Saturday, October 08, 2005

Here's the Thing About Bush

Here’s the thing about Bush. His administration is like every office in which I’ve ever worked, especially the NJTPA from which I recently retired.  He’s a frightened, narcissistic chief executive who attained his position by dubious means and maintains a sense of false superiority by surrounding himself with mediocrity.  His minions are remarkable only by their willingness to suffer his temper tantrums and bad behavior and his immature demands for jollity at their expense.  He and his minions spend their days ridiculing competence and excellence as an affront to their G-d given right to rule. Meanwhile they wheel and deal to get whatever they can, while they can.  The jig is up.  It’s about time.

October 8, 2005
The Trouble With Harry
By MAUREEN DOWD

Conservatives may consider Harriet Miers the last straw.

But what will Harriet Miers consider the last straw with conservatives?

Maybe it will be Bork Borking her.

The old Supreme Court nominee reject rejected the new Supreme Court nominee, calling her "a disaster on every level" and "a slap in the face" to conservatives. Robert Bork complained to Tucker Carlson on MSNBC last night that Ms. Miers had "no experience with constitutional law whatever," that it was wrong for W. to choose a justice simply to have a woman's perspective and that conservative reaction veered between "disapproval and outrage."

WHAM! BLAM! POW!

Way to crack the gal right across the kisser, when she's already on the ropes from so much conservative wailing and gnashing of teeth.

Senator Sam Brownback suggested it would be futile for the "very decent lady," as he dismissively called her, to compete with John Roberts's masterly performance because that would be like "following Elvis."

Pat Buchanan told Keith Olbermann that conservatives were "agonized," "depressed," and "virtually heartbroken," and Charles Krauthammer wrote: "If Harriet Miers were not a crony of the president of the United States, her nomination to the Supreme Court would be a joke, as it would have occurred to no one else to nominate her." Ouch.

Conservatives are shocked to discover that President Bush has been stuffing his administration with cronies and mediocrities in important places? If Ms. Miers were a sworn foe of Roe v. Wade and an ardent advocate of originalism in constitutional jurisprudence, would the same conservatives be so sick about her qualifications? Clarence Thomas, after all, was anything but a leading light of American jurisprudence.

The New Republic this week chooses the biggest 15 hacks in the Bush administration, noting that "no administration has etched the principles of hackocracy into its governing philosophy as deeply as this one." Ms. Miers wins at No. 1.

W.'s case for her elevation is their closeness, because she is, as Alexander Hamilton put it, one of the "obsequious instruments of his pleasure."

But there is some sign, at least, that there are limits to cronyism, even for the Bush administration. The president had nominated Timothy Flanigan to be deputy attorney general, a job in which he would oversee all U.S. attorneys, the criminal division of Justice and the F.B.I. His qualification for this was a stint as Alberto Gonzales's deputy White House counsel, a job where he helped write the torture memos. In Congressional testimony at one point, he said that waterboarding was a good thing, because it doesn't leave visible or permanent marks. After his White House stint, Mr. Flanigan was a senior executive at Tyco International, where his main contribution was hiring Jack Abramoff, the Republican influence peddler, to protect Tyco's offshore tax shelters. Yesterday, Mr. Flanigan withdrew amid growing questions.

The right is right about Ms. Miers's insufficiency to join the Brethren, even if the right is cynical. Actually, there's a lot of cynicism in the Miers affair. Those on the left are perfectly happy to look away from mediocrity because it is the lesser of two evils, because they were spared the nightmare of a reactionary maniac.

W. is so loath to leave his little bubble - where caretakers tell him how brilliant and bold he is - that he keeps selecting the people in charge of the selection committees. It's just so much easier to choose a sycophant who's already in the room than to create one from scratch.

He used to disdain pointy-headed liberals from Yale, but now he's angry at pointy-headed conservatives demanding some sort of genius for the Supreme Court, rather than a den mother who did all of W.'s legal wet work and who prefers John Grisham to Leo Strauss.

While the Bushies have been trying to reassure the right that W. knows Harry's heart, that she's a good Christian church lady who will vote in a way that will please them, Harry is probably working herself up to a good grudge against all those meanies who are savaging her as a lightweight apple polisher. Imagine! After she rechristened herself midlife as born again and Republican for them.

Even if she was going to be a loyal conservative jurist before, why should she be now, after all the loathsome things they've said?

The old maxim goes that a neoconservative is a liberal who got mugged by reality. But if you're a conservative mugged by conservatives, neo and paleo, it may have the opposite effect and turn you into ... David Souter!!!!

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Sunday, September 25, 2005

Birthdays

9/25/2005 5:55 AM

It’s my birthday and I can’t sleep.  I’m tired but that isn’t enough anymore.  

I keep thinking about my life:  the things for which I am lucky and the things for which I’m not.

I can’t decide which wins.

On the one hand, I don’t live in Faluja or Saudi Arabia or New Orleans; but I live right on top of a canyon of carbon monoxide generated daily by thousands of internal combustion engines traveling the Jersey Turnpike and GW Bridge.  

I have genuine love in my life from my sisters and I suppose from Chris, but I have to witness one of those sisters struggle with multiple sclerosis in a nursing home while I remain living an apartment that is full of memories of her.  Each wall, corridor and room has a memory of her that used to make me cry in remembrance.  I wish I could forget but I can’t.  

I miss Sharon’s company more than anything.  I hate that she’s not around anymore.  I still have the last set of birthday cards she bought me; because she can’t or won’t do that anymore.  It’s the little things that hurt the most:  her picking me up in her car so we can go someplace together; me calling her whenever I make something so she can be the first to share it; complaining, laughing; going on vacation together.

We still talk every day; twice a day; I spend three days a week with her.  We still laugh and eat but it’s now done in alien territory from which she cannot escape.  

I am free of that horrible job and those people who had nothing but contempt for me and lucky that Chris is so generous that I can have these few years to do what I like but I still want recognition that I suppose I’ll never get despite my pretensions as a playwright.  I do enjoy the time spent collaborating but I was hoping something would come of it and I see now nothing ever will.

Is my life worth anything?  I wonder.

Thursday, July 07, 2005

New Statesman - Arts - Real people power, or pernicious platitudes?

Saturday, June 25, 2005

Yogi the Pug Home page

Thursday, June 23, 2005

More on Geldof's Bid for Attention

The Observer | OMM | The Gallagher interview in full


Sunday June 19, 2005

David Walliams: The first time I ever saw you, you were getting into a taxi in Camden. This was probably about 1995. I sort of bowed down and you waved out the window like the Queen, and from that moment I've always loved you.

Noel Gallagher: I don't remember that.

DW: Of course you don't remember that.

NG: It is the kind of thing I fucking do.

....

DW: Do you feel any guilt about being wealthy?

NG: No. Not at all. None. I was signing on 13 years ago. Absolutely no guilt whatsoever.

DW: Noel, you didn't feature on the Band Aid 20 record, did you?

NG: We were in LA recording the new album. You kind of get forced into those things, don't you? But there were lots of people in there that we have a problem with.

DW: Who?

NG: The Darkness. Keane. I like Bono. He's a friend of mine. I like Chris Martin. He's a friend of mine. Probably everyone else... I could pick an argument with them.

DW: Were you asked to do Live8?

NG: We can't do it. We've got a gig in Manchester that night.

DW: Would you do it otherwise?

NG: I'm not sure about this Live 8 thing. Correct me if I am wrong, but are they hoping that one of these guys from the G8 is on a quick 15-minute break at Gleneagles and sees Annie Lennox singing 'Sweet Dreams' and thinks, 'Fuck me, she might have a point there, you know.' It's not going to fucking happen, is it? Keane doing 'Somewhere Only We Know' and some Japanese businessman going: 'Aw, look at him ... we should really fuckin' drop that debt, you know.' It's not going to happen, is it?

DW: I suppose it's about raising public awareness. Matt [Lucas] and I got involved with Comic Relief this year and it does teach kids that there are people in the world that are less fortunate than us. I don't think you do engage with those sort of issues unless something like music or comedy brings you to them.

NG: Yeah, I understand. If we didn't have 60,000 people in a stadium waiting for us to come and play already... It just can't happen.

DW: Did you watch the first Live Aid on telly?

NG: Yes. I watched it in a caravan in Wales - in Rhyl. And we watched it again on DVD recently, just to see [Paul] Weller really ... with fuckin' no socks on, dancing with no guitar. What struck me was that the boy bands of the day such as Spandau Ballet and Duran Duran could all play their instruments. It's so far removed from the bands of today like Westlife and Boyzone, who are utter shit. I am not a fan of Duran Duran or Spandau Ballet, but now there is pop music and alternative music and there is nothing in between the two. I enjoyed Live Aid more the second time around, I think.
Click link here to check this out!

Wednesday, June 22, 2005

Geldof and His Exercise in Self-Congratulation -- You Go Italians!

The Italians got it right. A bunch of over-privileged, overpaid, spoiled brats get to show off and tell the world how wonderful they are. If they really gave a shit about the poor, they'd be building full-service dormitories on their country estates so the homeless would have places to live.

Geldof chides Italian stars for Live 8 apathy - Yahoo! UK & Ireland News

Wednesday June 22, 11:35 AM


Geldof chides Italian stars for Live 8 apathy

ROME (Reuters) - Bob Geldof told Italy's rock stars on Tuesday there was no excuse to miss the Rome stage of the Live 8 concert next month, as some of the country's top acts hesitated over playing "the biggest concert of your life".

Rome will host a huge free concert in the Circus Maximus -- the ancient Roman chariot race track -- on July 2, one of eight events around the world aimed at focusing the world's attention on poverty reduction, but some big stars are wavering.

Vasco Rossi, possibly Italy's most popular rock singer, has pulled out of the concert where he had been due to top the bill, saying it clashes with another gig he is due to play in Ancona, on the other side of the Italian peninsula.

Another singer demanded more information on what the gig is about before agreeing to appear.

"Vasco is a great star, a really great, great artist, and I think he should be on that stage," Geldof, the organiser of the event, told a news conference in Rome.

"Where's Vasco? Vasco where are you? We want Vasco. We need Vasco," he said, to spontaneous applause from Italian reporters.

Geldof said many of other acts were juggling their schedules to play at one of the eight Live 8 concerts being staged ahead of the Group of Eight (G8) in Scotland on July 6-8.

U2, Coldplay, Elton John, REM and Green Day are all playing their own concerts on July 2 -- many in different countries -- and still plan to perform at Live 8, Geldof said.

"He's not going to lose his voice," he said. "He only has to sing two songs."

Unlike in Britain, where Live 8 has received massive publicity, it has been barely mentioned by Italian media.

Singer Lorenzo Jovanotti, another household name in Italian pop who has performed in the past to campaign against poverty, said he would not agree to play Live 8 until he got more information about the Rome concert.

Geldof said Jovanotti was right to want to find out more about the event and said he would speak to him personally.

Geldof, who organised the 1985 Live Aid concert in London and Philadelphia, has drawn some of the world's best known acts to play at the concerts, even persuading Britain's feud-riven Pink Floyd to reunite for the first time in 24 years.

Geldof got the idea of inviting the line-up that created Dark Side of the Moon and The Wall to reform after he read an interview on the Internet with drummer Nick Mason.

"He said the only reason he could stand to get the band back together would be a new Live Aid," Geldof said.

"It's bad enough to force a divorced man and wife to get back together ... This is four people with four divorces."

Geldof said any pop act should leap at the chance to play Live 8 as it would be an historical event, but that he would not be performing himself.

"I would love to play on that stage, but as an artist I don't deserve to, so I am not going to," he said. Geldof's solo career has never reached the success he had as frontman for the Boomtown Rats which split in the 1980s.

As well as Rome, Live 8 will be held in London, Paris, Berlin, Philadelphia, Tokyo, Toronto and Johannesburg. An organiser for the Italian event said the global show would open in London with U2 and Paul McCartney performing together.
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Friday, June 17, 2005

The secret Downing Street memo - Sunday Times - Times Online

Tuesday, June 07, 2005

Actress Anne Bancroft dies

Actress Anne Bancroft dies - Yahoo! UK & Ireland News

A graduate of the same Bronx high school from which I graduated, and one of my favorite actresses of all time. Rest in peace.
Click link here to check this out!

Perchance to Dream

I had one of those really "real" dreams last night; more like a nightmare actually.

I dreamt about my office; only the remodeling was still going on. There were hundreds more people; new people working there; and of course none of them had anything to do. In order to accommodate all these new people, the office was being reconfigured again, only this time I was being reassigned.

In place of my office, I found myself in a bare cubicle. At first, I wasn't alarmed. It was dark, but self-contained. Then I realized there were at least five other people sharing this tiny cubicle with me. I was no longer near a window; had no private office and began to panic that I'd never be able to write amidst all the noise generated from so many people with nothing to do all day.

Then I walked around and saw people jammed into tiny spaces everywhere I turned. All the rooms were small and full of people. I didn't know what any of them did.

It dawned on me that the "bully squad" had finally got their revenge on me. I was utterly humiliated and set out to call my union but since I no longer had privacy I looked for a place to make a call with my cellphone. I walked down the hallways and saw more and more people.....got angrier and sadder, and then I woke.

So disturbing was this dream that as I struggled to wake, it took several moments for me to realize that it never happened. Several more moments passed before I recognized how lucky I am to be out of that place.

Sunday, June 05, 2005


Buster