor and his henchman
can start your friends wondering why you don't
loosen up once in awhile.


Which Forgotten 80s Cartoon Character Are You?
brought to you by Quizilla

You Are the Stuffing





You Are the Stuffing




You're complicated and complex, yet all your pieces fit together.
People miss you if you're gone - but they're not sure why.



In other Yanksgiving news, MY DAD IS ENGAGED! I'm so excited for him!

2004-11-24

So...

Ukraine has a disputed presidential election, and they're on the brink of a civil war. The US has a disputed presidential election, and...it's life as usual.

2004-11-23

There's so much that I could say about this picture...

...but I won't.

Economic 'Armageddon' predicted

This is, um, promising.... NOT!

Stephen Roach, the chief economist at investment banking giant Morgan Stanley, has a public reputation for being bearish.

But you should hear what he's saying in private.

Roach met select groups of fund managers [in Boston] last week, including a group at Fidelity.

His prediction: America has no better than a 10 percent chance of avoiding economic 'armageddon.'

Press were not allowed into the meetings. But the Herald has obtained a copy of Roach's presentation. A stunned source who was at one meeting said, 'it struck me how extreme he was - much more, it seemed to me, than in public.'

Roach sees a 30 percent chance of a slump soon and a 60 percent chance that 'we'll muddle through for a while and delay the eventual armageddon.'

The chance we'll get through OK: one in 10. Maybe.

In a nutshell, Roach's argument is that America's record trade deficit means the dollar will keep falling. To keep foreigners buying T-bills and prevent a resulting rise in inflation, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan will be forced to raise interest rates further and faster than he wants.

The result: U.S. consumers, who are in debt up to their eyeballs, will get pounded.

Less a case of 'Armageddon,'' maybe, than of a 'Perfect Storm.'

'Virgin Mary' toast fetches $28,000

Just thought I'd give y'all the update on this.

2004-11-21

This is somehow oddly appropriate...


"it's a small world": The happiest cruise
that ever sailed! Surreal and silly, or sweat
and touching, you are a well intentioned 1960s
homage to the world's diversity that
unfortunatly inspires feelings of sheer terror
in those who can't help but feel something more
sinister lays beneath your shiney surface. But
most cannot deny your charm, even if they
cannot explain it, and leave feeling better
than when they entered. Most overlook the fact
that because of your unique style and design,
courtesy of Disney Legend Mary Blair, you are a
true work of art and you deserve to be
appreciated. You are both worldy and
simplistic, both cosmopolitan and decidedly
middle American. You are a splendid
candy-coated contradiction with a sugary, sunny
song that one never forgets. If the world
truely listened to your never-ending optimism,
it could be a small world after all.


What Disneyland attraction are you?
brought to you by Quizilla

All I want for Christmas

United States Patent 5,983,411

2004-11-20

Kittens and Patriarchy

Microsoft Word is sexist. It recognises 'matrilineal' but not 'patrilineal'.

In other news, we have a kitten! My roommate was fairly convinced that Sudra was lonely. Maybe she is. So now we have a kitten. 7 months old. Named Tiggy. Part (not sure how much) Maine coon. We have them segregated at the moment. Sudra hasn't quite figured out what's going on yet. She noticed the meowing from the other room at one point this afternoon. She seemed not quite sure what to make of it and eventually, as is her style, lost interest. We'll see how this develops. Hopefully the kitten will run the extra pounds off Sudra and she won't be Chubby-Cat anymore. Maybe this will bring out hidden maternal insticts in her. Or something.

Back to the patriarchy (in Brazil)....

2004-11-19

I (heart) the world

I love when I come up from air from a study break to see the headline on BBC read 'Troops storm major Baghdad mosque'. Because, you know, there were bad people inside. Never mind the fact that it's Friday. There were worshippers inside. Among others, the imam was arrested. The raid was conducted by Iraqi security forces backed by US troops.

Long ago this became a moot point. But let's just all remind ourselves: this is not a war on Islam.

2004-11-18

Library Adventures

I would like to re-iterate my frustrated hatred of all McGill Libraries Reference Staff. Not once have I ever actually been helped by these people. They listen to the first three words you say and then tell you they know exactly what you need. And it never is what you need. Then they suggest that you check Muse. Thanks. Did that. That's why I'm asking YOU.

In other news, Bill Clinton is preparing to open his Presidential Library. No word on whether or not the Blue Dress will be on display. Oh the nostalgia. Things were so simple and harmless during the Clinton years.

2004-11-17

Let's all move!

Ireland has been named the best country in the world to live in by The Economist. I could live in Ireland. Yeah, I could totally live in Ireland.

Who's with me?

(And no comments about the fact that I'm supposed to be writing papers and yet I've posted three times today. I'm being super-productive.)

Leading Democrat Senator Won't Block Confirmation of Gonzales

'I said jokingly that the president, with the majority he has in the Senate, could have sent up Attila the Hun and got him confirmed,' Mr. Leahy said. 'But Judge Gonzales is no Attila the Hun; he's far from that, and he's a more uniting figure.'


Just fucking curl up and die. If Gonzales is a uniting figure then I am the Second Coming. Wouldn't that be great? If the Second Coming were a gay history student?

bah

I'm listening to the most inane rich-activist-kid conversation at the architecture café. They are preventing me from working on my paper because it's just far too entertaining.

Only in America


'I do believe that this is the Virgin Mary Mother of God.'
Click
here
to read the whole story

In real world news, Anthony reading week is going well. I'm four pages away from hitting 30 pages on my independent study paper. And I definitely have more than four pages left to write. This is a good thing. I just hope it's all coherent at the end. Then I let it sit and ferment for about five days until I look at it again, polish it up, and hand it in. In the meantime, I'll hopefully write my latin american history paper. And maybe my Dante paper. Tonight, also, I have to finish up my personal statement.

A busy boy am I.

Now, though, I am going to have a poor law free shower. Woohoo! (At this point, it really is the little things.)

2004-11-15

Who's a dumbass? I'm a dumbass!

I HAVE ANOTHER WHOLE WEEK TO WRITE MY PAPERS!

Somehow, I thought that next week was the beginning of December. But it's not. All last week up until yesterday, I thought that I had this week, and that's it. That I would basically have to write three papers and finish my personal statement by Sunday or so (first drafts, at any rate). This is what prompted the panic of taking this week off. I'm still going to take this week off, and I'm still going to try to get two papers essentially written by the end of this week. I really think I can have my 30-pager done by Wednesday--a first draft, that is. Then I'll jump into the 15-20 pager.

*enormous sigh of relief*

In the meantime, go watch the trailer for Un long dimanche de fiançailles, Jean-Pierre Jeunet's (of Amélie fame) new film. Audrey Tautou is even in it!

http://www.apple.com/trailers/warner_independent_pictures/averylongengagement.html

2004-11-13

Time off

I've realised that this blog has become less about me and more about posting things that other people have said that I feel you all ought to know about. As you might imagine, there hasn't been a lot of me to go around recently, with school and all. Indeed, I'm instituting an personal reading week next week, so I probably won't be posting much, if anything. Don't worry, it's not likely that I've died. I'll just be trying to write two papers and the bestest personal statement ever seen my a graduate admissions committee. Maybe.

Ugh. Three more weeks and this semester is over. I will be oh-so-glad when it is.

2004-11-12

Bizarro World

From Atrios. The sad thing is that these kinds of stories don't even surprise me anymore.

I just heard a report on NPR about a group of Chinese Muslims who have been in Guantanmo. We've decided that they're no longer a threat. The Chinese government wants us to hand them over so they can try them on terrorism charges.

We don't want to hand them over because... yes, you know it's coming...

The Chinese government may torture them.

2004-11-11

I (heart) rumours

Especially when the rumours involve the potential new chairman of the Republican Party possibly being a big ol' homo.

Mehlman has REFUSED to answer direct questions from reporters about his sexual orientation. This wouldn't be relevant, except:

1. There have been rumors for years about Mehlman's sexual orientation. Now that he's a very public figure, those rumors gain an importance they didn't have before.[...]

2. Mehlman has already said publicly that the gay issue is fair game for politics. If it's fair game, then the same rules apply to him.

3. Mehlman has publicly defended the president's anti-gay policies, including the federal constitutional amendment. Were Mehlman gay, he'd be guilty of hypocrisy, and that would justify his outing - again, were he gay.

4. The GOP has made it perfectly clear that gays and lesbians and their relationships are a threat to the fabric of society. As American citizens and voters we have the right to know if Ken Mehlman's so-far-undisclosed relationships are posing such a threat or not. The last thing the GOP should be doing is giving a position of prominence in the party to someone who, for all we know, might have a secret agenda of undermining the family. They can't have it both ways.

5. The Republican National Committee is an organization that makes NO BONES about using gay-bashing to help Republican candidates. There is good reason to believe that any RNC chair, were he not 100% straight, would be at pains to effectively run an organization that relies on gay-bashing to get its way. Don't red-state Americans have the right to know if the leader of their party, whomever it turns out to be, actually embraces the party's prefered lifestyle?

6. We have been told that part of President Bush's supposed "mandate" in the most recent election was a vindication of his attack on gays. The voting public has a right to know if the next RNC chair plans on subversively undercutting that mandate or actively supporting it.

[...]

America is in the throes of a culture war, nurtured by groups like the RNC and people like Ken Mehlman. Americans have a right to know which side of the culture war Ken Mehlman is on, and whether, as RNC chair, he would be a fifth column for those very forces that the RNC tells us are out to steal America's Bibles and jam homosexual sex down its throats and the throats of its children.


Now, I've always been one for keeping what happens in people's bedrooms their own business, which, for example, is why I couldn't care less about Monicagate. As for outing people, I've also never been a fan of that--it's their life, if they want to disclose, they can disclose. Sure it would be better in the long-run if everyone just came out so that people would realise that gays and lesbians are everywhere and are quite normal people, but everyone has to do what they have to do.

In this case, though, it's different. Not only is there the problem of hypocrisy, but this would be worse than having Mary Cheney as a paid staffer of Bush/Cheney '04 while completely refusing to acknowledge her existence and most especially refusing to acknowledge her lesbianism.

I think it's clear that the nation is deeply divided and in a very fragile state at the moment. I fully agree with the quote where it talks about the culture war. Imagine the shit storm of Mehlman were to become GOP Chairman only to be outed? Maybe it would be a good thing in the long-run, but I doubt it. It would piss a lot of people off at Bush, but I don't think that it would make them amenable to gay neighbours or the thought that somewhere in the nation sodomy might be occurring or gays might be getting married.

2004-11-10

US deficit pushes euro over $1.30

'The euro has now risen by 10 US cents in a month.'

BRING ON THE FOOD RIOTS!

Okay, so I'm getting a little ahead of myself here....

2004-11-09

About how I'm feeling right now, on a variety of levels

A thought on the marriage amendment issue

All these people who want to add a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage, to add the first restrictive amendment to the US Constitution. Fine. Okay. You want to play that way? Give up your guns. I will gladly give up my (potential) right to marriage--I'll settle for a civil union or nothing at all, even--if you give up your Second Amendment right to bear arms. It only seems fair. If we have to give up one of our rights, you ought to give up one of yours. That's what democracy is all about: sharing. And, remember, sharing means caring. (Of course, democracy isn't as much about sharing as socialism is, but that's beside the point.)

2004-11-08

Sorry Everybody

No explanation needed for this one. Just follow the link.

Daily Kos :: Backdoor draft

From Kos:

Jesus, this one hits too close to home:
David M. Miyasato enlisted in the U.S. Army Reserve in 1987, served three years of active duty during the first Gulf War and received an honorable discharge in 1991. He remained on inactive status for five more years, until 1996. Since then, the Kaua'i resident has married, started an auto window tinting business and this year, he and his wife had their first child.

But in September, Miyasato received a letter from the Army recalling him to active duty and directing him to report to a military facility in South Carolina on Tuesday.

'I was shocked,' Miyasato said yesterday. 'I never expected to see something like that after being out of the service for 13 years.'

Miyasato is now suing the Secretary of the Army, asking a court to prevent the Army from ordering him to active duty. He is also asking for a court judgment declaring that he fulfilled all his obligations to the military.

This dude has been out longer than I have. This is the first reported callup of a soldier who had already completed his inactive reserve obligations.

The draft is coming.


At least I can claim homosexuality. I'd love to see Bush try to let gays into the military just to boost the draftable population. Heh. But, as Margaret Cho has said, 'How can you fight a war without gays? I mean, if you don't have lesbians, who's gonna read the map?'

2004-11-07

Eschaton's view on 'values'

If 'values' are the new battleground, which I mostly doubt, then I say bring it on, Larry Flynt-style. Let the scarlet A's be handed out, the closet doors swung open, and weekly church attendance records of members of congress and the administration be compiled. If sinning godless heathens are the problem, then let's be clear about who the sinning godless heathens are.

2004-11-06

Can we riot now?

Those exit poll results have been a problem for reporters ever since Election Day.

Election night, I'd been doing live election coverage for WDEV, one of the radio stations that carries my syndicated show, and, just after midnight, during the 12:20 a.m. Associated Press Radio News feed, I was startled to hear the reporter detail how Karen Hughes had earlier sat George W. Bush down to inform him that he'd lost the election. The exit polls were clear: Kerry was winning in a landslide. 'Bush took the news stoically,' noted the AP report.

But then the computers reported something different. In several pivotal states.

Conservatives see a conspiracy here: They think the exit polls were rigged.

Dick Morris, the infamous political consultant to the first Clinton campaign who became a Republican consultant and Fox News regular, wrote an article for The Hill, the publication read by every political junkie in Washington, DC, in which he made a couple of brilliant points.

'Exit Polls are almost never wrong,' Morris wrote. 'They eliminate the two major potential fallacies in survey research by correctly separating actual voters from those who pretend they will cast ballots but never do and by substituting actual observation for guesswork in judging the relative turnout of different parts of the state.'

He added: 'So, according to ABC-TVs exit polls, for example, Kerry was slated to carry Florida, Ohio, New Mexico, Colorado, Nevada, and Iowa, all of which Bush carried. The only swing state the network had going to Bush was West Virginia, which the president won by 10 points.'

Yet a few hours after the exit polls were showing a clear Kerry sweep, as the computerized vote numbers began to come in from the various states the election was called for Bush.

How could this happen?

2004-11-05

'Kerry Won'

Just for context, the author of this piece is Greg Palast, a 'contributing editor to Harper's magazine, [who] investigated the manipulation of the vote for BBC Television's Newsnight.' In other words, not just some desperate crazy person.

2004-11-04

Skanksville



Just in case the image doesn't link, check the link. I really like the look that the Bush twins are going for. One of them is 21st century skank and the other is early 20th century skank. It's a good balance. Of course, Laura is in her usual Barbie doll pink, smelling of Lysol (see the Margaret Cho post below). Uncle Dick is wearing a black suit, appropriate for Darth Vader. Not sure what Lynne was thinking: lime green is hardly a patriotic colour, unless we count Miami and Key West, and we KNOW what kind of people live THERE. And, gasp, could that be? Mary Cheney! Have they let her come out of hiding? I guess they had to move her out of the Undisclosed Location so they could put Dick back into storage. And who's that masculine looking woman standing with her?

Vacation's over, folks! Let's make these next two years hell for Bush.

Impeachment 2006!

2004-11-03

Big Brother and the Boss

Winston kept his back turned to the telescreen. It was safer; though as he well knew, even a back can be revealing. A kilometre away the Ministry of Truth, his place of work, towered vast and white above the grimy landscape [...] He tried to squeeze out some childhood memory that should tell him whether London had always been quite like this. Were there always these vistas of rotting nineteenth-century houses, their sides shored up with baulks of timber, their windows patched with cardboard and their roofs with corrugated iron, their crazy garden walls sagging in all directions? And the bombed sites where the plaster dust swirled in the air and the willowherb straggled over the heaps of rubble; and the places where the bombs had cleared a larger patch and there had sprung up sordid colonies of wooden dwellings like chicken-houses? But it was no use, he could not remember: nothing remained of his childhood except a series of bright-lit tableaux, occurring against no background and most unintelligible.

The Ministry of Truth [...] was startlingly different from any other object in sight. It was an enormous pyramidal structure of glittering white concrete, soaring up, terrace after terrace, three hundred metres into the air. From where Winston stood it was just possible to read, picked out on its white face in elegant lettering, the three slogans of the Party:

WAR IS PEACE
FREEDOM IS SLAVERY
IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH.


On a rattlesnake speedway in the Utah desert
I pick up my money and head back into town
Driving cross the Waynesboro county line
I got the radio on and I'�m just killing time
Working all day in my daddy'�s garage
Driving all night chasing some mirage
Pretty soon little girl I'm gonna take charge

The dogs on main street howl 'cause they understand
If I could take one moment into my hands
Mister I ain'�t a boy, no I�'m a man
And I believe in a promised land

I'�ve done my best to live the right way
I get up every morning and go to work each day
But your eyes go blind and your blood runs cold
Sometimes I feel so weak I just want to explode
Explode and tear this old town apart
Take a knife and cut this pain from my heart
Find somebody itching for something to start

The dogs on main street howl 'cause they understand
If I could take one moment into my hands
Mister I ain'�t a boy, no I'�m a man
And I believe in a promised land

There'�s a dark cloud rising from the desert floor
I packed my bags and I�'m heading straight into the storm
Gonna be a twister to blow everything down
That ain�'t got the faith to stand it�s ground
Blow away the dreams that tear you apart
Blow away the dreams that break your heart
Blow away the lies that leave you nothing but lost and broken-hearted

The dogs on main street howl 'cause they understand
If I could take one moment into my hands
Mister I ain'�t a boy, no I'�m a man
And I believe in a promised land

End of Days

That's it. It's over. Kerry has conceded. George W. Bush has been elected again for the first time.

Needless to say, this is a very difficult moment for me. I wasn't personally involved in any of this. Being in Montréal, I've been able to observe everything from an out-of-body distance. The nation of my birth has troubled me more and more since Bush came into office, and most especially after 11th September 2001. I remember going home for the first time after 9/11, in December 2001. I actually flew home because it was so inexpensive. 45 minutes in the air is a hell of a lot easier than 8 hours on a bus. I was nervous but I had faith. Besides, who would blow up a little Air Canada jet? After collecting my bags, I stepped out onto the curb to look for my parents. Up they drove in their enormous Ford Expedition (Eddie Bauer Edition). Already, it sported an airbrushed vanity plate that declared 'Freedom will be defended' against a background of a bald eagle and the American flag. They had a flag on the antenna. Massachusetts had already released their official vanity plates and there was one of those on the back declaring 'United we stand.'

My mother and stepfather have never claimed to be whole-hearted Bush supporters, but they're the kind of people that worry me the most: they blow with the wind. Although they claimed not to support Bush, they immediately bought into the patriotic goose stepping that was called for after 9/11. Dissent quickly became unpatriotic. That is, perhaps, the most frightening aspect of Bush's America.

The only thing in my mind that can account for what's going on is pure and simple apathy. Although there may have been record turn-out yesterday, the majority--even if it's an ever so slight majority--of the nation just doesn't care enough to question what they are fed. Cheney declared that if Kerry were elected, the nation would almost certainly suffer another terrorist attack. What the nation doesn't understand is that Bush&Co themselves have committed a terrorist attack far worse than that of 9/11. They are attacking the very foundations of the nation. I don't even want to think about what four more years of Bush will mean for the nation or for the world for that matter. It's simply too painful to think about right now.

The nation is clearly deeply divided. This is perhaps surprising considering the amount of pulling together that seemed to happen after 9/11. The problem is, though, that the Republicans now hold control of the entire government. Giuliani was on ABC at one point last night and suggested that whoever won would have to do a lot of bringing together. I simply don't see the Republicans as doing this: why should they? They now have a popular mandate--51% it's true, but that's the first majority mandate that a president has received in over a decade.

I am deeply conflicted right now about my own future--never mind that of the nation. It frightens me to think that I might be moving back to the states in a few months. And yet I wonder if maybe that's where I need to be. The odd thing about this election is that it has, in a way, awakened some kind of patriotism within me. There is great promise in the founding promises of the United States.

The nation survived Nixon.

The nation survived Reagan.

Can the nation survive Bush?

The GOP tried to impeach Clinton because of a dirty dress.

Two years are a long time to wait. And yet if the Democrats can get their act together during the next two years and make decisive gains in the mid-term elections, Bush is impeachable on a lot more than a dirty dress. A lot can happen in two years. A lot.

There has been a lot of talk, particularly over at Daily Kos, about the death of the Democratic Party in its current state. The party is ripe for reformation. It desperately needs to draw itself together and find its base and its message. For the sake of the nation and for the sake of the world. Almost half the nation supported Kerry. It's difficult to know if it was based on support of the Democrats or an anti-Bush sentiment.

I think that this election decisively shows that the US is tacking significantly more to the right than Europe or Canada. Any new Democratic party would necessarily have to run towards centre. I've always been more of a leftist, to be sure, but I'm starting to wonder if I need to return to the nation of my birth to help save it.

I'm too conflicted about it all right now to say for sure. But I feel too strongly about the future not to consider it at all.

No Surrender, II

Everyone agrees that Bush&Co. stole the election four years ago. If they do it again....

As I suspected--and as has been pointed out over at DailyKos--something's not right in FL and OH. The link is to a post explaining the very obvious fact that exit polls for everywhere but OH and FL reflected reality. In FL and OH, though, both of which showed Kerry winning by comfortable margins, something happened. What, did people lie?

Somehow I think not.

I'm going to be very punchy today. Not nearly enough sleep. I stayed at the boy's house last night in order to have access to a tv. (I have to say that I was happy with ABC for not doing stupid things like calling states way too early. They refused, in fact, to call OH. And they called MN and WA quite a while after everyone else had. I guess Peter Jennings still retains some sanity from his Canadian roots.)

Anyway, since I was staying here and leaving for school from here, I had to bring a change of clothes, obviously. I subconsciously made a good choice:

No Surrender

I think I should try to sleep. But I thought I would post these lyrics as an attempt to stay hopeful. I have to admit that my hope is fading, but I don't want to think about Kerry not winning. It's just too horrific to think about what the United States and the world might be like after another four years of Bush.

--

We busted out of class had to get away from those fools
We learned more from a three-minute record than we ever learned in school
Tonight I heart the neighborhood drummer sound
I can feel my heart begin to pound
You say you’re tired and you just want to close your eyes and follow your dreams down

We made a promise we swore we’d always remember
No retreat, believe me, no surrender
Like soldiers in the winter’s night with a vow to defend
No retreat, believe me, no surrender

Now young faces grow sad and old and hearts of fire grow cold
We swore blood brothers against the wind
I’m ready to grow young again
And hear your sister’s voice calling us home across the open yards
Believin’ we could cut someplace of our own
With these drums and these guitars

We made a promise we swore we’d always remember
No retreat, believe me, no surrender
Blood brothers in the stormy night with a vow to defend
No retreat, believe me, no surrender

Now on the street tonight the lights grow dim
The walls of my room are closing in
But it’s good to see your smiling face and to hear your voice again
We could sleep in the twilight by the river side
With a wide open country in our hearts
And these romanics dreams in our heads

We made a promise...

It's 12.47...

...do you know where your next President is?

2004-11-02

Margaret Cho

During her recent get-out-the-vote tour, everyone's favourite Asian-American compared John Kerry to an Ent, the tree-people from Lord of the Rings, because he's so tall.

'But wouldn't you so much rather have a tree than a bush?'

She also said that Teresa Heinz Kerry had a Mrs Robinson-like quality about her and was sexy, especially in comparison to Laura: 'you KNOW her pussy smells like Lysol.'

From 'electoral-vote.com'

As I have discussed repeatedly, normally people with a cell phone but no landline are not polled. Most of these are in the 18-29 year old group. Up until now, no one has known how their absence from the polling data might affect the results. Zogby has now conducted a very large (N = 6039) poll exclusively on cell phones using SMS messaging to get a feeling of how they will vote. The results are that they go strongly for Kerry, 55% to 40%, with a margin of error of only 1.2%. If they all vote tomorrow, the pollsters are going to spend the rest of the week wiping egg from their faces. But historically, younger voters have a miserable turnout record, so the pollsters need not yet stock up on paper towels.


Oh, and there's the current prediction, too: Kerry 298, Bush 231.

Special End of the World Edition

This is it. 2nd November 2004. Hopefully it will be remembered for being the day that the United States finally snapped out of its zombie daze, elected John Kerry, who then set about correcting the wrongs that have been propagated over the previous four years.

Appropriately enough, the first song that came on iTunes this morning was Madonna's 'American Life'. I think I need to make a new cd to listen to today, starting with U2's 'Beautiful Day', since Kerry has been playing that a lot at his rallies, but prominently featuring The Boss. It's funny how, when I was a mindless child, I used to sing along with the chorus of 'Born in the USA' whenever it came on, and thought that it was all about how great it was to be born in the USA and how wonderful a country it was and all. Oh, the naïveté of the child.