May 27, 2008 archive

The Weapon of Young Gods #24: Ruinous Smackdown Fallout

My head is still swimming from multiple blunt traumas long after Olivia left me in the ruinous fallout of her smackdown. The night is quiet again, but I feel like the whole neighborhood just heard her nuke my self-confidence and curse me with the “stalker” epithet. I try to forget about it as the Civic creeps along Camino Capistrano back down the hill toward Coast Highway. I actually almost banish tonight’s shame with an even more trivial memory that bubbles up: eons ago, I came shamefully close to failing my driving test in this very neighborhood. This is almost too ridiculous to acknowledge, so I try to pay attention to the road as I drive back up the coast to Dana Point.

Previous Episode

Conflicting NYT/WaPo Articles on IAEA Report on Iran

The New York Times and The Washington Post are both running stories for tomorrow about a report on Iran issued Monday by the International Atomic Energy Agency.  

The two articles read as if they were written on different planets.

The NYT article is written with a tone of alarm; suggesting or implying that the IAEA report — which has not been made public — claims that the Iranians are working dilligently towards making a nuclear weapon.

The tone of the WaPo article is exactly the opposite.

Pony Party, wherein i confess my suckitude

ok, so i really, really meant to find an interesting item to discuss this morning, and post the most inviting pony evah!!!….even though the morning population doesnt necessarily notice or care what i actually put in  ðŸ˜‰  (for which i thank you profousely)

Enlightened Justice

Your resident historiorantologist has lately been puzzling over the matter of how it is that Alberto Gonzalez and the current rubber-gavel-wielding “Chief US Law Enforcement Official” have not been brought before the World Court to stand for their crimes.  Clearly, it doesn’t take the piercing legal intellect of a Harriet Miers to recognize that torture goes against everything Americans believe in – our nation is, after all, a product of the Enlightenment, that 200-or-so-year period starting around 1650 in which thinking humans chose to recognize science, redefine the roles of government and the governed, and repudiate things like tyranny.  Given this definition, of course, the aforementioned “legal” experts clearly are not Enlightened individuals, but closer examination of what actually went on before the bar back then shows that the Gitmo Gang would find themselves right at home dispensing “justice” in a court of that era.

So join me, if you will, in the Cave of the Moonbat, where tonight we’ll look at criminal justice in the Age of Powdered Wigs – and may find that the current cadre of ethics-averse thugs running our penal/information extraction system would have been right at home in an Enlightenment court.

Well past time Memorial Day honor veterans against war

Memorial Day weekend has come and gone. All weekend, I saw veterans honored on television, the newspapers, parades, etc. I saw more than my share of yellow ribbons, American flags, 21-gun salutes and more. But something was missing, something I wish would be covered every Memorial Day, voices of dissent, especially from those who served our country.  

Don’t get me wrong. I support the troops. I support them just as much as those who support war efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan. I also support veterans in past conflicts. For many of them, Memorial Day means everything. However there are other veterans that never get heard. They are silenced, ignored and misunderstood because they have something vastly different to share. I’m talking about those veterans who served their country, survived the horrors of war and heal their wounds through advocacy efforts.

It pains me veterans organizations advocating for peace are always overlooked on Memorial Day. For many of these organizations, getting into a Memorial Day parade can be a controversial ordeal. In Bremerton, Washington, Veterans for Peace were told to stay away from this year’s festivities. Why? Why should we honor one idea of veterans and not the other? Why is it controversial to honor veterans who want their service be remembered differently? It seems that every Memorial Day, we miss another opportunity to honor veterans in a different and meaningful context. It’s time we open our minds to what does a Veteran mean. It’s well past time we honor those who speak out against war.  

War is traumatic and many veterans who speak out against their actions (or their government’s policies) want their experiences to be validated, understood, and accepted. Anti-war veterans organizations must honored the same way that many of us honor Veterans of Foreign Wars, the American Legion or Disabled American Veterans, every Memorial Day. All veterans must be honored, even those who speak out against war.  

I honor those who want to be remembered for their service. I honor those who lost their lives fighting for what they believed in but I also honor those who experienced the other side of war and want to make our country and our communities, a more humane place. This Memorial Day I also honor the Veterans for Peace, Courage to Resist, Gold Star Families for Peace, Military Families Speak Out , Iraq Veterans Against the War, Vietnam Veterans Against the War, and Veterans Against the Iraq War. I’m sure there are many more. They served America and they love their country. It’s well past time we honor them every Memorial Day.

Funkaliscious Monday: Stevie

I don’t know about any of you, but I missed Buhdy’s Funkaliscious Friday this week. So I thought we could make up for that a bit tonight. I’m afraid I’m sadly lacking in the ability to come up with a catchy theme like Buhdy and others have so often done. But hey, if we’re talking funk, who better personifies that than Stevie Wonder?

Here’s the early one:

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