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July 31, 2005

What is Enlightenment ?

An Answer to the Question: "What is Enlightenment?", by Immanuel Kant
Königsberg in Prussia, 30th September, 1784.


Enlightenment is man's release from his self-incurred tutelage. Tutelage s man's inability to make use of his understanding without direction from another. Self-incurred is this tutelage when its cause lies not in lack of reason but in lack of resolution and courage to use it without direction from another. Sapere aude! "Have courage to use your own reason!"- that is the motto of enlightenment.

Laziness and cowardice are the reasons why so great a portion of mankind, after nature has long since discharged them from external direction (naturaliter maiorennes), nevertheless remains under lifelong tutelage, and why it is so easy for others to set themselves up as their guardians. It is so easy not to be of age. If I have a book which understands for me, a pastor who has a conscience for me, a physician who decides my diet, and so forth, I need not trouble myself. I need not think, if I can only pay - others will easily undertake the irksome work for me.

That the step to competence is held to be very dangerous by the far greater portion of mankind (and by the entire fair sex) - quite apart from its being arduous is seen to by those guardians who have so kindly assumed superintendence over them. After the guardians have first made their domestic cattle dumb and have made sure that these placid creatures will not dare take a single step without the harness of the cart to which they are tethered, the guardians then show them the danger which threatens if they try to go alone. Actually, however, this danger is not so great, for by falling a few times they would finally learn to walk alone. But an example of this failure makes them timid and ordinarily frightens them away from all further trials.
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For any single individua1 to work himself out of the life under tutelage which has become almost his nature is very difficult. He has come to be fond of his state, and he is for the present really incapable of making use of his reason, for no one has ever let him try it out. Statutes and formulas, those mechanical tools of the rational employment or rather misemployment of his natural gifts, are the fetters of an everlasting tutelage. Whoever throws them off makes only an uncertain leap over the narrowest ditch because he is not accustomed to that kind of free motion. Therefore, there are few who have succeeded by their own exercise of mind both in freeing themselves from incompetence and in achieving a steady pace.

But that the public should enlighten itself is more possible; indeed, if only freedom is granted enlightenment is almost sure to follow. For there will always be some independent thinkers, even among the established guardians of the great masses, who, after throwing off the yoke of tutelage from their own shoulders, will disseminate the spirit of the rational appreciation of both their own worth and every man's vocation for thinking for himself. But be it noted that the public, which has first been brought under this yoke by their guardians, forces the guardians themselves to renain bound when it is incited to do so by some of the guardians who are themselves capable of some enlightenment - so harmful is it to implant prejudices, for they later take vengeance on their cultivators or on their descendants. Thus the public can only slowly attain enlightenment. Perhaps a fall of personal despotism or of avaricious or tyrannical oppression may be accomplished by revolution, but never a true reform in ways of thinking. Farther, new prejudices will serve as well as old ones to harness the great unthinking masses.

For this enlightenment, however, nothing is required but freedom, and indeed the most harmless among all the things to which this term can properly be applied. It is the freedom to make public use of one's reason at every point. But I hear on all sides, "Do not argue!" The Officer says: "Do not argue but drill!" The tax collector: "Do not argue but pay!" The cleric: "Do not argue but believe!" Only one prince in the world says, "Argue as much as you will, and about what you will, but obey!" Everywhere there is restriction on freedom.

Which restriction is an obstacle to enlightenment, and which is not an obstacle but a promoter of it? I answer: The public use of one's reason must always be free, and it alone can bring about enlightenment among men. The private use of reason, on the other hand, may often be very narrowly restricted without particularly hindering the progress of enlightenment. By the public use of one's reason I understand the use which a person makes of it as a scholar before the reading public. Private use I call that which one may make of it in a particular civil post or office which is entrusted to him. Many affairs which are conducted in the interest of the community require a certain mechanism through which some members of the community must passively conduct themselves with an artificial unanimity, so that the government may direct them to public ends, or at least prevent them from destroying those ends. Here argument is certainly not allowed - one must obey. But so far as a part of the mechanism regards himself at the same time as a member of the whole community or of a society of world citizens, and thus in the role of a scholar who addresses the public (in the proper sense of the word) through his writings, he certainly can argue without hurting the affairs for which he is in part responsible as a passive member. Thus it would be ruinous for an officer in service to debate about the suitability or utility of a command given to him by his superior; he must obey. But the right to make remarks on errors in the military service and to lay them before the public for judgment cannot equitably be refused him as a scholar. The citizen cannot refuse to pay the taxes imposed on him; indeed, an impudent complaint at those levied on him can be punished as a scandal (as it could occasion general refractoriness). But the same person nevertheless does not act contrary to his duty as a citizen, when, as a scholar, he publicly expresses his thoughts on the inappropriateness or even the injustices of these levies, Similarly a clergyman is obligated to make his sermon to his pupils in catechism and his congregation conform to the symbol of the church which he serves, for he has been accepted on this condition. But as a scholar he has complete freedom, even the calling, to communicate to the public all his carefully tested and well meaning thoughts on that which is erroneous in the symbol and to make suggestions for the better organization of the religious body and church. In doing this there is nothing that could be laid as a burden on his conscience. For what he teaches as a consequence of his office as a representative of the church, this he considers something about which he has not freedom to teach according to his own lights; it is something which he is appointed to propound at the dictation of and in the name of another. He will say, "Our church teaches this or that; those are the proofs which it adduces." He thus extracts all practical uses for his congregation from statutes to which he himself would not subscribe with full conviction but to the enunciation of which he can very well pledge himself because it is not impossible that truth lies hidden in them, and, in any case, there is at least nothing in them contradictory to inner religion. For if he believed he had found such in them, he could not conscientiously discharge the duties of his office; he would have to give it up. The use, therefore, which an appointed teacher makes of his reason before his congregation is merely private, because this congregation is only a domestic one (even if it be a large gathering); with respect to it, as a priest, he is not free, nor can he be free, because he carries out the orders of another. But as a scholar, whose writings speak to his public, the world, the clergyman in the public use of his reason enjoys an unlimited freedom to use his own reason to speak in his own person. That the guardian of the people (in spiritual things) should themselves be incompetent is an absurdity which amounts to the eternalization of absurdities.

But would not a society of clergymen, perhaps a church conference or a venerable classis (as they call themselves among the Dutch) , be justified in obligating itself by oath to a certain unchangeable symbol inorder to enjoy an unceasing guardianship over each of its numbers and thereby over the people as a whole , and even to make it eternal? I answer that this is altogether impossible. Such contract, made to shut off all further enlightenment from the human race, is absolutely null and void even if confirmed by the supreme power , by parliaments, and by the most ceremonious of peace treaties. An age cannot bind itself and ordain to put the succeeding one into such a condition that it cannot extend its (at best very occasional) knowledge , purify itself of errors, and progress in general enlightenment. That would be a crime against human nature, the proper destination of which lies precisely in this progress and the descendants would be fully justified in rejecting those decrees as having been made in an unwarranted and malicious manner.

The touchstone of everything that can be concluded as a law for a people lies in the question whether the people could have imposed such a law on itself. Now such religious compact might be possible for a short and definitely limited time, as it were, in expectation of a better. One might let every citizen, and especially the clergyman, in the role of scholar, make his comments freely and publicly, i.e. through writing, on the erroneous aspects of the present institution. The newly introduced order might last until insight into the nature of these things had become so general and widely approved that through uniting their voices (even if not unanimously) they could bring a proposal to the throne to take those congregations under protection which had united into a changed religious organization according to their better ideas, without, however hindering others who wish to remain in the order. But to unite in a permanent religious institution which is not to be subject to doubt before the public even in the lifetime of one man, and thereby to make a period of time fruitless in the progress of mankind toward improvement, thus working to the disadvantage of posterity - that is absolutely forbidden. For himself (and only for a short time) a man may postpone enlightenment in what he ought to know, but to renounce it for posterity is to injure and trample on the rights of mankind. And what a people may not decree for itself can even less be decreed for them by a monarch, for his lawgiving authority rests on his uniting the general public will in his own. If he only sees to it that all true or alleged improvement stands together with civil order, he can leave it to his subjects to do what they find necessary for their spiritual welfare. This is not his concern, though it is incumbent on him to prevent one of them from violently hindering another in determining and promoting this welfare to the best of his ability. To meddle in these matters lowers his own majesty, since by the writings in which his own subjects seek to present their views he may evaluate his own governance. He can do this when, with deepest understanding, he lays upon himself the reproach, Caesar non est supra grammaticos. Far more does he injure his own majesty when he degrades his supreme power by supporting the ecclesiastical despotism of some tyrants in his state over his other subjects.

If we are asked , "Do we now live in an enlightened age?" the answer is, "No ," but we do live in an age of enlightenment. As things now stand, much is lacking which prevents men from being, or easily becoming, capable of correctly using their own reason in religious matters with assurance and free from outside direction. But on the other hand, we have clear indications that the field has now been opened wherein men may freely dea1 with these things and that the obstacles to general enlightenment or the release from self-imposed tutelage are gradually being reduced. In this respect, this is the age of enlightenment, or the century of Frederick.

A prince who does not find it unworthy of himself to say that he holds it to be his duty to prescribe nothing to men in religious matters but to give them complete freedom while renouncing the haughty name of tolerance, is himself enlightened and deserves to be esteemed by the grateful world and posterity as the first, at least from the side of government , who divested the human race of its tutelage and left each man free to make use of his reason in matters of conscience. Under him venerable ecclesiastics are allowed, in the role of scholar, and without infringing on their official duties, freely to submit for public testing their judgments and views which here and there diverge from the established symbol. And an even greater freedom is enjoyed by those who are restricted by no official duties. This spirit of freedom spreads beyond this land, even to those in which it must struggle with external obstacles erected by a government which misunderstands its own interest. For an example gives evidence to such a government that in freedom there is not the least cause for concern about public peace and the stability of the community. Men work themselves gradually out of barbarity if only intentional artifices are not made to hold them in it.

I have placed the main point of enlightenment - the escape of men from their self-incurred tutelage - chiefly in matters of religion because our rulers have no interest in playing guardian with respect to the arts and sciences and also because religious incompetence is not only the most harmful but also the most degrading of all. But the manner of thinking of the head of a state who favors religious enlightenment goes further, and he sees that there is no danger to his lawgiving in allowing his subjects to make public use of their reason and to publish their thoughts on a better formulation of his legislation and even their open-minded criticisms of the laws already made. Of this we have a shining example wherein no monarch is superior to him we honor.

But only one who is himself enlightened, is not afraid of shadows, and has a numerous and well-disciplined army to assure public peace, can say: "Argue as much as you will , and about what you will , only obey!" A republic could not dare say such a thing. Here is shown a strange and unexpected trend in human affairs in which almost everything, looked at in the large , is paradoxical. A greater degree of civil freedom appears advantageous to the freedom of mind of the people, and yet it places inescapable limitations upon it. A lower degree of civil freedom, on the contrary, provides the mind with room for each man to extend himself to his full capacity. As nature has uncovered from under this hard shell the seed for which she most tenderly cares - the propensity and vocation to free thinking - this gradually works back upon the character of the people, who thereby gradually become capable of managing freedom; finally, it affects the principles of government, which finds it to its advantage to treat men, who are now more than machines, in accordance with their dignity.

July 30, 2005

Links With Your Coffee - Saturday

I've been listening to talk of the American dream since the 50's. it's been how capitalism and increased productivity would solve our problems and create our very own Camelot. It hasn't happened, oh our productivity has increased and continues to increase, but we're still spending our 40 hours a week at work certain that we need every new gadget and the latest version of everything we already own. The marketers have done their work. We are all nuerotic fucks that want more and more and more. Many measure success not by how happy we are but how much stuff we have. The questions we ask one another are veiled inquiries trying to figure out how much money our neighbors make, how the hell they can afford that new car, TV, boat, blah blah blah, and it's getting worse. We now not only compare ourselves with our next door neighbors but those in other countries. We hear talk of family values from the right and from the left and they both tend to miss the point. Paul Krugman's article on Family Values French style highligts the issue. It think Paul is right we can learn some things from the French in this regard.

French Family Values

Big Ad hat tip to Houston

The upcoming Skeptics Circle need submissions check here to see how you can help. For more information about the skeptics circle visit Orac

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Here's why you can't buy the News Journal at Wal-Mart

July 29, 2005

We're The Client


Attorney-Client Privilege

The White House will make public most of the documents related to Supreme Court nominee John Roberts' work for the government but will hold back internal memos believed protected by attorney-client privilege, a senior Bush administration official said on Tuesday.
Here is Jay Leno's take on the claim of attorney-client privilege. It works for me.



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July 28, 2005

Links With Your Coffee - Thursday

Is this the real reason Judith Miller doesn't want to reveal her source?


Yesterday was a banner day we were selected as weblog of the day here

Mad Kane was ready for the name change War? What War?

As I Lay Reading Ophrah, Faulkner, I must say I'm surprised via 3 Quarks Daily

Ape to Man

A Woman Who Found a Way to Write

The second season of the new Dr. Who is now in production and I must say I like the new Doctor's costume better than the one Eccelston wore this season.

Religion itself is the fount of most evil

For the government of a secular country such as ours to treat religion as if it had real merit instead of regarding it as a ridiculous anachronism, which education, wisdom and experience can hopefully overcome in time, is one of the most depressing developments of the 21st century. Religious people must be treated with the same respect as non-religious people, but their religions should quite properly be regarded with the weary contempt they deserve. Instead we have debates on TV news shows between hardline Muslim scholars and moderate Muslim politicians without any intervening voice of scepticism suggesting that the whole darned thing might be just as invented as virgin births and Mormon tablets.
Since these are dark days, it’s time to stop all this polite tiptoeing around religion and harden up accordingly. Our elected leaders constantly bleating their respect for religion is not political correctness but a public declaration that intellect, tolerance, democracy, reason and enlightenment are of less value than dogma and delusion.

July 27, 2005

Bush Flips Out


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What incredibly infantile arrogant behavior from the President of the United States. He has no respect for the office. All class!



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Keith Olberman reports a finger would be funnier but according to those who were there it's his thumb



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update: John Godfrey (Dow Jones Newswire) writes, "I was in the scrum of reporters at the event. Bush did not flip anyone off. He was clearly giving a thumbs up in response to a question shouted from the crowd." I called John to verify the email was from him and to ask him if there was any doubt in his mind, he said there was not. I forgot to ask him if he's sighted.

New Rule, Watch This Video


Bill Maher on the Jay Leno show. You don't want to miss this one. Karl Rove is a ... Judge Roberts with ... in his pants. Anal sex, evolution, gravity and New Rules.



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A torrent of the file with a larger 320x240 size will soon be available here

Links With Your Coffee - Wednesday

onegoodmove reader Michael Leza onThe methods and bias of the media check it out. Is he right?

They Eat Their Own or how to avoid being a BushBot.

How Costco Became the Anti-Wal-Mart

But not everyone is happy with Costco's business strategy. Some Wall Street analysts assert that Mr. Sinegal is overly generous not only to Costco's customers but to its workers as well.

The Books of Summer by Alice Hoffman

SUMMER is what we look forward to, it is the far away goalpost when we're slogging through winter, the antidote to ice and snow. It's the season of freedom, hydrangeas, drive-in movies, baseball. Just as there are songs that forever remind you of a certain summer in your life, there are books that claim a particular summer: the summer when everyone read "The Mists of Avalon"; the Harry Potter summers; the summer you tackled Dickens.

One of my favorites was the summer I discovered Hemingway. Discovered is not the right word I had already been introduced to Hemingway in high school through "The Old Man And The Sea" a great book but not one I would use to introduce the author. For Whom The Bell Tolls, The Sun Also Rises, or Farewell to Arms seem better choices. The Short Stories would also be good. It was the summer of '64 I'd just finished my six months with the National Guard and with the University of Utah scheduled for the fall I fell in love with his writing and during those few months devoured everything he'd written.

July 26, 2005

Old School Bush


David Letterman reports on George Bush's trip to the woodshed.




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Links With Your Coffee - Tuesday

important update: War on Terror Renamed The president needs your help head on over to Agitprop and leave your suggestions.

Not political, but moral Houston an American in Paris explains the failing of the Bush administration is not political but moral. He writes:

Follow me for a moment back to my philosophy classes at university. This lesson about the two foundations of moral legitimacy stuck with me. First, you must adhere to a moral code that others respect, even if they do not take it as their own. For example, people may or may not, themselves, follow the Ten Commandments, but they can respect it as your code of conduct. Second, you must be consistent in your adherence to it. If you covet your neighbor's wife every now and again, your moral credibility takes a hit. That's why we blast philandering televangelists. We may or may not respect their code; what we take them down for is not following it. We call it hypocrisy...

He concludes that the President is more loyal to his friends than he is to his principles, to the Office of the President, and, most important, to the American people and our proud history.

Another onegoodmove reader you should definitely check out Changing Places

The Woodstock of Evolution

Sunday Bloody Sunday

For months the Couch Potato Pattons have been telling us loud and clear that despite all the gloom-mongering, the US was doing better in Iraq than the loathed MSM was letting Americans know (Rich Lowry even was bold enough to issue a proclamation on the cover of the National Review cover story claiming, "We're Winning"), that there was a wealth of good news that was being deliberately unreported, and that our soldiers knew the real story, saw truer and deeper into what was happening than those elite editors in NY and DC vegetating behind their computer screens...

Roberts Not Fit

Mesopotamian Max

July 25, 2005

Links With Your Coffee - Monday

Ronni Bennett has nice things to say about Frank Paynter all of which are well deserved. If Frank's blog wasn't a regular stop before you read this post it will be afterwards.


Shredder running on a Dual 2.7Ghz Macintosh won the 5th International Duthc Dutch Computer Championship.

Scientology the dark side

The Plame Floodgates Open an excellent summary of Rove-Gate to date from Daily Kos


Corporate Socialism, Not Free Trade

Classroom Evolution's Grass-Roots Defender

Pundits on Plame

July 24, 2005

Meeting The President


Tonight Show fun. George Bush has a knack for boring not only adults but children. This clip will bring back memories of this classic from the archives. The yawning boy is more entertaining but this is not bad and then there is the bonus coverage of Dub participating in National Ride Your Motorcycle to Work Day.



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July 22, 2005

Choosing a Justice


Dave Letterman on the Supreme Court nominee



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Links With Your Coffee - Friday

Think Progress has the dirt on Rove Libby WSJ says the memo was marked "Top Secret" Yummy, Yummy, I've always hated the fact that Rove graduated from the same High School I attended.

For Two Aides in Leak Case, 2nd Issue Rises

More great stuff on Rove and it just keeps coming.

The Seven Words you can't say in Kindergarten View the Movie here

Danish Mullah rages against terror I lived in Odense for six months back in the 60's. The Danes are warm friendly people who look out for each other and it appears little has changed since then.

The Thirteenth Meeting of the Skeptics Circle hosted by Orac

What are the Odds

Double Super Secret Background Mark Fiore on Karl Rove (flash)

I'm A Source Not A Target says the button

Link
The Iraq war is over, and the winner is... Iran

Iraq's new government has been trumpeted by the Bush administration as a close friend and a model for democracy in the region. In contrast, Bush calls Iran part of an axis of evil and dismisses its elections and government as illegitimate. So the Bush administration cannot have been filled with joy when Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari and eight high-powered cabinet ministers paid an extremely friendly visit to Tehran this week.

July 21, 2005

Links With Your Coffee - Thursday

It is certainly getting more interesting.
Plame's Identity Marked As Secret

Memo Central to Probe Of Leak Was Written By State Dept. Analyst

A classified State Department memorandum central to a federal leak investigation contained information about CIA officer Valerie Plame in a paragraph marked "(S)" for secret, a clear indication that any Bush administration official who read it should have been aware the information was classified, according to current and former government officials.
Plame -- who is referred to by her married name, Valerie Wilson, in the memo -- is mentioned in the second paragraph of the three-page document, which was written on June 10, 2003, by an analyst in the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research (INR), according to a source who described the memo to The Washington Post.
The paragraph identifying her as the wife of former ambassador Joseph C. Wilson IV was clearly marked to show that it contained classified material at the "secret" level, two sources said. The CIA classifies as "secret" the names of officers whose identities are covert, according to former senior agency officials.
Anyone reading that paragraph should have been aware that it contained secret information, though that designation was not specifically attached to Plame's name and did not describe her status as covert, the sources said. It is a federal crime, punishable by up to 10 years in prison, for a federal official to knowingly disclose the identity of a covert CIA official if the person knows the government is trying to keep it secret.


What a great idea. I like literary blogs, but it is a lot of work visiting all of my favorites on a regular basis. This will help, the latest posts from six excellent British Blogs are accessible from one page the new Brit Lit Blogs and they are promising to add more. Check it out.

Mad Kane took the Supreme Court hype and picked a women. Sandra Day might be pleased, but not Mad but a miss is a miss. But the three limericks are all winerrs.

Avery Ant Karl Rove: Sinister Sex Symbol

When Harry Met Osama Terrorism comes to Hogwarts.

July 20, 2005

Links With Your Coffee - Wednesday

Video of Isikoff telling Hannity how it really is on Rove-Gate. I love the way he characterizes all the republican talking points as irrelevant.

Homes As Hummers

Downing Street Memo

HEAR TAPE OF JULY 23, 2002, DOWNING STREET MEETING…

…or an amazing 9-minute recreation thereof that uses the exact words of the "Downing Street Memo."

Dyer: The bombs had nothing to do with anything

Two-Thirds Believe London Bombings are Linked to Iraq War

on the basis of information which actually implicates and denigrates him, not exonerates him

A Time of Doubt for Atheists

Oh how I love stories like this one. It appears Rove played it a little too close to the vest in early testimony leaving out important testimony. If this is correct Karl is in deep shit even if nothing else comes out. An Unlikely Story indeed.

Talking Points Memo has a pdf copy of a letter sent to the congressional leadership expressing concern at the low level of public discourse on the subject of intelligence. After pointing to several of the more egregious examples they make the following statement

These comments reveal an astonishing ignorance of the intelligence community and the role of cover. The fact is that there are thousands of U.S. intelligence officers who “work at a desk” in the Washington, D.C. area every day who are undercover. Some have official cover, and some have non-official cover. Both classes of cover must and should be protected.

July 19, 2005

Harry Potter a Liberal

Reader Bronwyn points to this passage in J.K. Rowlings latest (spoiler) and asks is this just a thinly veiled reference to the current Bush War on Terror, political scene, and can anyone point to similar examples. I don't know if we have any Potter fans here but I'm sure we have no shortage of folk willing to speculate. I must admit that I gave up on reading the series around book four though I almost bought the current book when I heard that Dumbledore had showed Hermoine his wand, been arrested, and unable to deal with the shame had commited suicide. But that bit of nonsense came from Rick Santorum's office and as is so often the case the rumor turned out to be false. Just kidding, Rick is a slow reader and isn't even through the first chapter.

They looked at each other, long and hard. Finally Scrimgeour said, with no pretense at warmth, 'I see. You prefer - like your hero Dumbledore - to disassociate yourself from the Ministry?
'I don't want to be used,' said Harry.
'Some would say it's your duty to be used by the Ministry!'
'Yeah, and others might say it's your duty to check people really are Death Eaters before you chuck them in prison,' said Harry, his temper rising now. 'Your're doing what Barty Crouch did. You never get it right, you people, do you? Either we've got Fudge, pretending everything's lovely while people get murdered right under his nose, or we've got you, chucking the wrong people in jail and trying to pretend you've got the Chosen One working for you!
-Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince

July 18, 2005

Links With Your Coffee - Monday

Frank has penned a fascinating post on Journalism / Postmodernism but is Frank taking a position on the suject or is he just making an observation soliciting disucssion while he reserves judgment.

It's easy to say that you view the facts objectively, that you're willing to change your mind when faced with such facts, but we all come from somewhere philosophically, and it is far too easy to pick our favorite philosopher, our favorite politician, our favorite religious leader and look to him for guidance. I'm just kidding about the religious leader. We become entrenched in our views and loyal to our heros when we should be loyal to the search for truth. It is the philosophical attitude that is important for us to maintain. Otherwise we become victims of bad reasoning and of making stupid assumptions.

Mark Fiore George Bush Rock Star at the G8


Francis Crick's Beautiful Mistake This is excellent and a big thanks to Lara Inis for the link


There are simply too many Rove stories floating around, oh how awful for him, I'm going to wait a couple of days and simply enjoy, without comment, the unfolding beauty.

We're not the scumbags some think
Said Mehlman with a nod and a wink
     We have uttered no name
     Not Valerie not Plame
All we said was Joe Wilson's a fink.

July 17, 2005

I've Already Said Too Much

I just read Matt Cooper's article in Time and most of it is what we have all heard before. The most interesting is the following paragraph. It appears Rove was trying to sell the story that the disucssion of Wilson and his wife was just an aside, but that is not the way Matt remembers it and not the way he testified to the Grand Jury. This pretty much destroys the talking point we've been hearing from the right-wing spinners that it wasn't the main topic of the discussion. Oh yes, and there is also Matt's recollection of Rove's closing line, "I've already said too much" let's hope that's true and Rove is on his way out.


A surprising line of questioning had to do with, of all things, welfare reform. The prosecutor asked if I had ever called Mr. Rove about the topic of welfare reform. Just the day before my grand jury testimony Rove's lawyer, Robert Luskin, had told journalists that when I telephoned Rove that July, it was about welfare reform and that I suddenly switched topics to the Wilson matter. After my grand jury appearance, I did go back and review my e-mails from that week, and it seems as if I was, at the beginning of the week, hoping to publish an article in TIME on lessons of the 1996 welfare-reform law, but the article got put aside, as often happens when news overtakes story plans. My welfare-reform story ran as a short item two months later, and I was asked about it extensively. To me this suggested that Rove may have testified that we had talked about welfare reform, and indeed earlier in the week, I may have left a message with his office asking if I could talk to him about welfare reform. But I can't find any record of talking about it with him on July 11, and I don't recall doing so.


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July 16, 2005

Links With Your Coffee - Saturday

Karl Rove's Nondisclosure Agreement

One of the most basic rules of safeguarding classified information is that an official who has signed a nondisclosure agreement cannot confirm classified information obtained by a reporter. In fact, this obligation is highlighted in the "briefing booklet" that new security clearance recipients receive when they sign their nondisclosure agreements:

Before ... confirming the accuracy of what appears in the public source, the signer of the SF 312 must confirm through an authorized official that the information has, in fact, been declassified. If it has not, ... confirmation of its accuracy is also an unauthorized disclosure.
Sixteenth Philosophers Carnival

Prayer 'no aid to heart patients'

Fire Karl Rove Video from the DCCC

We rock the boat

Today's Muslims aren't prepared to ignore injustice

July 15, 2005

Links With Your Coffee - Friday

Rove Reportedly Held Phone Talk on C.I.A. Officer My recollection is that Novak said he got the information on Plame from two White House officials, and Rove is reported to have said that when Novak told him about Plame he said "I heard that too" But how does that square with Novak's statement ""I didn't dig it out, it was given to me. They thought it was significant, they gave me the name and I used it." Link This may be what the prosecutor is looking at the two accounts seem contradictory, but even if you put a happy face on it you have or Rove confirming to Novak that Plame was an agent as accurate. Either way is bad for Rove.


This Page on debunking GOP Rove talking points is being updated as new information becomes available.

Karl Rove's America Krugman weighs in and nails it as ususal.


Bush admin may be responsible for botching effort to thwart London bombing Did Bush tip off the London Bombers, it looks like it.

Joseph Wilson Letter to Select Committee

Mouse study suggests Alzheimer's damage reversible

July 14, 2005

No Comment


The White House press corps is still on a roll. Scotty is getting more testy by the day and no one has told the press don't squeeze the Scotty. "

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Related: Plame Talking Points

More on Plame from Kleinman

July 13, 2005

Links With Your Coffee - Wednesday

A note concerning Republican talking points on Rove from Josh Marshall.

Working for Health Care A cure for outsourcing? It looks like a step in the right direction, and of course National Health Care is the right thing to do.
Disposable Litmus Test A little streaming humor from the Swift Report.

The Blogometer

Burgers from a lab? US study says it's possible

Great Photo

You Are 47% American
America: You don't love it or want to leave it. But you wouldn't mind giving it an extreme make over. On the 4th of July, you'll fly a freak flag instead... And give Uncle Sam a sucker punch!

July 12, 2005

This is Ridiculous


Russert claims this a very serious matter. "as one Republican said to me last last night if this were a Democratic White House we'd have congressional hearings in a second"

As Russert points out there are three issues at play here. the possible crime of outing Valerie Plame, perjury by Karl, and the political fallout. The first two are still open questions the later is blossoming like the turd Rove is. John Kerry and Hillary Clinton are calling for him to be fired, and it looks like the media feeding frenzy has begun.


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July 11, 2005

Links With Your Coffee - Monday

The Best of Us there is a difference between us and them. Highly recommended.

Why Rove should be fired

This email demonstrates that Rove committed a firing offense. He leaked national security information as part of a fierce campaign to undermine Wilson, who had criticized the White House on the war on Iraq. Rove's overworked attorney, Robert Luskin, defends his client by arguing that Rove never revealed the name of Valerie Plame/Wilson to Cooper and that he only referred to her as Wilson's wife. This is not much of a defense. If Cooper or any other journalist had written that "Wilson's wife works for the CIA"--without mentioning her name--such a disclosure could have been expected to have the same effect as if her name had been used: Valerie Wilson would have been compromised, her anti-WMD work placed at risk, and national security potentially harmed. Either Rove knew that he was revealing an undercover officer to a reporter or he was identifying a CIA officer without bothering to check on her status and without considering the consequences of outing her. Take your pick: in both scenarios Rove is acting in a reckless and cavalier fashion, ignoring the national security interests of the nation to score a political point against a policy foe.

This ought to get Rove fired--unless he resigns first.

Rove Told Reporter of Plame's Role But Didn't Name Her, Attorney Says page 1 Washington Post. I didn't name here all I said was that Wilson's wife works for the CIA.

We're Not in Watergate Anymore

Jeb Bush: Hurricane Dennis Could Be Fault of Michael Schiavo

Florida Governor Jeb Bush has asked a state prosecutor to investigate possible links between Hurricane Dennis and Michael Schiavo. Governor Bush said that he connected Mr. Schiavo with the category 3 storm after realizing that Dennis spelled backwards is actually 'sinned.'

Dennis spelled backwards equals 'sinned'

Fox on London Attacks

Truth Tour Detour

LONDON, ENGLAND— Rush Limbaugh and the Truth Tour in route to Iraq made an unexpected stop in London. Too much negative news coming from here, he said. We're going to provide some needed balance. The G8 summit was doing good work and what does the Main Stream Media report about, a few tiny bombs going off. First let me point out the many buses that were'nt blown up. Thousands of miles of the underground perfectly fine and the naysayers, the terrorists are winning crowd, are once again focusing on the negative. Hell, there were only a few hundred feet of damaged tunnels. The tour broadcasting from the Devil's Tavern said they were in London to help stiffen the British upper lip, and enjoy a dark ale.

July 10, 2005

The Broken Window Fallacy


Fox News commentator maintains network's high standards. What a dolt Stuart Varney is, " that's not 10 Billion dollars worth of losses... It's called the reverse hurricane effect", no you dumb fuck it's called the Broken Window Fallacy Why do we have to listen to this crap everytime there is a natural disaster, will they never get a clue. We had this conversation just a year ago when Ivan and company were the stars of the show. It makes you wonder if these idiots are simply unteachable?



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Links With Your Coffee - Sunday


Following this link will help create a miracle. A million to be exact, and be sure to wish him a happy blogiversary.

Leading Cardinal Redefines Church View on Evolution

An influential cardinal in the Roman Catholic Church, which has long been regarded as an ally of the theory of evolution, is now suggesting that belief in evolution as accepted by science today may be incompatible with Catholic faith.


Nearly Two-thirds of U.S. Adults Believe Human Beings Were Created by God

Earlier this year, the State Board of Education in Kansas reignited an old debate – whether or not creationism should be taught in public schools – and shone the spotlight on a new theory, intelligent design. While many in the scientific community may question why this issue has been raised again, a new national survey shows that almost two-thirds of U.S. adults (64%) agree with the basic tenet of creationism, that "human beings were created directly by God."

At the same time, approximately one-fifth (22%) of adults believe "human beings evolved from earlier species" (evolution) and 10 percent subscribe to the theory that "human beings are so complex that they required a powerful force or intelligent being to help create them" (intelligent design). Moreover, a majority (55%) believe that all three of these theories should be taught in public schools, while 23 percent support teaching creationism only, 12 percent evolution only, and four percent intelligent design only.

The Giraffe


'Truth Tour' Promises Good News, Shorter Broadcasts from Iraq

This week, a delegation of conservative journalists--including the Swift Report's own Deanna Swift--will travel to Baghdad in order to bring you what the so-called mainstream media won't: good news. In today's installment, the first of a Swift Report series, Deanna kicks off her "Truth Tour" travelogue, giving readers an advance peek at her week inside Baghdad's exclusive Green Zone.

Brain Based Values

Patricia Churchland Reviews Michael Gazzaniga book The Ethical Brain

Envision this scene: Socrates sits in prison, calmly awaiting execution, passing the time in philosophical discussions with students and friends, taking the occasion to inquire into the fundamentals of ethics: Where do moral laws come from? What is the root of moral motivation? What is the relation between power and morality? What is good? What is just?
Ever modest, Socrates confesses ignorance of the answers. The pattern of questioning strongly hints, however, that whatever it is that makes something good or just is rooted in the nature of humans and the society we make, not in the nature of the gods we invent. This does not make moral rules mere conventions, like using a fork or covering one's breasts. There is something about the facts concerning human needs that entails that some laws are better than others.
From the time of Socrates to the present, people have sought to give a natural basis for morals—that is, to understand how a moral statement about what ought to be done can rest on hard facts, albeit facts about conditions for civility and peace in social groups. How can ethical claims be more than mere conventions? How can such claims be rooted in facts about human nature but have the logical force of a command?
Developments in evolutionary biology have helped to explain the appearance of moral motivation in humans and in other eusocial animals—animals that display behavior involving cooperation, sharing, division of labor, reciprocation and deception. In these species, various forms of punishment (shunning, biting, banishing, scolding) are visited on those who threaten the social norms. Ethological studies help us appreciate that, at a basic level, human social behavior has much in common with that of other species...

If you find Gazzaniga's book of interest you'll enjoy Brain Wise by Patricia Churchland it is an excellent introduction to what neuroscience teaches us about common philosophical problems.

July 9, 2005

Rove Nailed

It just doesn't get much better than this. He may not end up in jail, but however it plays out it is liable to cost George Bush and the Republicans dearly in the months to come.

Time to get ready for the Karl Rove frog-march? David Corn at Huffington

I don't usually log on Saturday evenings. But I've received information too good not to share immediately. It was only yesterday that I was bemoaning the probability that -- after a week of apparent Rove-related revelations--it might be a while before any more news emerged about the Plame/CIA leak. Yet tonight I received this as-solid-as-it-gets tip: on Sunday Newsweek is posting a story that nails Rove. The newsmagazine has obtained documentary evidence that Rove was indeed a key source for Time magazine's Matt Cooper and that Rove--prior to the publication of the Bob Novak column that first publicly disclosed Valerie Wilson/Plame as a CIA official -- told Cooper that former Ambassador Joseph Wilson's wife apparently worked at the CIA and was involved in Joseph Wilson's now-controversial trip to Niger.
To be clear, this new evidence does not necessarily mean slammer-time for Rove. Under the relevant law, it's only a crime for a government official to identify a covert intelligence official if the government official knows the intelligence officer is under cover, and this documentary evidence, I'm told, does not address this particular point. But this new evidence does show that Rove -- despite his lawyers claim that Rove "did not tell any reporter that Valerie Plame worked for the CIA" -- did reveal to Cooper in a deep-background conversation that Wilson's wife was in the CIA.

I believe this is the Newsweek article David Corn is referring to, Matt Coopers Source

Fitzgerald preparing indictments under the Espionage Act? John Dean thinks so.

Links With Your Coffee - Saturday

Myth Buster

More on Sam Harris in the Toronto Star and before you say here he goes again bashing religion, speaking not of Sam Harris but of the author of onegoodmove, remember that it is not religion per se, but the dodgy reasoning and stupid assumptions fundamentalists expound and moderates tolerate that is being attacked. Bad thinking of any kind needs to be exposed. No free passes simply becuase it's labeled religion.

Myths die hard, Harris realizes, but die they must if we are to survive as a species. For now that millions embrace the metaphysics of martyrdom or the truth of the book of Revelation — and are armed to the teeth — "words like `God' and `Allah' must go the way of `Apollo' and `Baal' or they will unmake our world," he warns. Faith-based religion "must suffer the same slide into obsolescence" as alchemy.

If not, and as long as it is acceptable for someone to believe that he knows how God wants everyone on Earth to live, "we will continue to murder one another on account of our myths."

Religious moderation, Harris argues, betrays both faith and reason equally. Moderates are, in large part, responsible for religious strife "because their beliefs provide the context in which scriptural literalism and religious violence can never be adequately opposed" — all thanks to the sacredness in which we hold tolerance.

Conservatives on Evolution (Requires free registration. Or use "singlearticle" as the username and password.)

Even if they believe they equivocate, take David Frum for example, he believes in evolution but thinks it occurs under some divine guidance, intelligent design, but get this on how he thinks it should be taught in public schools "I don't believe that anything that offends nine-tenths of the American public should be taught in public schools. ... Christianity is the faith of nine-tenths of the American public. ... I don't believe that public schools should embark on teaching anything that offends Christian principle"

Incredible, applying David's principle that means we shouldn't teach Geology, Anthropology, and Physics since there are principles in all those disciplines that are at odds with at least some Christians principles.

William Kristol is apparently proud of the fact that his children made it through public schools without ever cracking a science text.

Charles Krauthammer, The Washington Post and Richard Brookhiser of the National Review have the most reasonable views on the subject.

Thanks to Lara for the link.

July 7, 2005

Terrorists Strike

What can one say, it was inevitable. Thirty-three plus confirmed dead and certain to rise, we send our condolences to our British friends. Blair has already declared that the terrorist won't win. I'm sure George will echo those sentiments. It seems to me an empty statement, though from a political point of view, predictable. Terrorism has always existed and always will. All one can reasonably expect is to limit the number and size of such attacks. I'm sure Bush and Blair are surprised since we are fighting them in Iraq so we don't have to fight them at home.

London rocked by terror attacks


Update some worthwhile links from the comments:

The implications of the London bombing Juan Cole

London Bombing Suw Charman

Gary Turner on the British soul.

As President Bush said in October, "We are fighting these terrorists with our military in Afghanistan and Iraq and beyond so we do not have to face them in the streets of our own cities." Tragically, the terrible bombing in London shows we are now paying a horrible price for this silly, dangerous, short-sighted, and truly dishonest line of reasoning.

July 6, 2005

Links With Your Coffee - Wednesday

Pediatricians Denounce Abstinence-Only Ed

Even though there is great enthusiasm in some circles for abstinence-only interventions, the evidence does not support abstinence-only interventions as the best way to keep young people from unintended pregnancy

Celestial Drops Holy water for the orange groves. Surprise it doesn't work. A great example of a lack of critical thinking skills, this time from Katherine Harris, and these are our leaders.

Amartya Sen


Mom, Who Lost Son In Iraq, Talks About 'Disgusting' White House Private Meeting With Bush

But what she encountered was an arrogant man with eyes lacking the slightest bit of compassion, a President totally "detached from humanity" and a man who didn’t even bother to remember her son’s name when they were first introduced.

Instead of a kind gesture or a warm handshake, Sheehan said she immediately got a taste of Bush arrogance when he entered the room and "in a condescending tone and with a disgusting loud Texas accent," said: "Who we’all honorin’ here today?"

"The whole meeting was simply bizarre and disgusting, designed to intimidate instead of providing compassion. He didn’t even know our names," said Sheehan. "Finally I got so upset I just looked him in the eye, saying ‘I think you can imagine losing someone. You have two daughters. Imagine losing them?’ After I said that he just looked at me, looked at me with no feeling or caring in his eyes at all."

O'Donnell has Three Questions for Karl Rove's Lawyer

Fortunate Son Can you believe this shit.

How Many Lies

Disenfranchisedmusic.com has a new song How Many Lies (lyrics) here is the link to Download

How many lies can an asshole tell? Before we wise up and throw him in a prison cell? For crimes against nature, humanity and truth We should stick him in shit filled telephone booth! 'Cause he lied to the world for justification For an illegal war - He had trouble separatin' all the fiction from the faction so he lied when he said "I hope this will not require military action"

John Kasper Band also has a new anti- war song

Don’t think twice, about the life you lead Must be nice, that someone else will bleed Fear is all around, terror’s on the rise The stars and stripes a waving fills our patriotic hearts with pride Don’t think twice Don’t think twice, about the wars we wage Don’t compromise, no that’s a big mistake Freedom’s on the march, God is on our side Be sure to say a prayer for those courageous souls we’ve sacrificed Don’t think twice Don’t think twice, about the lives we take Wrong or right, it’s got to be our way So that we may live, thousands have to die Say the pledge and tell yourself that we were surely justified Don’t think twice Don’t think twice, it isn’t up to you Close your mind; pretend it’s just not true These colors never run; we’re not afraid to fight Especially if someone else is gonna have to pay the price Don’t think twice

July 5, 2005

Pink Floyd - Live 8



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so, so you think you can tell
heaven from hell,
blue skys from pain.
can you tell a green field
from a cold steel rail?
a smile from a veil?
do you think you can tell?

and did they get you to trade
your heros for ghosts?
hot ashes for trees?
hot air for a cool breeze?
cold comfort for change?
and did you exchange
a walk on part in the war
for a lead role in a cage?

Live 8

July 4, 2005

Bush In Denmark

This picture definitely needs a caption, here is a first try.

pretty.jpg


via Per Madsen

Dodgy Reasoning and Stupid Assumptions

The fourth of July is a perfect time to rededicate ourselves to the 'philosophical' attitude our founders exhibited, and to avoid the "dodgy reasoning and stupid assumption-making that the unwashed masses" often use.

Julian Baginni put it well in a recent BBC Night Waves program discussing his book The Pig That Wants to Be Eaten: And Ninety Nine Other Thought Experiments

I think it's possible to read a hell of a lot of philosophy, it's possible to be a professional philosopher, and not have a philosophical attitude. I think the philophical attitude is this kind of constant questioning, and I think that sometimes people find philosophy, they love it, and they latch onto a few of their favourite philosophers, and they become as entrenched in a particular form of philosophy as any unphilosophical person becomes entrenched in their assumptions; philosophers are actually subject to the delusion in fact because their subject is officially the 'queen of the sciences,' the discipline which questions assumptions more than any other, they kind of feel that they themselves are immune to the kind of dodgy reasoning and stupid assumption-making that the unwashed masses do, and I think that's a terrible risk of doing philosophy
Thanks to OB for the transcript



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Links With Your Coffee - Monday

A Declaration for the Fourth of July

What is Patriotism

Frank is trying out a new Site Counter, you can help him test it.

The Bush Interview: Tonight With Trevor McDonald Bush brings his own facts.

Shame on the World Herald

Toward a More Perfect Union How would progressives make it so.

Craig Crawford Columinst for CQ Weekly and frequent commentator for MSNBC is blogging how fun is that.


France is a hell hole that is if your definition of hell is less stuff and more free time. As for me I'll take hell.

Fighting Words Q and A with Chuck Hagel, hell no I won't back down.

Roe vs. Wade impact on Republican party.

July 2, 2005

Karl Rove a Traitor?

roveperp.jpg

Lawrence O'Donnell writes in The Huffington Post,

"I revealed in yesterday's taping of the McLaughlin Group that Time magazine's emails will reveal that Karl Rove was Matt Cooper's source. I have known this for months but didn't want to say it at a time that would risk me getting dragged into the grand jury."

Talk Left has some interesting analysis of the subject. Looks like they may be trying to nail Rove for perjury. Oh boy, Oh boy would that make my day.

update on Rove

Links With Your Coffee - Saturday


Agitprop has an mp3 of Dub's Fourth of July Speech check it out.

of family values and iron cages

Stephen Covey's books must be read as a description of a capitalism that has no place to go. His ideal reader is not the person who creates wealth, it is the middle-level bureaucrat working in a large-scale organization trying to get through the day. Into this world of purposeless activity, Covey introduces structure. For people powerless to influence the destiny of the organizations for which they work, he offers the illusion of efficacy. In a world in which competition is sublimated into furious struggles over seating arrangements around tables, as if any change from yesterday to today must be divined for meaning, he tells his readers that win-lose is over. Mormonism's great contribution to the work of Stephen Covey has been to provide the unwritten and perhaps unconscious assumptions for a secular version of what life means in organizations in which most people spend most of the time spinning their wheels. And now, we are told, the family has become another one of those organizations.

Locke also has a new book in the works Mystic Bourgeoisie

Mad Kane Warrior Dub Anthem podcast version

The following was stolen from Frank Paynter at Sandhill Trek who stole it from someone else.

and currently making the rounds via email

Berkeley just announced the discovery of the heaviest element yet known to science. The new element has been named "Governmentium".

Governmentium has one neutron, 12 assistant neutrons, 75 deputy neutrons, and 224 assistant deputy neutrons, giving it an atomic mass of 312. These 312 particles are held together by forces called morons, which are surrounded by vast quantities of lepton-like particles called peons.

When catalyzed with money, Governmentium becomes Administratium, an element which radiates just as much energy, since it has half as many peons, but twice as many morons.

Since Governmentium has no electrons, it is inert. It can be detected, however, as it impedes every reaction with which it comes into contact. A reaction that normally takes one minute or less will require a week or more if contaminated by any Governmentium.

The half-life of Governmentium is 4 years. It does not, however, decay, but instead undergoes a reorganization in which a portion of the assistant neutrons and deputy neutron exchange places. In fact, Governmentium's mass will actually increase over time, since each reorganization will cause more morons to become neutrons, forming isodopes. The characteristic of moron-promotion leads some scientists to believe that Governmentium is formed whenever morons reach a certain quantity in concentration.

This hypothetical quantity is called "Critical Morass".

Flags


flagsaddam.jpg I'm not much of a flag waver agreeing with Howard Zinn about The Scourge of Nationalism The typical flag waver these days is some asshole who wraps himself in the flag trusting that it will protect him from criticism and free him from the responsibility to do any critical thinking. Waving the flag seldom accomplishes any worthwhile goal and more often leads to division and hate. The young soldier whose enthusiastic but misguided use of the flag in Iraq was just the first of many damaging misteps in the war and highlights the danger. Lara Inis a frequent and much appreciated source of material for onegoodmove writes that the recent discussion of flag here reminded her of this Eddie Izzard video and how his words "That's the rules . . . that . . . I've just made up!" presaged Chuck Hagel's recent remark, "It's like they're just making it up as they go along."



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July 1, 2005

O'Connor Retires

O'Connor Retires From Supreme Court

What to do read this post from Liberal Oasis

Links With Your Coffee - Friday

If you get a chance don't miss the girl in the café currently showing on HBO If you have comcast and subscribe to HBO it is available in On Demand until July 10th. Excellent.


Lit pop Take the Quiz

You scored 9 out of a possible 10
Born to be Wilde
Congratulations. You are a literary genius. You clearly have spent far too many warm summer days indoors writing frightening verse to a buck-toothed girl in Luxembourg. Go out and get some fresh air and buy a Gareth Gates record. (and if you don't know what we're talking about, you're a lot less sad than us)


Photoshop fun. Thanks Ian

Long Road Home


Cooder also came up with the slightly loony character who helps tie the story together—a lonely “space vato” dropping in on the residents of Chavez Ravine in his UFO.

“The UFO allows you to take a different viewpoint,” Cooder explains. I look over, and he’s dead serious, weaving through freeway traffic as jazz plays softly on the radio. “If every song is in the past tense, that’s a drag, so you have to predict the future. And the Ravine would be a good place to land one of those things. So the guy gets out, looks around, and warns the people about the future—which enables somebody in the crowd to say, ‘Sir, you’re wrong, that can’t happen here.’ Which I really wanted to say, because everywhere I go, I’m thinking to myself, if you’d have said 10 years ago that a mutant tribe in Washington will take over, unplug the Constitution, wreck our country, and steal two presidential elections, everybody would have said that can’t happen. So every day we’re crossing that line, and that’s all I seem to be able to think about.”
Thanks goes to Clare for this one.

It's The Oil Stupid

An excerpt from Tom Brokaw's recent appearance on the Dave Letterman Show. The main points:

  • Saudi Arabia is now the incubator for terrorism
  • The relationship is about oil
  • We're not doing anything about that in this country.
  • As long as we keep our snoot down in the oil fields we have a problem
  • Because they know where they have us we're fucked.



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