Tuesday, 26 January 2010
deep breath
Last summer, I ordered a terrific, hopeful T-shirt adapted from a vintage British World War II poster, advocating a stiff upper-lip and moreover to not panic. "Keep Calm and Carry On." I think that this Etsy entrepeneur is espousing equally good advice. Etsy, which is a wonderful outlet for creativity and handicraft and represents those handmade gifts that are great to give and receive, is especially smart considering the sorry state of the economy and jobs market and the prospects for revival of such a monstrosity. We should all hone up on our knitting skills.
Sunday, 24 January 2010
gerrymandering
H and I just took a short trip this weekend to get out of the house and shed some of the winter detrius. Had we been traveling during 1789 in the Holy Roman Empire, however, it's boggling to think of how many international boundries we would have crossed with city-states and peculiars of the Church and Crown. How did so many separate jurisdictions cohabitate? Surely it wasn't peaceable.
we won't be pwn'd again
Hoping I am not one of these merchants of gloom or persistant naysayers (though I am very quick to criticize US policy), I cannot see there was much good news for the Obama administration during this past week. After the end of the Kennedy dynasty, the Supremes were quick to follow with another blow, relaxing campaign finance reform and reversing the goals of McCain-Feingold. Politicians are already tools of corporate interests and their cherry-picking of candidates that will support their agendas should not be made any easier, and now the opinion of a gaggle of investors, stakeholders is on equal-footing and apparently just as sacrosanct in terms of First Amendment Bill of Rights™ protection as any individual voter. That does not bode well for America's credibility or sincerity. Mixed signals are abundant with the call for taxing the bohemoth banks and tripping over healthcare reform.
Thursday, 21 January 2010
skimming with sharks

Tuesday, 19 January 2010
beating ploughshares into swords
Here's some disturbing reporting from ABC News--

Saturday, 16 January 2010
capricorn
I've noticed, that either through intent or accident, we have a lot of goat-themed decor about the house--from the Picasso to the great-horned lamp.
Friday, 15 January 2010
jamming good with Weird & Gilly
Last week NASA released some photographs of the Martian terrain on sand dunes that look like they are covered with sagebrush. This, however, is the result of shadows of sublimating crystalline pillars of dry ice frost now that it is spring time on Mars. Even if it is sort of an optical illusion, it far surpasses the shadow that looks like a human face on Mars or a contrived Virgin Mary in a grilled cheese sandwich. It seems a shame that there is all that unused real estate, by man or beast or sometging unimaginable on the other planets. The only news on Mars, we would say, is when we send out rockets and robots there, or when those comets hurled into Jupiter.