Politics, open government, and safe streets. And the constant incursion of cycling.

Month: November 2008 Page 7 of 8

Recommended: Ethicurean

While I don’t often write about it, I’ve always been interested in the hows and whys of the food that arrives at my table.   My grandfather was a stockyard worker, and it was early in my life that I followed a pig from the stockyard to the back of his truck to the slaughterhouse to the butchering table to my dinner plate.  It was a good lesson in the costs, choices, and implications of what I ate then, and has remained something of a framework in my choices about what I eat now.  I’ve never been particularly evangelical about my food choices, and my interest in the ethics of food production and consumption have generally been limited to wanting to ensure that my own choices were consistent with my values.  But the recent reemergence of food supply as a political issue (if you’re in the US or Europe, you might not have noticed it, but it’s definitely becoming a problem) has heightened my interest in food policy and supply.  I’ve encountered some difficulty in getting useful and interesting analysis, though.  This subject area tends to attract a lot of what I call “true believer” authors who are steadfastly dedicated to their cause (organic farming, local sourcing, etc.) to the exclusion of all other perspectives.  While these folks occasionally produce an interesting read, I don’t come away feeling like I’ve got any better understanding of the bigger issues.

Enter Ethicurean.  I only recently discovered it when a regular read linked this summary of Obama’s various food policy-related positions.  I found it well written, and as I poked around the site for a bit more, I found a good mix of big picture policy pieces and this-cheese-shop-is-great bits.  Despite multiple authors, it’s got a consistently informed tone that I quite appreciate.  Maybe you will, too.  Give it a read.

10:15/Saturday Night: Dreaming of Bad Things

Chris Isaak’s Baby Did a Bad Bad Thing is his second hottest video.  Imagine that.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fbpv7IUTm5k[/youtube]

The first time I heard this next track, I thought it was Chris Isaak.  In fact, it’s Jace Everett, singing Bad Things.  Apologies for the cheeseball graphic – YouTube beggars can’t be choosers.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9osYNb5jmGQ[/youtube]

Found Everett through HBO’s new True Blood series.  Here’s the opening segment featuring Bad Things.  I’m a complete sucker for Southern Gothic.

Finally, we have one of the Butthole Surfers’ best works – Whatever (I Had a Dream Last Night) (set to a fanvid using the beginning of Donnie Darko):

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4kUAyMo_aQA[/youtube]

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Fiona Apple’s Criminal would have made an appearance tonight, but you can thank Sony for stopping that.  So instead, here’s a rather inspired derivative work involving April Stevens’ (1959!) Teach Me, Tiger:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxrE9xWU59Y[/youtube]

The Party of Ignorance

Sometime back, someone used the phrase “the joyful marriage of confidence and ignorance” to describe the values of the people that the Palin candidacy appealed to.  For me, that does a fairly good job of describing the Republican Party as a whole.  There are, to be sure, exceptions.  But that is what lies at its political core.   And as Lawrence O’Donnell argues below, it’s those sort of political values that can almost deliver the Vice Presidency to someone like Sarah Palin:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oD_e4yTQpg8[/youtube]

They’re laughing, but it’s not funny.

Weekend Music: Flip It Edition

Going to use this Friday to play what I would have had up here on Wednesday. The first track everyone knows. Everyone. The Clash’s Rock the Casbah:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OAkfHShATKY[/youtube]

Algerian Rachid Taha knows it, too. Apparently a huge fan of Joe Strummer. But he thought the song was a little condescending, so he had a go at it, in Arabic. Dunno about you, but I like this version – Rock el Casbah – better:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rw6Xw2q_91M[/youtube]

Friday Notes: Still Sinking In Edition

Wednesday was for finally getting some sleep.  Thursday was for tracking down all the things I’ve left undone of late.  And today is for actually getting them done (or getting started on that, anyway).  So things have been a little light.  If you want to see a lot of what I *would* have been writing about, if I’d have been more adept at multi-tasking, check out my friend Karen’s posts from the past few days.

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Love this photo.  Everybody wins.

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With the defeat of Carol Schwartz, the DC city council is now a Republican-Free Zone.  Good job screwing yourselves with Patrick Mara, guys.  And it wasn’t just the GOP that got screwed here – it was DC.  Schwartz was a positive influence on the council, and now she’s gone.
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Good video report of the Obamalleycat I was involved with last Saturday.

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Question 2 passed in Maryland, adding slot machines to specific locations around the state.  The state will now be balancing (well, attempting to) its budget on the backs of its poorest citizens.   I’m theoretically in favor of legalized gambling, but the practical impact in the communities in which it is concentrated is stomach-turning.  Good luck, Maryland.

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Atrios pointed to this WaPo story about a black couple that worked in the White House over three decades, starting in the Truman Administration.  It’s not just a personal interest piece, but a good review of history.  And, as Atrios asks, stick with it until the end.

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Vegan Soul Power has an interesting guest post about eating on the road with the Obama campaign.

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Marijuana-friendly ballot iniatives across the country nearly run the board.  Interesting.

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Krugman spoke the truth, here:

What I mean by that is that for the past 14 years America’s political life has been largely dominated by, well, monsters. Monsters like Tom DeLay, who suggested that the shootings at Columbine happened because schools teach students the theory of evolution. Monsters like Karl Rove, who declared that liberals wanted to offer “therapy and understanding” to terrorists. Monsters like Dick Cheney, who saw 9/11 as an opportunity to start torturing people.

And in our national discourse, we pretended that these monsters were reasonable, respectable people. To point out that the monsters were, in fact, monsters, was “shrill.”

We’re not through with them, either.

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I’m only half kidding when I say that I’d contribute to a Palin ’12 effort, but Adam Bonin thinks that a Palin ’16 effort is something to keep in mind.

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Is Charlie Crist still engaged?

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Tom Perriello’s actually going to win, isn’t he?  I never would have thought that would happen.  How sweet it is to be wrong.

Joe the Lying Hypocrite

Yes, yes, we’re all tired of Joe the Plumber stories.  But this one just so neatly illustrates the rank dishonesty and hypocrisy of his kind that I just couldn’t leave it to chance that you’d not see it:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q7x0YyLDono[/youtube]

As Jed @ dKos puts it:

turns out that when Plumber Joe was a child, he was on welfare, not once, but twice, and he credits it with helping his family ultimately lead a middle-class life style. He defends having received welfare by saying that he’s subsequently paid into the system.

In other words, well-designed taxpayer-funded social assistance programs are fine because ultimately they will pay for themselves.

Ding.

(And hopefully that will be the last time we ever see Joe the Plumber on these pages.)

Getting the House in Order

Speculation over the shape the new Democratic power structure will take is mostly focused on the various Obama Admin cabinet possibilities, but I think it’s worth taking a look at the legislative side, too.  Joe Lieberman out as chairman of anything but his own one man party should be a given, of course.  On the House side, I’d like to see Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA) succeed in his bid to take the Energy and Commerce Committee chairmanship from Rep. John Dingell (D-MI).   Rep. Dingell is, to be sure, an extremely smart, talented, and principled legislator.  He is also, I think, entirely too grounded in the Detroit manufacturing industry.  Those ties will stand in the way of truly transformative energy policy, I’m afraid, and Waxman’s demonstrated aggressiveness will be an asset in the Committee’s oversight roles.  I don’t know if Waxman’s willingness to be open with this effort will bring other challenges out into the open, but I think a bit of competition for these chairmanships can be healthy.

Also, I think that we should expect to see a fundamental change in the way that goverment operates.  Sure, the Democrat in the White House and the Democrats in the Senate and House share a lot of common policy goals, and should be expected to work together to achieve them.  But they are in two fundamentally different branches of government.  I don’t think it will take long before we see House Dems reassert the power they have as a seperate and co-equal branch of government.  This, of course, will be cheered on by the Republicans, who will welcome it as a sign of Democratic weakness.  I think the public, however, should see it as a sign of the strength of the American system of government.  Checks and balances are healthy, and lead to more durable legislation and policy.

(If you’re interested in the origin of the current system of Party First, check out this interview with former Congressman Mickey Edwards (R-OK).   In it, he describes Gingrich’s reshaping of the Republicans in Congress from a seperate institutional power to a supporting cast for President George H.W. Bush, and how that eventually led to this idea that it’s entirely about party, rather than insitution, country, or Constitution.  I found it very interesting.  It’s about 18 minutes long.)

Update: An informative take on the process of selecting the committee chairs.

Midweek Makeover: Writ Large Edition

Midweek makeover?  Forget that, today is a milestone makeover, and that’s probably underselling it.  No covers, either.  It’s the real thing.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1rhKJcTgmgI[/youtube]

Prop 8

The less I say about it right now, the better.  It’s a bitter edge on a day of great joy.  Not everything is counted, there will be various legal challenges, but it doesn’t at all look good.  This is one of many things we need to address in an America that just expressed a renewed committment to decency, and it should be right there near the top of the list of priorities.

Delivering on Hope

There remain many things to be said about the politics that resulted in yesterday’s massive vote for change.  And I’ll get to them.  But taking everything in is leaving me rather circumspect, at the moment.  Further, I’m very much looking forward to spending less time on politics, and more time on governing.  We placed an enormous amount of hope on Barack Obama last night, and now it’s time to make sure he delivers.  His election was not an end in and of itself.  It is – if we all do our part – a means to a better country and a better world.

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