Vituperative but thoughtful observations on history, politics, religion, and society.
Sunday, March 08, 2009
An interesting item: historians think they have located a mass grave at the Bunker Hill battlefield in Charlestown, Mass. They'd like to use sophisticated radar equipment to make sure of their conclusions, but there is a problem -- it's underneath some lovely private gardens. "No wonder our plants grow so well," said one homeowner.
Friday, March 06, 2009
It's your bear now
Finally, we see that the economy is called the president's own -- The Obama Market -- rather than the same "we inherited this mess" trope his spokesmen have used since inauguration. Although at last look, MSNBCers were still cawing about the nastiness of the previous president, as if to distract themselves as the walls fall around them. According to Bloomberg, the market has lost 20% of its value since BO took office, the worst opening administration performance in 90 years.
And an excellent if wonkish overview of BO economic policy, if you can call it that, at the WSJ today.
Finally, we see that the economy is called the president's own -- The Obama Market -- rather than the same "we inherited this mess" trope his spokesmen have used since inauguration. Although at last look, MSNBCers were still cawing about the nastiness of the previous president, as if to distract themselves as the walls fall around them. According to Bloomberg, the market has lost 20% of its value since BO took office, the worst opening administration performance in 90 years.
And an excellent if wonkish overview of BO economic policy, if you can call it that, at the WSJ today.
Wednesday, March 04, 2009
Sons of Nixon
Drudge's headline says "New Enemies List" regarding the White House campaign against Rush Limbaugh.
Funny, but I thought the exact same thing this morning, but in another context. Is it me, or is the Obama White House exceptionally prickly when it comes to criticism? The media has been swooning over them for so long that when any doubts are aired by the Fourth Estate, they can't help but reply. Witness Press Secretary Robert Gibbs the other week answering criticism from CNBC's Rick Santelli, and then again this week from another CNBCer Jim Cramer. My first thought was "don't you have anything better to do with your time than whine about all this ... say fixing banks?"
Now the calculated Rush campaign is revealed as having been hatched months ago, even before election day. Taken together, these people seem to have a Nixonian paranoia that somewhere, sometime, someone is saying something bad about them. And that these people should be duly noted and not allowed to make their assertions unanswered.
I picture Gibbs and Emmanuel sitting in the WH, with an LBJ-style bank of tv sets, clicking furiously between cable stations, their thumbs numb from hitting the volume and mute buttons. "Aha! Santelli just criticized us! Make a note. We'll blast him tomorrow." "Aha! Cramer just said nasty things! What is it with CNBC! They're in cahoots with evil bankers! Make a note. We'll get them tomorrow too."
Pretty soon we'll start comparing Gibbs to Ron Zeigler, Emmanuel to HR Haldeman, and Axelrod to Ehrlichman ... somewhere, an enemies list is being drawn up.
Drudge's headline says "New Enemies List" regarding the White House campaign against Rush Limbaugh.
Funny, but I thought the exact same thing this morning, but in another context. Is it me, or is the Obama White House exceptionally prickly when it comes to criticism? The media has been swooning over them for so long that when any doubts are aired by the Fourth Estate, they can't help but reply. Witness Press Secretary Robert Gibbs the other week answering criticism from CNBC's Rick Santelli, and then again this week from another CNBCer Jim Cramer. My first thought was "don't you have anything better to do with your time than whine about all this ... say fixing banks?"
Now the calculated Rush campaign is revealed as having been hatched months ago, even before election day. Taken together, these people seem to have a Nixonian paranoia that somewhere, sometime, someone is saying something bad about them. And that these people should be duly noted and not allowed to make their assertions unanswered.
I picture Gibbs and Emmanuel sitting in the WH, with an LBJ-style bank of tv sets, clicking furiously between cable stations, their thumbs numb from hitting the volume and mute buttons. "Aha! Santelli just criticized us! Make a note. We'll blast him tomorrow." "Aha! Cramer just said nasty things! What is it with CNBC! They're in cahoots with evil bankers! Make a note. We'll get them tomorrow too."
Pretty soon we'll start comparing Gibbs to Ron Zeigler, Emmanuel to HR Haldeman, and Axelrod to Ehrlichman ... somewhere, an enemies list is being drawn up.
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