Friday, October 3rd, 2008
We’ve had 8 years of someone mispronouncing the word “nuclear.” Sarah Palin, I implore you to learn the phonetic pronounciation. As soon as is humanly possible. Like the vast majority of Americans, I strenuously believe you’re entirely unqualified to manage a zoo, let alone the vice-presidency, but you could appear just a tad more official [...]
Friday, September 12th, 2008
So I finally figured out, today, why supporters of McCain piss me off so much, and it’s the same reason that many Obama supporters piss the other side off: Some people vote based on who they like, rather than what they think that person will do for the country.
If you’re a McCain supporter reading this, [...]
Thursday, September 11th, 2008
Seven years ago, this nation was viciously attacked by a group of Saudi Arabians working out of Germany, Pakistan, and Afghanistan. They hijacked planes and flew them into symbols of America, turning our own industry into weapons of mass destruction. Thousands of lives were snuffed out when the towers fell and when the walls collapsed [...]
Thursday, August 7th, 2008
Okay, first, happy August. I guess I’ve not been too great with keeping up with here, no excuses, nothing interesting to say.
The Democrats are slowly coming to Denver for the Convention, and my town is beginning to fill up. Tent cities are popping up around the Pepsi Center. Add to that 66th Annual WorldCon (Denvention [...]
Thursday, July 17th, 2008
The greatest shortcoming of the human race is our inability to understand the exponential function.
That’s what Albert Bartlett, retired professor of physics at the University of Colorado in Boulder, says. I saw a lecture of his (granted, a low-budget video recording of it) last night. The concepts are not staggering in their complexity, the results [...]
I get updates from Diana DeGette through the email machine tube. She tells me all the things that I want to hear, and lots of things I don’t want to hear. She’s told me about the evils of the war in Iraq, of the splendidness of Democracy, and so on. Today she’s told me about [...]
There was a particularly potent parade of nitwits, idiots, and assholes on the road today on my way to work. I nearly chewed my own arm off in frustration. Would have, too, if it weren’t for all the leather I wear–that stuff is exceedingly difficult to chew through. There were a few times when I [...]
So it seems that Tim Russert died today. Can’t say I’m too upset about that–I don’t know much about him, never watched any of his shows, and I am typically uninterested when news figures die (similarly, I didn’t wring my hands overmuch when Peter Jennings died).
That said, Wikipedia very briefly gave me another example of [...]
I’ve tried really, really hard to not jump the gun in this 2008 election season and support one candidate or another, not so much because I want to see where the cards fall, but because it’s been more important to me to determine a candidate’s efficacy based off his or her prior words as contrast [...]
Wednesday, May 14th, 2008
From CNN:
Former Sen. John Edwards will endorse Sen. Barack Obama’s presidential candidacy, Obama’s campaign says.
Ah, the Edwards Bump.
I am, by no reasonable metric, a fan of the armed forces. I don’t personally know anyone who has greatly benefited from being involved, nor can I come up with a particularly poignant reason why our current military has to be as expanded as it is. I fail to see why we need to dump [...]
Last month, I wrote an article for the local magazine, Metromode, about the death of a close friend and how difficult it is to reconcile sorrow with humor. I retold the joke my friend would tell about a kid with Down syndrome trying to get on the bus. Wasn’t really that funny of a joke, [...]
Friday, October 5th, 2007
Wayne Allard is an old white guy who works in Washington, a Senator elected from my state of Colorado. I write him often regarding his steadfast support and creation of legislation spelling out marriage as a union between one man and one woman. He wrote me back today.
Dear Stephen:
Thank you for contacting me to express [...]
Friday, September 7th, 2007
Elections are necessary but not sufficient to establish genuine democracy. Aspiring dictators sometimes win elections, and elected leaders sometimes govern badly and threaten their neighbors. History demonstrates that democracy usually follows good governance, not the reverse.
- Rudy Giuliani, Sep/Oct issue of Foreign Affairs
I know Giuliani is talking about Iraq in this quotation, but… couldn’t he [...]