Can they even be corrupt competently? This is horrible, and pathetic at the same time. F’ing idiots, all of them. They really don’t believe in our form of government or the rule of law.
This is basically an interview with John Gaeta about the approach taken in the upcoming remake of Speed Racer. The movie looks great, and I’m such a fan of the Wachowski brothers that this is on my must see list. The Matrix and V for Vendetta are among my favorite movies in large part because of the visual and stylistic weight of their films.
Tonight’s episode of Heroes focused on a future 5 years after a catastrophic nuclear explosion (in the form of a radioactive hero) in NYC. The world is a dark place, and the “heroes” are about to be subjected to a government sponsored euthanasia/genocide program. We watch a number of the good guys get killed brutally by a government run amok and an evil hero.
However, even in this dark tableau was a moment of optimism. In this future, the government was able to erect a monument to the dead within five years of the tragedy. In our world, run by George Pataki, Michael Bloomberg, and George W Bush, we still don’t have a national memorial to the dead.
Just found this from Think Progress and thought I would pass it on. McCain makes a good argument for withdrawing troops immediately (from Haiti and Somalia). He talks about the will of the people and Congress and how the President should realize that they don’t want the military to be used for nation building or policing a country torn in civil unrest. You know, the same things he believes now…. Oh, wait…
I thank God everytime I think that they could’ve been U.S. servicemen.
He’s our state senator. The software engineer in me appreciates the attempt to validate his assumptions.
And the lies from the Press Secretary’s podium continue. Look, you want to talk about Clinton? Al Gore got smacked around by a press repeating RNC press releases because he made a phone call on a government phone using a DNC paid for phone card.
Talk about media bias…
OK, I know I spend too much time changing the themes around on my blog, but this guy has done something amazing. He’s created command-line interfaces, in your browser, for his blog. Want posts categorized under slashdot? list the Slashdot directory. Check them out and be amazed. (via Boing Boing)
This makes me proud of my team and the teams I work with at ESPN.com:
Considering the asynchronous nature of the Internet, to have two computers within about a half-second using the TCP-based protocol (we’re not doing what video games do) we use is pretty amazing. This is pretty cool.
Even better (though unfair in this test), is the fact that we’re ahead of TV. We’re probably actually closely in sync with TV, as I’m watching on my Slingbox which adds a few seconds of latency.
Don Imus, off the air. Rush Limbaugh, still on the air. Explain this to me.
This is depressing. The issues are complicated, but the limited sovereignty that Indian tribes enjoy are a big part of this.
I meant to write more about this article but never seem to have time to do so. So, here you go. It’s too good not to pass on.
Oddly enough, I know her. She’s trying to turn this into a business/career so, if you’re a tech nut or geek, check out her blog.
Read the cartoon, it’s a pretty pathetic display for those pundits…
We need more Democrats to make this point, to stay on this message, and to then live up to its ideals:
Not since the days of Watergate, when our judicial system and intelligence community were deployed by the White House in the service of partisan politics, have we seen such abuses. And in many ways, what we have seen from this administration is far more extensive than that scandal.
Partisan politics has infiltrated every level of our federal government – from scientific reports on global warming to emergency management services to the prosecutorial power of the federal government itself. Even the Iraq War – from our entry to the reconstruction – has been thoroughly politicized and manipulated.
…
During the 2000 presidential campaign, Karl Rove, George W. Bush’s political architect, often drew an analogy between that election and the election of 1896, in which adviser Mark Hanna joined forces with many of the plutocrats of that Gilded Age and ushered in a 35-year era of Republican dominance – dominance that didn’t end until the election of Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Without a trace of reserve, George Bush and Karl Rove set out to recreate that earlier era of one-party rule. And they pursued their goal by inverting the very purpose of government.
…
Principals and supporters of the Bush Administration have taken to attributing its myriad failures to mere incompetence. This is an ironic defense for an Administration that once touted President Bush as the first MBA President and boasted about a cabinet filled with CEOs.
…
Once the Iraq War was launched, we all knew how important the reconstruction would be to securing the peace. But politics extended to that country’s reconstruction and the examples are truly shocking:
The person chosen to oversee Iraq’s health care system was the community health director for the former Republican governor of Michigan. The man he replaced was a physician with a master’s degree in public health and post-graduate degrees from Harvard, Yale, Dartmouth and UC-Berkeley and taught at Johns Hopkins School of Public Health where he specialized in disaster response.
A 24 year-old with a background in commercial real estate was hired by the Authority to reopen and manage the Iraqi stock exchange.
The daughter of a prominent neoconservative was tapped to manage Iraq’s $13 billion annual budget.
…
The Administration would like the press and public to believe all of this corruption and cronyism consists of isolated instances and one-offs. But I ask you:
Michael Brown. Scooter Libby. Bernard Kerik. Halliburton. Philip Cooney. David Safavian. Lurita Doan. Matteo Fontana. Sue Ellen Wooldridge. Steven Griles. Alberto Gonzales. FEMA. Iraq intelligence. Iraq reconstruction.
This Hall of Shame is no accident and these are not isolated incidences. It’s a pattern of political appointees who put partisan interests ahead of country – and were told to do so.
…
The saddest legacy of the Bush Administration’s six-year trail of cronyism and corruption is that it contributes to the public’s already cynical view of government. This makes it even more difficult for those of us who believe that the purpose of government is to secure a better future for our country and all of its people. Repairing this sorry legacy is the first challenge our next President will face.
It is the saddest legacy, and we’ve even seen it on FatMixx. “It’s politics” is the lazy way out, and it’s the easy way out. It’s not “politics.” As Rep. Emanuel says in his speech, political appointees aren’t inherently corrupt. There isn’t a requirement that they put party over country. The requirement is actually quite the opposite.
Read the rest of the speech. It is the right point to make to the American people and to the world. We must reclaim our dignity as a country and show that we can rise above partisanship when it comes to the key issues of the day.






