NEW YORK – Stocks had their worst day of trading since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks Tuesday …
Which, coincidentally, was the last time that President Bush acknowledged that he is aware that the stock market exists.
NEW YORK – Stocks had their worst day of trading since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks Tuesday …
Which, coincidentally, was the last time that President Bush acknowledged that he is aware that the stock market exists.
That’s what Bush wants slipped into his checking account, to run his wars — not including the one he wants to start with Iran — through fiscal 2009. Now I could break that down by the population of the US or the world, or tell you that’s roughly $2,143,000 for every solider presently serving in Iraq. But I won’t. Let’s take a more astronomical approach, shall we? I found this on Google Answers:
Number of visible stars, visible with the unaided eye
Everyone's eyes differ, but a figure of around 6000 visible stars is
often quoted (with around half visible from any point on earth). At
sea level in a rural area you might see around 2000, and in an urban
area you might be lucky to see 20.
You can't count the stars directly. Due to the rotation of the earth,
more keep appearing on one side and disappearing from the other. As
atmospheric conditions change, some stars become visible and some
become invisible. Instead, people look through a tube, count the stars
in that field of view, and scale that figure up to obtain an estimate
for the total.
Let’s take a liberal perspective, and say that you’re lying in your sleeping bag on a mountain top in the high Sierras in mid-summer (low humidity), late at night when the moon is not up. I’ve been there, it’s amazing. So maybe you can see 3000 stars. The Shrub wants $10,000,000 – Ten Million Dollars – for every star you can see. Picture it.
So Bush wants more than all the stars of the heavens we can see, to a factor of ten million. Shall we give it to him? Yes? For what?
To save us from the evil communists who want to smother our American way of life? No, that’s not it.
WMD? Nope.
To get our oil out from under their sand? Maybe. It’s the most plausible reason I’ve seen posited to date. But that’s some pretty expensive crude, Dude, especially just for the oil rights, not the oil itself.
To stop Saddam? Ha ha ha.
To find Bin Laden? That’s not even funny.
To fight them over there, so we don’t have to fight them over here? That’s sick. Twisted and warped and foul and sick. That’s evil, boys and girls. Pardon us y’all, but we’uns was hopin’ might we bury – I mean borrow – your country … since we’re over here over anyway, pulling down statues of your megalomaniac. You see, we need a place to throw a rather messy hoedown, and well, we like to keep the carpets clean back home. And our dog bites. So no no, it’s not at all convenient. Can’t possibly have a good Texas BBQ back home just now. It has to be here, because we’re invitin’ some fellas that tend to get sloppy with their ribs and sauce. But we promise to rebuild — er, clean up — after ourselves.
It’s not just that we can’t afford another half a trillion bucks. And you know that’s the least it would be; this is just the estimate. It’s that we can’t afford another 3000 lives. We can’t afford to stagger on as a country torn asunder by protracted and untreated mental illness and unremitting grief and stress. We need to rebuild what’s been damaged here, of the fabric of what passes for our civilization. We need to build a place for ourselves in the world’s community and economy. And, maybe on Saturday mornings when time permits and the sun is out, make some attempt to teach our children not to repeat these unconscionable and stupid mistakes.
Interesting Salon article about Bush’s juggernaut of power grabbing.
Crisis is what we are facing now. Public opinion has decisively turned against the president’s war in Iraq, with voters dissenting where our system says they should — at the polls. Congress, the supposed locus of the power to “declare war,” is belatedly registering its disapproval of Bush’s inept conduct of that war. Even the normally secretive military and national-security bureaucracies are busily signaling their objections to the commander in chief’s plans.
In virtually any other advanced democracy in the world, government personnel and policy would by now reflect this political earthquake: Either the chief executive would have resigned, or the parties would have coalesced in a government of national unity. But here, the repudiated leader is escalating his war and proclaiming, “I’m the decision maker.” Regarding Congress, Bush said during a recent “60 Minutes” interview, “They could try to stop me from doing it. But I made my decision, and we’re going forward.” And now the president appears to be barreling toward a confrontation with Iran.
Have you heard the news about plans for the presidential library of our fearless Decider in Chief? It’s estimated to cost half a billion bucks to build it, and the imperial minions are searching for a place for it in the great state of Texas. One front-running site is Southern Methodist University, the faculty of which has voiced concerns. They wrote a letter to the president of the university, saying they would …
..regret to see SMU enshrine attitudes and actions widely deemed as ethically egregious: degradation of habeas corpus, outright denial of global warming, flagrant disregard for international treaties, alienation of long-term U.S. allies, environmental predation, shameful disrespect for gay persons and their rights, a pre-emptive war based on false and misleading premises, and a host of other erosions of respect for the global human community and for this good Earth on which our flourishing depends.
I suspect their concern may be a bit premature; the president may have overestimated his legacy. Does he really have $500 million worth of friends left? Would he know what to do with a library if he had one? I doubt it. And I fear that when all the donations and payoffs are in, he may have just enough to buy a used VHS copy of Soylent Green from amazon.com.
On the day that E Howard Hunt died, I happened to hear Sweet Home Alabama come up in random shuffle on my iPod. Pure coincidence? Sure. But it makes you think. The institutional memory of an administration actually brought down by its own arrogance and corruption is passing from our lives, one conspirator at a time. And it has been replaced by the appalling rise of an administration that won’t fall no matter how manifest and clear its amoral malignancy. How soon we forget.
In Birmingham they love the governor
Now we all did what we could do
Now Watergate does not bother me
Does your conscience bother you?
Tell the truth
[a joke I received by e-mail today]
It is the night after the state of the union speech. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee has passed a resolution amounting to no confidence in the war plans of the president. George W. Bush is tossing restlessly in his White House bed, where suddenly he sees the ghost of George Washington appear.
Bush says to him, “George, I need some help, I feel so hopeless and everyone hates me. What’s the best thing I can do to help the country?”
“Don’t be led by dishonest people. Set a strong, honest and honorable example, just as I did, There is always hope for change,” Washington advises, and then fades away.
An hour later, Bush is astir again, and sees the ghost of Thomas Jefferson moving through the darkened bedroom. Bush calls out, “Tom, please! What is the best thing I can do to help the country?”
“Show respect for the constitution. There is always hope, ” Jefferson advises, and fades from sight.
Sleep is still not possible for Bush. He awakens to see the ghost of FDR hovering over his bed. Bush whispers, “Franklin, What is the best thing I can do to help the country?”
“Forget your rich friends and start helping the less fortunate, just as I did. There is always hope.” FDR then fades into a mist.
Bush still isn’t sleeping well, worrying about his dropping numbers, when he sees a fourth figure moving in the shadows. It is the ghost of Abraham Lincoln. Bush pleads, “Abe, what is the best thing I can do right now to help the people of the United States?”
Lincoln replies, “Go see a play.”
glad you opened this blog? . And I’ve just been sitting here sitting about the philosophy of shared moral intuitions – normative ethics – and I just might decide to impart my thoughts. Or not. I don’t feel like I necessarily ought to. You know what I mean?
I picked an orange from the tree in my parents’ back yard this afternoon, and just a little while ago I ate it. It was good.
You never know about an orange. You bite into it, it might be sweet or bitter. But I peeled this one, broke it open and stuffed a big chunk in my mouth, because I trust an orange to be the best it can be; to be sincere, without deception. An orange does not have a nefarious hidden agenda. It might make up pucker up, but it won’t get you killed for no good reason. I trusted that orange more than I trust the good intentions of President Bush tonight.
Yeah, I watched the speech. Couldn’t help myself. And he said some good things. He wants to make things better for the people. But I don’t trust him. He’ll mandate progressive programs, maybe, but he won’t fund them. And that tax break for health insurance thing is a sick joke. What about the millions of people who can’t take advantage of a tax break because they don’t make enough to pay taxes in the first place, let alone pay for insurance. What about the poor and the working poor? No, I don’t trust him. And more’s the pity.
Tzu-kung asked, What is leadership?
The Master said: “Food enough, troops enough, and a trusting people.”
Tzu-kung said: “Were there no help for it, which could best be spared of the three?’
“Troops,” said the Master.
“And were there no help for it, which could better be spared of the other two?”
“Food,” said the Master. “From of old all men die, but without trust a people cannot stand.”