February 25, 2008 archive

I’m going to be nice for a change

His Mom and Dad were busy cleaning up the trailer.  I took my one year old grandson in my arms and set him in front of me on my ATV.  We took off down the wooded logging road slowly at first and then a bit faster.  I showed him the woods, the woods our family has retreated to annually every summer for twenty years.  I told him to fear not the creatures of the woods, for they would not hurt him if he were true in spirit.  I said I would teach him the way.  Respect the land in it’s beauty and it will take care of you. I showed him nature, the mountains, the rushing stream all from the seat of an ATV.  Yes it sounds corny, the self induced delusions of a fifty-something change of life hippie, this unspoken spiritual communication from one soul to another.  Is it real or something based on faith. My engineer side is fighting with my shaman side.  What I felt, what he felt, I have no words to describe.

The same kid fell asleep on a ride yesterday with his mom.  With me he was animated and fully awake.  Some years ago I carried his mother on my back, ran two miles down the mountain in desperation for the epinepherin kit we forgot to bring on our walk.  Stumbling through swamps and fallen trees she said “Dad I’m OK”.   My first daughter had suddenly “outgrown” her life threatening allergy to bees. Yes, I believe in miracles.  I was left to catching my breath.

I know not how or why kids and animals like me but they do.  The next morning upon seeing me in the trailer door a one year old says his first words Vroom, Vroom and extends his arms for me to pick him up again.  The Grampy connection was made and continues to this day.  He wants me and I have to sneak out of their house so he won’t get really upset and keep his parents up all night.

Camp for our family is memories.  A generation of our large family at the campfire toasting marshmellows, telling ghost stories after spending the day in the swirling mountain stream.  Searching for moose in the early morning or coming face to face with a beaver while swimming with a diving mask.  I think daughter and beaver both scared each other. I saw water exploding from two directions and then one daughter standing up.  

The family dog, a rottweiler pulling logs out of the woods for the next night’s fire.  Memories richer than Bill Gates these are.  The love of family, once secure in that a love of community, once secure in that a knowledge of history and the failures of mankind, once secure in that a knowledge of the evil man can exhibit.

Be true to each other will you.  Keep me off the Apocalyptic horse and should I rebuild yet another damned computer and write the whole book about all this.  

‘How I spent spring break: Stopping the war’

Instead of “Where the Boys Are,” the old-time spring breaks that used to bring waves of partying college students to Florida beaches, the theme for some students this spring will be “Bring the Boys Home.”  (It’s not just boys at war any more, of course; that just fit better.) Our Spring Break invites students and young people to Washington DC for a wide range of antiwar actions in March.

Meanwhile, Campus Progress, a project of the Center for American Progress, is sponsoring Iraq Action Camp, three days of education, training and action for students March 15-17 in Washington. It’s free for college students, but they should register now.

Says Robin Markle of Drew University SDS in New Jersey:

“I don’t think we can rely on the government to stop the war, despite what politicians may say when they’re on the campaign trail. I’m really excited about the Iraq Moratorium campaign, which invites anti-war activists to hold actions the third Friday of every month in their communities. I think that locally-based grassroots actions like these, with people talking to their friends, co-workers and neighbors, is our best strategy for steadily growing the movement until it’s something that politicians can’t simply pay lip service to.”

Is antiwar action and energy being transferred to the presidential campaign?

Says Kati Kesh of UNC-Asheville:

From my perspective … it seems that although some students are very much swept up in the election process most students remember what happened in 2006 when they put their faith in the Democrats–the Democrats failed to do anything about the war. Because it’s an election year it seems that the student body is becoming more politicized and wanting to be more active about issues such as the war in Iraq.

More on what students are thinking and doing in this CounterPunch article.

Another Bush promise to Military personnel being broken.

cross posted from Sancho Press. http://sanchopress.com/

In 2002 President Bush signed a bill to put citezenship applications of non US citizens who serve in the military on “the fast track”. In addition, fees for citizenship are waived.

Like many other promises made to military personnel this one is not being kept. This may not be the most important issue regarding failures to meet what military members have earned, promised and deserved but just another example of bureacratic snafus, incompetence and poor management.

I saved a flag, Iraq and video tribute to IGTNT I can’t use

Cross posted at Daily KOS

A while back I got the urge to visit Goodwill, I rarely do because the days of bargains are long gone around here. But I also know even if I’m not shopping for anything when I get that urge I will find something I didn’t know I needed until I get there. I also found a parking spot close to the door, another sign I was going home with something. I hit the furniture section and didn’t see anything and then headed down the back wall something I never do, when I spotted it hanging on a hanger amidst some curtains. A flag. Not just any flag mind you, but a special flag, the creases from it’s unmistakable triangular fold still visible. It was a interment flag, used to drape the coffin of a veteran or soldier who died in action.  

EENR for Progress: Health Care is a Human Right

Health care is a human right. In my own definition of the progressive movement, I count that as a basic progressive principle.

For various reasons, from my own personal perspective, it is simply unacceptable to settle for anything less than true universal health care. Some of those various reasons are my experiences with health care in the United States, as well as those of my friends and family, some of whom have serious or chronic conditions.

In tonight’s EENR for Progress, we look at why we need universal health care, proposals for universal health care, and what progressives can do to achieve it.

Pony Party: Sunday music retrospective

Cream III



White Room

A Brief History of the Red Carpet

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Time to roll out the red carpet: It’s Oscar Night!

Let’s have a look at the red carpet in history — it’s more interesting than you might think! — and then have a fun night watching the awards.

I only care about one Academy Award tonight

The Academy Awards start in a few minutes.  While they can be treated as a political topic in many ways — even without commenting on the labor situation in the arts — that’s not my topic today.

This has been a slow year for prestige moviegoing on my part.  For the first time I can remember — maybe for the first time since I became a teenager — I have seen none of the films nominated for Best Picture.  Of them, I’m most inclined to see “Michael Clayton” to see how well its depiction of New York lawyering matches mine, and I’ll be pleased if it wins.  (I’d also be happy for Clooney to get an Oscar for Best Actor, though I hear that Daniel Day-Lewis is a lock; please don’t let it go to Johnny Depp for a performance that is so inferior to the classic Sweeney Todds of George Hearn and Len Cariou.)  But mostly, I don’t much care who wins.

Nor do I care about the face-off for the Best Documentary prize between No End in Sight and SiCKO; while I’ve only seen the latter, I’ve heard enough about the former to believe that both films deserve wide audiences and I’m not going to choose between the issues of Iraq and Health Care on the basis of importance.  I choose both.  I’ll root for a tie.

No, the award I care about is in a category where the winner is considered to be a foregone conclusion, and I am rooting loudly for the underdog.  I want to publish my thoughts for the record before the award ceremony begins — and the wrong film almost certainly wins.

The category is Best Animated Feature.  And now, for your consideration, a rant.

O The Huge Manatee!

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“The longer I live, the more I realize the impact of attitude on life. Attitude, to me, is more important than facts. It is more important than the past, the education, the money, than circumstances, than failure, than successes, than what other people think or say or do. It is more important than appearance, giftedness or skill. It will make or break a company… a church… a home. The remarkable thing is we have a choice everyday regarding the attitude we will embrace for that day. We cannot change our past… we cannot change the fact that people will act in a certain way. We cannot change the inevitable. The only thing we can do is play on the one string we have, and that is our attitude. I am convinced that life is 10% what happens to me and 90% of how I react to it. And so it is with you… we are in charge of our Attitudes.”

Charles R. Swindoll

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