31 August 2009

Article: "At 29, Depeche Mode is now post-post-punk"

















Love the catchy headline: "...post-post punk".  Our efforts to lay latticework upon latticework in order to categorize and taxonomize is grand.  Depeche Mode what - is post-punk, so that would make them New Romantic...?  Synth...?   Click HERE to read the article.

Heh.

Miracle unfolds as diver is saved by whale



30 August 2009

"Teachable moments": Doublespeak for "Caution, P.C. pitfalls near"

I love how everything's a "teachable moment" after elitist Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. accused police Sgt. James Crowley of being a racist, and President Obama needlessly injected himself into the swirling fracas. Surely advised to diffuse the growing race crisis he himself had fomented, President Obama invited both to the now famous "Beer Summit," and called the grievous errors in judgement "a teachable moment." Journalist Katie Couric used the term in a different situation in an interview.

'Take that thing off your head'
by WorldNetDaily
"Maybe it's because her dad served in the U.S. Marines ... or because her high school mascot is a fierce-looking eagle ... or because she plans to enlist in the Army next summer after graduation to defend her country ... whatever the reason, when Heather Lawrence saw a Muslim student refuse to stand for the Pledge of Allegiance and recite it with the class, the 16-year-old Junior ROTC member saw a teachable moment and took it. And for that, she's been suspended five days."
Read the latest now on WND.com.

"You have someone in the States who is able to enjoy our educational and health care systems, yet it's okay for them to be disrespectful, and it's not okay for my daughter to speak her mind," Mark Lawrence told the Tampa Tribune. "That's her First Amendment right. That's her freedom of speech."

A real teachable moment would be to urge people, including the disrespectful immigrant child in the story to start loving their country and not parading their defiance around like they're anything special.

26 August 2009

"She's So Gone" by Cause and Effect


With a bottle of wine
and two friends of mine
We could head to the hills
There's no need for those pills


Under fractal trees and a fractal sky
we are everything


All she needed was,
was a push from us

Now she's learning to fly

She's so gone
but so am I
Both of us been learning to fly
She's so gone
she'll touch the sky

And now I don't know what I'm feeling

Can't remember feeling this high
-
C&E interview here:

23 August 2009

Feature: Quotation mark madness!!!

Needing guidance when using quotation marks? I LOVE THIS!!!

SURELY this author is the 9th degree grandmaster of punctuation, the "Neo" of grammatical usage!
-------------------

653 "Single quotation marks are used to punctuate a quotation within a quotation. Double and single quotation marks are alternated in order to distinguish a quotation within a quotation within a quotation."

"I never read 'The Raven'!"
"Did you hear him say, 'I never read "The Raven" '?"


-------------------

-Excerpted from Writer's INC, 1990, Write Source Educational Publishing House

Marvel at the little quotation marks dancing around with such precision in this most trying of situations. These guys are such underdogs - and so easily misunderstood. Despite seeing them move with such affective grace here, I suffer to see them treated with such disregard these days...

655/656/657 "Periods and commas are always placed inside quotation marks. An exclamation mark or a question mark is placed inside quotation marks when it punctuates the quotation; it is placed outside when it punctuates the main sentence. Semicolons or colons are placed outside quotation marks."

-Ibid.

19 August 2009

"What am I doing here?" moments



I walked in Sears today at 1:30 p.m. Brisk jazz was playing, the kind you'd hear in a Peanuts sketch. I'm on a mini-vacation, and not going anywhere special. Other than me, I wondered, "What are everyone's excuses for being strolling through the mall on a Wednesday afternoon?"

At that time I felt detached, probably due to the walking and jazz without being in a nightclub, stiff potion in hand. Maybe the energy in the jazz made me feel guilty for walking without a purpose. I shook off the feeling of lonely streetlamps and trees.

Ah, the richness of experience.

On a brighter note, I saw ultimate justice (TM) delivered after a self-absorbed idiophite female almost ran me off the road. I blared on the horn, and as lights came flashing and traffic slinkied to a halt, she was pulled over seconds later by the policeman driving in front of me, who was witness to the whole thing. Boy, that felt good.

15 August 2009

Bombshell indictment of Donkey shenanigans appears in Salon.com

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, whom I used to admire for her smooth aplomb under pressure, has clearly gone off the deep end with her bizarre rants about legitimate town-hall protests by American citizens. She is doing grievous damage to the party and should immediately step down." - Camille Paglia

Excerpted from: http://www.salon.com/opinion/paglia/2009/08/12/town_halls/index.html


Camille Paglia is the University Professor of Humanities and Media Studies at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia.


No need for me to boast in a period of national political turmoil, so please don't interpret this as such. However, there is a need to rally - being that events fall ever quickly from public consciousness in time for the next news story - and it is the shift in balance of what's making news today that deserves examination.

A haymaker of an article appeared in Salon.com this week (Wow, on Salon?), probably leaving many rat-out-your-parents ethics libs catatonic. This honest indictment by Camille Paglia is some of the finest writing I've seen: graceful, dot-connecting, cogent. Rarely will one of the left's own have the honesty to dare criticize her cronies. Some of the GOP ignore this painful lesson (prominent voices in the party admit they're in disarray and have long been in tatters), but Sen. McCain, the former presidential candidate obviously hadn't when he impaled himself with his own lance, courting the hispanic "open-the-floodgates" lobby, and shishkebabing the rest of the party with him.

So when honest, courageous voices like Paglia's surface, we need to listen well. Her courage invested with this is pallates taller than the shoebox I saw mustered by the GOP in producing a leader for the 2008 election. It's courage we've seen highly evident in these vitriolic town hall meetings capturing so much press (!) and I'm hopeful for Salon for producing an alternative viewpoint. I won't go as far as being "optimistic" though.

Americans, far too long feeling helpless to throw a wedge in the revolving door of legislators and MSM antics quickly forget what a house of cards is in their midst. How often can grassroots America stand by while their intelligence is insulted? From "flyover states" to "astro-turf," it's evident how far out of touch the liberal elite is with its constituency. A unique feature of Paglia's article is making us confront the cumulative nature of these looney goings-on in government. She not only talks the health-care reform debacle, she stacks up all the other remarkable stories which had quickly scuttled away, winds up, and sends them all reeling:

  • Speaker of the house (3rd in line to the Presidency) "Representative" Nancy Pelosi calling private citizens "Nazis"

"House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, whom I used to admire for her smooth aplomb under pressure, has clearly gone off the deep end with her bizarre rants about legitimate town-hall protests by American citizens. She is doing grievous damage to the party and should immediately step down."

  • - Not-so subtle caste warfare from the White House (Don't jump to dismissing the storied "beer summit" and criticism as racism)

"Of course, it didn't help matters that, just when he needed maximum momentum on healthcare, Obama made the terrible gaffe of declaring that, even without his knowing the full facts, Cambridge, Mass., police had acted "stupidly" in arresting a friend of his, Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. Obama's automatic identification with the pampered Harvard elite (wildly unpopular with most sensible people), as well as his insulting condescension toward an officer doing his often dangerous duty, did serious and perhaps irreparable damage to the president's standing. The strained, prissy beer summit in the White House garden afterward didn't help. Is that the Obama notion of hospitality? Another staff breakdown."

"But somehow liberals have drifted into a strange servility toward big government, which they revere as a godlike foster father-mother who can dispense all bounty and magically heal all ills. The ethical collapse of the left was nowhere more evident than in the near total silence of liberal media and Web sites at the Obama administration's outrageous solicitation to private citizens to report unacceptable "casual conversations" to the White House."



Paglia's article is a modern-day Crisis. Thomas Paine would be proud. Pulitzer, please.

14 August 2009

Article & Commentary: School prayer charges stir protests

See article: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/aug/14/criminal-prayer-case-stirs-protests/?page=1

Commentary by "Jaeger"

"The ACLU, via its distortion of the Constitution and the heavy-handed cooperation of Judge Rogers, has managed to turn Santa Rosa County School District into their little police state, replete with stool pigeons, snitches, and informers spying on student body members, teachers, and local officials for any information for which they can use to strengthen their chokehold on this peaceful, most livable of communities."

"If Mr. Lay and Mr. Freeman are imprisoned under the auspices of some gross perversion of constitutional law, then it is very clear that this is not the America that our forefathers fought to uphold, strengthen, and defend with all that they had. If this should happen at the hands of this activist judge, then it is time for the states to reevaluate their relationships vis a vis the federal government and its oppressive judiciary. "

"The time has come for citizens to take a stand against the oppression of radical secularist groups such as the ACLU who have taken the courts from being forums of justice to becoming their instruments of imposing their values upon others via this legal terrorism. A ruling by such a federal judge as this should be rightly nullified by the State of Florida immediately, and Florida should use its state and county police to resist U.S. Marshals from taking Mr. Lay and Mr. Freeman into incarceration."

07 August 2009

Facing the Wind



Facing the Wind, by The Fixx

Just give me something to hold on
A piece of the world
That won't go wrong
Is there somebody there
I can talk to
Somebody sharing the same view


Facing the wind


One avenue that would lead to
A place on this earth
Where we all grew
Longing for travel we stood still
Watching a sky that was once blue


Facing the wind



Each line we throw
Gives us false hope
One ray of light, God I can't cope
Thinking about what we all are
One human race that's gone too far

Facing the wind...





06 August 2009

Are you a just a leaf in a stream?


I enjoyed this discourse between radio host Dr. Michael Savage and a caller - "John" from New York City. In this transcript, Dr. Savage used a simple but beautiful analogy on free will and religion, and the sense of a powerful communication being made was very clear. Beyond the caller, I wonder how many listeners pondered the exchange.


Hr. 3 22:03, 27 July 09

Caller John: “My personal belief is however the universe works, whatever happens to us is just that, whatever happens - happens irrespective of whatever belief system we believe in.”

Dr. Michael Savage: “So you think you are just a leaf in a stream going downstream and there's nothing you can do as a leaf.”

J: “I'm sorry?”

S: “You believe you are like a leaf and thrown into a stream and you are just moving along and you have no effect upon the stream itself.”

J: “I have an effect on this world if I choose to but not...”

S: “You’re saying you have no free identity and no free association? You can't make your life become what it should be? You can't alter situations and affect the outcome of your life?”

J: “I certainly can, but not after death... as I said, however the…”

S: “Wait wait wait I wanna I want to back up on this, because many people think they're just leaves in a stream, and they have no effect on their destiny.

J: “Just because you believe in Christianity, it's up to the universe...”

S: “Do you believe your acts while you're living will have any impact on what happens afterwards?”

J: “I don't know, but I will tell you I definitely try to do the right thing in life just in case.”

S: (Laughing) “There’re many reasons to do the right thing, some of them are based on selfish motives such as... [unknown] Just in case I happen to subscribe to that as well... I want to gamble that there is a judgment day, not necessarily because I'm such a good person!”