Re: Will Mike Bloomberg run for President in 2008?

July 4th, 2007 by JoeC

Bloomberg’s gonna run independent and make back hall handshakes with each party on certain issues and push weight behind one party or another. He’s a billion dollar campaign advertisement that will run between the commerical breaks on the CNN debates. Who’s he gonna be plugging, that’s the question. Bloom Diesel has more zero’s buried in off-shore accounts than Perot and he’s the iPhone of politics. Only a few will buy the gee-whiz but goddam if the paradigm hasn’t shifted.

Happy independence day everyone. I love bee.r. Beer.

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BRRRRRRRRRREP BLOUGH AINT NO COMIN BACK, SON

January 30th, 2006 by JoeC

I used to assign some degree of reverence to the higher ideals propping up our democracy.  Things like Trust and Respect.  But the more I learn about government, seems like the whole thing is held together with a rancid glue of fear, and lust for power and money.  And not just the current administration.  I’m talking bipartisan here, stretching back decades.  Makes sense, when you carry the two on human nature.

Bush is spying on his own people and the CIA is lobbing missles blindly from drones with drunken recklessness.  They’re all blacked out drunk on a terrible power binge and they’ve lost a healthy and necessary fear of their constituency.

Never mind hunting or sport shooting clay pigeons in the Hamptons with Grundale and Reginald.  Let’s not try to put lipstick on an M-16.  Assult rifles are for war.  They’re for killing people in large numbers.  And I want to be able to get my hands on one.  Because at the end of the day, the people hold the power in a democracy and when words and promises and obligations lose all meaning the only hard currency left in Power is one in the chamber and a few in the clip.

It’s an ugly and uncomfortable thing to talk about, but let’s face it, the 2nd amendment was created exclusively to secure the means for the people to violently overthrow the government.  That’s it. 

I don’t advocate such a thing, and I hope to Christ it will never be necessary.  But with the reckless arrogance and incompetent disconnection of the current administration, I want to keep my options open for cap guns, water pistols, large calibur revolvers, assult rifles, rocket launchers, and Abrams Tanks.

Go ahead and tap my phone, george, your rotten swine.  It hasn’t worked right in 3 weeks and nobody calls me anyhow.

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The KKK probably doesn’t much care for Spike Lee joints, either

December 13th, 2005 by JoeC

God’s a big guy, at least 15 feet tall.  I also heard he likes wearing funny hats, and he refuses to take them off, even in movie theatres.  Aparently, he sat right the hell in front of MisterE at Narnia, and blocked his view of the screen:

It is probably the worse parallel to christianity i’ve ever seen since Mel Gibson’s passion.

Well it’s tricky see, because The Passion was a much more convoluted and bizarre Christian uh……parallel, because Jesus was played by an autistic mime, and all the other Jews in the movie were actually inflatable sex dolls.  You would not believe the trouble Mel Gibson had with the stop-start animation technique to really make them look like real people.  I’m sure there’s a hell of a behind the secens documentary in the bonus DVD.

Shit I’m thinking of another movie…Jesus was meant to be Jesus in The Passion.  There were no parallels anywhere.  It was meant to be Gibson’s frank interpretation of the literal story as he knew it. 

The evil witch is supposed to be either the Romans or the Jews, it depends on how anti-Semitic you feel.

I haven’t seen the film yet but I read the book, as MisterE did, long ago in the less confounded days of youth.  And without doing even the most cursory internet research, I’m fairly certain the White Witch represents evil, or the Devil.  Or if you hate Christianity, Jews. 

Shit, I hope when I die the whitehouse splits in half or something.

That cannot possibly mean anything.

I really wish I could remember the books better, because I can’t remember if they were so blatantly christian as well.

Well, rake it over in your mind for a minute.  The film was a multimillion dollar gambe by the wildly secular Disney.  They only kept the Christian parable so lucid because they thought it was marketable to a vastly Christian nation like, for example, America.  I’m willing to bet C.S. Lewis was not so calculated and cunning.  More likely with him, he was just a Christian guy, and wanted to write a book about what he believed.  If anything, the books were more Christian than the movie.  That said, you better stop reading now MisterE, grab a goddam handle of whiskey and get a cab to a titty bar and cleanse yourself of the Christian literature that has remained all these years, like a cancer, in some dark corner of your mind.

At least in the Passion, you knew what the movie was REALLY about.

Apparently nobody is having too much trouble figuring out what The Chronicles of Narnia are all about either.  They’re about Jesus.  That wasn’t so hard, was it?

Whats the point of going through all this trouble to create magical lands and characters, and then have the story just be the new testament.

Is it the storytelling device you hate, or the new testament?  Both?

What a waste of celluloid.

Yeah fuck this.  Let’s go watch a Spike Lee joint. 

Wait…he’s not………..black……….is he?

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WHAT’S UP THUG

December 5th, 2005 by JoeC

Well Nate, I think you’re too quick to define the term too narrowly.  On it’s face, the term ‘gangsta’ may be most apparently tied to the hard-luck inner city gangbanging black man.  But I checked urbandictionary.com, and definition #2 of ‘Gangsta’ seems to afford a bit more laditude to the word, defining ‘Gangsta’ as:

"One who willfully promotes and participates in destructive and self-serving culture in an effort to project a particular image of ‘toughness’ or to make oneself intimidating. Willingness to blatantly and horrifically misuse English is a necessity, as is a low IQ and sub-par education (or at least the appearance thereof)."

Where Nate cites ebonics as a necessity, I think we can broaden that to a general debasement of the engilsh language, which would include Bush’s backwoods Texas big sky ranch pigeon slang.

Also accounted for are what appears to be a wildly inadequate general aptitude and the appearance of a 9th grade education. 

The whole bit about willfully promoting a destructive and self-serving culture to project toughness may also fit in somewhere, if you stretch it far enough.  I’m messing you don’t have to stretch anything any place, we’re fighting oil wars all over the planet.

The reason Fiddy likes Bush is, a Desert Eagle and an M-60 are nice, but that hardly stands up to 25 aircraft carriers, a bag of nukes and 3 million goddam automatic rifles.  And tanks, christ let’s not even get into the tanks.

Bush is a Gangsta, and I don’t really think he’s even trying to hide it.  Maybe he’s got something figured out that the rest of us missed.

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I met the sons of darkness and the sons of light in the bordertowns of despair

October 10th, 2005 by JoeC

When I was 17 I used to date this Mormon broad.  It went fine for awhile.  Her father was some type of brain doctor and she rode horses in competitions and had walls covered with long blue ribbons and enormous trophies falling off every surface in her room.  I never really looked at what the trophies said but it seems like if you’re a 17 year old girl and you ride horses at shows, you end up getting some type of ribbon or statue or accolade.  Just getting up on that animal and looking good in those riding britches is some type of miracle.  She used to bomb around in an old Toyota, and I don’t know if we ever learned anything from each other.  The relationship was ultimately terminated under pretense of irreconcilable religious differences though looking back it may have been doomed on more general grounds.

Seventeen was an odd year for me in the house of Lar.  It was a year of self-disciplined religion.  I read my Bible daily and talked to God like we went to kindergarten together back in the 80’s.  I was the junior class president at Mount Anthony Union.  The homecoming crown was collecting dust in my closet, and I was playing varsity basketball.  I talked to God about all these things.  It was a tough year physically though, I began to get splitting, monster truck migraine headaches around that time, which usually left me in a dark room wishing for death for 8 hours or so, generally building in violent agony to a spine-snapping climax of vomiting stomach bile 10 or 15 times into a trashcan by my bed.  I also developed a strange circulation problem where my hands would turn ghost white and grow numb in 40 degree weather.   It could’ve been bad luck, but looking back I’d sooner attribute it to my manic anorexia at the time.  A strange thing, that.  at 6′6" I weighed 165 pounds and thought of it as ‘progress.’  Why not 160, I thought, it might be possible if I could get a handle on my ‘diet.’  Watch out for 170 though, or you’ll start looking a little too…………American.

 I talked to God about my weight ambitions too.  After school I stumbled and gasped through a 2 hour basketball practice on a bag of broccoli, and then went home and sank into the chair and drank a cup of tea (no milk no sugar) and said, God, I’m so tired and weak and hungry and it’s making me dizzy, but please help me out with the discipline to not eat.  I’m trying to maintain a healthy weight here Christ.  And he uh………’answered’ that prayer too.

I got what I wanted when I was 17.  It was midnight, and I was on my knees talking to God in the garden of virtue and self-destruction.  Seventeen was an odd year, and maybe a good one.  The last year before the world came and the ignorance of youth crumbled into the rubble of general manic confusion.  And in the years between then and yesterday I been around the planet and seen the the world’s biggest buddha and sat in the temple and tried to feel something but got too distracted worrying about maintaining a position of sufficient respect (Never point your toes at the buddha).  I saw Westminster and stood at the tombs of kings and tried to feel something but the dodgy old British men shadowing me to make sure my camera stayed in the bag sort of killed the God buzz.  I saw one guy snapping clandestine shots of a tomb in some dim annex.  Good luck in Hell, I thought.

Now it’s autumn in New York City, mostly overcast in Sheepshead Bay.  The hookah coals are on a slow burn to ash and the air smells of sweet apples.  Nate just left for work and the place is mostly quiet.  I’ve been reading this latest exchange between Lar and Andy and Nick and I’ve been trying to make some sense what it means to be a Christian.  

I met a guy named Eric who drives a problematic purple Vespa, and he was a bit of a lighthouse.  He’s an older fellow, slim, maybe around 60 or so, with a full white beard and a reassuring sort of soul sparkle.  Whenever a Vespa breaks down some angry beaver calls the shop and I have to fire up the van and go pick it up.  I’ve had to pick up old Eric’s rig at least three times and the hell of it is, it’s a brand new rig, 2006 model, and he only bought it a few months ago and the thing breaks down all over the place.  So by the third time I felt real bad about it, and it was getting sort of awkward to show up week after week to bring his maimed animal back to the shop, so I’d offer him a ride in the van to wherever he was going, and we got to talking, and I asked him what he did for a living.  Well, he said, I’m an ordained minister, and I also am a psychologist.  It took me off guard, but explained a lot of things too.  I told him that it all made more sense now, because it would take a man of God to not drive that thing into the Hudson and then wave a middle finger as it bubbled to the bottom.  Eric’s paradigm helped a little in understanding what it means to live like a Christian. 

It seems Lar comes to the table with a deep evangelical Christianity and an academic interest in anything other than that.  Andy and Nick come with a hardened atheism, and an academic interest in understanding the Christian mind.  But the academic facade has long blown away, and now it seems we have Lar unapologetically trying to win souls for Christ through the long arm of the internet, and Andy and Nick bent on proving to Lar that God is man’s invented crutch.  After both sides have made all their points, where else is there to go?

What does it mean when the untimely tragic death of a man will turn a mother towards God and make a cousin forsake God entirely?

I am Joe C.  I don’t understand God and I don’t understand women.  All I know is if you twist the throttle you move towards some things and away from others, and if I met Christ at a bar I’d buy him a wine and ask, how’s your father.  Also, I cannot stop listening to Purple Rain.

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A heart that’s full up like a landfill

October 4th, 2005 by JoeC

I was making a run to north Jersey today in the Euro-style Benz -powered sprinter Vespa van to pick up a broke down scooter earlier today.  Traffic was light and tolerable and I had NPR on, and I suddenly realized that I may loathe George Bush.  MEEshell Norris, or whatever her name is, was running down the day’s news, and there was a sound byte of Bush doing what we might term ‘defending’ his latest Supreme Court nod.  I found the rough equivalent on cnn.com as is reproduced below:

In his first solo press conference since May, President Bush said Tuesday he has never discussed abortion with Miers or any of his judicial nominees.

"Not to my recollection have I ever sat down with her [to discuss abortion]," Bush said. "What I have done is understand the type of person she is and the type of judge she will be."

This seems like such an outright Clinton-style lie, made more wicked by the overt arrogance of his constant explaining.  He’s known this woman for a decade, she’s acted as his personal attorney, and never in the past 10 years the topic of abortion has never come up, even casually.

Although to be fair, I don’t know if I have solid purchase on the abortion views of my attorney either.  I’ve retained him for a number of years now, and though I could speculate, I don’t believe we’ve ever really had it out over abortion.  Then again, he doesn’t actually hold a law degree.  He’s a lifeguard in San Diego, and has a massive, bouncing, bleached blond afro.  And he’s not up for a Supreme Court seat. 

If I hear one more worn out, broken record, arrogant Bush sound byte about the unbelievable progress in Iraq, or the superior handling of the Katrina aftermath, or of his unflagging insistence that everything is under control, I’m gonna fuckin explode.  EVERYTHING IS NOT UNDER CONTROL.  EVERYTHING IS NOT FINE.  ALL I’M ASKING IS FOR A LITTLE HONESTY HERE. 

What’s really wildly clever and dreadfully cute about the whole thing is, Miers was actually the woman screening the possible Supreme Court picks for Bush!  And he ended up picking her, the woman who thought she was picking the real candidate!  Too Funny!

Miers, 60, was involved as White House counsel in vetting Supreme Court candidates for the president. She said she was "humbled" by Bush’s decision to nominate her.

Following this logic, Bush should marry the wedding planner and shoot the undertaker in the goddam skull.  And then shoot him again, just to make sure.

Politics is a wretched thing and I’m not sure what all these party labels mean anymore.  I suppose I still primarily identify with what it means to be a Republican.  Maybe George Bush was a Republican at one time but he is something other than that now.

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For you don’t count the dead when God’s on your side

September 12th, 2005 by JoeC

Nick wonders where all the Boy Scouts went:

How did all of the once-Boy Scouts in the conservative movement ever forget the one thing that organization is known for?

I’d imagine being the President of the United States is sort of a hard job.  And with that assumption, you allow for a certain latitude of error and ideological discrepancy without sacrificing support for a leader. 

But I’m beginning to think Bush has it all wrong.  If you find yourself in a position of being the most powerful man on the planet, you don’t arbitrarily place your buddies in positions of great responsibility and assume they won’t ever have to actually do the job that corresponds with their job title.  What you do is, you hire super competent and qualified people, then you grab a bottle of XO and call your buddy up at 2am and charter a couple F-18s and fly out to Nevada and fire off some hellfires in to the Nevada desert and have the pilot do some barrel rolls and maybe throw up in your mouth a little and have a good time of it.  If I were president I’d actually run a pretty bad ass operation.  But the point is, you borrow fighter jets with your buddies.  You don’t give them jobs they can’t do. 

On the other hand maybe Bush didn’t get a grip on the irony of Dylan’s With God On Our Side.  Was the destruction of New Orleans the most planned for and anticipated natural disaster in US history?  Sure it was.  But that didn’t mean it was ever going to happen.  It was never inevitable.  Could you even imagine an entire US city destroyed, and nobody to hate afterwards?  If there’s nobody to hate when it’s all over, then it cannot possibly happen. 

I couldn’t find the quote, but on a few different occasions a while back, Andy wrote that the government’s role is to protect our rights, and then protect our lives, in that order [and correct me if I got that wrong or took it out of context Andy].  And that sort of thing sounds fine when were debating the details of policy, but a disaster like Katrina is a lens on the truth, and when Americans are trapped in their attic eating mothballs and waiting for death, rights don’t so much matter.  The measure of a man is the ability to get up in the morning, say ‘what do I need to do to bring the crops in today?’  And then do it.   

A president needs to be able to run the train.  Bush faltered in a situation where American lives were at stake, and that makes people mad.  Nobody in the think tanks ever reasonably thought terrorists would turn planes into missiles and fly them into New York.  People have known for a long long time that New Orleans sits well below sea level, and there was potential for things to go very wrong.  In the past few years alone, the US has seen Hell, both man made and natural.  SOMEBODY PLEASE TELL THE MAN AT THE TOP OF THE STACK THAT IF IT CAN GO WRONG, IT WILL GO WRONG. PLEASE  ACT ACCORDINGLY. 

I rode to Ground Zero tonight.  I’m not yet sure why.  I suppose mostly to see what type of people show up at Ground Zero on 9/11/05.  I tried to feel something but mostly it was numbness.  There were some Asians squatting by a grip of candles in front of the fence.  I saw some Norwegian tourists.  I had a slice of Steve’s pizza.  I paid in a stack of quarters and wiped the grease on my pants.  There was a pig-tailed broad on a bicycle in a black shirt and jean skirt at the corner of Dey Street.  I walked by her on the way to my scooter.  She was crying. If I knew beyond a doubt she was crying on account of America, I would’ve stopped and put my hand on her shoulder for a moment, looked her dead in the soul, and then kept walking.  But for all I knew, she just pedaled away from a terrible breakup, and I sure as hell didn’t want to get tangled with that.   There was a flag flapping at half mast for the ones that died, and the ones still alive trying to understand how to live with the ideals that died.  Maybe I went looking for hope, but left wishing the NYFD truck covered with 12 flat screen TVs and blasting uplifting power ballads would quiet the hell down so a man could afford the option to stand and reflect for two seconds.

You will know us by the trail of cool and intricate knots we leave in rope.  Fall is coming and so is winter. 

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It’s hard to focus your eyes when you’re underwater

September 7th, 2005 by JoeC

I’m not well acquainted with the back story of FEMA, but Don seems to offer a competent summary.  When we’re in The Shit abroad, it’s ok to gaze beyond the horizon, and float around words like ‘vengeance’ and ‘justice’.  Regardless of the truth of it.  When it’s 3,000 miles away, it’s all academic.  You can draw party lines, and make your scapegoats, because right or wrong won’t truly manifest itself in any definitive fashion for another decade.  And in the meantime, Bush can just say ‘watch my thumb’ and the the TLC hour long specials on the B2 bomber will be distraction enough until it’s time to brush your teeth and go to bed.  Sleep.  Wake.  Hustle.

I messed around on CNN this morning, and read over an article about 303 NYPD cops that were bussed down to help out with disaster relief.  There was a photo of a New York City cop standing at the edge of the floodwater, gazing past drowned houses and pickup trucks.  I got a little blurry and tried to push the word ’superman’ out of my mind.

Katrina was a terrorist, devoid of homeland or religion. 

I didn’t start really paying attention to the situation until about day three.  There are hurricanes every year down there, people lose houses, people board up the storefronts, reporters stand in front of palm trees being whipped to hell by wind and rain.  Store your food, stack your water.  Big deal.  Next storm.  But the headlines kept getting bigger.  And just like that, New Orleans disappears.

The wild thing about Mother Nature is, she doesn’t lend much credence to God,  country, or political affiliation.  So for awhile, we’re left with only the truth of the situation; New Orleans, in a world of shit.   You’re forced to drop the political prism, drop the benefit of the doubt, and scream, WHO’S IN CHARGE HERE?  WHAT’S GOING ON? THESE PEOPLE NEED HELP.

People are dying in the dirty south.  Gas prices are up.  Gab’s shouting ‘racism’ and Don is holding out for that rainbow.  There’s a war going on, and I feel unwell about the Bush administration.  Somewhere there is hope.

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…and then I do this fantastic leaping scissor kick, and twirl my wand…

September 6th, 2005 by JoeC

Don writes

[The search for truth] is exasperating.  I wonder what it would take to help people go on that quest just for the hell of it?

If we can find that - then WIS is a guaranteed success.  But I’m still trying to figure out where to start looking.

First, the new UI seems to be moving in the right direction.  I was finding it cumbersome to write a heavily referenced post, and was using a roundabout way to grab quotes from other bloggers and then get back into my own blog box. 

Let’s say I’m blogging right now.  True enough.  And I want to blue box something Don said about the quest for truth.  To do that, I clicked ‘issue front’, and then scrolled down to Don’s post, grabbed his quote from there, then clicked ‘go to my page for this issue…’  to bring me back into my blog.

Is that the most direct way to do this?  If it is, that’s not so bad, but I did like in the old UI how a new window opened up for different blogs.  That way you could have ready 4 or 5 posts to reference with one click and no searching around.  Also, is the ‘links submit’ function gone for good?  That was an ok feature.

Concerning Mellow Yellow’s thoughts on where the truth tree grows, it doesn’t grow on the battlefield.  And what I mean is, maybe Guy Catelli and Amir disagree vehemently on Social Security policy.  But they both happen to be way into, say, interpretive dancing.  Well, we need to know that then.  Maybe a more direct and meaningful shuffle towards Truth will happen when there’s a common ground to start from. 

We should do everything possible to make it seem like humans are talking to other humans.  It’s been mentioned before that there should be a bio page for writers to fill in the blanks.  I really don’t think this would be some kind of novelty.  Actually it may be as important as the issues discussed.  Building relationships is building bridges, and one thing bridges aren’t, are walls.

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I guess dot com is what more people are most comfortable with. Though Dot …

September 1st, 2005 by JoeC

I guess dot com is what more people are most comfortable with.  Though Dot org makes me think of fresh air and the rolling green hills of Vermont.  But I also think a lot of National Public Radio is stupid and pretentious. 

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