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

Category: Personal Page 25 of 59

Travel Notes: Omnibus Edition

[Part of my year-end omnibus series]

Mitch Altman’s story of a weekend in a new city captures one of the best parts of traveling – random connections with interesting people:

[My host] also organized an anti-war event at a community center, and somehow during the event the Coke machine they rented as the center-piece of the performance caught on fire while videos of “Dr. Strangelove” mixed with actual footage from Iraq on the floor.  I met Charlie through a journalist from Libération who interviewed me in the early days of TV-B-Gone media craziness.  As well as hosting me in his wonderful, government-subsidized apartment (they actually support the arts in France!), Charlie is a great connector, hosting get-togethers where journalists, film makers, artists of all sorts, many flavors of activists, and other interesting, creative, intelligent people mix and mingle in long nights of conversation and friendly debate.

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Anil Dash lives the dream.  Almost.

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I’m a sucker for certain historical travel narratives, and this was right down my alley.  It’s an account of two young women who set off in 1944 on a long circle through the eastern US (via bike, train, and riverboat).  What makes it particularly interesting is that the first half appears to be a contemporaneously written account, and the second finished by one of the women when she was in her 80s.

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Does flying occasionally scare you?  Then don’t read this.

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The best in travel usually entails taking some risk, in my experience.  This list wouldn’t be my own, but it’s not a bad place to start.

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My trip to Argentina last month marked the first time I’d ever had my photo taken at a border, as a condition of entry.  Presumably, other countries will be following the United States further down that road:

The Homeland Security Department has announced plans to expand its biometric data collection program to include foreign permanent residents and refugees. Almost all noncitizens will be required to provide digital fingerprints and a photograph upon entry into the United States as of Jan. 18.

Because nothing keeps us safe like storing your biometric information in a one stop shop for identity thieves.

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I’m going to have the opportunity to get to a new part of the world in the next year or two – Southeast Asia.  Shamefully, I have to admit that it’s never held that much interest for me, as a region.  Maybe I could start with Burma.

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A little closer to home – the Yellow Arrow Capitol of Punk tour of DC’s punk history might be worth a look.  Punk was never really my thing, so I can’t speak to the quality of it, but the execution strikes me as really a good idea.   The Yellow Arrow concept goes well beyond DC – right now, it claims 467 cities.  Check it out.

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Craig of Travelvice captures some of the, uh, cultural nuance of eastern Europe.

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While I’m working on finishing this story (really, one day . . . ), you might enjoy this account of Dubai, which I think hits the marks pretty well:

Inside the airport, there was a 90-minute wait at passport control. Surrounding me were an international smorgasbord of travelers; Indian businessman, Arab millionaires, Palestinian refugees, Russian hookers, Japanese tourists, and women dressed head to toe in black robes, complete with leather gloves. With a population of 1.2 million, Dubai only has about a couple hundred thousands locals, the rest are migrant laborers from India, Pakistan, Philippines and Malaysia, not to mention the UK and USA. The guy in the line warns me of ever-present blonde Russian hookers, “There are 200 000 of them in Dubai!” he tells me, shaking his head in disapproval, as if they were an unpopular teenage accessory.

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I probably won’t write about the Nova Scotia trip I took in October, and I have no clever way to work this into another story, so I’ll just post this link to the site of a restaurant we passed.  Because I am twelve.

The ACS Conspiracy

Could have told you this was coming:

Sixteen appointees and advisers helping president-elect Barack Obama’s Justice Department transition efforts all recently sat on the board of an organization little known outside legal circles: The American Constitution Society for Law and Policy.

I suspect we’ll hear more about this Big Liberal Plot in the coming years. To put it kindly (and honestly), the American Constitution Society (ACS) was a very late response to the conservative Federalist Society. Like the Federalist Society, it’s not a nefarious secret conspiracy – it’s a simple organization of like-minded lawyers who believe that supporting the organization can help advance their ideas about the law and government. I’ve been a member since the outset (2001), but haven’t participated all that much. There are lots of campus-based events, and (in DC, at least) ACS sponsors the occasional forum or lecture.  I think the last one I attended was this forum on human rights (co-sponsored with with Center for American Progress – you can view video of it here, if you like).  ACS also maintain a blog (natch), which you might find interesting.  I write all that in the hope that the next time you hear about “that liberal ACS”, you’ll have some measure of reality to compare to what will almost certainly be a mythologized version of the organization.

Omnibus Notes

I’m going to try and clear my draft desk in the next couple of days, so I can concentrate on a few long form projects.  To do that, I’m going to push out a lot of stuff that I can’t give the treatment originally intended, but can’t in good conscience just push into the dustbin.*  They’ll be loosely organized around general themes (I hope).  So I’m asking for a bit of your indulgence, to see this place through to the new year.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j2Gm1oBhUcQ[/youtube]

*My conscience occasionally works in odd ways.

Weekend Music: Gimme a Beat Edition

There used to be a carnival that would come to town every year.  It was the usual ripoff and con game, but it was fun fun fun.  This despite the fact that all of the rides played pretty much the same three songs.  Any one them takes me right back, spinning fast.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aiJ_2zQYUFg[/youtube]

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nLLweEwG8Ss[/youtube]

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ID_N7rv-iN8[/youtube]

East/West

From XKCD.

Did the Kid Get a Bike for Christmas?

Please make sure it fits.  I’m sitting at my desk right now, looking out at two kids with brand new bikes circling around the park behind my house.  The boy’s bike fits perfectly, and he’s zooming around with a big smile.  The girl’s bike is very poorly adjusted, and she’s having a hard time getting moving.  All they need to do is raise the seat for her.  I wish I knew them (or could find a parent), so I could go out and offer a bit of help.

A Christmas Message . . .

from Polly Toynbee (and many, many more):

“There’s probably no God. Now stop worrying and enjoy your life”.

Merry Christmas.

“I Want It Now!”

The Richmond Democrat makes an excellent connection between Veruca Salt and Virginia Republicans.

(I should admit some ambivalence about this.  My own Veruca Salt impressions are not exactly unknown, amongst my friends.)

Warner Records Takes Its Ball and Goes Home

Warner wants more money from YouTube, and because it isn’t getting it, you’ll shortly have a tougher time finding music/videos from artists like Cher, Alanis Morrisette, The Raconteurs, etc.:

Warner Music Group ordered YouTube on Saturday to remove all music videos by its artists from the popular online video-sharing site after contract negotiations broke down.

The order could affect hundreds of thousands of videos clips, as it covers Warner Music’s recorded artists as well as the rights for songs published by its Warner/Chappell unit, which includes many artists not signed to Warner Music record labels.

Between that and Sony’s dedication to hating its own customers (i.e., making it impossible to easily embed videos from Sony artists), the music series here will have to shift from being mostly retrospective to a good bit more prospective.  When it comes to new music, I’ve happily avoided the major labels for years.   Most of my favorite new artists – like Dan Reeder, Stereo Total, and Tanghetto – are on indy labels that don’t fight against the idea that the more people that hear their artists’ music, the better off they are.  That doesn’t, unfortunately, solve for the problem of having most of the music I love – and want to share – stuck with the old major labels, but it’s a start.

10:15/Saturday Night: These Waves

A little different, tonight.  First, from Yo La Tengo, Our Way to Fall:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S3TOPNXVXD4[/youtube]

It’s just . . . it just is.

Second, I’m going to offer something a little different.  A hypertext novella – These Waves of Girls, by Caitlin Fisher.  There’s sound at that link, and just give it a second.  Or a half hour.  I’m loath to spoil it with too much introduction, so I’ll just offer that it’s a rather unconventional approach to telling one woman’s own story.  You’ll know rather quickly whether it works for you.  It did for me.

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