Thursday, July 31, 2008

Snitches get stitches....









What happens when Gang Bangin' popular rapper drops a track that praises Obama while dissing Hillary and Jesse Jackson? Obama must condemn said track.

In inner city views, this is most disrespectful. I'm sure Ludacris understands this, but it clearly puts him in a position to be viewed by his peers as being openly and publicly 'dissed'. Wait until the honeymoon is over, and black folks living in the city realize that he is going to have to govern a NATION. Black people make up about 15% of the total population of the USA. This means Obama is going to have to break some promises. When they realize how he has used them, it's going to get real ugly folks.

Only 2 things can save him. An untimely death, which would make him a martyr, or an outward show of support for the black community that will alienate him with 'typical white people'...Obama is in a tough place.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

seeing if this free file hosting thing works...

a friend pointed out I don't have alot of my music online. I am trying to remedy that, so I am trying out this free file hosting site. Let's hope this works and sticks around!


http://www.mediafire.com/?ojfw1d1limj







http://www.mediafire.com/?fjrhklxxxyy

the flash pass

Capitalism works.

One note, goodbye to one Mark Teixeira






good luck in Cali!

I took the nephews to Six Flag yesterday. For 35$, you can get a 'flash pass' that basically allows you to 'walk on' every ride. You walk up the exit amongst the disembarking passengers that waited an hour to ride the 2 minute ride. But, for your extra 35$, YOU BYPASS THE LINE AND WALK RIGHT ON!

Damn, I love this country!

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Critical Dumb Mass


Driver Attacked, Injured By Group Of Cyclists In Seattle

http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7011743421

I have witnessed 'Critical Mass' demonstrations while I was dating my wife as a student @ UGA. Athens, Ga is not a 'big city', and usually, a couple hundred douchebag cyclists would take over the streets of downtown on a weekend or weeday night and wreak havoc.

Here's a clue, you 2 wheeled dipshits: what you are doing is not a 'protest' or 'demonstration', it is 'thuggery', plain and simple. I did not have a drivers license until I was 25: and I only owned my first car when I turned 30. But, I got around. I rode a bike, but not on busy streets in rush hour traffic. Sometimes I took the bus or cab. I got rides with friends and chicks I was banging.

Here's another clue: if your wearing that ridiculous Lance Pants and stupid shoes, that means you can cough up the 2 bucks necessary to take MARTA, which now has bike racks on every bus and train. Why not take your dumbass outfit to the parks, where you can breathe FRESH AIR, instead of that evil, planet killing CO2? But, noooo. You want to be 'seen'. Your a douche! Get it? You are holding up traffic in rush hour! Go away!

Nothing is funnier to me then seeing a group of 'Lance pants' wearing pricks riding together. On a busy city street, one with no bike lanes. Which, BTW, comes at a heavy cost to the taxpayers and takes land from roadside property owners. These guys NEVER respect the traffic laws, BTW.

The only thing worse then these self pretentious asslicks, is the 'Harley Club'....Yeah, sure 'Loud pipes save Lives' my ass. How about 'I have a small penis, but 8 grand, so listen to me roar?!' You know these guys would be hoppin mad if a 'Ghetto Cruiser' went through thier White Bread neighborhood blaring some Ne Yo. The only difference between a Harley and a Hoover is the position of the dirtbag.

And there is no difference between 'Critical Dumb Ass' participants and a an eco-terrorist. If they pulled this shit with me, with my kid in the car, I would have layed on the horn, squeezed off a round, and screamed 'get away from my car, or become a speedbump'.


Saturday, July 26, 2008

The designated juicer



The pitcher that threw at the dugout should be deported. You cannot allow that kind of hooliganism in baseball.

Or, they should implement my system, the designated juicer. One guy on the team gets to 'roid up, and the next time this happens, you send out the goons. They fight in the infield one on one. Take a page out of hockey's book.

Good Boy!

Have you seen this boy?







A 5-year-old boy slipped out of the Imagination Station child care center unnoticed Tuesday afternoon, crossed two busy streets and wandered to a restaurant on the Interstate 35E service road in 100-degree heat.

Employees of Hooters found the child safe about 5:20 p.m. He left the child care center in the 2300 block of San Jacinto Boulevard, crossed the Interstate 35E northbound service road and Dallas Drive, bought a soft drink at a service station and walked to Hooters, where an employee found him and called police.

Deborah Pugh, who owns the child care business, said Wednesday that the boy asked to go to the bathroom and then slipped out a fire exit door, which must, by law, remain unlocked.

“It was just really fast,” Pugh said. “When the parent came for him we said he was in the bathroom. But we looked and realized he wasn’t, and we called police.”

Denton police spokesman Jim Bryan said someone from the child care center called 911 at 5:04 p.m., saying the child was missing. Officers searched the immediate vicinity and could not find the boy.

“At 5:20 p.m., while the officer was on the scene at the child care center, the assistant manager of Hooters called police,” Bryan said.

The officer responded to Hooters and brought the boy back to the Imagination Station, where he was released to his father, Bryan said.

“He was unharmed and in good condition,” the officer said.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

A 'conservative argument for the Impeachment of GWB'


I always shudder at the mention of my politics as 'conservative', when I feel I have been pretty anti-conservative in my views and consistent for such a long time...

I support gay marriage. Hell, let them walk the plank, too.

Not really pro-life until you get to the 22nd week. I feel if you want to abort them, do it while they are still developing but not after the 22nd week.

Not too hot on assault weapons. Sorry, 'Nuge, but I don't think you really need those armor piercing 'cop killer' bullets, ok? I know that pisses you off, but so be it.

I'm for legalization. You know what I'm talking about.

I'm against the death penalty.

I could go on and on, but I am constantly being reminded that as a fat, wealthy middle aged white guy that doesn't vote for the 'democrat' candidate, I must by default be a 'conservative'.

Such is my cross.

Recently I had an enlightening conversation with ao good friend from Cleaveland who supports Kucinich and agrees we should have impeached the president. I agree with him now, but not for the reasons he listed.

First off: not putting adequate 'boots on the ground' in Iraq in 2004.

As Napoleon said, if you say you're going to take Vienna, you take Vienna! After his generals told him that the troop strength was not adequate, he waited 3 more years to 'surge' more shock troops there. It is BS to claim 'the surge is working' when his top advisors and sitting GOP Senators ( Like McCain: HELLO! ) told him he needed more BOTG. This is simply 'playing politics' in regards to execution of the war. It showcases bad decision making, which lead to the unnecessary deaths of Americans serving there.

He could have made a hard, wartime decision and suspended 2 German bases to 'surge' more troops there back then: according to the Defense Department's annual "Base Structure Report" for fiscal year 2003, which itemizes foreign and domestic U.S. military real estate, the Pentagon currently owns or rents 702 overseas bases in about 130 countries and the military high command deploys to our overseas bases some 253,288 uniformed personnel alone. Hell, he could have brought a fraction of personell from Camp Butler in Okinawa, one of 10 Marine bases in Japan!

Secondly: The response, and mismanagement of Katrina. Don't misunderstand me: not everything that occurred was his fault, but alot of it was. Putting a 'crony' in charge of FEMA with no real experience was strike one. Getting his picture snapped 'touring the damage ' in Air Force One instead of getting his ass down there until a week later is strike two. Strike three was not using the force of the National Guard to qwell the 'unrest' right away.

That's not to say that region is not to blame themselves. But, New Orleans is like your quirky, entertaining retarded child. You know they aren't as handsome as brother Texas, or as hard working as cousin Mississippi. You know if 'it' hits the fan, you have to spend extra 'special' attention to them due to thier 'special needs'.

I could also say that his breaking of promises on fiscal responsibilty could be number three, or his reluctance to seal the southern border, but I don't think that rises to the levels of one and two.

So there you have it, friends. I would support any impeachment effort on GWB based on those reasons alone.

Monday, July 21, 2008

Blood at the polls....Pray for a GOP defeat.




http://www.townhall.com/columnists/AustinHill/2008/07/20/if_obama_loses_in_november,_will_america_suffer?page=full&comments=true


I asked this question many months ago. What if it's a 'squeeker' and Obama loses?




"...What will happen if, on election night in November, John McCain wins the presidency? Will it necessarily be determined that Obama’s defeat is the result of a conspiracy? A fraud? Or something worse?

Much has been said and written in recent months about the historical and cultural significance of the Obama nomination, and the would-be Obama presidency. Obama, himself, seems to place no limits on his own historical and cultural significance. At age 46, he has already authored two books - - both are about himself - - and the securing of his party’s nomination marked, according to him, the moment when our nation began to “heal..”

But what if Obama’s seemingly inevitable destiny - - that of “change agent President” - - was abruptly cut short? I’m not hinting here at the possibility of an assassin’s bullet (I’ll leave it to Hillary Clinton to suggest such things). I’m merely stating the obvious. The first Black American to secure the presidential nomination of a major political party could end up losing the election. If that were to happen, then what would the historical and cultural significance of that event be?

I first raised this question about five months ago, during some of the ugliest days of Obama’s primary election struggle with the race-baiting Clintons. In a private conversation over lunch in Washington, a friend and former Bush Administration staffer told me “Obama is a much more formidable candidate than many Republicans think. And while I disagree with him on policy issues, there is part of me that really believes that electing this guy President would go a long way towards healing the black-white rift in our country.”

“But does the inverse of that hold true?” I asked. “If he

makes it to the general election but then loses, are black-white relations made worse?”

“I don’t want to think about that” my friend replied after a long pause. “There could be trouble in the streets.”

That was in February. And since that conversation, I’ve repeatedly experienced people hinting at similar concerns in a variety of different contexts. I see it in email messages from readers of this column. I hear it from listeners to my own talk radio program at Washington, DC’s 630 WMAL, and the many other talk shows I guest host around the country.

And this past week I heard it in the most explicit terms. While speaking with a friend who is a yacht broker in the affluent Santa Monica coastal region of Southern California, I asked “what do people in your circles have to say about the presidential election? Are they even talking about it? What do they say?”

“Yes, people are talking about it” my friend assured me. “It’s assumed that Obama will win. But if he doesn’t, there’s a fear that South-Central LA will erupt in riots, kind of like what happened after the trial of the cops that beat Rodney King in 1992.”

I’m not a conspiracy theorist or alarmist. But I do believe that current cultural and political conditions are such that a McCain “victory” in November could create, at the very least, some significant tension in our society, if not outright civil unrest. Much of my concern has to do with a rather skewed, subjective, and selfish view of the notion of “injustice” that Obama himself has propagated throughout his campaign.

Think about it. On both implicit and explicit levels, Obama’s rhetoric suggests that the annoyances, the risks, the hardships and insecurities of your existence are the result of various injustices done to you, and that he alone can correct those injustices.

If a business executive earns exponentially more money than you do, this is an injustice and he will correct it. If you bought a house and are now having difficulty making the payments, this is an injustice and he will correct it. If you do not have “free healthcare,” this is an injustice and he will correct it. The fact that nuclear weapons exist in the world is an injustice, and he will correct it. If you purchased toys imported from China that turned out to be defective, that is an injustice and he will correct it (yes, he actually delivered a speech entitled “Safer Toys For Our Children” in Iowa last December, two days after Christmas). And if you believe, as he apparently does, that “rich people” just simply “have too much already,” well that is most certainly an injustice and he will correct it.

Combine these dynamics of entitlement and “justice” with the reality that we live in an era of historical and constitutional illiteracy, and it’s not difficult to imagine how anything short of an Obama presidency could be viewed by some in America as yet another injustice. And if Obama’s inevitable destiny is disrupted by something so trivial as the American electorate, this could be deemed an injustice that trumps all others....."

Sunday, July 20, 2008

there in a pinch.



After my gig Thursday night ( which is free and open to all )

http://theevanlee.blogspot.com/2008/07/every-thursday-night.html

I was set to settle in for a nice Friday evening. The toddler was asleep, the old lady put in 'Fools Gold' ( ugh ) and I started to drift off to sleep when my cellphone rang. It was my trumpet player, Mico, who was playing with Mudcat @ the Northside Tavern. It appears the bass player did not arrive, and it was 10 pm. Would I be able to come and play bass for the evening?

It was just like putting on old shoes. Danny 'Mudcat' and I share some strange telekenitic ability to follow each other without words. Even after 20 years, it is a comfortable place where I don't have to 'think' too much.

But, even though I LOVE playing with Mudcat, I know I am growing older. Sure, it's fun to put the amp up to 11 and watch hot chicks get drunk and dance. It's even funnier watching drunk HUGE ladies do the same! But, it just wears me out. The following day after a Mudcat gig is spent recovering, whereas 10 years ago, I would have squeezed in 2 during the next day. I don't know how he keeps it up. I suspect Wild Turkey is in there somewhere....

Dont get me wrong, if asked, I will play. I would not dream of saying 'no'. I'm just admitting I do not have the stamina and longevity that I used to, especially if I have to play drums with him. I can get by on the bass or accordion pretty easily.


The bathrooms @ the Northside Tavern are notorious. They make the term 'dive bar' blush. The difference between a crack whore and the Northside bathroom is in a pinch, you can take a dump on the crackwhore!!


Thursday, July 17, 2008

Hi there, Olga.





Ольга Костянтинівна Куриленко

Olga Kurylenko

Above, the very sexy Olga. Below, the very douchebag 'Dmitri'.

But first, a side note.

My old friend moved back to the ATL last week, and as a talented 'wingman', I happily accompanied him to the 'meat markets' last weekend. This poor dude does not have any luck. Or confidence.

While sitting at a bar next to a lovely cougar, I easily chatted her up and set my buddy up for the kill. We've done this many times before. 20 years ago, he would have had her in the sack while I serviced her two friends. But, now I'm fat and happily married. And my old friend has 'lost it'.

He's been gone for about 4 years, and I swear, he hasn't gotten laid in that time. Before then, he lived here and was just as unlucky. The desperation and desire hangs on him, and women can pick up on that like a snake senses fear. It's like the worst cologne in the world.

He does not have a good job, or alot of $$$. But he's not ugly, and he's actually a nice guy. I've asked my wife and her friends for thier unbiased critiques,and they all say the same thing. He just lacks the balls to go 'all out'. Just put it out there bluntly, and don't get your feelings hurt if you fail.

How many times have we seen the douchebag get the hot girl? Why is that? More then likely, he talks down or treats women awful, yet he never lacks for female companionship. Beautiful women never get approached by guys like my friends, they either find a 'nice guy' by a friends hookup or they end up with a parade of guys who don't care much about thier feelings. The 'decent' hardworking dude is too chickensh*t to take a chance. And my buddy doesn't own a computer, even though he is my age, so he's never used to 'net to find romance, only the 'old fashioned' tried and true....Meeting chicks in bars, etc..

Since it's been so long since he has experienced it, it has sent him into a death spiral. Now, he's more desperate then ever, and all the women notice it right away. He can't gin up enough courage to pretend like he doesn't give a crap about the girl he is flirting with, so she runs away. But, it did not used to be like that . Go for about 6 years without scoring and being a single, middle aged guy, and it puts you in a place somewhat like p*ssy Purgatory. Your not quite in hell ( married ) but you cant get to 'heaven'.:-)

I wondered to myself, if I had unlimited resources, how could I cure my buddy?

If ( and this is all hypothetical ) we lived in Nevada, and I was an internet millionaire, I could set him up with unlimited credit @ the Moonlite BunnyRanch and have him go wild. After satisying his male desires, and with the full knowledge that anytime he wanted to he could 'get some', he would approach women completely different. He would be married within a year. I gay ron tee it.

But every now and then, the douchebag get's rocked. Listen to Dmitri the Douchbag try to get a date with 'elegant' Olga:









Douchebag Phone Message - Watch more free videos

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Water Heater nightmare




Last friday, my tenant tells me the Water Heater will not stay lit. So, being a 'good' landlord, I call A All Appliance Service to 'fix' the issue. A quick google search informs me that most issues of this nature is a direct result of the 'Thermocoupler'(?) going bad, and it was not a terribly expensive 'fix'....

Then, the 'contractor Macarena' begins.

First, the guy shows up very,very late with no phone call to warn my poor tenant, who is late for his bartending job in East Atlanta.

Then, in all of 5 minutes, he informs me the tank is 'rusted', and water is putting out the pilot....?!Okay, here's 82 smackers for the 'service fee'.

That's odd, so I look up my paperwork, and the damn thing is only 4 years old. A call to 'Sears' service tells me they will send out a guy Tuesday.

Sears automated call's monday pm to tell me they are coming. The guy arrives and looks at the water heater....

' Who took off the pilot coupling? It's lying on the floor? Since someone took off the PC, warranty is now 'void'. Nice. As a plus, it's only typical condensation, and all it took was for the guy to put the coupling back on and adjust the venting and a syrofoam vapor catcher on the WH. 127$ cha ching.

Isn't it interesting that these folks answer your phone when your seeking service, but when you complain, then every subsequent time you call, you go 'straight to voice mail'? That's rather funny, no?

If this were an islolated experience, I might understand. But, this happens 80% of the time I use any American contractors. NO matter the issue, plumbing,roofing, electric, appliances, 80% of the time, I get screwed. The other 20% of the time, it's only a minor inconvenience as they show up late and do not meet pre set timelines.

Then, people wonder why they move 'jobs' overseas. Because those people give a shit.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

excellent article on feminism and the working place




http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200807/working-moms

As you may have heard, some 50 years after Betty Friedan sprang us from domestic jail, we women … seem to have made a mess of it. What do we want? Not to be men (wrong again, Freud!), at least not businessmen—although slacker men, sans futon and bong, might appeal. In these post-Lisa-Belkin-New-York-Times-Magazine-“Opt-Out” years, we’ve now learned the worst: even female Harvard graduates are fleeing high-powered careers for a kinder, gentler Martha Stewart Living.




And what are our fallen M.B.A. sisters of Crimson doing? Kvells one Harvard-grad-turned-stay-at-home-mom, on the subject of her days:


I dance and sing and play the guitar and listen to NPR. I write letters to my family, my congressional representatives, and to newspaper editors. My kids and I play tag and catch, we paint, we explore, we climb trees and plant gardens together. We bike instead of using the car. We read, we talk, we laugh. Life is good. I never dust.

Is the mass media to blame (again!) for pushing women out of the workplace? Not so much. On our zeitgeist-setting TV shows, it’s only the housewives who are desperate. Work is fun! The Manhattan working gals of Sex and the City, whose days revolve chiefly around dishing over cocktails, are essentially ’50s suburban housewives, trophy wives of (in this case) glamorous if emotionally distant New York jobs—skyscraper-housed entities with good addresses and doormen that handsomely fund their lifestyles while requiring that they show up to service them only infrequently, in bustiers and heels. I want a vague job like the one Charlotte has, in the art gallery she never goes to; or the lawyer job Miranda has (charcoal suits and plenty o’ time for lunch with the gals); or Samantha’s PR gig, throwing SoHo loft parties and giving blow jobs to freakishly endowed men (actually, that’s the one job I don’t want); I want to spend my days like “writer” Carrie, lolling in bed in her underwear, smoking and occasionally updating her quasi-bohemian equivalent of a My­Space page.

In real life, female journalists (particularly sex columnists) have frightening stalkers, dour editors who begin phone conversations with “This is not your best,” and paychecks so thin they trigger not just an amusing episode in which some Jimmy Choos must be returned but years of fluorescent-lit subway rides to a part-time job teaching ESL at some community college on Long Island. In an ugly if typical turn, one’s column is suddenly moved from the Manhattan section to the North Jersey “auto buy” section because of the arrival of a younger, hotter writer. In real life, workmen would unceremoniously peel Carrie’s ad off the side of the bus and replace it with an ad touting the peppy new relationship blog of Miley Cyrus.

An assault on the flaccid, pastel-hued Real Simple values of today’s overeducated, underperforming homebound women, Linda Hirshman’s marvelously cranky Get to Work … And Get a Life, Before It’s Too Late drew an Internet hailstorm. (Those stay-at-home mothers—like AARP members, they’ve got time to type.) Short, biting, funny, and deliciously quotable (Hirshman is like an old-guard feminist Huckabee), Get to Work is a great value in terms of making the most of your limited reading hours. (Susan Faludi’s Stiffed ran 672 pages; my galley of Get was a slim 94.)

Hirshman’s thumbnail review of recent feminist history makes for prickly, entertaining reading. “Just over thirty years ago,” she rails, “the feminist movement turned from Betty Friedan, the big-nosed, razor-tongued moralist,” to Gloria Steinem. Not only did the honey-tressed blonde clearly have a smaller nose, as Hirsh­man implies, but “Gloria was nicer than Betty.” The pliant undercover Bunny shepherded in a “useless choice feminism” of soft convictions and “I gotta be me” moral relativism. Hirshman quotes Sex and the City’s hapless Charlotte, who, when given flak for quitting her job to please her smug first husband, can only wail plaintively, “I choose my choice! I choose my choice!”

Hirshman fires with both barrels (Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill!) at today’s mommies, who are so busy sniffing the Martha Stewart paint chips that they have forgotten Friedan’s exhortation to get out and change the world. In reference to the NPR-listening, tree-climbing Harvard grad quoted above, Hirshman acidly notes:


Assuming she is telling the truth, and she does live in the perfect land of a Walgreens’ ad, is not all this biking and tree climbing a bit too much of the inner child for any normal adult? Although child rearing, unlike housework, is important and can be difficult, it does not take well-developed political skills to rule over creatures smaller than you are, weaker than you are, and completely dependent upon you for survival or thriving. Certainly, it’s not using your reason to do repetitive, physical tasks, whether it’s cleaning or driving the car pool. My correspondent’s life does have a certain Tom Sawyerish quality to it, but she has no power in the world. Why would the congressmen she writes to listen to someone whose life so resembles that of a toddler’s, Harvard degree or no?

Ouch!

Not afraid, in her own big-nosed, razor-tongued way, to alienate everyone (or at least half of everyone), Hirshman considers all stay-at-home mothers fish in her barrel (think fish pedaling tiny aquatic bicycles). No target is too small: Hirshman even tears mercilessly into the sleep-deprived new mothers who’ve made the unfortunate decision to share their rambling thoughts on something called Bloggingbaby.com. (Really, aren’t there any blogs over which the Web should draw its gentle curtain? Apparently not.) But in fact, Hirshman insists, the problem starts well before mother­hood. It begins when young women enter college and violate Hirshman’s No. 1 rule of female emancipation: “Don’t study art.”

Why aren’t the women who are outnumbering men in undergraduate institutions leading the information economy? “Because they’re dabbling,” she snaps. Here’s yet another Problem That Has a Name: Frida Kahlo.


Everybody loves Frida Kahlo. Half Jewish, half Mexican, tragically injured when young, sexually linked to men and women, abused by a famous genius husband. Oh, and a brilliantly talented painter. If I was a feminazi, the first thing I’d ban would be books about Frida Kahlo. Because Frida Kahlo’s life is not a model for women’s lives. And if you’re not Frida Kahlo and you major in art, you’re going to wind up answering the phones at some gallery in Chelsea, hoping a rich male collector comes to rescue you.

As Woody Allen’s own Whore of Mensa would sigh and pencil in the margin, “Yes, very true!” And don’t we all know them, those defiant, dreadlocked young lovelies with their useless degrees in studio art, experimental fiction, modern dance, and gender studies, lactose-intolerant and unemployable: “I choose my choice! I choose my choice!”

Of course, Hirshman, with that somewhat unlovely, censorious tone, is being a tad simplistic. She leaves aside the matter of whether women driven to make piles of money are the same ones likely to incite meaningful social change. If the Harvard stay-at-home mom walked away from an attack-dog corporate-lawyer job with Exxon, I, for one, would rather see her playing tag and climbing trees. And although Hirsh­man did work as a lawyer (lawyer, along with doctor and judge, is the kind of high-degree, socially relevant job she approves of), she then became a professor of philosophy and women’s studies. (Call the White House! We have a professor of philosophy on the line!)

Not that being an academic isn’t a hell of a lot of fun; in fact, its very pleasantness contributes to a bias peculiar to members of the thinktankerati. So argues Neil Gilbert, a renowned Berkeley sociologist, in A Mother’s Work: How Feminism, the Market and Policy Shape Family Life. According to Gilbert, the debate over the value of women’s work has been framed by those with a too-rosy view of employment,


mainly because the vast majority of those who publicly talk, think, and write about questions of gender equality, motherhood, and work in modern society are people who talk, think, and write for a living. And they tend to associate with other people who, like themselves, do not have “real” jobs—professors, journalists, authors, artists, politicos, pundits, foundation program officers, think-tank scholars, and media personalities.

Many of them can set their own hours, choose their own workspace, get paid for thinking about issues that interest them, and, as a bonus, get to feel, by virtue of their career, important in the world. The professor admits that his own job in “university teaching is by and large divorced from the normal discipline of everyday life in the marketplace. It bears only the faintest resemblance to most work in the real world.” In other words, for the “occupational elite” (as Gilbert calls this group), unlike for most people, going to work is not a drag.

Indeed, what does Linda Hirshman know about “work”? (It’s a veritable WWE Smackdown of Academics!) Parries Gilbert:


Linda Hirshman claims that “the family—with its repetitious, socially invisible, physical tasks—is a necessary part of life, but allows fewer opportunities for full human flourishing than public spheres like the market or the government.” Many people would no doubt find unpaid household chores less interesting than Professor Hirshman’s job … But walking up and down the super­market aisle selecting food for a family dinner is a job that has more variety and autonomy than the paid work being done by the supermarket employees who stack the same shelves with the same food day after day, and those who stand in a narrow corner at the checkout counter all day tallying up the costs of purchases, and the workers next to them who pack the purchases into paper or plastic bags. That space in the market is a bit cramped for human flourishing.

To be sure, attacking feminist criticism as being the extended whine of a privileged, educated upper class is as old as … well, as bell hooks’s 1984 critique of Friedan’s Feminine Mystique: “[Friedan] did not tell readers whether it was more fulfilling to be a maid, a babysitter, a factory worker, a clerk, or a prostitute than to be a leisure-class housewife.” It’s a point that keeps having to be made, though. And hooks’s list doesn’t even include the legions of colorless office jobs that most women endure, “real” jobs that trap them from eight to five in a cramped cubicle under hideous lighting. During the course of a Sex and the City workday you’re likely to encounter Mr. Big, but at a “real” job you’re far more likely to be thrown in with the pimply, fright-wigged characters of Dilbert or with Dwight Shrute from The Office, the show whose name is synonymous with tedium, idiocy, and despair.

The eight-to-five routine entails quite a few repetitious, socially invisible physical tasks (think Rob Schneider’s Richmeister on Saturday Night Live: “Makin’ kahpies!”). Research suggests that such drudge work holds no special lure even for (free at last!) females. Citing a survey of 909 employed women on how they had felt during 16 different daily activities, Gilbert notes:


Employed women expressed a higher degree of enjoyment for shopping, preparing food, taking care of their children, and doing housework than for working at their jobs—an activity that was ranked at the next-to-lowest level of enjoyment, just above commuting to work.

Further, in a development that would shock only today’s most radical feminists (where are those last two hiding? Buffalo?):


When it came to interactions with different partners, the women ranked interactions with their children as more enjoyable than those with clients/customers, coworkers, and bosses.

But aren’t women at home subject to the oppression of their chauvinistic, soul-crushing husbands? As if a mere human could compete with clogged freeways and Sisyphean paper pushing (or its more up-to-date equivalent, paperless pushing) and burnt-coffee-laced afternoons counting the acoustic tiles in stale conference rooms, and the hours spent arguing over the wording of a memo that within minutes after its dissemination will be dragged into the now-two-dimensional circular file. Unless he’s an abusive alcoholic or something similar, to be more oppressive than a “real” job, a husband would have to possess tireless text-messaging thumbs: “Where’s my dry cleaning?” “Did you pick up my dry cleaning?” “Where are you shopping right now?” “No! No! I told you—no butter lettuce from Safeway, only Whole Foods!” (Come to think of it, this may be a fairly accurate bit of communication between a privileged mother and a micromanaged nanny.) Even providing a chilled martini at six o’clock and roast beef at seven to the legendary suburban alpha male of yore allowed most of one’s day to be fairly flexible. As for today’s poorer husbands, many of them are likely too tired from their job’s repetitious, socially invisible physical tasks—such as makin’ kahpies!—to continually oppress their wives.

But surely women’s economic independence is worth it? Oy. Wrong again. Here Gilbert launches into an exhaustive and rather depressing analysis of how far we’ve come since the 1970s. It’s a long way, baby … if chiefly in terms of the accessibility of appliances. Seventies luxuries—air conditioners and clothes dryers—are of course the new millennium’s necessities. Although more than half of all households were hanging their clothes on a line or schlepping them to a laundromat in 1971, for instance, by 2001, the majority of even poor households owned dryers. And now we all require goodies like cell phones and 900 channels of cable unheard-of 30 years ago—by 2001, eight out of 10 low-income households owned VCRs/DVD players. No question, getting moms a paycheck has been very good for the U.S. consumer-electronics market, not to mention fast-food vendors, child-care providers, and—despite all those clothes dryers—the dry-cleaning industry.

However, while the economy benefits, for working-class families with young children, so much of a second income is eaten up by child care and taxes and other costs related to holding down a job that, after purchasing the microwave—now necessary to produce hot meals in the 10 minutes left for food preparation—and the de rigueur DVD player, the second wage earner might as well have stayed at home. Gilbert concludes, then, that financial need is not the force behind women’s shift in the past 50 years from work in the home to work in the market­place; rather, it is the desires of those who have made out like bandits in this new order, the tiny minority (3.5 percent in 2003) of women who earn $75,000 or more. Members of this occupational elite have created a host of cultural norms by which their far less privileged sisters—who, again, make up the vast majority of working women—feel they must abide. For Hirsh­man’s doctors, lawyers, judges, and professors, work has been terrific, so it’s no wonder they’ve advocated social change, imposing on society between the 1960s and the mid-1990s “new expectations about modern life, self-fulfillment, and the joys of work outside the home.”

They’ve gotten results: fathers in the U.S. now spend more time with their children and do more of the household tasks than their counterparts did, and Congress and employers both have made market-friendly provisions, such as parental leave, designed to encourage mothers of young children to take up paid employment. The society that has emerged, in which equality between men and women supersedes equality between social classes, may therefore be seen as “the triumph of feminism over socialism.” Never mind the social costs, we now have an army of consumers and a vast labor pool—what could be more market-friendly? Indeed, since the late 1990s, so-called family-friendly policies in Europe have been, as the Oxford sociologist Jane Lewis observes, “explicitly linked to the promotion of women’s employment in order to further the economic growth and competition agenda.” Women have achieved the freedom to join men on a more or less equal footing in the market­place, which strengthens the notion that the only thing ultimately of value is one’s ability to turn a buck. The triumph of feminism, Gilbert reminds us (echoing those socially conservative men of the left, George Orwell and Christopher Lasch), has served the culture of capitalism. As he sums up the whole darn tangle:


The capitalist ethos underrates the economic value and social utility of domestic labor in family life, particularly during the early years of childhood; the prevailing expectations of gender feminists place too high a value on the social and psychological satisfactions of work; and the typical package of family-friendly benefits delivered by the state creates incentives that essentially reinforce the devaluations of motherhood prompted by the capitalist ethos and feminist expectations.

All of which brings us, finally, to Sweden. (And doesn’t a shot of raspberry Absolut sound good at this point?) The debate about mothers and work: it always ends—doesn’t it?—with Sweden. Oh, if America could only be like Sweden—such a humane society, with its free day care for working mothers and its government subsidies of up to $11,900 per child per year. The problem? One hates to be Mrs. Red-State Republican Bringdown, but yes … the taxes. Currently, the top marginal income-tax rate in Sweden is nearly 60 percent (down from its peak in 1979 of 87 percent). Government spending amounts to more than half of Sweden’s GDP. (And it doesn’t all go to children, given Sweden’s low fertility rate.) On the upside, government spending creates jobs: from 1970 to 1990, a whopping 75 percent of Swedish jobs created were in the public sector … providing social welfare services … almost all of which were filled by women. Uh-oh. In short, as Gilbert points out, because of the 40 percent tax rate on her husband’s job, a new mother may be forced to take that second, highly taxed job to supplement the family’s finances; in other words, she leaves her toddlers behind from eight to five (in that convenient universal day care) so she can go take care of other people’s toddlers or empty the bedpans of elderly strangers. (As Alan Wolfe has pointed out, “the Scandinavian welfare states which express so well a sense of obligation to distant strangers, are beginning to make it more difficult to express a sense of obligation to those with whom one shares family ties.”)

I’m pretty sure that changing diapers of all sizes isn’t the kind of women’s work Betty Friedan had in mind, nor Linda Hirshman. The bottom line (and this fact will become more so as humans live longer): there’s a whole lot of caregivin’ goin’ on. We all fantasize about work that uses our creativity, is self-directed, happens during the hours we choose, and occurs in an attractively lit setting with fascinating people—you know, jobs like women have on TV. Oprah’s job! However, since in reality—even in Sweden—so many roads lead to a wet wipe, I myself feel grateful and lucky to be here in California while I type this essay … which I am actually doing in bed, clad in my sweatpants rather than in high heels and a bustier (as, fortunately, I am not a fantasy character on television—not unless they did a Sex and the City “lumberjack” edition). Later, I will feed the cats for my single, working-gal neighbor, who has a real office schedule, complete with commute. Perhaps I’ll also fling Popsicles at my latchkey children in the next room, mesmerized by a Princess video. (How much money have I earned while running Princess videos? I should pay Disney! Well, maybe not.)

Work … family—I’m doing it all. But here’s the secret I share with so many other nanny- and housekeeper-less mothers I see working the same balance: my house is trashed. It is strewn with socks and tutus. My minivan is awash in paper wrappers (I can’t lie—several are evidence of our visits to McDonald’s Playland, otherwise known as “my second office”). My girls went to school today in the T-shirts they slept in. But so what? My children and I spend 70 hours a week of high-to-poor quality time together. We enjoy ourselves. As that NPR-listening, tree-climbing mother said: “We read, we talk, we laugh. Life is good. I never dust.” Perhaps our generation of mothers can at least offer an innovation that the early radical feminists never had. I think of Linda Hirshman approvingly quoting Pat Mainardi’s angry political analysis of the hidden tally of unrewarded “women’s” housework:


Here’s my list of dirty chores: buying groceries, carting them home and putting them away; cooking meals and washing dishes and pots; doing the laundry; digging out the place when things get out of control; washing floors. The list could go on but the sheer necessities are bad enough.

Wait … she washed the floor?! Time to redefine “necessities,” Pat. Say what you will about them, those radical feminists were tidy housekeepers. What I’d say to them over a distance of 30 years is (Ching! There’s the microwave!) … you can have it all—if you run your house like a man.

Jesse..Just go away please.



Enough you douchebag. Quit the smug 'maybe I will run after all' crap.

Look. I admired what you did. I liked you making the media wear 'Jackal' badges, and that you stayed true to your promise to only serve one term. I stood with you when you stormed out of the Wellstone wake. But, now your a qualified nutjob.

There are no 'questions' about 9-11. Popular Mechanics: look into it.

Cut your hair, dude. You look pathetic.

You embarrass me for supporting you many years ago. It almost seems like you cant handle being irrelevant.

Jeese, you are the Brett Favre of politics. Now please, go away.

Sunday, July 13, 2008

wierd Sunday


TOKYO (AP) -- About 5,400 residents were evacuated in Osaka in western Japan and flights at nearby airports were rerouted Sunday as army experts disposed of a large unexploded bomb believed to have been dropped by the U.S. military during World War II, authorities said.

An explosives disposal unit from Japan's Ground Self-Defense Force safely defused the rusty one-ton bomb in the crowded residential area during a 50-minute operation, local army spokesman Shoji Matsumoto said.

Nearby highways and roads were closed, and city buses, boats and flights in and out of nearby airports were rerouted, city officials said in a statement.

The bomb - about 6 feet long - was found by workers at a construction site last month, Matsumoto said.

Although the war ended more than 60 years ago, unexploded bombs still turn up regularly in Japan, where U.S. forces conducted extensive air raids against major cities.


Wierd,huh?

To keep with the 'wierd'theme, here's some interesting theater from the far out left:


Saturday, July 12, 2008

Cynthia no more, verse Two...






Well, this was a no brainer. Kinda like figuring out in 2000 that Hillary really did not want to be anything other then POTUS, even if she was running for Senator.

Cynthia 'those JEWS' McKinney is the Green Party candidate. This actually makes the Libertarians voting in Bob Barr look downright intelligent. What exactly qualifies McCommie to represent the 'greens'? Her record in the ghetto's isn't exactly one of 'conservation'. In fact, she was terrible on ecological issues. I believe her last hairdo was established as a protected wetland! For the Red Spotted Jewkoo Bird.

Good Grief. WTG, Georgia.

http://myfreefilehosting.com/f/190feb7226_0.97MB










Crazy we can believe in !








Friday, July 11, 2008

Every Thursday Night



I can be found with my musical friends at Steinbecks Oyster Bar in Oakhurst.

The thing I like about this gig is it's mostly horn driven Nawlin's material and it's mainly acoustic. I use a 10 watt amp and a mic for the banjo and upright bass.

Fun Fun Fun~!

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Political Correctness run amok


http://www.popecenter.org/issues/article.html?id=2019


"One of those “social goals” that now dominate in American education is that of making various minority groups (those designated as victims of our oppressive culture) feel good about themselves. Toward that end, some professors have taken to the creation of myths. The particular myth that plays the central role in this drama is that of the “Stolen Legacy.”

Here is the way that myth goes. The culture and philosophy of the ancient Greeks was not truly their creation, but was “stolen” from Egypt. Since Egypt is in Africa and all the people in Africa are “black” this means that white Europeans were victimizing blacks more than 2400 years ago. In one particularly ludicrous aspect of this myth, it is asserted that Aristotle journeyed to the Library at Alexandria and stole books that he later claimed as his own works.

When Professor Lefkowitz learned that this and other intellectually indefensible ideas were being taught by a professor (Tony Martin) in the Africana Studies Department, she publicly challenged their historical accuracy. Among other problems with the “stolen legacy” idea is that Aristotle died years before the Library at Alexandria was built. But when she pointed this fact out to Professor Martin, he took umbrage. Who was she, a white Jew, to question his interpretation of black history?! At that point, it began to occur to her that Martin, a tenured faculty member, was one of those people who won’t let the truth get in the way of achieving their objectives. "

I wonder what Mr Martin would feel about Jesse Jackson not using the 'pc' term 'African American' when talking to his buddy about Obama?




Then, we get this beautiful lil gem:
http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/atlanta/stories/2008/07/09/men_working_signs_atlanta.html

"In the battle of the sexes, women's magazine editor Cynthia Good said this was a skirmish she had to fight.

Across Atlanta they stood, orange signs with black letters that read "Men At Work" or "Men Working Ahead."

Sometimes, the signs stood next to women working alongside the men.

Good demanded Atlanta officials remove the signs and last week, Atlanta Public Works Commissioner Joe Basista agreed.

Score one for gender equality, Good said Wednesday.

"They get it," Good said about the city in a telephone interview.

Public Works officials are replacing 50 "Men Working" with signs that say "Workers Ahead." It will cost $22 to cover over some of the old signs and $144 to buy new signs, said Public Works spokeswoman Valerie Bell-Smith said.

Good, founding editor of Atlanta-based PINK Magazine, a publication that focuses on professional women, said she's not stopping with Atlanta.

"We're calling on the rest of the nation to follow suit and make a statement that we will not accept these subtle forms of discrimination," said Good, 48.

Good pressed the issue after Atlanta police came to her office last month on a complaint that she spray painted "wo" onto a "Men At Work" sign.

Did she do it? Good replied by complaining about the signs.

Good fired off letters complaining about the signs to Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin and Gov. Sonny Perdue.

State transportation officials said they will ask contractors to remove signs specifying just men are working at a construction site.

Atlanta union leader Gina Pagnotta said some women employees of Atlanta Public Works complained about these signs years ago.

"It is a little bit bias to say 'Men Working,' " said Pagnotta, president of the Professional Association of City Employees. "Women are working, too."



Sigh.....'Workers Ahead'?! Sounds positively Marxist.

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

CNW babies




Whether it's something in the water or the grooving sounds of country music, the aftermath of what one health officials calls Grand Junction's "Woodstock" drives up pregnancies in this city each year.
Nurse-Family Partnership supervisor Wanda Scott said referrals to her agency from the Mesa County Health Department quadruple every year after the music festival Country Jam. Scott told commissioners about the phenomena Monday during a presentation called, "How are the Children?"

Scott said on average the health clinic sees between 25 to 30 pregnancies a month. She says five weeks after the festival that number jumps to almost 80 a month.

The festival ran from June 26-29. Performers included Tim McGraw, Clay Walker and Sugarland.

"That's our Grand Junction Woodstock," Scott said, referring to the 1969 counterculture rock festival in Bethel, N.Y., featuring such acts as Jimi Hendricks and Janis Joplin.

Grand Junction is a city of about 50,000 about 245 miles west of Denver.

Country Jam Director Steve Berg said the information surprised him.

"I certainly can't stop them from having sex. If we could stop it we certainly would," he said.

Commissioner Janet Rowland said education could help prevent unwanted teen pregnancies but didn't know what else could be done to stop them "short of putting birth control in the water at Country Jam."


http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_9817712

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

A scary situation



Obama want's to increase taxes on everybody that makes over 250 grand a year.

There are 23 million small business owners in America who file their business income taxes as an individual taxpayer. These small business owners employ people ... tens of millions of people. In fact, the small business owners of this country provide way more than 70% of the private sector jobs out there.

When Obama talks about raising taxes on people who make more than $250,000 a year he's talking about raising taxes on the man or woman who writes your paycheck.

Now ... would you care to spend a few of your precious minutes thinking about the logical consequences of raising taxes on your employer? Do you think they're just going to cut back on the money they take from their business operation? Oh yeah, sure they will.

Surely you can see that these people are going to adjust to their increased tax load by cutting back on business expenses. You, my friend, are a business expense. Are you going to be the business expense that gets cut? Perhaps so ... and then what happens? The evil rich have now they have taken away YOUR job, and you hate them even more.


What about those (like my wife ) that could make close to that in a year or two? Once you get to earning about 235 grand a year, why bring in the business for her employer if it means she is going to get creamed in taxes? Wouldn't it make more sense to lay back and get paid under the cap? How is that for 'productivity'?

That does not even take into consideration his plans for 'free healthcare and college'. We are already in debt to the Chicoms for billions, how are we going to fund all these new programs?


http://www.latimes.com/news/la-na-obamaplans8-2008jul08,0,809330.story?track=ntothtml

Now, think about this for a minute. Remember how mad everybody got in the 2000 election? Well, can you imagine what would occur if Obama loses in a 'squeeker'? Pandemonium would be the order of the day.

We can only wish for an Obama landslide, or an outright McCain win, and I cannot see either happening at this time.

Monday, July 7, 2008

Cocoa Tea get's high on Obama




Why, why, why?

One of the most interesting things about my recent pilgrimage to Jamaica was watching the locals get very interested about the current US POTUS race, or should I say, Mr Obama's Wild Ride.

All over the island, it's Obama this, Obama that, pins, shirts and reggae songs abound.

This song was composed by legend Cocoa Tea, who says in the first verse 'it's not class, race or creed but what the people need'...

But that's clearly not the case. What has Obama suggested that would do anything positive for the poor black people of Jamaica?

Unless they feel Cuban and decide to get on a raft, they aren't getting any 'free healthcare or education' from the USA.

As a matter of fact, Obama's clear signal to raise the taxes on the upper 5% will only result in LESS tourism to Jamaica, which is 1/3rd of thier entire GDP. The middle class familes that travel to FDR will not be getting any 'relief' from Obama's tax structures, as we all know that when you raise the capital gains taxes and further tax those 'evil top 5%' that means less payroll and benefits for those middle class tourists that they employ.

Now, one could make the case that Brooklyn has a large ex pat community, so maybe that's why CT likes Obama. Or, maybe, just maybe, he's doing it because 'it is about race', and lots of Jamaicans living in the USA will buy his songs.

Now, I'm pretty sure if a German Polka artist wrote a similar song in German praising McCain, it would be compared to Hitler before you can say 'Achtung Baby'. But, somehow, even pointing out that Cocoa Tea only loves Obama 'cause he is black......Well, that's racist.

Look, dumbass. You are making your bed, so be prepared to lie down in it. If you thought you were mad at the 'injustice' of Air Jamaica cancelling your 2 hour flight, get ready to see your tourism revenues fall even more. Since oil prices have skyrocketed, even those wonderful European tourists have tapered off. Now, let's tax the rich and middle class people from the USA that are keeping your stupid little monarchy afloat, and how do you think that's going to workout?

I just wish people would just be honest and say 'I wont vote for an old white guy' or 'I just want to say I voted for the first black president' instead of using those ridiculous words such as 'hope' and 'change'....

So, Cocoa Tea: you better 'hope' McCain wins, or you won't be getting any 'change' from your eeeeeevil rich white tourists.

Also, what's with the MLK/Obama wear? MLK and his church's message was about 'inclusion'. Obama's church is not about 'inclusion', in fact, it's about 'us vs them', which is pretty ironic considering they are 'all about Jesus' up in there.

If it truly 'is not about race' then they shouldn't be using MLK's image and words to promote themselves. Just sayin'. Content of character, not color of skin.

Thursday, July 3, 2008

The nanny




What a great concept. An all inclusive that comes with your own nanny so you can hit the beach and the bar. Jamaica is a wonderous paradox. On one hand, it's beautiful and the people are laid back. Then there are areas that make India look 'rich' and even dudes from Detriot and Baltimore get nerous there.

You cannot go to Jamaica and not sample the wares. The Rum, the coffee and more herbal refreshments. The taxi driver on our last night says ' 5 dollars I can hook you up'. So imagine my surprise and delight when he hands me a 'phat sack', much much more then I would be able to use. And I'm not stupid enough to bring it home so as I'm at the bar around midnight, I wonder, what should I do with this?

I decide to let fate handle it. I make a quick detour to the room and get some paper and pen. I then hide the stuff in the stairwell to an adjoining building above the fire extinguisher.

Then, I write a couple short notes describing what it is and where it was, and left these little papers in the restroom , under a bar napkin, etc....About then I see a white guy with the paper in hand heading towards the stairwell. Mission accomplished.

But, then I realized other people may find the note and get tricked into searching for it. But by then, I was 3 sheets. So, if you found the stuff and had a great time: good for you. If you looked for it only to find it gone I apologise.

On another post I will explain the pandemonium of our cancelled flight, and the breakdown of civilized society at Sangster Airport.