silveradept: A kodama with a trombone. The trombone is playing music, even though it is held in a rest position (Default)
[personal profile] silveradept
It’s a beautiful day in the neighborhood - the clouds have returned, after a stint of sun and heat, and the temperature is chilling out a bit in the mornings. It’s nice weather here, and I fully expect it to start raining again sometime soon, even if it doesn’t until August or September.

Let’s play. Also, for those of you who are new to the journal over the course of the last half-solar revolution or so, please, introduce yourselves and tell me how you found me. While I don’t have any high ratings in any Kevin Bacon or other type of game to connect to celebrities (unless you’re going for John Williams or a small smattering of anime and American tokusatsu actors, where you can finish the chain through me...), it’s always interesting to find out how people find what is, on balance, a wholly unremarkable blip in the vast sea of the Internet.

Internationally, CNS is either trying to paint all Muslims as inflexible or the UK government as ineffective against the Muslim horde with a piece talking about how the UK's government initiative to establish scholarly circles in the UK that can talk authoritatively about Islam is not getting buy-in. The government is trying to provide good alternatives to extremist ideologies, which draws criticism as “attacking Islam”, apparently. If this is the same program described by the Daily Mail as instructing public school students in Islamic traditions and Islamic school students getting lessons on citizenship, then it looks like a good attempt to get the various cultural groups talking to each other. Of course, then we’ll have the complaints and insinuations that this is just another way for Muslims to creep their influence in so they can take over and turn the UK into a fundamentalist Islamic state.

After telling Senator Obama it’s what he has to do to understand what’s going on, and that he couldn’t make any sort of policy pronouncements without it, the McCain campaign is trying hard to squelch the positive surge Senator Obama is getting from his visit to Iraq, including claiming that he as right about Iraq first and releasing an attack ad claiming that Senator Obama and the Democrats are to blame for higher fuel prices. Senator McCain would also love for voters feeling that Senator Obama isn't ready for the Commander-in-Chief role to continue, a tack that Robet Novak thinks that McCain can win on, should the election be a referendum on Obama, or European governmental skepticism of Senator Obama to extend to the people here.

The candidacy of Barack Obama produces several sets of opinions. First, it was “Will Barack Obama be dismissed or have to deal with accusations that his racial background qualifies or disqualifies him in the people’s mind, before they’ve actually listened to him?” Because only The Shadow knows what lurks in the hearts of men, we’ve tried to get at other questions that may illuminate this first one. The primary season helped some with that, too. As things are, Lawrence Bobo thinks that a President Obama would be a great success for relations, even though it will not be the final victory and the birth of the post-racial society. Shelby Steele takes a more cynical route, believing that both sides will use a President Obama to bury further progress on race relations , and Musings & Migraines is less enthusiastic, pointing out the Senator's willing repetition of "It will all get better when black people get married and stay married before having kids" on a Father’s Days speech, and the Senator’s support for leveraging churches as agents of social change. Similarly, Musings and Migraines is not to happy about David Brooks' insistence that people now have to change to get out of the recession, with the implications that they put themselves there through making bad choices over the objections of their wiser counterparts. The Professor sees this claptrap as essentially the Obama campaign party line, and that rather than trying to address issues that generate these scenarios or the need for people to engage in self-destructive behavior, morality and capitalism will merge at the right point and bury the actual problem. A problem that [livejournal.com profile] bradhicks suggests was generated by the abysmal failure of Phil Gramm's experiment in deregulating the economy, because he failed to account for the reality that the market has no time to correct itself and weed out cheaters and those who hurt their consumers and competition.

Elsewhere, the WSJ thinks Iran deserves sticks, not carrots, and hasn’t done anything to credibly convince the West they’re changing, while also suggesting that lowering taxes is the way to make the rich pay more in taxes, because the rich already pay too much and will start hiding their money if tax rates go up, claiming Al Gore's plans to get the country off of petroleum won't work, William McGurn expectantly waiting for the positive press of people who fought and captured those claimed to be terrorists, thinking that they deserve to be praised for their attempts to make us safer, imperfect that they may be. What, you mean we should applaud those who remixed a personal conveyance platform into a swifter way of deploying police forces? Or, as Ann Marlowe writes, those trying to apply Iraq lessons to Afghanistan?

Technology pokes its head above ground with an exoskeleton that helps the paralyzed walk in action, some frame-to-comic frame comparisons on Watchmen, an expensive coffee machine with which Starbucks hopes to try and save itself, and COPA getting smacked down again by the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals. I hate CIPA with a phenomenal vengeance, but if I had to deal with COPA as well, there probably wouldn’t be Internet access at public libraries, because everyone would have to register themselves to look at anything not suitable for a four-year old. Not only that, but those without an age-verification mechanism like a credit card would be out in the cold. And who would willingly give over something like that to every website that had actual information? Kick COPA out the door and don’t try to defend it any more, please.

And last for tonight - the difficulty of communication between people who have lots of specialized language, steampunk-style wallpaper, and the seven best national parks for visiting old-growth forests. So, now that we’ve rolled the ball back and forth, let’s go take a nap.
Depth: 1

Date: 2008-07-23 04:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ldragoon.livejournal.com
I freaked out when I saw that walking-system for paralyzed people -- it's so much like the system the lead character uses in the comic Mars! Awesome. :)
Depth: 3

Date: 2008-07-24 01:18 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ldragoon.livejournal.com
I am not being in any way sarcastic -- this device is going to make a HUGE difference in people's lives. It has the potential to give back mobility to so many people who I'm sure never thought they'd be able to live at all outside of a wheelchair. I'm really floored by how wonderful it is.

Let me guess - Japanese company?
Depth: 5

Date: 2008-07-25 01:24 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ldragoon.livejournal.com
I sure hope so! This is the future I want, dammit, not this crazy all-war-all-the-time-Brave-New-World-bullshit. I want Star Trek The Next Generation! WAAAAAHHH!!!

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silveradept: A kodama with a trombone. The trombone is playing music, even though it is held in a rest position (Default)
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