Monday, July 31, 2006
The Customer ... Can Go To Hell
SunRocket Deal - $8 A Month!
Friday, July 28, 2006
Wait, You Have Our Money
Thursday, July 27, 2006
Some Things Are Simple, But Not The Middle East
It is time to engage with subtlety and nuance, for a change. I know it has become unfashionable to do such things, amidst all the macho Manichaeanism so popular among the serried ranks of various think-tanks, journalistic eminences, and blogospheric blowhards, where far too often ideological affiliation trumps fact-based inquiry. But stay with me, if just for a moment or two: Al-Qaeda is not Hezbollah, and Hezbollah is not al-Qaeda, and Hamas is not either of them. It is easy to scream like a boy from the rooftops that they are all terrorists, and terrorists, we know, are bad, and so must be defeated, for if they aren't, we are showing weakness, and showing weakness too is bad, because, you see, Mogadishu and then, well, you know the script. But Islamists come in different shapes and sizes, and with different agendas, and we cannot tar them all with the same broad brush and presume that we will prevail in a complex global counter-insurgency campaign against radical Islamists simply by egging on the Israelis to eradicate Hamas and Hezbollah (whatever that means), while we take care of Sadrist death squads and al-Qaeda radicals, neo-Baathists, and hard-line Sunni nationalists in Iraq (before turning to Syria and Iran!) Does anyone seriously believe that such simplistic, quasi-messianic approaches will make this country safer, as legions of individuals from (aptly named) Londonistan' to the Parisian banlieu to Dearborn to Jeddah to Lahore to Jakarta look on with horror at the scenes of Arab and Muslim blood being shorn hither dither?
Wednesday, July 26, 2006
New Job/Light Bloggin' - Again
- Kofi Annan says Isreal intentionally targeted a UN facility in Lebanon (killing 4 UN observers). Strong words, not the kind an experienced diplomat would throw out lightly. What's the back story? Why is Kofi willing to take the heat for such a statement?
- Another American wins the Tour de France. Doesn't seem as big a deal but it should be. Where's the love for Floyd Landis. Does a brother have to lose a nut for people to start caring?
- Why does the media pretend that Guiliani has a chance to the be the republican candidate in 2008? Besides the fact that the republican base will reject him, can you imagine the skeletons that will be unearthed? Bernie Kerik was probably one of his honest friends.
- The entreprenurial side of me (usually deeply buried but awakening lately) sees the obesity epidemic in America as a potential goldmine. Can you imagine the demand for folding beach chairs that can support up to 500 pounds? Bagels the size of a plates? Toilet seats that can accomodate the width of two normal-sized asses? It's gonna be huge! Ok people, how are we going to make money off this?
- Pakistan is increasing it's nuclear arms prodcution capacity. Thank White Jesus they are not a part of the axis of evil.
- Robot Chicken is my favorite new show. Each episode is only 15 minutes long, perfect for someone with ADHD like me. Also caught an episode of Munchies the other day. Yeah, exactly.
Tuesday, July 25, 2006
Friday, July 21, 2006
Japanese Double Header
The contentment that comes from a great meal required that we continue the evening so we headed to the subterranean East Village sake bar – Decibal. If you’re looking for a cool authentic-yet hybrid Japanese drinking experience in New York, this place hits the spot. At this point, there’s not really much more to be said, drunkenness and merriment ensued. I stumbled out of a cab into my apartment a few hours later.
Inase Sushi is located at 1586 1st Avenue between 82nd and 83rd. Decibal is located at 240 E. 9th Street between 2nd and 3rd.
Lucklily, I stopped at 44 ...
Thursday, July 20, 2006
Hmmm
We are tempted to comment, in these last days before the war, on the U.N., and the French, and the Democrats. But the war itself will clarify who was right and who was wrong about weapons of mass destruction. It will reveal the aspirations of the people of Iraq, and expose the truth about Saddam’s regime. … History and reality are about to weigh in, and we are inclined simply to let them render their verdicts.Ah yes, the unholy trinity, the UN, the French, and the Democrats. If it wasn't for the constant use of this slam by the right, why, it would seem like a parody. Mr. Kristol, I see a medal of freedom in your future! Asshole. Having been so momumentally wrong, at what point does he cease to be an expert, a "grown up, a serious thinkier about the Middle East? Miracles, alas, do not happen. Kristol has - predictably - used the situation in Lebanon to ramp up his calls for invading Iran. Apparently, the Iranian people can't wait for us to get there. You know, I'm sure that gonna's go super for us. Just super.
Wednesday, July 19, 2006
Joe, Joe, Joe
Is That Marvin?

"Dear Mother and Father Anderson," the most recent letter read, "Thank you once again for your generous gift. I was able to get my [immunization] shots and enough milk and flour to feed myself and to buy some new clothes for school. Because milk was cheaper this month, I had a little money left over and was able [to buy materials] to fix my football, or, as you call it in America, soccer ball."
"I don't expect him to know everything about money, what with out of control inflation forcing his country back towards a barter system" Anderson said. "But if Mtumbe wants to better his lot in life, he needs to start socking a little away for the future, not wasting it on every little fancy and childish whim."
Read the rest at La Cebolla
Tuesday, July 18, 2006
Keep That Thought To Yourself?
On the one hand I understand the historical need to protect minorities and other groups from crimes directed at them soley b/c of their skin color, nationality, sexual orientation, etc. I think that historically the problem wasn't merely that "hate" crimes were being committed against minorities, it was that those crimes often went unpunished or were only lightly punished. It was open season on minorities and perhaps the data demonstrates that hate crime laws - with their harsh punishments - have had a detterrent effect on the incidence of such crimes.
On the other hand, a thuggish act is a thuggish act and absent a widespread campaign of violence and/or intimidation against a particular group, I'm not sure I agree that identical acts of violence should be punished more severely because of the pepetrator's motivation for committing the crime. What if the pepetrator had thought racist thoughts but not uttered them? Would the harm caused by his acts been any less? What if the perpetrator in this case had denied ever using such slurs? What about situations when the perpetrator is a member of the same protected group as his victim? Are we to believe, for example, that never in the history of crime has a black perpetrator uttered a racial slur at his black victim? In such an instance, would the crime be classified as a hate crime? These seeming inconsistencies are troubling if you believe that we should be moving towards a more uniform system of justice that punishes crimes without regard to the race or status of the perpetrator or the victim.
I think a part of the problem is that hate crime laws are imperfect. Absent special circumstances, they seem no better at enforcing societal norms and values than do traditional laws. I find it a touch ironic, however, that most folks against hate crimes laws tend to be from the law and order side of the aisle. Not the kind of folks who tend to lose sleep over the punishments handed out to criminals. This incongruity leads one to believe that the real issue is not justice in the abstract, but other deeper seated concerns about who gets punished for what; an issue that goes back to day one in our country and for which there can be no denial that race has been an integral part. There's further irony of course in the fact that perhaps the first hate crime laws were the white slave laws which made white women a special class under the law.
Mostly though, the truth that seems to get lost in the debate is that laws are local. Crimes are not uniformly punished across states. A robbery in New York that might result in a 5 year sentence might result in a 20 year sentence in Texas. Even within jurisdictions, there has long existed differences in the penalties handed out for similar crimes (penalties for dealing crack vs. powdered cocaine come to mind). Further, the practice of weighing the intent/motivation of a perpetrator is not something foreign to our system; our penal code is full of graduated penalties based on the intent of the criminal. Hate crime laws are not perfect and there may very well be reasons to revisit the need for them in our current system but not for the reasons most of their opponents believe.
Cage Match
Answer: The Devil would laugh his ass off.
Partial Credit: Vince McMahon would sell it on PPV for $29.95
Honorable Mention: Big D would be able to sleep in on Saturdays.
Brooklynites

Monday, July 17, 2006
Mama Mia!
Friday, July 14, 2006
Do Me A Favor - Have A Great Weekend!
Don't Die (If you're famous)

"Jimi was also notorious among friends and bandmates for becoming angry and violent when he drank alcohol. Kathy Etchingham spoke of an incident that took place in a London pub in which an intoxicated Hendrix beat her with a public telephone handset because he thought she was calling another man on the payphone. Alcohol was also cited as the cause of Hendrix's 1968 rampage that destroyed a Stockholm hotel room and led to his arrest there. Carmen Borrero revealed that while drunk, Jimi once threw a glass vodka bottle at her, which shattered when it struck her face. Musician Paul Caruso's friendship with Hendrix ended in 1970 when Jimi punched him during an alcohol-fueled argument." (from Wiki)
Who Knew Barbaro Is A Blond Woman?
Thursday, July 13, 2006
Priorities
---David Letterman"Any online gamblers here? Well, Congress is looking in shutting that down. There's going to be a massive congressional investigation of online gambling and they're going to shut it down. And when they get done with that, they're going to look into this North Korean thing."
How To Spot A Jap - And Kill Them
Wednesday, July 12, 2006
Bobby Flay Is A Liar
Tuesday, July 11, 2006
Finally, I Can Move On
I hate not finishing books I’ve started reading. I’ve done it a couple of times – Cold Mountain and Sabbath’s Theater are two prime examples – but generally I force myself to finish whatever I start. Forcing myself is how I’d describe the last two months with The Name of the Rose. A highly regarded novel by a highly regarded novelist that I found a chore to read.
This book was described to me as a sort of (intelligent) precursor to the Da Vinci Code. A religious based mystery novel but concerning itself with a different mystery – the strange and criminal happenings at a famed monastery in 14th century Italy. Can our hero, a brilliant Sherlock Holmes-esq character solve the mystery before anyone else is killed? Will the competing forces for control of the Church destroy each other? Can the wealth and treasures of the Church be reconciled with the life of poverty Jesus led? Will the Waldesians, Minorites, devotees of Francis Bacon and Thomas Aquinas, the Italians and French, and other parties ever reconcile? Do you care? I don’t and I read the damn book.
I recognize that I’m a blasphemous heathen so perhaps those more excited about the history of the Catholic Church, the role of monasteries as repositories of knowledge during the dark ages, the philosophical arguments underpinning key aspects of Church dogma, will dig this book. Unfortunately even the detective/mystery parts of the book left a little to be desired – I didn’t understand many of the “ah-hah” moments because many of the clues were in Latin or they were just too much like mensa puzzles for my limited faculties. Umberto Eco is clearly an intelligent and scholarly man and I know he has a well deserved reputation around the world but this simply wasn’t the book for me. Perhaps a fan of Eco will shed light on what I missed.
Monday, July 10, 2006
Good Morning
- I thought the World Cup finale was great. I watched more Cup games this year than ever before and can see myself getting even more into the 2010 Cup - to be held in South Africa no less.
- It's a beautiful summer morning so why did I have random thoughts of winter on my way to work? Something to do with getting older I think.
- My VOIP home phone is down. If you've left me a voicemail at home in the last two weeks and I haven't gotten back to you, my bad. To those who I've recommended VOIP fret not, the service works fine, my "gizmo" is malfunctioning and I haven't had time to call SunRocket. I should have a new gizmo in a few days and be back up and running. In the meanwhile, hit me on the cell.
- Anyone have thoughts on last night's new episode of the Chappelle Show? I think I need to see it again b/c I didn't find it all that funny and somehow I don't think that's right.
- Not expecting any tears from you all but my run of banking with perks that started when I was a law firm associate has finally come to an end and it sucks. When I got out of law school I was hooked up with a private banking account at Citibank as a benefit of being a firm associate. Basically, the best services and interest rates available without any monthly fees or min. balances. When I left firm practice in 2001 I thought I'd be cut off but somehow I stayed under the radar. Until now. Now, Citibank is charging me hella fees. Time to change banks. Anybody want to recommend a no-fee bank that doesn't require min. balances?
- Home Run Derby tonight. Watch steroid-free* players hit moon shots.
Friday, July 07, 2006
Slick Deals
Time To Charge The FBI With Treason
Thursday, July 06, 2006
Tuesday, July 04, 2006
On Patriotism
The patriotism of the conservative goes unquestioned. It's assumed that every politician on the right will wear a flag on his lapel and effortlessly hold forth on ours as "the greatest country in the history of the world." ...But the progressive and the reformer have a problem with what passes for unadulterated patriotism. By nature, the reformer is bound to insist that the country, however glorious, is not a perfect place, that it is capable of doing wrong as well as right. The nation that declared "all men are created equal" was, at the time those words were written, the home of an extensive system of slavery.
Most reformers guard their patriotic credentials by moving quickly to the next logical step: that the true genius of America has always been its capacity for self-correction. I'd assert that this is a better argument for patriotism than any effort to pretend that the Almighty has marked us as the world's first flawless nation.
Monday, July 03, 2006
Ladies - Have You Gotten The Memo?
3) Prairie Muffins are aware that God is in control of their ability to conceive and bear children, and they are content to allow Him to bless them as He chooses in this area. [so I guess no fertility treatments for the those unable to conceive naturally?]
9) Prairie Muffins do not reflect badly on their husbands by neglecting their appearance; they work with the clay God has given, molding it into an attractive package for the pleasure of their husbands. [mold it baby!]
11) Prairie Muffins own aprons and they know how to use them [I'm in total agreement]
17) Prairie Muffins place their husbands' needs and desires above other obligations, arranging their schedules and responsibilities so that they do not neglect the one who provides for and protects them and their children. [you know, these muffin-heads may be on to something]
18) Prairie Muffins are fiercely submissive to God and to their husbands. [submissives, not just for the BSDM set anymore]
40) The women who will have the greatest impact on the world, those who will have the greatest influence on history, are those "well-behaved" women who faithfully serve God in their daily lives, seeking His approval rather than the world's admiration. Prairie Muffins know that while engaging in the kingdom-building work in their homes of loving, training and disciplining their children, the world may not express its approval, but it will be turned upside down. [devoted child rearing is fantastic, but the rest is pure rubbish].