Archive for May, 2005

Downing Street Memo

Tuesday, May 31st, 2005

I am joining the alliance of bloggers, led by Shakespeare’s Sister, petitioning for a response from the President to questions raised by the Downing Street Memo. The contents of that document are quite disturbing and deserve a full airing and thorough, independent investigation. I have placed the full text of John Conyers’ letter to President Bush in the extended entry. Please read it carefully and consider signing the letter by going to Conyers’ website.

If anything can be learned from the collective action taken by several Philadelphia bloggers in the last Philadelphia Attorney General Primary it’s this; bloggers grouping up and presenting a united front gives journalists a new angle to cover a story they might not otherwise have covered. If nothing else, this matter deserves serious attention and any attention we can bring to it is a small step. Please consider signing, and if you have a blog, please consider posting about this.
Read the rest of this entry »

156

Tuesday, May 31st, 2005

When even one is too many.

Cutest Movie Ever!!

Tuesday, May 31st, 2005

On Saturday night I saw a great movie called Mad Hot Ballroom. Briefly, it’s about a New York City competition among the ballroom dancing programs in the public schools. Three schools are highlighted, one in the fairly impoverished Washington Heights area, another in Bensonhurst, and the last in Lower Manhattan. The kids are so cute, their stories so inspiring, so uplifting. I could probably go on and on about it, but I’ll refrain. Seems like it was a relatively low budget film and I’ve seen very little advertising, so it looks like they’re relying on word of mouth. Well, you’ve got some, go see this movie.

Memorial Day

Monday, May 30th, 2005

Susie Madrak:

Here is how to count the cost: In high school graduation pictures that will never be replaced with wedding pictures. In wedding rings that will never be worn smooth by years. By the daughters who will walk down the aisle with an uncle or brother instead of Dad. By the sons who will find themselves angry and lost, not understanding why. The children who will hear about their mother’s eyes, their father’s chin but won’t ever see themselves reflected in that face.

By the parents who now understand the quiet obscenity of outliving their own children.

Each and every one of these deaths left a hole in the world. That is why we count them.

They mattered.

Memorial Day

Monday, May 30th, 2005

Kurt Vonnegut:

Mary admired the two little girls I’d brought, mixed them in with her own children, sent them all upstairs to play games and watch television. It was only after the children were gone that I sensed that Mary didn’t like me or didn’t like something about the night. She was polite but chilly.

“It’s a nice cozy house you have here,” I said, and it really was.

“I’ve fixed up a place where you can talk and not be bothered,” she said.

“Good,” I said, and I imagined two leather chairs near a fire in a paneled room, where two old soldiers could drink and talk. But she took us into the kitchen. She had put two straight-backed chairs at a kitchen table with a white porcelain top. That table top was screaming with reflected light from a two-hundred-watt bulb overhead. Mary had prepared an operating room. She put only one glass on it, which was for me. She explained that O’Hare couldn’t drink the hard stuff since the war.

So we sat down. O’Hare was embarrassed, but he wouldn’t tell me what was wrong. I couldn’t imagine what it was about me that could burn up Mary so. I was a family man. I’d been married only once. I wasn’t a drunk. I hadn’t done her husband any dirt in the war.

She fixed herself a Coca-Cola, made a lot of noise banging the ice-cube tray in the stainless steel sink. Then she went into another part of the house. But she wouldn’t sit still. She was moving all over the house, opening and shutting doors, even moving furniture around to work off anger.

I asked O’Hare what I’d said or done to make her act that way.

“It’s all right,” he said. “Don’t worry about it. It doesn’t have anything to do with you.” That was kind of him. He was lying. It had everything to do with me.

So we tried to ignore Mary and remember the war. I took a couple of belts of the booze I’d brought. We would chuckle or grin sometimes, as though war stories were coming back, but neither one of us could remember anything good. O’Hare remembered one guy who got into a lot of wine in Dresden, before it was bombed, and we had to take him home in a wheelbarrow. It wasn’t much to write a book about. I remembered two Russian soldiers who had looted a clock factory. They had a horse-drawn wagon full of clocks. They were happy and drunk. They were smoking huge cigarettes they had rolled in newspaper.

That was about it for memories, and Mary was still making noise. She finally came out in the kitchen again for another Coke. She took another tray of ice cubes from the refrigerator, banged it in the sink, even though there was already plenty of ice out.

Then she turned to me, let me see how angry she was, and that the anger was for me. She had been talking to herself, so what she said was a fragment of a much larger conversation. “You were just babies then!” she said.

“What?” I said.

“You were just babies in the war — like the ones upstairs!”

I nodded that this was true. We had been foolish virgins in the war, right at the end of childhood.

“But you’re not going to write it that way, are you.” This wasn’t a question. It was an accusation.

“I — I don’t know,” I said.

“Well, I know,” she said. “You’ll pretend you were men instead of babies, and you’ll be played in the movies by Frank Sinatra and John Wayne or some of those other glamorous, war-loving, dirty old men. And war will look just wonderful, so we’ll have a lot more of them. And they’ll be fought by babies like the babies upstairs.”

So then I understood. It was war that made her so angry. She didn’t want her babies or anybody else’s babies killed in wars. And she thought wars were partly encouraged by books and movies.

So I held up my right hand and I made her a promise: “Mary,” I said, “I don’t think this book of mine is ever going to be finished. I must have written five thousand pages by now, and thrown them all away. If I ever do finish it, though, I give you my word of honor: there won’t be a part for Frank Sinatra or John Wayne.

“I tell you what,” I said, “I’ll call it ‘The Children’s Crusade.’ ”

She was my friend after that.

Smoking Ban Extras

Sunday, May 29th, 2005

Just a few tidbits regarding Michael Nutter’s smoking ban which passed City Council by a 10-7 vote last week.

On Friday I spoke to the owner the bar I go to most often about his feelings on the impending smoking ban. His reaction surprised me a little in that he wasn’t all that concerned about losing business. This was something of a shock because his bar is a classic smoke filled tap room where nearly all of the patrons are chain smoking, beer and shot people. His major concern was dealing with regulating the foot traffic in and out of the bar from patrons going out to smoke on the pavement, as well as the potential for liability from having packs of intoxicated individuals congregating right outside his establishment.

Another tidbit I learned from my conversation, is that a bar that makes less that 30% of its gross from prepared food cannot stay open on Sundays. He has already ruled out trying to squeeze in under the 10% loophole that would allow smoking in his establishment for two years past the January 2006 deadline, as it would prove too costly to shut down on Sundays. What we will see, however, is an interesting revival of some of the long standing, but mostly forgotten, Pennsylvania Blue Laws regarding alcohol consumption and sale. To be more clear, there will be no smoking in any bar in Philadelphia on the Sabbath. Now how weird is that?

Peculiar

Sunday, May 29th, 2005

From Editor & Publisher:

(May 29, 2005) — There is a strange disconnect in America at the moment, with the press partly to blame but in the position to do something about it, or at least explain it. You may be surprised to learn that nearly 6 in 10 Americans feel the Iraq war is “not worth it,” according to a recent Gallup poll. Exactly 50% feel that President Bush “deliberately misled” them on the issue of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, and virtually the same number call the war an out-and-out “mistake.” More than 56% now say the war is going badly for the United States. Gallup also recently found that 46% of those polled say we should start withdrawing troops.

For months, E&P Online has tracked various Gallup polls on this subject, and watched the numbers rise and fall. After the Iraqi elections in January, public opinion briefly shifted in a more positive direction, but that was quickly reversed with a return of wide violence and a rising American death toll this spring. Yet despite all the front-page coverage and punditry in the papers, it still seems that the war, and any deep feelings about it, are stuck in slow motion, or in quicksand.

That’s why every week when we consult Gallup, I’m always surprised to find the growing public doubts about the war. Most of the time, in our work and play, you’d hardly know a war was going on. There is more opposition to this war than there was in 1968 with regard to Vietnam, yet far less public and editorial protest. That 57% of Americans say the war is “not worth it” is haunting: such clarity, and such acceptance.

But still, the media continue to look at opinion on the war in a black-or-white, red state/blue state way, when it is much more complicated than that…

Pictures and Birthdays

Sunday, May 29th, 2005

Albert, from Dragonballyee, has posted his final pictures from last weekend’s Italian Market Festival. I’d like to draw your attention to this one picture in particular, because it is such a classic, old school Philadelphia shot. Also, Dragonballyee is one year old today. Happy birthday Albert! Some day soon, I’m going to pull together enough cash to pay Albert to take a really great wideshot of a block of rowhouses for use as this site’s logo. Until then, I’ll enjoy his unique look at Philadelphia in both pictures and words.

Bonus Saturday Beer Blogging

Sunday, May 29th, 2005

Pangaea
Pangaea brewed by Dogfish Head Craft Brewery in Milton, Deleware.

This is really a Malt Liquor rather than a beer, but that’s close enough for our purposes. Tonight is the first time I’ve given Pangaea a try and I’m quite pleased with it so far. It’s brewed with crystallized ginger, but isn’t overly sweet. The ginger only comes out in the aftertaste, and has more of a spicy, rather than sweet, character.

Bunches of Fun

Saturday, May 28th, 2005

Matt has posted a very cool email interview he conducted with Will Bunch from Attytude that I think you’ll enjoy reading. Go have a look.

Saturday Beer Blogging

Saturday, May 28th, 2005

Kelpie
Kelpie Seaweed Ale brewed by Heather Ale LTD. in Stathaven, Scottland.

This is the sort of beer I would generally dismiss as too gimmicky and not even try. Despite my initial reservations, I’m glad I decided to give it a try because it is a very tasty dark ale that I now buy fairly regularly. According to the brewer, the inclusion of seaweed is an attempt to simulate historic Scottish ales made from barley grown on seaweed fertilized fields. Well worth a try.

I Would Have Done the Same

Saturday, May 28th, 2005

I bet it was his last cigarette, so jumping out the window of a fast moving vehicle to retrieve it was the right thing to do:

Jeff Foran suffered trauma to his nose, eyes and chin after jumping from a car traveling 55-60 mph. Authorities said he was trying to retrieve a cigarette blown out of the passenger-side window.

“Nelson said Foran was smoking a cigarette when it blew out the window and Foran jumped out the window to retrieve the cigarette. Nelson said he was driving between 55 and 60 mph when Foran jumped out,” the trooper said.

“Foran did the right thing and asked his buddy to drive him home,� Gravier said. “It was obvious he was extremely intoxicated.�

Gravier added: “If anything could make him stop smoking, this should be it. The man is lucky to be alive.�

This Gravier character is completely out of his mind. If anything, Jeff will need to smoke more than ever in order to help deal with the nose, eye and chin trauma.

The Reward for Failure

Saturday, May 28th, 2005

I’m actually surprised they haven’t received a metal or a commemorative plate. From the Washington Post:

Two Army analysts whose work has been cited as part of a key intelligence failure on Iraq — the claim that aluminum tubes sought by the Baghdad government were most likely meant for a nuclear weapons program rather than for rockets — have received job performance awards in each of the past three years, officials said.

The problem, according to the commission, which cited the two analysts’ work, is that they did not seek or obtain information available from the Energy Department and elsewhere showing that the tubes were indeed the type used for years as rocket-motor cases by Iraq’s military. The panel said the finding represented a “serious lapse in analytic tradecraft” because the center’s personnel “could and should have conducted a more exhaustive examination of the question.”

Pentagon spokesmen said the awards for the analysts were to recognize their overall contributions on the job over the course of each year. But some current and former officials, including those who called attention to the awards, said the episode shows how the administration has failed to hold people accountable for mistakes on prewar intelligence.

Quote of the Whatever

Saturday, May 28th, 2005

Strange are the days when parody is less outrageous than reality.
-Matt

This applies to a great deal more than just Ohio. Strange days indeed. Most peculiar.

Smoking Ban - Still Seems Like a Slippery Slope

Friday, May 27th, 2005

At least I’m not the only person who’s a little suspicious of the anti-smoking crusade.

Check out Stu’s futuristic scenario.

Kind of makes me wonder what’s next. Maybe soon only people who get at least 1 hour of exercise three days a week will be covered for medical insurance. Or maybe it’ll only be the people who fall into the normal weight guidelines on those damned government charts. Fast food places will be brought to their knees by lawsuits over their unhealthy menus.

And on and on it goes…

Off

Friday, May 27th, 2005

I have the day off today and I’m sitting here laughing at everybody who doesn’t. Ha! Anyway, I’m off to the bar for a drink or two, and then I’m going to go try and get my driver’s licence back. That sounds all wrong, doesn’t it? Anyway, right now I’m leaning towards taking the whole weekend off from everything, so if you don’t hear from me for a while, enjoy.

Commemorative Plates

Friday, May 27th, 2005

Elvis Plate

If it turns out that any of the Ohio Bureau of Workers’ Compensation Fund was invested in Elvis Presley commemorative plates, I may just get religion. Is it really too much to hope for?

If you haven’t been following the story, $50 Million of the Ohio Worker’s Comp fund was invested in rare coins and other collectibles. The coin dealer is a well connected Ohio Republican who runs a collectibles business. We’re talking about the sort of stuff you see on infomercials early in the morning, so what could possibly go wrong? Anyway, some $10 million to $12 million invested with Mr. Noe, the coin dealer, is now missing. Good thing it wasn’t something important like a state workers’ comp fund…oh, wait.

The plate pictured above sells for just $12.95 on eBay and comes with a certificate of authenticity. You’ll need that certificate, because otherwise you might not really be dealing with a real plate with a picture of Elvis on it. Don’t believe your eyes, because it could be something else altogether, and that would be tragic.

Santorum Goo

Thursday, May 26th, 2005

I was thinking about the fact that I’m going to need to spend the next year and a half thinking about Rick Santorum, if I’m ever going to be a responsible Philadelphia blogger. You have to admit that the prospect is pretty morbid.

Anyway, to cheer myself up I made a Rick Santorum warp page where you can spend a few minutes twisting and distorting Rick’s face for giggles. This is a pretty old gimmick, but what the hell, enjoy.

Sadly, the little Java applet works best with Internet Explorer. It will still work with Firefox, but you probably won’t get all of the control options. It will take it a few seconds to load, so be patient.

Oh, Rick

Thursday, May 26th, 2005

It seems as though everybody’s favorite dog loving drama queen, Rick Santorum, has been taking money from the “baby killers”. Not that the hypocrisy is surprising in any way, but I do love having a giggle at my junior Senator’s expense. From the DSCC Via Susie:

Senator Rick Santorum this week re-emphasized his opposition to stem cell research, stating that he was “disheartened� to learn that the House of Representatives voted to expand stem cell research and that he does “not support taxpayer funding for scientific research that involves the destruction of human embryos.� Yet Santorum had no problem accepting $55,500 in campaign contributions from companies that conduct stem cell research.

“Rick Santorum’s opposition to stem cell research is hypocritical – he staunchly opposes stem cell research and even introduced legislation to severely limit the research, but he has no problem accepting money from the companies that conduct the research,� said DSCC Communications Director Phil Singer. “If Santorum truly opposes stem cell research and isn’t just using the issue to pander to his political base, he should return the over $50,000 in campaign contributions he accepted from the companies that carry out the research.�

On Tuesday, the House of Representatives voted to expand stem cell research, after which time Santorum issued a statement saying that he did not “support taxpayer funding for scientific research that involves the destruction of human embryos or that is based on the prior destruction of human life,� and that he was “pleased to hear� of the President’s pledge to veto the Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act of 2005. In 2003, Santorum also co-sponsored legislation that would have severely restricted stem cell research.

However, in spite of Santorum’s words and actions, since 1998 he accepted a total of $55,500 in campaign contributions from political action committees representing six separate companies that conduct stem cell research, including Becton Dickenson, General Electric, Johnson & Johnson, Merck, Novartis, & Pfizer.

I may need to update his moniker a little. Something along the lines of “everybody’s favorite dog loving drama queen who personally profits from baby killing, Rick Santorum”. Eh, too clunky.

Philadelphia Smoking Ban Looks Set to Pass

Thursday, May 26th, 2005

It looks as though Nutter may have finally gotten his smoking ban. Fortunately for me, there is a built in two year reprieve for bars that make less that 10% of their gross on food, which is exactly the sort of establishment I frequent. I can foresee a number of bars switching to an all hot dog menu in the near future just to make the cut.


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