Pony Party, home for the holidays?

According to this Yahoo!News article, the Pentagon has opened up ‘military only’ air lanes to accomodate increased holiday travel…

Bush called holiday travel “a season of dread for too many Americans.” He said the problems with delayed flights are “clear to anybody who’s been traveling. Airports are very crowded. Travelers are being stranded and flights are delayed, sometimes with a full load of passengers sitting on the runway for hours.

“These failures carry some real costs for the country, not just in the inconvenience they cause but in the business they obstruct and the family gatherings they cause people to miss,’ the president said. “We can do better.”

There will also be changes in staffing and allocation of resources that will focus the FAA on getting planes to run on time, planned for both the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays.  [no surprise that no other ‘holidays’ were mentioned by name, is it?]

….ALMOST makes it seem like they care…..

as always, the floor is yours.  just please don’t recommend the pony party…

~73v

Docudharma Times Friday Nov. 16

This is an Open Thread: The debate starts now

Headlines, Calif. Court Rejects SUV Mileage Rules, Scientists Fault Climate Exhibit Changes, Poor Are Lagging in Hurricane Aid From Mississippi, Two Koreas agree rail timetable, U.S. to urge compromise in Pakistan, Balibo Five deliberately killed: coroner, A ‘battlefield of the mind’ in Iraq, Jordan’s Islamists Seek Offices Their Allies Scorn, Cypriot seeks to unravel curse with pants and egg, Powerful quake on Peru-Ecuador border, UN criticises Rio police killings, Hundreds of Nigerian robbers shot

Officials: Bangladesh cyclone kills at least 242 and some 650,000 others displaced by the storm, which is packing 150 mph winds and expected to cause severe flooding.

DHAKA, Bangladesh – A cyclone that slammed into Bangladesh’s coast with 140 mph winds killed at least 242 people, leveled homes and forced the evacuation of 650,000 villagers before heading inland and losing power Friday, officials said.

Tropical Cyclone Sidr roared across the country’s southwestern coast late Thursday with driving rain and high waves. The storm left about 242 villagers dead from falling debris, said Nahid Sultana, an official at a cyclone control room in Dhaka.

USA

Calif. Court Rejects SUV Mileage Rules

By Frank Ahrens and Carrie Johnson

Washington Post Staff Writers

Friday, November 16, 2007; Page A01

A federal court in California yesterday rejected the Bush administration’s new fuel economy standards for light trucks including SUVs, ruling that the government failed to take into account the effects of carbon emissions and their possible link to global warming.

The finding by a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit in San Francisco was a victory for environmentalists and several states that had sued over fuel economy standards, which were announced in 2006. It is among several recent court rulings that have urged greater attention to global warming.

Scientists Fault Climate Exhibit Changes

Smithsonian Head Denies Politics Altered Arctic Show Message

By James V. Grimaldi and Jacqueline Trescott

Washington Post Staff Writers

Friday, November 16, 2007; Page A01

Some government scientists have complained that officials at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History took steps to downplay global warming in a 2006 exhibit on the Arctic to avoid a political backlash, according to documents obtained by The Washington Post.

The museum’s director, Cristián Samper, ordered last-minute changes to the exhibit’s script to add “scientific uncertainty” about climate change, according to internal documents and correspondence.

Poor Are Lagging in Hurricane Aid From Mississippi

GULFPORT, Miss., Nov. 14 – Like the other Gulf Coast states battered by Hurricane Katrina, Mississippi was required by Congress to spend half of its billions in federal grant money to help low-income citizens trying to recover from the storm.

But so far, the state has spent $1.7 billion in federal money on programs that have mostly benefited relatively affluent residents and big businesses.

Asia

Two Koreas agree rail timetable

North and South Korea have agreed a timetable for establishing cargo rail services between their two nations, the first for over 50 years.

Trains will begin crossing the border on 11 December, connecting South Korea with an industrial zone in the North.

U.S. to urge compromise in Pakistan

By Paul Richter and Laura King, Los Angeles Times Staff Writers

November 16, 2007

WASHINGTON — Fearing the collapse of a friendly government, the Bush administration has begun a concerted public effort to salvage the embattled presidency of Pakistan’s Gen. Pervez Musharraf by pushing him to compromise with political opponents and abandon emergency rule, U.S. officials said Thursday.

U.S. envoys intend to warn their longtime ally that they believe his power is quickly ebbing, and that he must lift the 2-week-old emergency decree and work with former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and other opposition figures to stabilize the country. Underscoring the warning will be an implied threat that if he doesn’t take such steps, Washington is ready to work with others who will, officials said.

Asia Pacific

Balibo Five deliberately killed: coroner

A NSW coroner has referred the case of the Balibo Five to federal authorities for possible war crime prosecutions, finding the journalists were deliberately killed by Indonesian forces who had invaded East Timor.

Deputy State Coroner Dorelle Pinch today ended the inquest into the death of Brian Peters, the Channel Nine cameraman who was one of the five Australian-based newsmen killed during the Indonesian attack on Balibo village, in then Portuguese Timor, on October 16, 1975. She found he and his colleagues had been shot or stabbed by Indonesian special forces away from the heat of battle after they invaded East Timor.

Middle East

A ‘battlefield of the mind’ in Iraq

Using the Koran as a tool, a new strategy is aimed at turning suspected insurgents into model citizens.

By Alexandra Zavis, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

November 16, 2007

BAGHDAD — The men crouched on the floor of the carpeted tent listen intently to a cleric seated on a wooden bench in front of them, some leaning forward so as not to miss a single word.

Be patient, he tells them. Follow the prophet’s example. Forgive those who wronged you. Hands shoot up, and the round-faced imam in beige slacks and sneakers begins to take their questions.

Islamic teachings have been transmitted at such gatherings for centuries. But this is no religious madrasa. The tent is surrounded by fences topped with barbed wire, soldiers stand at its entrance and the students wear the yellow overalls of detainees at U.S. facilities.

Jordan’s Islamists Seek Offices Their Allies Scorn

ZARQA, Jordan – This crammed slum of four-story concrete housing blocs has given Jordan some of its biggest headaches: it is a stronghold of the opposition Islamic Action Front and the hometown of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who rose from here to the helm of the Iraqi insurgent group Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia.

Jordan’s political Islamists wield their most concentrated power here in this industrial city of 834,000 just a quarter-hour’s drive from the capital, Amman.

Europe

As Georgia Moves to End Emergency, Visiting Envoy Presses U.S. Agenda

By Tara Bahrampour

Washington Post Staff Writer

Friday, November 16, 2007; Page A25

TBILISI, Georgia, Nov. 15 — When visiting State Department official Matthew J. Bryza appeared on Georgia’s state television Wednesday night, much of the country tuned in, in part because there wasn’t much else to watch.

The country’s main opposition TV station had been off the air for seven days, shut down in the middle of a program after President Mikheil Saakashvili declared a state of emergency to stem anti-government protests. Outside, riot police had chased residents through the streets with billy clubs in the former Soviet republic that President Bush has called “a beacon of democracy.”

Cypriot seeks to unravel curse with pants and egg

NICOSIA (Reuters) – Having marital problems? Have you tried putting egg in your underpants?

ADVERTISEMENT

A woman in Cyprus is on trial for sorcery after pledging to shake off a curse apparently plaguing a man’s relationship with his wife and mother-in-law.

The suggested remedy consisted of an egg, a spoon, a nail, some pubic hairs and underpants, local media reported on Friday.

“She cracked the egg into my underpants,” the 37-year-old man told a district court in the capital Nicosia.

Latin America

Powerful quake on Peru-Ecuador border

QUITO, Ecuador – A powerful earthquake shook the border region of Ecuador and Peru late Thursday, but there were no immediate reports of injuries or major damage.

The U.S. Geological Survey said the magnitude 6.7 quake struck at 10:12 p.m. and was centered in a sparsely populated jungle region, about 150 miles southeast of Quito, the capital. Local media said the temblor was felt strongly in the country’s largest city, the port of Guayaquil.

The Ecuadorean Geophysics Institute said it “had reports that the quake was felt throughout the country.”

UN criticises Rio police killings

Tom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro

Friday November 16, 2007

The Guardian

Increasingly violent police operations aimed at combating urban crime in Rio de Janeiro are causing growing bloodshed and masking a wave of summary killings, a UN representative has warned.

On Wednesday, after an 11-day tour of four Brazilian states, the UN’s special rapporteur on extrajudicial executions, Philip Alston, told reporters: “The people of Brazil did not struggle valiantly against 20 years of dictatorship … in order to make Brazil free for police officers to kill with impunity in the name of security.”

Africa

Hundreds of Nigerian robbers shot

Nigeria’s police chief Mike Okiro has admitted that 785 suspected armed robbers have died in encounters with police in the last three months.

The Nigerian police force has been criticised by human rights groups for killing suspects instead of arresting them and giving them a fair trial.

What are you reading?

Just the usual list this week.  Suggestions for topics are welcome.

If you like to trade books, try BookMooch.

What are you reading?  is crossposted to daily Kos

Just finished:

Hogfather by Terry Pratchett.  Hilarious.  The auditors are trying to kill the Hogfather (Santa Claus) so Death takes over his job.

How Mathematicians Think by William Byers.

Last week:

Fascinating ideas about ambiguity, paradox, and math.

Really quite an amazing work, and relatively accessible.  I recommend it to anyone interested in math. Some of the later chapters get into some less accessible math, but I think they can be skipped around, without losing too much.  

I’ve read about 10 explanations of what exactly Euler’s formula (e ^ i*pi = -1) actually means.  I understand the arguments, but I still don’t really get it, intuitively.  On the other hand, this book has one of  the clearest explanations of the roots of unity that I’ve seen.  

This week:

It got a little repetitious toward the end, but nonetheless a fascinating read for anyone with an interest in math.

Continuing with

Causality by Judea Pearl.  Fascinating but deep.

Intro to Probability Theory by Hoel, Port, and Stone.  A good text.

The Elements of Statistical Learning by Trevor Hastie and Robert Tibshirani.  An in-depth look at a wide range of statistical techniques.  Beautifully produced.

The Politics of Congressional Elections by Gary Jacobson

the Difference Engine by Doron Swade.  Back in 1821 Charles Babbage invented and designed a computer.  But it never got built.  This book tells the story, and also the story of the author’s attempt to build that machine in the present day.

Just started

Thief of Time by Terry Pratchett.  Yet more Discworld fun.  

Muse in the Morning

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
Muse in the Morning

The muses are ancient.  The inspirations for our stories were said to be born from them.  Muses of song and dance, or poetry and prose, of comedy and tragedy, of the inward and the outward.  In one version they are Calliope, Euterpe and Terpsichore, Erato and Clio, Thalia and Melpomene, Polyhymnia and Urania.

It has also been traditional to name a tenth muse.  Plato declared Sappho to be the tenth muse, the muse of women poets.  Others have been suggested throughout the centuries.  I don’t have a name for one, but I do think there should be a muse for the graphical arts.  And maybe there should be many more.

Please join us inside to celebrate our various muses…

In 1992 I learned to speak my truths.  They were tentative at first, hardly more than notes about the reality of my life.  Later some of them became poems.  Still later, more poems were added to add the view of hindsight.  I’ve tried to arrange them into a cohesive whole.  Maybe it works.  Maybe it has more meaning this way.

There is a story that goes with this, about two people who spent some time together even though separated by half a world.  That relationship helped me grow as a person.

To April, if you might be reading…or someday will:  I will always have nothing but fond memories of our time together.

A Transition through Poetry XX

Art Link
Sextet

Love Does the Finding

Love departed when I changed

or at least what I thought was love

but it came with conditions

I could no longer fulfill

I despaired of ever finding it again

though I searched for it begged for it

cried long hours and days

at its demise and denial

Eventually one stops looking

I dedicated my life to helping others

while I resigned myself to being alone

It was then that love found me

–Robyn Elaine Serven

–February 13, 2006

I know you have talent.  What sometimes is forgotten is that being practical is a talent.  I have a paucity for that sort of talent in many situations, though it turns out that I’m a pretty darn good cook.  🙂  

Let your talent bloom.  You can share it here.  Encourage others to let it bloom inside them as well.

Won’t you share your words or art, your sounds or visions, your thoughts scientific or philosophic, the comedy or tragedy of your days, the stories of doing and making?  And be excellent to one another!

Federal Fuel Standards Tossed for Ignoring Global Warming

Bravo to the Judiciary branch for doing what the other two can’t or won’t do!

Since the U.S. government announced new fuel efficiency standards in March of 2006, environmentalists and 11 states have argued that the standards do not go far enough to combat the harmful emissions that lead to global warming.

Today, the Ninth Court of Appeals gave a victory to environmentalists and a “rebuke” to the Bush administration in ruling that regulators “failed to properly assess the risk of global warming” in part at least for exempting larger SUVs and trucks.

The court decision is a rebuke to the Bush administration and its refusal to make meaningful steps to reduce global warming pollution from our automobiles,” said Pat Gallagher, director of environmental law at Sierra Club. “The decision tells the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration that it can’t monkey the numbers when it sets fuel economy standards by ignoring the cost of carbon emissions.”

The court’s action invalidates the March 2006 fuel standards for minivans, light trucks and smaller SUV’s.

While there’s still a long way to go, this was the third in a small string of court victories in 2007 against the administration and in favor of environmentalists and states seeking to reduce global warming:

  • In September, a federal court in Vermont awarded a major victory to states seeking to regulate auto emissions that produce dangerous greenhouse gases. The Bush administration had argued that the state laws on fuel economy should be preempted by federal rules.
  • In April, the Supreme Court rejected an argument by the Bush administration that the Environment Protection Agency has no jurisdiction to regulate emissions. “The high court rejected that view…ruling 5-4 that the emissions were air pollutants and that the EPA must regulate them unless it comes up with scientific justifications for continued inaction.

Last week Republican Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and Democratic Attorney General Jerry Brown of California filed suit against the Bush Administration “demanding that the federal government act on a request filed nearly two years ago to let the state limit motor emissions of greenhouse gases.”

I’m heartened that the judicial branch continues to provide these victories against the administration; victories that help to fight global warming.

It would be even more encouraging if Congress and the Bush administration got together on serious legislation that attacked the problem. That would be a much quicker route than forcing conscientious citizens and state governments to sue the federal government in court, for not doing its job in the first place.

test diary

nothing here: testing future diary issues (possible glitch)

more of the same

Muse in the Morning

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
Muse in the Morning

The muses are ancient.  The inspirations for our stories were said to be born from them.  Muses of song and dance, or poetry and prose, of comedy and tragedy, of the inward and the outward.  In one version they are Calliope, Euterpe and Terpsichore, Erato and Clio, Thalia and Melpomene, Polyhymnia and Urania.

It has also been traditional to name a tenth muse.  Plato declared Sappho to be the tenth muse, the muse of women poets.  Others have been suggested throughout the centuries.  I don’t have a name for one, but I do think there should be a muse for the graphical arts.  And maybe there should be many more.

Please join us inside to celebrate our various muses…

In 1992 I learned to speak my truths.  They were tentative at first, hardly more than notes about the reality of my life.  Later some of them became poems.  Still later, more poems were added to add the view of hindsight.  I’ve tried to arrange them into a cohesive whole.  Maybe it works.  Maybe it has more meaning this way.

There is a story that goes with this, about two people who spent some time together even though separated by half a world.  That relationship helped me grow as a person.

To April, if you might be reading…or someday will:  I will always have nothing but fond memories of our time together.

A Transition through Poetry XXIX

Art Link
Sextet

Love Does the Finding

Love departed when I changed

or at least what I thought was love

but it came with conditions

I could no longer fulfill

I despaired of ever finding it again

though I searched for it begged for it

cried long hours and days

at its demise and denial

Eventually one stops looking

I dedicated my life to helping others

while I resigned myself to being alone

It was then that love found me

–Robyn Elaine Serven

–February 13, 2006

I know you have talent.  What sometimes is forgotten is that being practical is a talent.  I have a paucity for that sort of talent in many situations, though it turns out that I’m a pretty darn good cook.  🙂  

Let your talent bloom.  You can share it here.  Encourage others to let it bloom inside them as well.

Won’t you share your words or art, your sounds or visions, your thoughts scientific or philosophic, the comedy or tragedy of your days, the stories of doing and making?  And be excellent to one another!

Flatland


If I have seen further,

it is by standing on ye shoulders of Giants.


            – Sir Isaac Newton

I remember when I was in junior high school, we had to read a book called Flatland. It wasn’t a very long book – more like a novella, really – certainly not a weighty tome like The Iliad, or a classic work of literature like Great Expectations, both of which we also read. It was a small book, paperback, not much bigger than The Elements of Style, a book you could read in one sitting easily, if you stayed focused. I took two or three sittings, as I recall.

As I say, Flatland was no Iliad. But while Edwin A. Abbott’s opus didn’t carry the physical or cultural heft of Homer or Dickens, I remember to this day its lesson, a lesson about perspective, ignorance and arrogance.

Which brings me, unavoidably, to the Democratic Party.

hekebolos, in his diary today, relates his unique, well-founded “insider” perspective on the reality-defying beliefs of much of the power structure of the California Democratic Party. He cites this priceless quote from one of Sacramento’s Very Serious Democratic Power Brokers, who was pooh-poohing an effort to censure Sen. Dianne Feinstein for her votes on Michael Mukasey, FISA, and Leslie Southwick:


Bob Mulholland, a veteran party strategist in Sacramento[, said,] “Sometimes people can’t anticipate or can’t understand the big picture.”

Ya don’t say – Bob.

Flatland is the story of its narrator, a Square who resides in a two-dimensional world of geometric shapes, all of whom are confined to an infinite plane its inhabitants call Flatland. Confined as they are to two dimensions, Flatlanders have no concept of depth. Their experience of each other is limited to encounters along the same plane; the existence of angles to define the various Triangles, Squares, Pentagons, and so forth that populate Flatland is only vaguely guessed, since, from the Flatlanders’ perspective, angles do not exist – only lines of varying lightness and darkness (as they “angle” away from the viewer’s point of view).

The narrator’s world is shaken to its foundation when he encounters, in a rare millennial occurrence (interestingly, the book, written in 1884, is set on New Year’s Eve, 1999), a Sphere from Spaceland, the world of three dimensions (in other words, the world that we humans know). The Sphere, unable to convince the Square with logic and words about the existence of other dimensions, is left with no choice but to force the Square to join him, literally, outside the box.




“Back! back! [” exclaimed the Sphere. “] Away from me, or you must go with me – whither you know not – into the Land of Three Dimensions!”

“Fool! Madman! Irregular!” I exclaimed; “never will I release thee; thou shalt pay the penalty of thine impostures.”

“Ha! Is it come to this?” thundered the Stranger: “then meet your fate: out of your Plane you go. Once, twice, thrice! ‘Tis done!”

What the Square sees and experiences as the Sphere – a sort of geometric equivalent to Marley’s ghost – takes him on a tour of Flatland, Lineland (the one-dimensional world) and Pointland (a world consisting of only a single Point), all from the perspective of three dimensions – beggars the narrator’s powers of verbal description.

It is enough for the Square to be lifted just ever so slightly above the plane of Flatland – the only plane of existence he had ever previously known – to be able to see things he never could have seen otherwise, to see (as best he could describe it) “into” things that otherwise had remained closed.


Once more I felt myself rising through space. It was even as the Sphere had said. The further we receded from the object we beheld, the larger became the field of vision. My native city, with the interior of every house and every creature therein, lay open to my view in miniature. We mounted higher, and lo, the secrets of the earth, the depths of the mines and inmost caverns of the hills, were bared before me.

We really shouldn’t be surprised by the condescending, breathtakingly arrogant attitude demonstrated in Bob Mulholland’s remark. After all, he is simply saying in words what so much of the “mainstream” Democratic establishment in the U.S. Congress has been telling us with its actions over the past 10 months; that is to say, we know better than the people who put us here.

And, you know what? Who can blame them, really? I mean, they’ve lived, most of them, their entire adult life in the second dimension, lacking perspective, making judgments based on what they can see from their vantage point within the Inner Circles of the Democratic Party: wandering around the Flatland of party politics, always seeing the same people, always bumping into the same ideas, always fighting the same wars.

Democratic Party insiders, when they hear the voices of Real People coming from outside their Inner Circles, fume and sputter that somehow we are the ones who have gotten it wrong, that we are the ones who do not understand The Way Things Are:


“I am the Monarch of the world. But thou, whence intrudest thou into my realm of Lineland?” Receiving this abrupt reply, I begged pardon if I had in any way startled or molested his Royal Highness; and describing myself as a stranger I besought the King to give me some account of his dominions. But I had the greatest possible difficulty in obtaining any information on points that really interested me; for the Monarch could not refrain from constantly assuming that whatever was familiar to him must also be known to me and that I was simulating ignorance in jest. However, by preserving questions I elicited the following facts:


It seemed that this poor ignorant Monarch – as he called himself – was persuaded that the Straight Line which he called his Kingdom, and in which he passed his existence, constituted the whole of the world, and indeed the whole of Space. Not being able either to move or to see, save in his Straight Line, he had no conception of anything out of it. Though he had heard my voice when I first addressed him, the sounds had come to him in a manner so contrary to his experience that he had made no answer, “seeing no man,” as he expressed it, “and hearing a voice as it were from my own intestines.” Until the moment when I placed my mouth in his World, he had neither seen me, nor heard anything except confused sounds beating against, what I called his side, but what he called his inside or stomach; nor had he even now the least conception of the region from which I had come. Outside his World, or Line, all was a blank to him; nay, not even a blank, for a blank implies Space; say, rather, all was non-existent.

Alternatively, they dismiss those voices as mere imaginings:


“Look yonder,” said my Guide, “in Flatland thou hast lived; of Lineland thou hast received a vision; thou hast soared with me to the heights of Spaceland; now, in order to complete the range of thy experience, I conduct thee downward to the lowest depth of existence, even to the realm of Pointland, the Abyss of No dimensions.

“Behold yon miserable creature. That Point is a Being like ourselves, but confined to the non-dimensional Gulf. He is himself his own World, his own Universe; of any other than himself he can form no conception; he knows not Length, nor Breadth, nor Height, for he has had no experience of them; he has no cognizance even of the number Two; nor has he a thought of Plurality; for he is himself his One and All, being really Nothing. Yet mark his perfect self-contentment, and hence learn his lesson, that to be self-contented is to be vile and ignorant, and that to aspire is better than to be blindly and impotently happy. Now listen.”

He ceased; and there arose from the little buzzing creature a tiny, low, monotonous, but distinct tinkling, as from one of your Spaceland phonographs, from which I caught these words, “Infinite beatitude of existence! It is; and there is nothing else beside It.”

“What,” said I, “does the puny creature mean by ‘it’?” “He means himself,” said the Sphere: “have you not noticed before now, that babies and babyish people who cannot distinguish themselves from the world, speak of themselves in the Third Person? But hush!”

“It fills all Space,” continued the little soliloquizing Creature, “and what It fills, It is. What It thinks, that It utters; and what It utters, that It hears; and It itself is Thinker, Utterer, Hearer, Thought, Word, Audition; it is the One, and yet the All in All. Ah, the happiness, ah, the happiness of Being!”

“Can you not startle the little thing out of its complacency?” said I. “Tell it what it really is, as you told me; reveal to it the narrow limitations of Pointland, and lead it up to something higher.” “That is no easy task,” said my Master; “try you.”

Hereon, raising by voice to the uttermost, I addressed the Point as follows:

“Silence, silence, contemptible Creature. You call yourself the All in All, but you are the Nothing: your so-called Universe is a mere speck in a Line, and a Line is a mere shadow as compared with -” “Hush, hush, you have said enough,” interrupted the Sphere, “now listen, and mark the effect of your harangue on the King of Pointland.”

The lustre of the Monarch, who beamed more brightly than ever upon hearing my words, shewed clearly that he retained his complacency; and I had hardly ceased when he took up his strain again. “Ah, the joy, ah, the joy of Thought! What can It not achieve by thinking! Its own Thought coming to Itself, suggestive of its disparagement, thereby to enhance Its happiness! Sweet rebellion stirred up to result in triumph! Ah, the divine creative power of the All in One! Ah, the joy, the joy of Being!”

“You see,” said my Teacher, “how little your words have done. So far as the Monarch understand them at all, he accepts them as his own – for he cannot conceive of any other except himself – and plumes himself upon the variety of ‘Its Thought’ as an instance of creative Power. Let us leave this God of Pointland to the ignorant fruition of his omnipresence and omniscience: nothing that you or I can do can rescue him from his self-satisfaction.”

Ever since the elections a year ago that gave control of Congress to Democrats, the single overarching source of disagreement between Establishment Democrats and those who put them into power has been the matter of putting a halt to executive abuses of power, whether in the area of waging an illegal war, defying congressional oversight, violating duly enacted law, committing treasonous acts, abridging the civil rights of Americans, or engaging in war crimes.

Those who have loudly and repeatedly expressed dissatisfaction with the self-evident unwillingness of many congressional Democrats – including those in leadership positions, and especially including those who, like Feinstein, are in absolutely no danger of losing to a Republic challenger in the next election – to stand up and Do The Right Thing by the Constitution, are constantly being told by those self-same Democrats that It’s Too Politically Risky, that We Know Better Than You About These Things, that standing for the integrity of the Constitution is only worth it if you can succeed.

Such is the view of the Flatlander Democrats in charge of the party. Party before all, they believe:


State Democratic Party Chairman Art Torres did not return messages seeking comment. But his spokesman Roger Salazar told the Sacramento Bee, “this party supports our Democratic senator and will continue to do so . . . Period.”

That was a Democrat speaking – an establishment Democrat, aide to a very powerful Democrat in the California party.

Party before constituents.

Party before Constitution.

We get it.

Say no more.

You’re limited by your perspective, down on The Flats.

We understand.

It doesn’t take much of an elevation, a terribly heightened perspective, for one to rise above the Flatland of party politics.  And once one has attained that elevation it is easy for one to see inside all of the petty, cautious, fearful, ambitious, venal, small-minded  machinations and reveal them for what they are.

An elevated perspective also gives the viewer an ability not only to see more of what is going on, it also allows him to put what is going on into context, to see how what is going on fits into, relates to, affects everything else that is going on. It allows the viewer to act more effectively, with greater knowledge of – guess what, BobThe Really Big Picture.

The framers of our Constitution had a perspective that allowed them to create a framework that has withstood – so far – the test of time.  They were literally children of the Enlightenment, imbued and conversant with the ideas not only of Hobbes, but also of Locke and Rousseau.  Their life experience and worldview made it possible for them to pen words like, “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness,” without sounding ridiculous.  Can you imagine more than a small handful of today’s political figures being able to write such words, such powerful words, words that would not only stand the test of time, but would speak truth about the human condition, truth that would transcend age, income, race, creed, or any other demographic cubbyhole?  

It’s not that those “Democratic insiders” who reside in Flatland cannot perceive the vantage point of the framers of the Constitution; it is just that, to those whose entire political existence has been taken up with party politics, the higher perspective and context provided by the Constitution is merely a dot in the firmament, something abstract and out of reach, a bright, twinkling light painted on the dome of the sky that, at most, revolves around the party-centric world of the political insider, and not the other way around. Democratic Flatlanders believe – and demonstrate it every week in Congress by the choices they make – that the very document that forms the framework within which their entire two-dimensional political universe exists is much less important than the political folderol that that document has made it possible for them to waste their time pursuing.


If I have seen further,

it is by standing on ye shoulders of Giants.


            – Sir Isaac Newton

Do we have any such Giants among us?

And the truth is, we’re not even asking for Giants. We’re just asking for elected officials who will elevate themselves just enough to rise above the level of party politics, who will move just slightly toward that firmament of Constitutional thought, to gain just enough perspective to see all of the petty machinations down in political Flatland for what they are: two-dimensional twaddle told by idiots, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.

We demand that our elected officials join us in the rich, challenging, meaningful, messy third dimension of politics: that whose baseline is the Constitution, and in which exists the only possibility for the continued success of this experiment called the United States of America.

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The Stars Hollow Gazette

Fall is election time for capo di tutti.  Currently the Corleones are content to watch from a distance for the most part.  After Michael and I cleaned up the joint and moved to Nevada things have been quiet for the family, not that we haven’t seen a few bodies buried.

This is real politics-

Harold is a veteran who has run before and lost, to both me and Michael among others.  This time he was unopposed until 2 days before the election.  He has the very best resume among all the current members.

A lock?

We have planning meetings where we democratically develop our platform (have an agenda? nobody comes).  At one meeting this year that Harold attended (because that’s what you do as a candidate) he vociferously opposed a really stupid idea which was adopted.

There was a really talented gal who will do an outstanding job, all of the retired capi had been recruiting her all year, but she would only run if her arch enemy (not Harold at all) ran.

So she got an email that Harold had been a supporter of this ludicrous notion (which would have been ignored anyway and which was a total lie), and on the spot her Al Gore campaign started and in three days she was capo di tutti.

Badda Bing.

Hmm… what does Don Vito notice?

Who was in that poorly attended meeting?  Who has relationships with our new Capo?  Are they attempting to clear the field?

That is politics.

Netroots Go Boom

What a day,

This was all foreshadowed recently on Bill Maher’s show when Kos was speaking of the netroots in the past tense, apparently without even realizing it.  He said that news media wasn’t allowing critical voices to be heard a few years ago which is why DailyKos became so popular but failed to point out the critical work being currently done and did not even mention the future of the netroots.

On a previous media appearance Kos said that anyone who posted photoshopped pictures on his website was an idiot. I figure that ruled out about 35% of the top posters who were now completely ignored as idiots by the guy they were helping to make rich.  Arrogant?  Hell yes.  Self serving?  Ahuh.  

So perhaps we need better leaders.  Perhaps here we need A leader.  Because right now we aren’t accomplishing a hell of a lot.

Did the netroots go boom?

Is it worth salvaging?  Or have our leaders already left us for the country club?

Kucinch: The Constitutional Convention Initiative and more! w/poll