• 1,297 replies
    marye
    Joined:

    Nuclear power! Carcinogenic cell phones! The Stanley Cup! and the usual parade of kids dancing and shaking their bones, politicians throwing stones, etc. Discuss.

Comments

sort by
Recent
Reset
  • Anonymous (not verified)
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    No chatter...
    ...from the terrorist networks after Ayman Al-Zawahiri, new AQ head, calls for revenge attacks on America for the killing of OBL. The problem is, there usually is a lot of chatter and when it is missing, that is when Homeland Security starts to go nuts. We are now in the waiting time. The FBI has admitted that it has lost track of many people in the Minneapolis area (Somalis', etc.) who have been to terrorist training camps. Anybody planning a plane trip before 9/11 should see increased security. More air marshals too, I should imagine. I think a lot of people in high government posts are uncomfortable right now and they are not saying much.
  • Anonymous (not verified)
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    YOU are the Eyes of the World, Jonapi!
    And yeah, just back from two weeks off art the beach, holiday on the seashore. How can I make a comment on starving children in Ethiopia? Saw the news and got sick the other night, had to remind myself to keep it off, restore my head. The reporter was in Mogadishu, Somalia. She was interviewing one of the top officers in the African Peacekeepers, drawn from other countries' armories and people. He said they were in the worst place on earth. The soccer stadium in long weeds, the bombed out buildings, IEDs. A Kalashnikov fires and the reporter and soldiers scramble for cover. The world is responding to this humanitarian crisis but food coming in through here first had to go through civil war in a country without a government for 20 years. Who is making the war here? Al Shabob (I am prompted to say "Shish Kabob") the AQ backed militias trying to take Somalia and turn the country into a terrorist training camp. They finally realized that they were killing the locals and pulled back to allow the pent up need for food distribution. Too little, too late as a woman with her kids cries "Where is the humanity?" Where, indeed? So the camps grow in Dadhob, Kenya and we live our lives of luxury and privilege... Look up MSNBC.com for a list of charities to make a donation to feed these people.
  • Anonymous (not verified)
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    aerial signal African drought
    i cried salt water.for what it's worth. brown skin painted on weak bone. shrunken carcass; something for the dust to claim. unholy abandonment for our viewing pleasure. no water no food no hope no life but do try, please. cue ball eyes in that head on a stick. our disconnect is perfect. we weep for a while and sleep soundly. hang in there little one. hang in there as the man with the camera brings image not grain. lens into lenses and my body sagged. sagged with all the hurt; a shriek that could summon God and shatter your semicircular canal. it doesn't bring him of course; he only seems to listen. where did we go so wrong when we can look straight into the eyes of a dying child and do nothing? a shameful spectacle. a suffering soul a stain on our species. sick and disgust as their organs fail. we've released so much pain into the world that the ether seeps decay. ghastly fog that chokes our brothers and sisters. suffocates and laughs. it's head seemed swollen. his head? her head? i couldn't tell. emaciated. fragile. eyes of ache and injustice. twisted with hurt. i could tell it was broken. i couldn't tell what it thought of me. why would i let a part of me suffer? for what purpose would i cut off one's own arm? because that's what i'm doing when i'm complicit in starving a life more pure and beautiful than mine. they ARE my life, have i not figured that out yet? he/she got better by the way; i saw it on the news. little body became more like yours and mine. sunken cheeks expanded and eye's like a cow. hope for that child at least. let's hope Aids doesn't pay a visit; please God, leave them alone for a while. reading this back, a thought of Arsenal's new signing Miyaichi entered my head; his debut on Saturday. looking forward to that. how shameful.
  • riggsjr
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Riots
    Have been gone for a couple of days on a break, not able to see much news footage but heard of the spread of the riots in England. I put on the news today and what do I see...shock horror it's everybody else's fault. Nick (nothing to do with me) Clegg saying we need to step back and look at the whole picture, need to find reasons etc. Well Nick there are a few good people on this very thread who could tell you what has gone wrong. It is the fact that a Tory Government in the 1980's gave up on Britain being an Industrialised nation and decided we would be better as a 'Service Industry', traditional jobs that had served generations for years went by the wayside for ever.However before we point fingers let me return to a topic dealt with previously. I feel that nowadays no one wants to PAY for anything, the arrival of the internet was a major step forward in progress but also I feel led to some of the problems we have today. How many times do we hear "don't buy that here, you will get it cheaper o the net", "don't buy it off that site search elsewhere. you'll get it cheaper". Now we have no Record stores,(I need a stylus for my turntable, nearest store 30 miles away!). Can't find a decent bookstore, sometimes you just want to browse and maybe stumble across something new. The point of this ramble? No stores, No jobs, no service industry and as we don't have heavy industry what the F..are people supposed to do for a living? I was lucky enough to get to take early retirement three years ago but it breaks my heart when I travel around town and see kids 17,18,19,20 and above wandering around with nothing to do and no prospect of anything to do. I could of course went down the road of telling that I lived for many years in a deprived area with no Community Centres, no Youth Clubs, and we spent every night walking miles around the surrounding countryside listening to the radio with no intention of causing a disturbance, but that was then this is now at least I had a job and was lucky enough to continually work for 41 years without being unemployed, which of todays youngsters will be able to say that? Answers on a post card....... Sorry folks just back and ranting already. P.S I know there were lots of the people in the riots just using it as an excuse to loot and rob, but that has been covered most eloquently covered previously by jonapi.
  • gratefaldean
    Joined:
    I've never been more
    Energized and happy in my professional life than 1995-2005 with Ray Anderson as the CEO and Chairman of the company I worked for. A truly inspired and inspiring business leader, he passed away early this week. He was a self-confessed "plunderer of the earth" who experienced a green epiphany in 1994 and led us all down a very interesting and fulfilling path. Truly a man who believed in walking the talk, he will be missed. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/08/08/ray-anderson-dies-green-buildi…
  • Daddy_Dead
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Talk about current, new "Greatest Story" and "Playing" streaming
    I guess in celebration of Grateful Dead Night at AT&T Park last night, ESPN.com is celebrating with five streams from Rhino's "Europe" package. Apparently Greatest Story Ever Told” (Paris) and “Playing In The Band” (London) are previously unreleased. Here's that link: http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/thelife/music/news/story?id=6843348 Let me know /// D.Dead
  • marye
    Joined:
    indeed
    and hey riggsjr, check in and let us know you're OK.
  • TigerLilly
    Joined:
    HEAR HEAR!!!!!!!!
    excellent post jonapi! ********************************** I am not young enough to know everything. Oscar Wilde
  • Anonymous (not verified)
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Taller
    Seemed much quieter here in London last night; not so for other cities in the UK though. Wolverhampton, West Bromwich, Manchester...Really nice to see locals getting together with brooms and cleaning up the streets themselves; gives me great heart. Police increased by 10,000 but worryingly permission has been given to use plastic bullets should the need arise. Not a good idea. You are dealing with young people who truly do not care about what they're doing. Rounding them up is one thing but using firearms? That way madness lies. Further to some points i was making yesterday, there are other important factors that need to be addressed. Certainly, the closing of youth related projects and centres does not help. In Clapham, where some of the rioting took place yesterday, a youth worker said that 4 youth centres had been closed in that area alone. Clapham is not even very big. The old saying, "the devil makes work for idle hands" is very very true. It is school/college/university holidays here and without parental guidance, somewhere to use that energy and adrenalin in a productive fashion; mix in resentment, frustration, poverty and alienation and what we've seen these last few days is bound to happen. And parental guidance is very important. People are having children at younger and younger ages; they themselves are not capable of looking after their own lives, so how on earth are they to care for someone else's? They do not have the life skills, the values and moral strength instilled in them to pass it on. This isn't meant to be patronising; i couldn't have taken on such responsibility at 18, 19 or even 20 years old. Some do of course, this does not apply to everyone. There are some remarkable young people doing an incredible job, whether the child was planned or unplanned. Let's not paint everyone with the same brush. But what outlook do you think some of these kids should have? Some are born into a flat on the 23rd floor of a grim high rise in dirty concrete surroundings. Just down their road is smart cafés, restaurants and bars; London, like a lot of cities all over the world is incredibly schizophrenic in design and social standing. I used to work in Angel, Islington; plenty of trendy bars and eateries in the high street outside the tube station. Go around the corner and there's a pleasant (and probably expensive) school for juniors; next road is a row of very expensive houses and a secure garden in the square, always well maintained. A few short steps and there is a block of council flats, dirty, rubbish on the floor, pokey shops and 12-14 year olds in school uniform smoking spliffs before another day wasted in the classroom. The Parcelforce guy wouldn't deliver to the front doors in the flats because even if the van was locked, it would get broken into. He now buzzes the intercom and waits downstairs until the recipient collects. All this is one street away from rich houses (including many television/celebrity owners); these kids have to walk past these to get to school (if they choose to go of course). Now, that isn't to say it's rich people's fault necessarily; some have studied damn hard and gone to Medical School and are doing positive things for others; they can't help being born into a more privileged background anymore than poorer kids being born into low-income grime. (Beliefs in reincarnation not withstanding). But when the cost of living is rising and wages, if you have any, are stalling; when you are treated differently (and people, don't fool yourselves that they don't recognise a condescending look in their direction; we may think we hide it well, we're just looking, but these kids know what most are thinking - black hooded waster, criminal, drug taker). A childhood of that together with absent parents; role model desertion and no money; bleak surroundings and police harassment; raging hormones and zero prospects. Well, let's face it everyone, we have an ammunition factory ready to blow. Something has to be done. Fairer conditions for all; genuine investment in certain areas; investment in youth projects is massively important. Why don't these corporations donate computers to youth centres in poorer areas? Musical instrument manufacturers donating or loaning equipment to projects; set up a community centre that has things that kids simply can't afford. Musicians and artists should regularly give talks and demonstrations in schools. Fashion designers, hairdressers, top stylists, writers, actors; would it be so hard to take some time away from what you do and spend a week showing some of these extremely bright kids just what is possible? A lot of these kids don't even know that you can make a living doing this; that you don't necessarily need to go to a University to be creative or have access to technology and ideas. Scientists, physicists and computer programmers should also regularly attend schools and design projects that would blow a kid's mind. In most cases i bet, these kids simply aren't aware that these things exist. When your daily routine is smoke, school, no parents, getting aggressively shouted at for the slightest misdemeanor (the amount of times i've witnessed a mother literally scream in a 2 year old's face for having the temerity to gently and smilingly reach out at a shiny candy bar in a supermarket and then usually getting a slap is for it's trouble is criminal; abuse pure and simple); when the parent's have no idea how to cook and all meals, if they get one, is chips, fried chicken or microwaved slop; if the parent is out at their third job so they can make ends meet and intimidation and argumentative aggression is an everyday occurence then they will not have the time or the simple chance to be exposed to some of the most incredible things human beings can achieve. Work-placements should be mandatory for large companies; computer graphics and radio, film and art and music and literature and sport and science and medical and spiritual practices and organisations should all be a large presence in schools from a young age. Blow their little minds and show them what can be achieved, rich or poor. Give them something they won't forget. Treat them like little adults and listen to what they have to say and how they express their emotions. Give them examples of the more out-there approach you can take to life and still be responsible and kind to others around you. If you're busy being creative or are filled to the brim and bursting with enthusiasm you have no time to even consider rioting or fighting or drinking or robbing or killing. Time would be too precious. Until we go in that direction, as Frank says, "there's no way to delay, that trouble comin' every day". Well, that's what i think, for what it's worth. And lastly, to end this rather over-long ramble, i'm reminded of something Stephen Fry once said; and to condense and paraphrase really quite wildly here, he basically remarked that if you look out if the window, Nature itself is unconditionally beautiful - the arctic, the deserts, the oceans; the only ugly things you will ever see out the window are things made by Man. And if, from your earliest age, looking at the world, you see yourself as a member of a species that can only uglyfy and spoil the world, it gives you a deep sense of guilt; guilt being the major cause of aggression and that why you get violence, because you feel guilty and worthless; ou feel worthless if you don't believe you are part of a species that is actually capable of producing beautiful things, which we are; in terms of architecture, in terms of painting, in terms of music and all kinds of things. Beauty is possible and is good.
  • trailbird
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    where does the time go ?
    right now I'm having a pint of Cherry Garcia ice cream and reminissing.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Forums

Nuclear power! Carcinogenic cell phones! The Stanley Cup! and the usual parade of kids dancing and shaking their bones, politicians throwing stones, etc. Discuss.

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

12 years 9 months
Permalink

Considering the ongoing rhetoric that's been coming out of the Right since President Barack "I'm Not a Muslin" Obama won the election, it flabbergasts me to utter stupification how any even remotely (and I mean REMOTELY) intelligent American can get behind ANYTHING that side is saying. They continue to knod their heads like good little robots whenever the current talking points come on their beloved Fox News, and everything else gets ignored. And then they sit there and point their fingers at their television sets, claiming Obama's trying to take their rights away when it was the party that came before that restricted more of our Constitutional rights than any president in a long, long time. I'm not one of those conspiracy theorists, but is there something in the water out in the middle of the country? Some chemical or remote transmitter that shuts down a citizen's ability to take in information and process it like the rest of us? How do these people think that Romney & Ryan are "one of them" and actually concerned with their station in this nation? Can't they see that, by reducing/restricting taxes on the wealthy means it comes out of the middle class, thus reducing the middle class to a higher-income version of the poor? I swear, whenever I talk about these issues with my Republican friends, I want to throw my hands in the air and scream, "I FEEL LIKE I'M TAKING CRAZY PILLS!!!"
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

I think it's the deep-fried butter sticks they consume at their fairs. Either that or Koch Brothers sponsored alien anal probes radiating out from Wichita (a stupid chip is left implanted) Seriously, how people, other than the top 2%, can vote for Republicans is a modern miracle of conditional advertizing! We're all doomed.
user picture

Member for

12 years 3 months
Permalink

a ww II vet. called into npr the other day to say that for the first time in his adult life he would not be voting for the pres. he then said the best thing to do from now on is to just place whoever has the most money into office and into congress. Aren't we already pretty close to that? Don't the koch bros.tell their puppets (boner and his cronies) how to vote and what to say? which laws to pass so that american "job creators" have an easier (more profitable) time going over seas to exploit brown people and destroy their environment due to no environmental regulations? Aren't the insurance and oil companies together so far up their asses that they make them cough? I guess i haven't been paying attention. to be honest, i can't believe the repoobs. didn't go for the jugular this time around and announce their ticket of christie /limbaugh (maybe next time). THAT really would have brought the sheeple out of the woodwork. ah yes, the great american plutocracy...........brought to you by at least 51% of american sheeple.ps. anyone seen "idiocracy"; funny "b" movie, but probably more prophetic than it's given credit for.
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

if you have not come across this before, give it a listen. Enjoy Michael D. Higgins (who was elected president of Ireland last year) is fed up with over-the-top Tea Party rhetoric, and he isn't afraid to show it. Listen to him call out radio host Michael Graham on everything from health care to foreign policy in this heated exchange from 2010. http://www.upworthy.com/a-tea-partier-decided-to-pick-a-fight-with-a-fo…
user picture

Member for

12 years 3 months
Permalink

a most passionate, accurate and well stated argument/condemnation indeed!
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

that the war will be over when the Isreali tank driver is convicted of muder for running over a peaceful protester nonviolently protesting. Until then they (IAFs) are all terrorists.
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

PLEASE GO BACK TO THE OLD ONE. NO DOUBT THIS IS DUE TO CRAMMING IN ALL THE STORE STUFF. HOW ABOUT SPLITTING THEM UP?
user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

Good luck to all who fight the rising storm waters in Louisiana and Mississippi. Pumps are keeping up, and the levees are holding, in Jefferson Parish this morning. The French Quarter looks deserted, except for 3 people from the Weather Channel. How small is the font on this new comment form?? I'm tilting the eyeglasses way down!
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

As the speeches go on it is so clear that the men and women who are giving then are strong and passionate in their vigor. Even John Kerry who always seemed like a vampire who came back from the Dead at then end of his stump speech came across with such strength and vigor it was truly astounding. If John Kerrry can burn down the house we may just be looking at at runaway race! (Amazing!!)
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 7 months
Permalink

Is there a chat room for dead.net anymore? Yeah it's been a long time since I got on this site, busy working and new girlfriend, etc. Wish you all well. "Once in a while you get shown the Light in the strangest of places if you look at it right..."
user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

Thank goodness for football! College games and now pro action are back! Will the Raiders be good this year? I'm not sure what to expect from the Chiefs.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

12 years 9 months
Permalink

Not sure how many of ya'll out there are fans of Black Flag, but this really caught my eye. On Black Flag's Facebook wall, they posted a cut-out from BAM Magazine circa '83/84: "Say It Loud! I'm A Deadhead And Proud! Someone sent me a copy of your Grateful Dead review [in which BAM contributor Mark Levinton wrote, 'So-called adventuresome people who dig Black Flag probably wouldn't be caught alive at a Grateful Dead concert.'] I saw that Grateful Dead show in Irvine! I've seen them three times in Oakland and once in San Diego since the Irvine show. I've also seen them many times in years past. The Dead is my favorite band. What we find is that there are Dead fans at our shows outside of California. California's music scene is remarkably segmented. Bands like Black Flag and the Dead draw all kinds of music fans to performances *outside* of California. But maybe things are changing. I saw some Black Flag shirts at the San Diego Dead show. I feel that in terms of approach and music the Dead have been a big influence on Black Flag from the beginning. We love the Dead. Glad you do, too!" UTTERLY MIND-BLOWING!!!!!
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

As one who worked at BAM back in the day, I get an even greater kick out of this. A blast from the past. And, of course, well said, Mr. Ginn!
user picture

Member for

12 years 8 months
Permalink

So, we've got this bogus quasi-movie going around seeming to demean the the Prophet Mohamed and causing his followers to do well-timed deadly actions. Not only has the movie caused the killing of the US ambassador to Libya, it has caused outright pitched battles in Eqypt, Tunisia and Yemen among possibly others world Arab countries. Added to this is the possibility that the movies makers mis-directed the entire cast about it's supposed plot and content of the highly polemical and incendiary flicks This has in turn given rise to the supposition that the film itself, shadowy as it is, is a tactical arm of Al Queda sewing mayhem and destructio,,
user picture

Member for

12 years 3 months
Permalink

The BBC Radiophonic Workshop is to reopen. Home of electronic experimentation, it was created in 1958 to produce sound effects and new music for radio and then television. An extraordinary pool of talent was located in those Maida Vale Studios on Delaware Road, including Daphne Oram, Delia Derbyshire, Dick Mills, Desmond Briscoe, Brian Hodgson, John Baker, David Cain, Paddy Kingsland and many more. The sound of the 'Doctor Who' theme that Delia Derbyshire helped to create, signaled the retreat behind the sofa for many a frightened child, myself included. The new Creative Director is Matthew Herbert, musician, master samplist, sound collagist and electronic wizard. It will now be based entirely online. Herbert's appointment is certainly promising. Here's to the future! http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-19568120 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BBC_Radiophonic_Workshop
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

Understand that hundreds of Daves Picks vol 3 were stolen in shipment. I live abroad and find that shipment takes 37 days,three times longer than Amazon dealers arrange. My copy of Spring 1990 supposively arrived in Arlington accofrding to USPS tracking info on the 24th of August but disappeared before delivery. The shipping problems are a strain on us anda certainly on you guys and Rhino. Please keep us updated about the website's experience with USPS,which may not be as bad as previously thought. Maybe you guys should use the same shippers as Amazon dealers.
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

That after 17 years The Grateful Dead continue to pull in not only widely held historical interest but ennui--like historical minutiae. Not to mention performances from spin-offs that the the genre they they themselves made famous..... shhhh, the baby is waking up. (this thing has now crossed two generational lines.) Is it worth all the stuff written & performed? Perhaps only as a sidebar to the history of LSD, whose letters are more favorably writ large on the dollar bill than USA.
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

Though I've been espousing an electoral victory for the current president for the last few months-- to the point of taking all bets and giving ridiculous odds, with the release of the latest polls I am ready to call it an official victory without chance if loss. The sad thing? Nothing will change until perhaps the next 4 year annual melee.... I find it unutterably sad that the best president elected since JFK has to be chopped off at the knees by by a bunch of morally bankrupt corporate whores.
user picture

Member for

12 years 3 months
Permalink

listening to him speak to the united nations council today reinforced the feeling of how nice it is to have an intelligent human being as a president. he really is an incredible orator..........and then i try to picture geo. bush jr. speaking in front of this same group of people and wonder how anybody in the free world (or just the world,period) ever took the usa seriously during his two demented terms. i imagine that leaders around the world would mark their calendars for the next u.n. meeting so that they wouldn't miss having a good laugh should the great tex-ass speak. even with obama's hands tied, he's light years better than what we had (or might have).
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

Here's a link to a funny little video starring Samuel L. Jackson that is the one true glimmer of hope I've seen in this presidential election season, since it uses humor, and not fear tactics, to persuade its viewers to vote: http://wtfu2012.com/
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

Too bad Jackson isn't debating Romney or his bat-boy. Thanks for posting Mike!.
user picture

Member for

12 years 3 months
Permalink

would've gladly been romney's veep, but the poor child was just too tired from his sexual marathon with the middle class here. he's building his stamina for '16 when him and his senatorial sweety will be running mates (assuming obama wins).
user picture

Member for

12 years 3 months
Permalink

to all the colon cleansing cross-dressers out there, please accept my apology for associating you health conscious, socially adventurous and fun-luvin' folks with the likes of walker and ryan. political disgust got the best of me for a moment.
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

GAUSHALA,Kathmandu, Nepal: A man died after he was stung by snake at Ekrahiya VDC in Mahottari district last night. He is 50-year-old Amilakh Mandal of Ekrahiya VDC-4. According to his family, Mandal was bitten by a cobra while spreading manure in the paddy field at Dhirapur-5 on Wednesday evening. He was first taken to a witch doctor for treatment and rushed to local hospital only after treatment by the witch doctor did not work. But it was too late by the time he reached the hospital and he died on way to the hospital, it is stated. Moral of the story: Taken them to the hospital first and alert the witch doctor his services are needed as the hospital. Seems like a sensible policy to me....
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

The BBC analysis is that the three upcoming debates will not serve to sway the election. Rather, Americans are being prepared for the fiscal cliff, the slashing of social welfare programs to avoid a massive raise in the interest on the national debt. Whoever gets elected, bad news is coming...
user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

We're about to be bombarded with full press Karl Rove and Koch Brother funded commercials. If your TV set is in Florida, Ohio or Colorado, watch out!! I'm off to the Joint for Furthur!!
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

so all we're getting is disingenuous spin on the propositions by the usual suspects on both sides.
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

Tell vague lies for an hour and a half was more than I could take. Obama not being fired up was disappointing. Neither had any good ideas for the future. Goooooo Mayans!
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

12 years 1 month
Permalink

Sooooo besides all of the garbage in the news I would like to think that the Love for Levon event I attended in New Jersey last night was a spiritually healing and lovely event for one of music's most revered men. I have not teared up and had goosebumps from a live music experience in too long. This review puts it fairly poignantly http://www.jambands.com/news/2012/10/04/roger-waters-gregg-allman-john-…
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

Without need for a concise history in the last 20 years of Afghanistan, the Mujahadeen fought and extraordinarily bloody war to oust the Russians from that desolate country. The Communist president, Najibullah and his brother were allowed to remain under UN protection (though the UN were merely public relations window-dressing without weapons, with the help of the Mujahadeen) Najibullah was left in relative obscurity in the diplomatic quarter of Kabul. The Taliban showed up after the Mujahadeen realized the impossibility of holding on to the war-torn country. Najibulllah's tortured body was strung from a traffic control light pole and guarded for all to see. Now, some 12 years later, Afghan President Hamat Karzai and his brother cling to power with the help of coalition forces, who have made clear through Obama that they are bugging out in 2014. Once again the Taliban are knocking on the door and once again it will be some component of the current coalition who will be tasked with handing over the bodies of it's erstwhile leadrers in the hopes of currying some type of favor. Today, on the anniversary of Najibullah's demise, Karzai pleads mournfully with the USSECDEF Leon Panetta for more support (who tells him to be more grateful for the sacrifice of 2000 allied soldiers as the coalition has expended that many men in mortal combat.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

12 years 9 months
Permalink

Y'know, this thought came to me the other night, and it proves just how stupid and simple-minded the people of this beautiful country can be: The TEA Party consider themselves to be conservatives/Republicans, and their stance is that they've been "Taxed Enough Already." The majority of them appear to be middle-class Americans, and they're about as anti-Obama as you can get. Now, here's the part where I start scratching my head. They're anti-Obama because they don't like his tax policies (he wants to increase taxes on the upper class/richest 1%) and are going to vote for Mitt Romney, whom they identify with because he's filthy-f**king-rich. But Romney has admitted he doesn't intend on increasing taxes on the rich while also saying the American people need to pay more in taxes to recover from the deficit of '00 through '08. So, where's that money going to come from? The upper class's taxes are already reduced, and the poor can barely afford to pay the standard tax rate based on their income. Now, here's where I fail to find the logic in the TEA Party's argument (assuming there was ever logic to begin with): The obvious answer of who will be shouldering the brunt of the tax increases is the MIDDLE CLASS. How the TEA Party can't see this boggles my mind to near-migraine proportions. It's clear that we live in a country where the majority of the population chooses not to think for themselves, especially when we have a**holes like Bill O'Reilly and Glen Beck (among numerous others) who take it upon themselves to act as the mouthpieces of the extreme right.
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

Is rooted in racism, among other roots in my opinion. The vast, vast proportion of the Tea Party are white and the type who lock their doors when driving through semi-marginal neighborhoods, thumbing the door locks. Many of them are "birthers" who hate all blacks and would never vote for a black under any circumstances. Next, they tend to be older and very conservative. Their rage (energy?) has to do mainly with the bail-outs and other spending Obama has done over his tenure, As usual, they conveniently forget Obama was facing a massive big-bank invented crisis which forced him to spend with little restraint with questionable legislation. They see this spending as irresponsible in the extreme and feel it will handicap the country as a whole and their kids and grand-kids in particular. Much of their ideology is written as talking points by conservative ideologues like the Koch brothers. Out of this (or starting from this) is a a guy called Grover Norquist who has had every possible politician sign a pledge saying they will never vote to raise taxes, whatever the circumstance. This is a thundering clash of opposing philosophies on the economy. The US Government's economy is not the same as your household economy and this is where they make their simplistic mistakes, You don't need to kill the social safety net -- you need to tax the highest 2% of the income tax bracket while shutting down corporate subsidies and loopholes (corporate welfare) and identify at least 5% of waste that every sane person knows is in the military budget. The Koch brothers and other super-rich Ayn Rand conservatives are foaming at the mouth to kill Medicare.Medicaid and Social Security. They need to be silenced to a reasonable proportion. One theory is slash all spending. Another is to spend money on physical infrastructure and other vital needs. No doubt the US will muddle through in a mixture of these two thanks to Norquist and the Tea Party, The Simpson/Bowles legislation does have some sound fiscal policy that would help address the debt and it's attendant interest. This would incorporate many of the Tea Party's legitimate concerns. The problem is to separate what is sound fiscal policy from the hysterical gibberish coming from the Koch Brothers and other super greed-head Ayn Rand coneheads. The Tea Party people are being used like tools. They need to see how they are being used in the class war.
user picture

Member for

12 years 3 months
Permalink

i wish those would come up for intelligent and educated discussions where i reside...............but i'm afraid that will happen at about the same time they run out of beer and brats in milwaukee. until then, it's best to do what any good and resourceful gardener would do. --- best of luck co, wa, or. !!!!!!! ---- (it's 2012, we shouldn't even so much as have to discuss this anymore, but it makes some politicians feel worthy of their useless jobs ( with their obscene perks) by creating ludicrous drug laws which target minorities and the poor......... who, in turn, feed the prison industry). "i like to think of laws not as rules to live by, but more as suggestions". :D....... a wise adage indeed! george carlin "they've outlawed the most popular vegetable in the world!" timothy leary
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

Or does it still seem a little surreal to be seeing a couple of guys from the Grateful Dead singing the national anthem on national tv? Don't the the MLB, SF Giants, and Fox PTB know who these guys are? Happy Birthday, Bob!
user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

I hit the refresh button and got a duplicate post
user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

Bob and Phil must be buddies with the 3rd base coach, Tim Flannery. I was watching the Chargers kick ass over on ESPN.
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

Comes as they are singing "land of the FREEEEEE." I loved Phil's raised-fist emphasis on "free."
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

Screwing up on the first debate and then having to pray Joe Biden didn't muck-up scrambling up that apple tree in the 2nd debate. Truly, by the exit polls of those who are likely to vote, this race is a statistical dead heat. Could it really be that Obama doesn't want a second term? (And would anybody have blamed him?)
user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

It wasn't Justin Verlander's night as his slumbering Tigers ran into a deep swinging Pablo Sandoval. Barry Zito pitched well and contributed 2 hits too. We'll see what tomorrow brings.
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

"I'm fixing a hole where the rain gets inAnd stops my mind from wandering Where it will go I'm filling the cracks that ran through the door And kept my mind from wandering Where it will go And it really doesn't matter if I'm wrong I'm right Where I belong I'm right Where I belong. See the people standing there who disagree and never win" Yeah well, at least it's a chance to get off the road and just squeeze the phone. Everybody stay safe on the East Coast!.
user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

I'm surprised I haven't read any accounts of baseball fans celebrating the sweep of the Tigers by the San Francisco Giants Sunday evening! Congratulations and hope the parade is fun, too.
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

Cartels are fighting it out in jet-set destination Acapulco, Mexico while opium production is up 17.6% in the world-leading producer country Burma. Perhaps that is why Ang Sang Su Kyi gets her cosmetic freedom. Afghanistan is the #2 producer in the world, just waiting for the US exit in 2014 to retake the lead.
user picture

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

Greetings Beings! Hope some East Coast Heads out there find this post. Would love to see you so we can dance and shake our bones one more time... Will be sipping some sweet tunes into the night and groovin' in this massive dance space just like old times... Here are some details... FALL FOR THE DEAD! ~ A Night of Dancin' to the Good 'ol Grateful Dead! Saturday, Nov 3, 2012 8:00p NEA - North East American School of Dance 25 Main Street, 4th Floor, Northampton, MA Join us as we clear out the cob webs, dust off those rusty strings one more time, and enter into the circle of community and connection as the kids they dance and shake their bones to the sounds of The Grateful Dead! This one night only barefoot boogie dance event will be a time for all of us who Love the sounds of Jerry and The Boys to come together in Love, Peace, and Celebration! This musical journey will be guided by DEAD DJ's Brothers Antonio Aversano & Bill Baue Sliding Scale: $5 - $10 https://www.facebook.com/events/239395542853679/ Peace, ~ Antonio ~
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

The Northeastern portion of the US as well as the Appalachian Mountain chain, the Hatteras shoreline to the North Shore of Boston and 22 foot waves pounding onshore at Lake Michigan (Chicago) and Lake Eerie (Cleveland) provided the rough proportions of a massive collision of two storms with a very low barometric pressure center (a record in fact) of 940 millibars. Hundreds of homes burned to the ground and and about 500 died. The price tag for damage? The second highest in history. It is clear that this combined monster, along with the heat of the summer drought, signaled the full onslaught of global warming. Just as clear is that people and politicians (including the presidential candidates) are in full denial of the real damages yet to be felt. If you live in a home that has no propane or oil heat, it will be uninhabitable when the grid goes out (predicted by cyber attack or otherwise). Unimaginable food and energy prices increases signal just a few of the severest effects. I'm not trying to scare anybody, just saying that I'm making plans for this stark future that include a self-contained tiny house with generator. In the long run of a worst case scenario even this will not be enough.