Happy thoughts (3)

It wasn’t too hard to find happy thoughts today, what with the gorgeous weather and my decision earlier in the week to take off from work. My mother came home from the hospital yesterday, and while she’s still fairly achy, tired, and on a low-fat diet, she’s doing well. Thanks again to everyone for the kind words and thoughts, especially earlier in the week before her surgery.

I spent most of today prepping copies of Kaleidotrope, which — god willing and the creek don’t rise — will get mailed out tomorrow morning. That and just enjoying the start of my three-day weekend.

“Let me tell you how it will be”

Andrew Sullivan is right:

But it seems odd to describe this as anything but a first stab at creating opposition to the Obama administration’s spending plans, manned by people who made no serious objections to George W. Bush’s. The tea-parties are as post-partisan as Reynolds, one of the most relentlessly partisan bloggers on the web. When you see them holding up effigies of Bush, who was, unlike Obama, supposed to be the fiscal conservative, let me know.But the substantive critique must remain the primary one. Protesting government spending is meaningless unless you say what you’d cut.

If you favor no bailouts, then say so. If you want to see the banking system collapse, then say so. If you think the recession demands no fiscal stimulus, then say so. If you favor big cuts in Medicare, Medicaid, social security and defense, then say so. I keep waiting for [Glenn] Reynolds to tell us what these protests are for; and he can only spin what they are against.

All protests against spending that do not tell us how to reduce it are fatuous pieces of theater, not constructive acts of politics. And until the right is able to make a constructive and specific argument about how they intend to reduce spending and debt and borrowing, they deserve to be dismissed as performance artists in a desperate search for coherence in an age that has left them bewilderingly behind.

Via Mark Evanier

And for a little more perspective, Jon Stewart:

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart M – Th 11p / 10c
Nationwide Tax Protests
thedailyshow.com
Daily Show
Full Episodes
Economic Crisis Political Humor

Friday various

  • Very minor 24 spoiler warning. The show is moving to New York next season. I wonder if this means I should start watching it again. I haven’t watched an episode in over four and a half years, but it would be interesting to see if I spot anything I recognize. [via]
  • Is your favorite television show in danger of being canceled? Well then don’t watch it — at least, not on television. It’s a compelling argument. If you’re not a Nielsen family, it’s maybe better to watch online (legally) where your viewership is counted. [via]
  • Then again, if cable companies like Time Warner have their way, pretty soon watching online won’t be economically feasible for most people.
  • Unless, of course, we get the sort of jobs that only pay well on TV. I can see this much from experience, editorial assistants don’t make anything like they seem to make on Ugly Betty. Heck, most editors don’t either.
  • Finally, photographer Chino Otsuka digitally added her modern self to childhood photos. It makes for a weird sort of time travel. I quite like it. [via]

Random 10 4/17

Last week. This week:

  1. “Season of the Witch” by Richard Thompson (orig. Donovan), guessed by Glen
    So many different people to be
  2. “Heave-Ho” by Smash Mouth
    She says these punks have to go
  3. “The Case Continues” by Ute Lemper
    The weapon was a phone call in the dead of night
  4. “Talking Old Soldiers” by Bettye Lavette
    I may just be an old has been to some
  5. “Loser” by Monow (orig. Beck), guessed by Eric B.
    Kill the headlights and put it in neutral
  6. The ghosts of sorrow haunt the deep
  7. “Good Old Fashioned Lover Boy” by Queen, guessed by Eric B.
    I’d like for you and I to go romancing
  8. “This Piece of Poetry Is Meant to Do Harm” by the Ark
    What you call peace to me is a call to arms
  9. “Midnight Radio” by Dar Williams (orig. Hedwig & the Angry Inch), almost guessed by Kim
    And all you strange rock and rollers
  10. “Grey” by Ani DiFranco
    I feel right at home in this stunning monochrome

Good luck!