aTypical Joe: a gay New Yorker living in the rural South

 

Thursday, June 05, 2008

Links for 2008-06-05

ON TMV TODAY

- Sandra Day O’Connor: Game Designer, Congratulations Alex, on a job well done! Wish I’d been there…

- Libertarian presidential candidate Bob Barr on The Colbert Report, also a link to his John McCain Green Screen Challenge and an unanswered call for TMV readers to point me to fun mashups of the three political speeches from Tuesday night.

YESTERDAY

- Gay marriage, the GOP, & the albatross, The California court rejected a stay of last month’s ruling on gay marriage and NY lawmakers are fighting to block Governor David Paterson’s directive that the state recognize same-sex marriages performed elsewhere. Lots of other links thrown in too.

- Osborn to be put to death tonight in Georgia: Case calls right to competent legal representation into question, I honestly thought we wouldn’t do it. We did it. I continue to hold out hope that we are at the beginning of the end of our punitive era.

OTHER LINKS:

- Obama keeps Dean at the DNC and will go with the 50-state strategy in the general.

- The Democratic Party Will No Longer Accept Washington Lobbyist Donations. ‘nuff said.

- I first heard about the alleged Michelle Obama whitey tape when I was in NY. Here my TMV coblogger anticipates Monday’s empty promises. Here a good link-filled update.

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Wednesday, June 04, 2008

Barack Obama Clinches Historic Democratic Nomination



Full text of Obama’s speech in extended entry.

Read the rest of "Barack Obama Clinches Historic Democratic Nomination" in the extended entry.

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Tuesday, June 03, 2008

Links for 2008-06-03

HOME SWEET HOME

We got back Friday, but there was storm damage. Nothing major. A tree down in the driveway, debris in the yard, outdoor lights and furniture damaged. The nephew’s car. We’re lucky. Spent the weekend cleaning up. The beginning of the week settling back in at work. The hit sultry southern summer’s almost begun… and I’ve got lots of links catching up to do!

ON TMV TUES 5/27

- Google says Viacom’s lawsuit against YouTube ‘threatens’ the Net, including a useful clarification of the difference between content and communication.

- A signal moment in the slow, painful meltdown of the broadcast TV industry, bad sweeps!

WEDNESDAY

- Same-sex marriage momentum, 51% of Californians think gay marriage should be legal

THURSDAY

- Republicans, The Colbert Bump & Same-Sex Marriage, Tony Perkins on The Colbert Report

- Linguist Geoff Nunberg on the meaning of “marriage”, I get peeved when they put quotation marks around the word “marriage.”

- Kiss your cable box goodbye, they’re building it into TVs. Now what about the Internet!!!

FRIDAY (on the road) SATURDAY

- Topsy-turvy: Republicans for Obama… Today’s Hillary protesters?, ah, the Democrats.

SUNDAY

- Vanity Fair on Bill Clinton’s “sometimes questionable associations”, skip the post, go directly to the article.

MONDAY

- Religion & Science, God & Politics: not such strange bedfellows after all, the “not precisely related” link is an important one.

- Apple moving from .Mac to Me? Adobe too?, I worried that this one was too techie for TMV. I only hope the Apple rumor is true!

- On Bill Clinton’s critique of the Vanity Fair piece about him, Jack Shafer’s, not mine.

TODAY

- Race, reason, and the Democrats in the 2008 primary season, more of me saying that we’re not as racist as we’re afraid we are… and that Obama can win Georgia.

- Nunn: it might be time to take another look at ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’, and why he won’t be Obama’s VP pick.

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Monday, May 26, 2008

Links for 2008-05-26

A family visit to my old Pennsatucky home in which the words “socialist” and “communist” were bandied about with abandon to describe me and the positions I hold and vile racist jokes were casually told in the living room has tested my “tolerance” and made me understand the truth about Josh Marshall’s Upcountry post in ways I never thought I would.

Later a fist fight broke out (I wasn’t involved) and my brother called my gay nephew (his son) who lives with my partner and me the old French derivative word meaning a bundle of sticks or branches, though, of course, he intended no such meaning.

We won’t be visiting home again for a good long time.

And I hope you’ll understand that I’m way behind on both blogging and links…

ON TMV FRI 5/23

- What explains the fading 5-to-4 at the Supreme Court?

- Holiday travel fun: trains, planes, and automobiles

- Leave bad enough alone: the FLDS case gone wrong

SATURDAY

- Cable prices go up, up, up

SUNDAY

- Web users “getting more selfish”

- How aware? How exposed?

- Libertarian Party picks Bob Barr as presidential candidate

TODAY I took a holiday.

- Tomorrow I’m off to FALLING WATER so there may be no blogging again. I am on vacation, after all!

- Actually this link says blogging is both good for you and an addiction, so they’re going to do a study…

- On the IP beat, Adidas claims it owns stripes!

- Old by now but not to be missed, Keith Olbermann’s “Special Comment” about Hillary Clinton invoking Bobby Kennedy’s assassination:

Because a senator—a politician—a **person**—who can let hang in mid-air the prospect that she might just be sticking around in part, just in case the other guy gets shot—has no business being, and no capacity **to** be, the President of the United States.

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Thursday, May 22, 2008

Links for 2008-05-22

Today was my last day in NYC so I’m late with links.

Last night we went to see the absurdly enjoyable, gleefully theatrical riff on Alfred Hitchcock’s “The 39 Steps” on Broadway; afterward we went backstage to meet one of the amazingly talented stars, Arnie Burton. Dinner at Vinyl rounded out (groan, couldn’t resist) the night.

ON TMV TODAY:

- The death penalty & Troy Anthony Davis

- Republican Memo: ‘The deepest GOP hole since the Great Depression’

- Let’s have more passionate newscasts!

OTHER LINKS

- DRM ALERT: Don’t give Microsoft the remote control - Bad Vista! Following reports that digital television viewers were blocked from recording the new season of NBC’s “Gladiators”, Microsoft confirmed that it is preventing users from recording the show.

- Georgia: publication features Obama in crosshairs on cover for article on white supremacist threat, spiralstairs @ Daily Kos and Blogs for Democracy have this too. Very alarming.

- Teen Alex Phillips puts girlfriend’s nude shots on MySpace: Child porn? - this is something I would typically give the full post treatment but given that TMV is skittish about such things I’m not sure where to go with this important topic. The kid was seriously out of line. The answer is NOT a child porn charge.

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Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Links for 2008-05-21

Today Doug and I celebrate our nine year anniversary!

And last night we went to see a performance by the man responsible for our first date. That man, Emmett Foster, was supposed to have dinner with me on that fateful night ‘lo those many years ago. But he had theater tickets so he wanted to bow out and suggested instead that I have dinner with Doug. I did and the rest is history.

Emmett was terrific last night at the Laurie Beechman Theater of the West Bank Café. He was performing in a comedy cabaret along with a couple of friends, Pat Candaras and Nancy Giles, who I hadn’t seen in a long time so I was thrilled to catch, and some unexpected acts—Matthew Cooper of Valerie Plame fame (who did a fun Al Gore) and Walter Shapiro of Salon.com—and a number of other performers. We had a fantastic time!

Meanwhile, at home a not tornado hit with baseball sized hail knocking down trees in our front yard, breaking my nephew’s windshield and generally causing mayhem. On to links…

ON TMV Yesterday:
- Congressman Broun To Introduce Constitutional Amendment To Ban Same-Sex Marriages

ON TMV TODAY so far…

- My first post edited for content. I had originally titled it:

- Kasparov Interrupted by flying dick, they chopped it down to Kasparov interrupted
Protesters had a “radio-controlled penis” interrupt an address by former chess champion Garry Kasparov. I posted it, with the video (deleted and replaced by a link) as a kind of light-hearted joke post. I alerted the TMV editors because I wondered if it might cross their boundaries, but I didn’t really think it would. Now I know....

- Racism and sexism: it’s time to change the paradigm - this is Richard Thompson Ford speaking at Google on his book, The Race Card.

OTHER LINKS

- If you don’t know Pat Candaras, you should. Nancy Giles too. They introduced her last night as, “the best thing about CBS Sunday Morning.” I love both CBS Sunday Morning and her.

- There was lots of talk about racism and sexism last night. Here’s a really good compendium of links to pieces dealing with the sexism/gender issue in the Democratic presidential primary campaign, Trumping reality with the sexism card.

- Hamilton Jordan, “a fun-loving political operative who helped propel a virtually unknown politician from the Georgia statehouse to the White House,” died last night in Atlanta. He was 63.

- In this piece—Earth to Democrats: Black votes count!—I almost dared to dream that Georgia and the South could go Blue this election season ("I’m left wondering if, hoping even, that with Blacks having moved back to the South, this religious, rural, evangelized, conservative Southern region that flipped from Democrat to Republican might surprise everybody and just as quickly flip right back").

- At lunch yesterday with my old Mediapolis colleagues they pointed me to this Marc Ambinder post:

Did you know that a half a million African Americans Georgia are eligible to vote but haven’t registered? The Obama campaign knows this. And they plan to register these voters by November

Dare to dream!

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Stretch (a fantasia)

The poster in the theater lobby

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the theater lobby
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Frankies 17

17 Clinton St, NYC

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Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Links for 2008-05-20

Breakfast yesterday at The Dish. The best French Toast! There I ran into my dear old friend Gretta Schiller. She’s lived in Chelsea for 25 years. I worked with her on Before Stonewall and tell just a bit about that here.

Last night we went to see Stretch (a fantasia) that “imagines the final days of Rose Mary Woods,Richard Nixon’s loyal secretary. Observing the 2004 presidential election from her swing-state nursing home. Thinking about power, and loyalty, and lying. And having some very strange dreams...”

The NYTimes review calls Kristin Griffith’s performance “commanding,” I liked the stoner boys too.

Dinner before at Frankie’s 17 has Doug and me talking about a hot dog joint for TJ. Don"t ask. Photo’s here. I’ll probaby post one or two on the blog later.

ON TMV Yesterday:

On markets, voters & behavioral economics

ONE SO FAR TODAY:

Prison Rape: How a difficult challenge is being addressed

OTHER LINKS:

I have to assume everyone in Georgia’s already heard about this one:
Jesus H. Christ: State GOP Chair Claims McCain Is ‘Kind Of Like Jesus’

Sonny prays for rain, she calls McCain Jesus. The Georgia GOP should keep it up! It’s the best get out the Democrat vote effort I can imagine…

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Monday, May 19, 2008

Links for 2008-05-19

I’m happily ensconced on 23rd Street in NYC!

Saw my dear friend Alex perform (beautifully, Bravo!) at Central City Chorus last night. Then had dinner at Suevos (?) on 17th St. in Chelsea. Heaven.

On to links…

SATURDAY AT TMV:

A helping hand for parolees in Kansas

On racial stereotypes & spending

NOTHING SUNDAY (a rare day off) ONE POST SO FAR TODAY:

Guns, gay marriage & a motivated electorate: Democrats are mad as hell. Are they going to take it anymore?

OTHER LINKS:

I’m pleased to see that, six months after being released from prison, Genarlow Wilson says college life is treating him just fine. If you’re not familiar with his case, some background here, here and here.

There was a clemency rally held for Troy Anthony Davis in Atlanta Saturday. Troy sits on death row in Georgia despite the recantations of seven witnesses who testified against him, despite the fact that no murder weapon was ever found and no physical evidence linked him to the crime, and despite the fact that he has maintained his innocence throughout. Learn more here and here.

I have a post at TMV about a 60 Minutes a segment on the Dallas DA and the Innocence Project that featured the story of James Woodard, who became the longest of any inmate in the nation to be cleared with the help of DNA evidence when he was released from prison last month.

We have innocent people in prison. We should err on the side of innocence, not guilt. The standard is guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. I do not understand how there can be no reasonable doubt with the facts as they are in this case. 

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Saturday, May 17, 2008

Today’s links

Friends and regular readers have said they find it difficult to find my posts at The Moderate Voice. What I will try to do is post links here every day to my posts there, along with links to articles of interest I’ve read that I may not have posted about. We’ll see how it goes…

From Yesterday...

Joshua Packwood: Morehouse Valedictory Man (he’s white)

Nepotism at West Virginia U

This one took a while…
We’re not as racist as we’re afraid we are

I’m working on a follow up to it. The post was motivated by Edwards’ endorsement of Obama. In it I say something like “Obama’s done a good job on hope but not so good on our fears...” The completion of that thought is he’s doing about as much as he can. We now have to step up to it, do our part. Edwards did that with his endorsement. I’ll say it better in a post to come…

THURSDAY

On miscegenation and gay marriage

California court overturns gay marriage ban

Jon Stewart on the West Virginia primary (very funny!)

WEDNESDAY

Oh, brother… UPDATED: He’s a father of 2 girls… Obama’s sweetie “gaffe”

Judge rules for straight student friend of gays in freedom of expression case

Love on Girls’ Side of the Saudi Divide

Maker Faire 2008: Steampunk, Robots, Devil-Ettes and more…

Now I’m off to NYC for vacation. I will try to update links every day so that you won’t have to go fishing for my posts at TMV!

PS - My take on Huckabee: the way they say the gay marriage decision will turn out Republican voters… that is NOTHING as compared to the way this will turn out Democrats. At the NRA convention no less, and in the context of what he was saying, it is so utterly and completely disgusting and revealing of the mindset and undermining of what they are trying to do. The news this week was already filled with stories on Republicans self-destructing. Huckabee was right on cue.

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Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Blogging update

You may have noticed I’ve been missing in action lately… Well, actually, I’ve been busy blogging at The Moderate Voice where I am grateful to have been welcomed as a regular contributor.

These are among the posts I’ve been most proud of while there:

Two on the NPR series on how parents are addressing their children’s gender-identity issues which aired last week, NPR: 2 families, 2 approaches to gender identity and most especially, On gender identity, amputee wannabes, & our contagious natures; McCain, abortion, Southern Baptists & the emergence of the Religious Right; Earth to Democrats: Black votes count!; Jeremiah Wright & Martin Luther King: “Tolerance” v. “Equality & Justice for all”; Fightin’ Words; Colbert & Stewart: One Formidable Opponent; Is mainstreet ready for gay PDA?

Unfortunately, I started blogging there just as the semester was winding down and work was heating up which means… the worst possible time! I was far too busy, had way too much to do to be able to keep everything going. Something had to give and, sadly, it was my own little blog.

As you may recall, I had been having troubles here. The fallout from the disastrous business relationship with E.Webscapes and Lisa Sabin-Wilson has left me in a quandary as to what to do about this site. It continues to have technical difficulties. I have closed down comments and have yet to settle on a long-term solution.

Meanwhile, there is no easy means to find my posts from among the others at TMV. And posting there is somewhat more time consuming than here on my own site. I’m trying to decide how best to address these issues and will let you know what I come up with shortly.

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Thursday, May 08, 2008

Fake palace boom across Germany

On Marketplace tonight:

A conference center planned for Hanover will look just like the Herrenhausen palace that was wiped out in 1943. In Potsdam, the state parliament just voted to move into a $200 million replica of a baroque palace. Frederick the Great stayed there sometimes. It was also destroyed in the war. Total cost, around $200 million. In Berlin, the government plans to rebuild the decimated former home of Prussia’s royal family. That tab, $700 million. Palace-building hasn’t advanced much in the past couple of hundred years. Stone masons, sculptors, 80 percent of the cost is labor, only now the workers are paid union wages. Why spend this much money to rebuild palaces that few Germans can even remember?

PETER SCHABE: It’s linked to an anxiety about globalization. People want a place to identify with, and they want to create cities that looked like they did a long time ago.

Peter Schabe works for the German Foundation for Historic Preservation. He says a lot of Germans are sick of modern architecture. These new-old buildings remind Germans of their proud past, while conveniently skipping the 20th century. This back-to-the-past movement started in Dresden, which was flattened by Allied firebombing. After Germany reunified in 1990, the city’s famed, domed Frauenkirche was resurrected from a pile of rubble. Today, nearly eight million tourists a year flood the city. Cities without palaces to rebuild, such as Frankfurt, don’t want to be left out. They’re building brand new “historic districts.”

A side-effect of all this? “Money spent creating fake new buildings means less money going to preserve authentic historic buildings.”

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Dream ticket a nightmare for Democrats

On Monday Andrew Sullivan had a piece about the possibility — and what he claimed was the powerful logic — of a unity Obama-Clinton ticket for the Democrats.

James Poulos powerfully disputes that:

They call it the “dream ticket” - a unity deal, brokered at the Democratic convention in Denver, Colorado, that puts both Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton on a bumper sticker and, hopefully, in the White House. Now that the mainstream media, Clinton’s greatest ally, has finally recognised the legitimacy of Obama’s triumph over her grinding and obdurate campaign, the dream ticket has lost any speculative vagueness of Beltway cocktail chat. Now, that dream is a matter of deadly seriousness - because it is now Hillary’s dream, and her last remaining option. Make no mistake: going into Denver with a heap of white votes and fortified by the new power of the post-Cheney vice-presidency, Hillary Clinton intends to force her way onto the ticket. If it knows what’s good for it, the Democratic party should stop her.

He details how Hillary has consistently put her own interests and passions above those of her party, everything that Obama’s about has demonstrated that he’s as good or better than she (wasn’t that why we went through this extended primary battle?), and there is no VP “problem” to begin with.

His conclusion:

The nomination of Barack Obama presents the Democratic party with more than its fair share of historic opportunities, and not just skin deep. Among these - and I think Obama would be the first to agree - are the possibilities which open when Democrats realise that the 2008 campaign is about more than the petty personalities of particular persons. Democrats have a once-in-a-generation chance, sorely needed, to fully refresh their national leadership. This chance has conveniently come at a time when Republican fortunes are at lows unseen since the last days of Herbert Hoover. To accept the GOP’s most profitable punching bag onto the national ticket after Democratic voters have plainly rejected her is to sacrifice the party’s best hopes to its worst habits. With American citizens of all persuasions crying out for fundamental change in Washington politics, such a failure hurts not just the Democratic party but the country as a whole.

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Wednesday, May 07, 2008

UGA spent $2.2M in New Orleans for Sugar Bowl

How the other half lives… The AJC reports on the school up the road:

It takes a lot of money to party with Georgia in New Orleans…

Georgia spent about $2.2 million, or $323,753.30 more than it was allocated, in New Orleans from Dec. 26-Jan. 2.

But the university will get that money back and more when the Southeastern Conference hands out its annual revenue distribution checks later this month. Georgia is expected to receive at least $10 million.

Perhaps that’s why the Bulldogs lived well while in New Orleans, according to information obtained by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution through state and federal open records laws.

The Bulldogs spared no expense. A massive group, including the president’s official party of 89 people, made the trip and went to numerous parties, all paid for by the athletic association. The 400-member Redcoat Band made the trip. So did the cheerleaders, Hairy Dawg and Uga.

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Michael Pollan @ Google

You know the drill by now, “Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.” Watch for the Q&A.


Via Boing Boing

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Tuesday, May 06, 2008

No honorary doctorate for anti-feminist Phyllis Schlafly

Washington University announced last week that they are giving Phyllis Schlafly an honorary doctor of humane letters.

Here’s Schlafly bio from her own organizations website:

Phyllis Schlafly has been a national leader of the conservative movement since the publication of her best-selling 1964 book, A Choice Not An Echo. She has been a leader of the pro-family movement since 1972, when she started her national volunteer organization now called Eagle Forum. In a ten-year battle, Mrs. Schlafly led the pro-family movement to victory over the principal legislative goal of the radical feminists, called the Equal Rights Amendment. An articulate and successful opponent of the radical feminist movement, she appears in debate on college campuses more frequently than any other conservative.

Emphasis mine. Here’s the definition of humane:

1. characterized by tenderness, compassion, and sympathy for people and animals, esp. for the suffering or distressed: humane treatment of horses.
2. of or pertaining to humanistic studies.

Not to, um, beat a dead horse, but by her own proclamation the woman is anything but! Apparently, 1,600+ students, friends, and others (including me!) on Facebook agree. They’ve set up a Facebook group:

This is the woman who lives the hypocrisy of having a career that takes her around the country lecturing “family values” groups on how women should stay home.

This is the woman who said of husband-wife rape, “By getting married, the woman has consented to sex, and I don’t think you can call it rape [sic].”

This is the woman who described sex education classes as “in-home sales parties for abortions.” Do her views fit with the future the men and women of Wash U’s graduating class see for themselves and their peers? Probably not. Then why honor her with them? Wouldn’t having someone like her in the midst of Wash U’s female graduates be incongruous at best, offensive at worst?

E-mail Chancellor Wrighton and let him know what you think! .

Jane Stone, coordinator of the Board of Trustees:

Inside Higher Ed asks, Is Phyllis Schlafly Worthy of an Honorary Doctorate? And says, “Washington University released a statement Sunday in which it said that honorary degrees require a unanimous vote of the Board of Trustees and are nominated by the unanimous vote of a board committee that is led by a trustee but that also includes students and faculty members.”

Oh, and making matters worse, Chris Matthews will deliver the Commencement address.

Via Jessica at Feministing.

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Lethal Injection Set for tonight

Our dubious distinction:

A Georgia man is set to be executed by lethal injection tonight. William Earl Lynd is to be the first inmate in the nation to be put to death since the Supreme Court held that the method is constitutional. Lynd’s clemency bid was denied yesterday by the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles.

More here.

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Monday, May 05, 2008

Excitement builds

I’m still thinking Obama’s our next president. No matter what the polling shows or the outcome of tomorrow. Hillary is indeed nothing of not dogged. But the numbers aren’t working for her.

AP:

Voter excitement, always up before a presidential election, is pushing registration through the roof so far this year — with more than 3.5 million people rushing to join in the historic balloting, according to an Associated Press survey that offers the first national snapshot.

Figures are up for blacks, women and young people. Rural and city. South and North.

Overall, the AP found that nearly one in 65 adult Americans signed up to vote in just the first three months of the year. And in the 21 states that were able to provide comparable data, new registrations have soared about 64 percent from the same three months in the 2004 campaign.

Voters are flocking to the most open election in half a century, inspired to support the first female president, the first black or the oldest ever elected.

Also, the bruising Democratic race has lasted longer than anyone expected, creating a burst of interest in states typically ignored in an election year.

Superdelegates are you listening?

Among the new voters in North Carolina is Shy Ector, 25, of Durham. She favored Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry while a student at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill four years ago, but never actually took the time to make sure she was registered to vote. Barack Obama’s candidacy was enough to make sure she did this year, she said.

“I was like ‘Oh, now this is a reason to vote. This is different,’” Ector said. “I was inspired and I was excited.”

New voters are generally less reliable. So there’s no guarantee this year’s newcomers will stick around in years to come — or even cast ballots in November if their candidate doesn’t make it.

“I will be very disappointed, and it will take me some time to recover,” Ector said of an Obama loss to Hillary Rodham Clinton. “I’m not going to say I’m just going to write off politics for good, but it does make you feel like you’re doing all this work for nothing, and nothing’s coming to fruition.”

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Still defending Wright

I’ve got a piece up at The Moderate Voice with a more in-depth articulation of my position on Jeremiah Wright.

Short version:

The historical movement shift of emphasis from “freedom and justice for all” to “tolerance” frees us to be intolerant of others, in this case Wright. Once marginalized, we don’t even have to ever address or deal with the substance of any of his arguments.

MEANWHILE.... Big Tent Democrat is betting on an 8 point win for Obama in NC.

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Saturday, May 03, 2008

The Empire Strikes Barack

1 day and 320,525 views…

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What happened to YouTube?

YouTube was down for an hour earlier. Om Malik speculates that maybe it was ”DNS hacks, domain expirations or aliens landing on the roof of YouTube office (OK I made the last one up).”

He tells us that YouTube receives about 10 hours of video per minute, and serves up terabytes of data per second and promises an update later. I’ll be curious to know what happened (and will post here too).

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Study: Most Facebook apps are silly, pointless

I defend Facebook, I think Facebook is all well and good, but Facebook is not for me. Why should it be? I’m a 53 year-old man!

But when I read that most Facebook apps are silly and pointless I have to wonder if Robert X. Cringely wasn’t right when he said that he was beginning to think that Internet social networking is another CB radio....

...destined to crash and burn.

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Friday, May 02, 2008

Ariely: Thoughts on gas prices

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What makes a design “Googley”?

The Official Google Blog says:

A small team gathered to discuss these questions and define the Googley Design Principles:

1.  Focus on people—their lives, their work, their dreams.
2.  Every millisecond counts.
3.  Simplicity is powerful.
4.  Engage beginners and attract experts.
5.  Dare to innovate.
6.  Design for the world.
7.  Plan for today’s and tomorrow’s business.
8.  Delight the eye without distracting the mind.
9.  Be worthy of people’s trust.
10. Add a human touch.

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