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

Category: Travel Page 10 of 29

This Is My Country, And It’s None Of Your Business

Just this week I was telling a friend about my lack of tolerance for being interrogated when I re-enter the United States (compare to my polite and honest answers when I’m entering other countries).  Congrats to this guy for not being cowed by a pointless exercise of power.   I particularly like his “takeaways”, including:

4. U.S. Citizens Have No Obligation To Answer Questions. Ultimately, the cops let me go, because there was nothing they could do. A returning U.S. citizen has an obligation to provide proof of citizenship, and the officer has legitimate reasons to investigate if she suspects the veracity of the citizenship claim. A U.S. citizen returning with goods also has an obligation to complete a written customs declaration. But that’s it. You don’t have to answer questions about where you went, why you went, who you saw, etc.

Batch Operation

Sometimes this place gets trapped in a bit of aspirational paralysis – I have so many things put aside to be noted and written about that I’m unable to get started on any one in particular.  So, forgive (and hopefully enjoy) some of the declutter:

Matt Tabbai takes on Lara Logan’s ridiculous attack on the journalism of Mike Hastings (author of the piece that sent McChrystal packing).

See, according to Logan, not only are reporters not supposed to disclose their agendas to sources at all times, but in the case of covering the military, one isn’t even supposed to have an agenda that might upset the brass! Why? Because there is an “element of trust” that you’re supposed to have when you hang around the likes of a McChrystal. You cover a war commander, he’s got to be able to trust that you’re not going to embarrass him. Otherwise, how can he possibly feel confident that the right message will get out?

If you click on nothing else in this post, click on the first link.

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As ever, Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli is an embarrassment to decent people everywhere.

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I didn’t expect England to get near the finals, but I didn’t expect them to go home so soon.  I much would have preferred they face Ghana than Germany.   James Fallows has a great roundup of the dark mood that befell most of the British press by the end of the ENG-GER match.

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If the title of this doesn’t take you there, I don’t know what to say – Pablo Escobar, Guerillas, and My Dream Bike.  The world is filled with amazing stories.

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Jon Shure attempts to answer the question – If You Tax Them, Will They Flee? It’s not a bad analysis to pull out whenever you start hearing the “If we raise taxes here, we’ll drive out all the rich!”  It’s something I hear around here (DC/VA/MD) in cycles, and yet people pretty much stay put.  Shocking, no?

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A perhaps surprising admission – I’m enjoying the Kagan confirmation hearings.  Some of it is being reminded of con law issues I’d long since forgotten, or getting a quick sketch of where current hot issues stand.  And part of it is just the mostly friendly approach of all involved.  Unfortunately, there’s always Jeff Sessions (R-Unreconstructed South) to spoil things.  Christ is he dumber than a box of rocks.

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I’m sure this only happens in academia.

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The Airbus A380 continues to be a draw for some travelers.  The closest I’ve gotten to one was on the tarmac at LAX, unfortunately.  Someday.  Soon, I hope.

Melden, Belgium

Looking down from halfway up the Koppenberg.

Brussels

The Grand Place.  Might be getting time to change the format of things, here.

A Note

It has come to my attention that some may believe that I was in Belgium this past week. But we all know how impossible that is, right?

Moving

The Muur

Friday Music: Temptations

The places, they call to me.   A most excellent friend just brought up the possibility of returning to Argentina.  I managed this snap on my first trip there:

Not bad for a furtive cellphone shot, eh?  But really, it captures so much of what makes me really want to head back.  As does the music of the Gotan Project:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wZk-LJ_KCMg[/youtube]

And Tanghetto:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=71G7sF1qun4[/youtube]

I have this silly habit of immediately imagining how I could make a life living in most places I travel.  Pick up some clients in industry X, live in neighborhood Y, and have a Z kind of life.  Predictably, that fades after a little time has been put between me and the place.  But Buenos Aires – along with Hong Kong and Cape Town – has held on much longer.

Recommended: Notes from the Road

Found a new travel site (through a tweet from Travelvice, long ago rec’d) called Notes from the Road.   It’s pretty much a model of the sort of travel-centric site I’ve long dreamed of putting up myself.   Absolutely beautiful photography, with perfect short texts that capture the experience of a place.  Check out this section on Bavaria, a place near and dear to my own life.

On Approach to DCA

I can’t even count the number of times I’ve landed at DCA, yet I’ve (sadly) never seen it like this:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ftQNT-9pnK0[/youtube]

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