From the monthly archives: November 2009

We truly are not a serious country:

Too much Leonard Nimoy

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But his intellectuality has contributed to a growing critique that decisions are detached from rock-bottom principles.

Both Maureen Dowd in The New York Times and Joel Achenbach of The Washington Post have likened him to Star Trek’s Mr. Spock.

The Spock imagery has been especially strong during the extended review Obama has undertaken of Afghanistan policy. He’ll announce the results on Tuesday. The speech’s success will be judged not only on the logic of the presentation but on whether Obama communicates in a more visceral way what progress looks like and why it is worth achieving. No soldier wants to take a bullet in the name of nuance.

Yes, serious people are engaging in serious discussions about how bad it is for Obama to be intelligent, circumspect and deliberative. … After eight disastrous years that should have proved to anyone with a pulse who wasn’t on a respirator how galactically retarded it is to elect a dim-witted, ivy-league C-student frat guy to run the country.

Fucking hell… Stuff like this, along with reading Idiot America, is pretty depressing to take in.

John Cole perks me up, as always, with his insight:

Are there other first-world countries where the media spends a lot of time worrying that its leaders are too rational?

For any of you non-lawyers who are interested in reading a great layman’s article about the legal fight making its eventual way to the Supreme Court to recognize homosexuals as equal under the law , please check out this article by Gabriel Arana in the American Prospect. The fundamental principle at work in this is something I learned years ago in law school:

The legal issues in [the current litigation] mirror those in Loving v. Virginia, the 1967 case that struck down miscegenation laws. In Loving, the court ruled that there was no compelling state interest for outlawing interracial marriage and that marriage was a fundamental right. But unlike Loving, by which time race had already been established as a suspect classification, the Supreme Court has not previously considered whether gay people are a suspect class. Courts, though, have generally granted suspect classification to groups that are well-defined and possess an “immutable” trait; share a history of discrimination; and are politically powerless to protect themselves.

In essence, Boies and Olson must prove that gay Americans deserve the same rights as everybody else because they are, paradoxically, different. The plaintiffs have said they will have psychologists and scientists testify that being gay isn’t something you can change. To establish political powerlessness, Boies and Olson point out that there are no openly gay senators, governors, or Cabinet members and that gays and lesbians have been unable to get nondiscrimination legislation passed on a national level — facts that the defense has not challenged.

I think we should all bear in mind a great quote from the end of the article:
[T]he Prop. 8 imbroglio and its legal fallout should serve as a reminder that equality isn’t a once-and-for-all achievement. Rights can be rescinded, the ground can shift again. Nor is it an eventuality.

Despite Martin Luther King Jr.’s assurance, the arc of history does not bend in any direction — much less toward justice — on its own.

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Here’s a great holiday pic of my adorable niece Madelyn:

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There are hardly words in the English language to describe my reaction to this video. I’m sorry for the pain it will cause but you really need to watch it:


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We really aren’t a very serious country if statistics like this don’t prod more people to demand that we stop the insanity already:

Dio mio, is Poppa Sully doing BMFs as well?


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Apropos bad music and games, I’ll call in some eleven-year-old talent…



Yep this band is for real.

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