Month: July 2008
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Who are they? Part III
Who are who? They! The people who run our lives. While “they” are hard to define, I’ve always thought of them as one of those “I know it when I see it” sort of phenomena, although I’ve searched for definitions, noting that Herman Kahn characterized them as “a vast group of intellectuals” said to “suffer…
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I’m sure this won’t be my first disappointment….
I am sorry to see that John McCain has denied roughing up the Sandinistas: CARTAGENA, Colombia (AP) – John McCain denied a Republican colleague’s claim that he roughed up an associate of Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega on a diplomatic mission in 1987, saying the allegation was “simply not true.” Sen. Thad Cochran, R-Miss., told a…
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The gun nuts next door….
I criticize the Philadelphia Inquirer a lot, especially on the gun control issue. But today I was delighted to see some favorable coverage, if not of guns, at least of some gun owners, in the form of Natalie Pompilio’s review of photographer Kyle Cassidy’s Armed America: Portraits of Gun Owners in Their Homes. From the…
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Doggies for demolition truth
Much as I wish people wouldn’t drag dogs into the 9/11 Truther business, I found this and thought I should share it so that readers whose compassion knows no bounds might be better able to understand the Truther mindset. The meaning of the above is explained here (although not quite to my satisfaction): Nathan Janes,…
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Worthless Dotcomradery
I have Communists for Hillary (what a dumb thing to buy; it’s worthless), and I had Republicans for Obama (what a dumb thing to let go; it’s probably worth a fortune). But Communists for Obama? That’s taken and there’s even a blog at Barack Obama’s official web site. Damn. I never seem to get it…
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sacred grounds and sacrilegious objections
For the third day in a row, the Philadelphia Inquirer has been promoting a newly evolved “SACRED GROUND” meme — the idea that soil once occupied by colonial slaves is sacred. Central to this belief (at least in Philadelphia) is the idea that slaves belonging to George Washington ought to be considered important historical characters…
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Local News
The Sterling, Illinois man who went on a murder spree has been captured. GRANITE CITY, Ill. – Police and FBI agents captured an ex-convict suspected of killing eight people in two states as he smoked a cigarette outside of a southwestern Illinois bar Tuesday night. Nicholas T. Sheley, who was the subject of a multistate…
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Culture War is Religious War, claims Buchanan
Noting the hopeless religious divide between Barack Obama and James Dobson, Pat Buchanan (on Dobson’s side, naturally) argues that peaceful coexistence is impossible: Can Americans ever come together if we are divided in our deepest beliefs about morality and truth, where one side believes gay marriage is moral progress, the other holds it a moral…
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Gone are the days when my heart was young and…
This post by Ann Althouse cracked me up. To no end. Well, maybe to some end, because it made me think about the gay replacement issue. Not that I really knew or cared all that much. If people don’t want to use the word “gay,” it’s a free country, and I’d never make them. As…
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Think it can’t happen here?
I was appalled to read that a small business owner in England (a woman who operates a “urban and edgy,” and “funky” hair salon) was sued by a devoutly religious Muslim woman who refused to work without her head covered. Which means the owner has “had to shell out $8,000 for hurting a veiled Muslim…
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Mamet Goes Conservative
This is kind of old news, but I need a post today. So here goes. I used to know David Mamet from his time helping to get the St. Nicholas Theater on Halsted Street in Chicago going. I was actually living in the theater at the time and helped them set up their sound system.…