Tuesday

offered without comment

hipsters, here it is: barackobamaisyournewfixie.com

entertain yourselves with that while I'm on vaca for a coupla weeks.

Friday

Drunk History:

For the record, I think that this is awesome. Basically the premise is get somebody who knows a lot about an historical event three-sheets drunk and get them to retell the stories in all their slurred, drunken glory.

The beauty, though, and the hilarity come in the form of the reenactments. The players mime the dialog as presented by the drunk historian - hiccups, profanity and all - in a way that brings history to life!

As an example, here is episode #3 in which Jen Kirkman gets drunk on wine and recounts the tale of Oney Judge, a favorite slave of George and Martha Washington...



NSFW language... also, I've chosen #3 because several of the others involve vomiting, etc.

Good day.

McCain's first attack ad



As Barack Obama is preparing for his first foreign trip as his party's nominee for President, John McCain launches his campaign's first attack ad. However, as TPM notes while he is attacking Obama's positions, both McCain and still-President Bush are also realigning themselves behind Obama on a number of issues:
  1. increasing troop presence in Afghanistan
  2. declaring victory and the promotion of a "general time horizon" (note: NOT a timetable) for troop withdrawl in Iraq
  3. and the beginnings of diplomacy with Iran with a top-level State Dept official meeting with Tehran nuclear agents this week
While McCain & company are trying their damndest to paint Obama as a flip-flopper on these issues, ultimately it is the McCain campaign that is changing their policy the most over the past few weeks.

The rhetoric is still there, though. A member of McCain's "truth squad", Bud Day (best remembered for his role in the 2004 'swift boating' of John Kerry), has recently proclaimed that
"The Muslims have said either we kneel or they're going to kill us.''
ooga booga booga! Be affraid... be very affraid!!

Meanwhile, McCain may have just thrown a logistical wrench in Obama's travel plans for the next week. He indicated that Obama may be in Iraq over the weekend, which for security reasons is typically information that is kept pretty secret. So despite the fact that McCain's criticisms were the ostensible impetus for Obama's current trip abroad, lately he has been:

Oh... and by the way... after a week-long hiatus, Phil Gramm is back to his advisory role in the McCain campaign (per Robert Novak, so salt grains suggested)... yes, the "nation of whiners" Phil Gramm. This time, though, he's lost his "surrogate" credentials and will merely be an advisor. So McCain was being truthful in his repudiation of Gramm when he said "Phil Gramm doesn't speak for me... I speak for me". True, Senator, but Phil Gramm does speak to you... concerning economics... which you profess to know little about... and he certainly doesn't have the economic interests of the vast majority of Americans in mind, just the vast majority of American corporations.

Good luck hearing any of that from the mainstream media though...

here we go again...

catchy little tune, actually...

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Monday

war crimes

This is probably a little too much like reading tea leaves to be believed, but this report indicates that some individuals in the current Bush administration are getting worried about being prosecuted for war crimes, especially in relation to torture violations.
So hot is the speculation that war-crimes trials will eventually follow in foreign or international courts that Lawrence Wilkerson, Colin Powell's former chief of staff, has publicly advised Mr. Feith, Mr. Addington and Alberto Gonzales, among others, to "never travel outside the U.S., except perhaps to Saudi Arabia and Israel."
It would be nice if Bush & Co. were held accountable for their various crimes over the past 7+ years in power. However, given:
  • the tepid reaction to the articles of impeachment of both Bush and Cheney that have been raised by Dennis Kucinich
  • the inability of Congress to hold anyone in the administration accountable (Karl Rove has yet to testify under oath as he's been subpoenaed to do several times, and continues to dodge contempt of congress citations)
  • and the fact that the U.S. Senate just voted to grant retroactive immunity to the telecom companies (and, by association, the administration) for their roles in domestic spying
I think holding anyone in the administration responsible for their misdeeds is but a pipe dream...

ouch...

The McCain campaign has had a rough go of it over the past couple of weeks in terms of economic policy. The big news last weeks was that one of his top economic advisers, former Senator Phil Gramm, indicated that America's is a "mental recession" and then quipped that America is a "nation of whiners"... turns out that's probably not going to poll well.

With the Economy becoming one of the biggest issues in the campaign this year, it's surprising that McCain hasn't made more of an effort to come up with a coherent message conveying what his approach will be.

Would you like some salt in that wound?:

Wednesday

viral marketing

It seems that viral marketing has even made its way into marketing for biotechnologies. First there was the PCR song:


now this:

Thursday

FISA, the 4th Amendment, and YouTube...

The recent declaration by Barack Obama that he would be supporting the latest "compromise" legislation (read: capitulation legislation) on the FISA courts created a massive uproar. Many of his supporters are crying foul and claiming that he is pandering, moving to the middle, and abandoning his previous positions - he professed that he would not support the 'Protect America Act' last summer.

One of the most interesting aspects of this "new campaign" built and run on new technologies - including social networking - is how they would handle the inevitable people-powered backlash. It came this week in the form of a group organized in the Obama campaign's mybarackobama.com which is a social networking site built within the campaign's overall website. His supporters can sign on to form groups, organize events, raise funds and gives the campaign a flexibility and people-powered base that has never been seen before in politics. Truly a new monster: campaign 2.0.

In response to Obama's announcement about his imminent support of the new FISA bill a group formed on mybarackobama.com called "Senator Obama - Please Vote No on Telecom Immunity - Get FISA Right" - and it quickly became the biggest on the site. Just this afternoon Barack Obama responded to his supporters (which he would have had to do eventually) with this statement. This is a glimpse of how the web has given a rebirth to democracy. Fascinating.

Oh, and those Fourth Amendment rights... you wont really have those for much longer because the FISA legislation will pass (after the Independence Day recess).

As a side note, check out this decision that a federal judge has just handed down. Apparently YouTube is going to be giving Viacom a list of all of the users who watched videos on their site, and... uh... which videos they watched. (YouTube and Viacom, remember, are in a legal battle right now over the whole Daily Show/Colbert Report, copyrighted materials appearing on YouTube thing).



Enjoy your 4th of July with everybody watching what you do... just don't do anything illegal (or that might be illegal) because they're watching.

Good day.

VP-stakes

I've been making the case here for Wes Clark as Obama's running mate. Then this happened earlier this week and the fallout has been tremendous (not to mention blown WAY out of proportion).

Wes Clark defends himself in (from?) his own words:


Whatever I may think about all of this is kind of irrelevant. Wes Clark essentially took himself out of contention for the VP slot on the ticket with these comments (with a little help from the McCain campaign and a real-life Swift Boat Vet for Truth, Bud Day... the hypocrisy runs deep, my friends). The McCain camp is probably relieved to have knocked off Clark and, as I noted earlier, if anything was to be Clark's downfall it would be his lack of experience on a national stage. He just fell through the trap door and landed square on the third rail.

So where does that leave the VP-stakes?... Are we back to Jim Webb? Wherever it is now, the NYT notes that given the Olympics and the packed convention schedule in August, the timing of the revelation of a running mate will be tricky business for the candidates this summer.

raw sewage?

Well, that's a pretty good monument to what it's been like in George W. Bush's America... but I bet we can do better. (some good suggestions in the comments section from that slog post)

blog catch-up...

I've been derelict in my duty as a blogger of late. (blogging is hard work during the summer!) So, other than the longer posts that I will disseminate forthwith, here are some of the (perhaps) interesting points that I've been meaning to share with you all over the past week:

  • Now that it's summer, I've started to wonder why Seattle doesn't have more outdoor seating establishments... why is that?
  • I don't have a car, so this whole expensive gas thing isn't hitting me too hard. Ultimately I think it will be an overall good thing. I mean, it's already made people appreciate public transit even more (as noted before). I'm reminded of how good (and cute) a healthy appreciation of public transportaion can be by this story, though I doubt gas prices are at the root of the kids' enthusiasm.
  • Speaking of animal cruelty... check out a story from my hometown paper describing recent antics at my alma mater, Colby College. It involves a pot bellied pig terrorizing a town and a hapless police force driven towards drastic measures... (spoiler: taser) [disclaimer: may actually be somewhat amusing, despite "animal cruelty" lead-in]
  • For anyone who ever wanted to win a debate with a creationist, here's a blueprint. This follows up on the publication of a pretty remarkable set of experiments that demonstrate strong support for Darwin's theories. 149 years and counting...