Sunday, April 27, 2008
Mystification
A running back. A running back. Because that's obviously the team's greatest need, considering that A) we just drafted DeAngelo Williams at RB what, two frakin' years ago, and B) our D-line has evaporated like early morning mist on a summer day. And the "C" items - O-line and defensive secondary - that are such perennial issues that they hardly bear mentioning...oh no, running back. That's the way to go. What are we, the Detroit Lions, with their wide reciever draft fetish?
I'm totally speechless right now. Even reading that we also got an offensive tackle in Round One is minimal consolation. I'm officially not happy. Not happy at all.
(Seriously........a f*cking running back???????) (Further seriously........from OREGON? Have you SEEN their outfits??????)
Hopefully I'll post more on this when I'm prepared to be articulate...
Friday, April 25, 2008
Quick update...
Okay, I kid...so actual party politics may not be consuming my life right now, but it seems like everything else in my life has naturally developed a deadline that miraculously coincides with May 6. My uncle's wedding. The spring edition of the historical association's newsletter. Spring alumni magazine. Commencement. Let's just say that, after Primary Tuesday, the various Democratic candidates won't be the only ones with a little more time on their hands.
Speaking of politics...I went to a Roy Carter for Congress rally yesterday (Carter's the guy who's going to free us from the Bush-kissing racist insanity of Virginia Foxx), and I met Jim Dean (Howard's older brother), who was there to endorse Carter on behalf of Democracy for America. I've gotten used to political figures who swoop in for five minutes of speechifying under the protection of body-guards. Dean spoke to just about everyone there, and I do mean spoke. We had an honest-to-goodness awkward-pauses-and-all conversation. He kind of reminded me of Richard Dreyfuss. Not that the resemblence was that strong...but Dreyfuss could play him in a movie.
All for now. I'll try to write more later, but I really am pretty swamped until after...well, you know.
Monday, April 21, 2008
The female Kasey Kahne
There's a reason I'm avoiding gender pronouns here. I could be talking about NASCAR's Kasey Kahne, or I could be talking about Indy Racing League's Danica Patrick. Or I could be talking about both of them.
Patrick won her first IRL race Sunday, becoming the first woman to do so (after previously becoming the first woman to score a top-five in the Indy 500 in her rookie season). It's her fourth season, but only her fiftieth start, thanks to IRL's wussy short season. Kahne won at Richmond in his second series in the Whateverthey'recallingittoday Cup Series, but it was actually his forty-sixth start.
Obviously, merely being able to finish a race in either series is an accomplishment, let alone winning. So I really don't want to sound like I'm denigrating either driver's talent. No one who's ever watched them would do that.
But ... both Patrick and Kahne are, to me anyway, symptomatic of a worsening problem in pro racing - particularly NASCAR - that emphasizes flash over substance. It drove me batsh*t crazy back during Kahne's rookie year when he was regularly treated like he was on the same level as past champions Jeff Gordon or Tony Stewart, when he had yet to win a single race. And don't even get me started on those creepy Allstate commercials...
[Except to say, I don't care how much money they're paying you, Kasey. WTF were you thinking when you did this? If your contract says you must humiliate yourself to this extent, then buddy, you need a new contract.]
And speaking of gross and creepy, remember the ad Patrick did for GoDaddy.com that was so off the rails they wouldn't even air it during the Super Bowl? As long as I'm still living on the same planet where that happened, I don't want to hear a single person accuse me of selling out the sisterhood. Danica, you don't get to pull that crap and then complain that the boys don't take you seriously.
Because, if the comments from other IRL drivers are any indication, it sounds like they do. Sure, Robby Gordon may bitch that your car is lighter than his, but he bitches about everything. He's Robby Gordon. Besides, have you seen him lately? Dude, whose car isn't lighter than Robby Gordon's?
But, two things - a) NASCAR has a weight restriction in every one of its series, IIRC. If the heaviest driver weighs 250 lbs., then the driver who weighs 150 lbs. has to add 100 lbs. of weight to his car. (If you can stash the extra poundage on the right side, all the better.) That increased downforce in corners has jack to do with the "car of tomorrow" - it's all thanks to Tony Stewart and his momma's cooking, mark my words. ;)
Second ... how often did you ever hear Jackie Robinson complain publicly about the crap he had to put up with as the first, and most prominent African American in Major League Baseball? I'm not saying Patrick should be a good little girl and just take it when ass-hats like former Formula One CEO Bernie Ecclestone call her and other women "appliances."
But the best way to quiet people like that is to let your performance speak for itself. Leave it on the track. Not your GoDaddy blog. You want to shut me up? Keep winning.
That goes for you, too, Kasey. And for the love of all that is holy, run over those Allstate stalker-chicks, will you?
UPDATE: Yes, I saw Gene Wojciechowski's column the other day on ESPN.com. And no, I didn't really care. He misses the point. Of course I have a certain measure of respect for anyone who straps herself or himself into a race car. But if winning doesn't matter, then what the hell is the point? The parallel he tries to draw between Patrick and Kansas coach Bill Self is totally fallacious - he's equating an NCAA men's tournament championship with a single frakin' IRL win. Not buying it. Sorry.
Your straw man's got a gimpy leg, Gene.
Saturday, April 19, 2008
More sunny news out of Iraq
This isn't something I'd thought a lot about until last year, when an Iraqi Christian minister (I want to say he was Presbyterian...) spoke to a class at Salem. Listening to him was absolutely heartbreaking. He talked about how, when Saddam Hussein was still in power, Christians in Iraq were pretty much left alone. Not that Saddam was pro-Christian...It was more that, being the shrewd dictator that he was, Saddam understood that a healthy Christian minority counter-balanced the Shia majority, so that the Sunni Muslims could stay in power more easily.
(Side rant: Saddam's dictatorship was secular. Al-Qaeda are fundie radicals. So, you know, not people who would logically EVER work together, no matter how bad Bush/Cheney, et al, would like to pretend they would. It would be like if Bill Maher and Pat Robertson joined forces. Just sayin'.)
I'm not at all suggesting that the world is not a better place with Saddam gone. But the plight of Christians in Iraq today - regularly targeted by the Islamic fundamentalists largely kept down during Saddam's regime - is one of the many subtleties that this administration (not to mention the media) glossed over in the run-up to the war. Read this article from Christian World News for more.
Some 30,000 Christians have fled Iraq since 2003, when this war started. Most of them, according to the minister that I heard speak, end up in Egypt or other Middle Eastern countries, where Christians may or may not be exactly embraced. It's hard for them to be granted asylum in the U.S., because that would involve our government admitting that Iraq is unsafe for them in the long-term...something this administration can't do for political reasons.
I hope you're not looking for me to lay out a quick solution to this, because I don't have one. As badly as I want every American soldier out of the quagmire in Iraq yesterday, I can't help thinking about how the withdrawal would affect the lives of ordinary, non-whackjob fundie Iraqis like that minister, who spoke movingly of how much worse things would be if not for the protection of our military there. Like I said, it absolutely breaks my heart.
Friday, April 18, 2008
Best. Blog Thread. Ever.
With this LOL Cat-inspired comment, so begins what might be the best thread in the history of the Internet. It might even beat the legendary Football Outsiders ROBO-Punter thread. Seriously.
So, basically, Feministing.com gets lots and lots of hate mail. Every so often, they'll post a hate e-mail or two for the viewing pleasure of their readers. Yesterday's "Anti-Feminist Mail Bag" had a twist - the hater made the mistake of sending it from his school e-mail address, rather than an anonymous one. Oops.
So now we know (in addition to his complete inability to punctuate) his name (Alex Kochno), where he goes to school, that his MySpace and Facebook profile pics are fug and - best part - that he's the public relations officer for the Southern Illinois University College Republicans. I mean, the post practically writes itself, doesn't it?
Now, something like this is pretty much guaranteed to entertain ("You guys got flamed by Ron Burgundy!") and to provide a certain amount of the guilty, mildly vicious pleasure that comes with schadenfreude (that's German for "Nelson-laugh," btw). But what really puts this over the top is the fact that other reps from that College Republicans chapter showed up to post.
It's not the flame-war you'd expect, from either side. A couple of CR officers offer sincere apologies and roundly condemn Kochno and his actions. Not a wimpy non-apology apology, either. They completely and totally throw themselves at the mercy of the other posters...who then don't flame them in return. It's all quite civil, actually. One leaves the comments section with a feeling that something productive happened, and will continue to happen, in the lives of the students involved.
Big, giant, applause-y kudos to the SIU College Republicans and their adviser, who handled the situation swiftly and professionally, with zero of the spin-or-cover-up style of crisis management popularized in political circles over the last few decades. Maybe there's hope for us yet...
(Oh, and kids? Don't drink and surf. It never ends well.)
Thursday, April 17, 2008
Young Dems convention, Part II
The opening ceremonies were supposed to have taken place in the auditorium, but for some reason they’ve been moved to the hallway/concourse where all the campaign tables are set up. I’m cool with that...counting the car ride, I’ve been sitting for three hours now. Standing is totes fine by me.
There are all kinds of cute boys around. Usually, when I see an attractive guy, I check out the left ring finger to see if he’s available. But, this being the Young Dems convention, a bare wedding-ring finger isn’t enough. We Dems proudly support civil rights for people regardless of sexual orientation, which is great…but it means that I have to establish availability on multiple fronts, if you know what I mean. The Young Republican women just don’t have to deal with this stuff. *sigh*
The funny thing is that Wood has massively more charisma than any other candidate I’ve seen here so far. When she stares me down (and she’s tall, too) and says that she’s my “best opportunity to take back the office of State Auditor,” I believe her, you know? I’m fired up about State Auditor. Capital F-U.
So basically the restless natives took over after that. During the PPT, I got so bored I spent a good 10 minutes searching the carpet after I accidentally flicked off the lid of my complementary pen. The Q&A was way more productive, mainly because the “audience” turned away from the PPT screen and toward each other. There was a guy who’d done canvassing for Heath Shuler in the last election, which got me all excited because that district is pretty rural once you get out of
Friday, April 4, 2008
Early Morning, April 4
In my lifetime, King has been mythologized as the innocuous peace-monger on whom we did book reports, whose birthday we celebrated as a day off from school or work. It’s worth remembering a time when King was widely thought, even by pro-civil rights Liberals, as a troublesome radical.
Lots of people name King as a martyr for American freedom. Those men and women who firmly believe King was murdered (with the complicity of the FBI) because he told truth to power are largely marginalized are cast as divisive hate-speakers. Those of us assigning those book reports to our elementary school students gloss over King’s indictments of
This is what I know. I go back to, not 40 years to Dr. King’s murder, but 45 years to his speech at the March on Washington, the speech that stands in the history of American oratory with the Gettysburg Address, when he put forth a dream in which, he said, people would be “judged not by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.”
I imagine men and women of every race standing in the heat of August on the Mall before the
And then I see a biracial man taking the lead in the race for the Democratic nomination for the presidency of the
“My Lord, My God.” In this, I quote a black minister here in Winston-Salem who, this week, I heard say that he was every day re-evaluating his perception of the maturity of America’s white voters, because in voting for Barack Obama we’re proving his cynicism wrong.
My Lord, My God. I pray every day that the citizens of this country that I love more than my life can grow to earn my love. That we, as a people, will get to the Promised Land. That we will vote – and live – based on conscience, rather than color. That we will cease to care about such superficialities.
This is one white girl who believes in that vision from the mountain-top.
[For some reason, that line in the U2 song "Pride (In the Name of Love)" ("Early morning, April 4/shot rings out in the Memphis sky/Free at last, they took your life/They could not take your pride") gets the time wrong. King died at 6:01 p.m. What, "Early evening" didn't sound right? They were going on Dublin time? Who knows...]
Wednesday, April 2, 2008
NC Young Democrats Convention, part 1
[Got to love spring migraines and general procrastination…better late than never, right?]
I’m a little anxious because I never actually printed out the directions to the Sheraton Imperial. I just wrote down the exit number and looked at GoogleMaps for 30 seconds or so. Fortunately for me, Exit Ramp 282 leads directly into the parking lot, which is also helpfully marked with signs for everyone who ever thought about running for any office anywhere. It’s not possible that I could be anywhere but the North Carolina State Young Democrats Convention. (Note to the Hillary Clinton campaign people…might want to rethink that sign location right next to the stop sign…unless you really do want people to “STOP Hillary Clinton for President.”)
The registration fee is $25. I’ve got $40 in cash. Now, I’m not a terribly intuitive person, but I had what I can only describe as doubts to the capability of the people at the registration table. Thanks to my line of work, I’ve stood in line at my share of registration tables. It can be a madhouse – people who’ve pre-registered, walk-ins (like me), no one knowing where they’re going. The registration table is where you want your A Team. And…not so much.
They have a basket full of $20 bills and $10 in change. I need $15. It’s 8:54, and the first session starts at 9. I’m visibly fretting. A random staffer offers to track down more change, but he’s gone so long that I finally say to Clueless Reg Table Staffer #1, “Why don’t you just give me the 10, and I’ll call it a $5 donation?” Everybody seems thrilled with this arrangement, especially me.
[You see, I have a serious problem with lateness. It causes me physical pain. Years ago, a therapist suggested that, deep down, I fear that I’m not worthy of waiting on. Entirely plausible…but I think it’s more likely that, deep down, I have serious issues with inconsiderate people who can’t get their sh*t together. Unfortunately, I’m a Democrat, so this is going to come up a time or two. My cross to bear.]
Inexplicable – It’s 8:58, and yet the concourse is packed with people seemingly unconcerned with getting to their session on time. I’m pushing my way through when this young woman in a weather-inappropriate bubble-skirted sundress jumps out at me, saying, “Do you know about Kay Hagan for Senate?” in this Disney-chipper voice. “Yes,” I bark, and keep on walking. (I don’t have time for a sales pitch! Don’t these people know there are sessions to attend???) (Besides, I have issues with Kay Hagan. More on her inappropriately chipper stand-ins later…)
So here I am in the auditorium at 9:05, my session (Peer-to Peer Outreach) having been moved from a smaller room. I know this because a random person wandered by and informed me and the other half-dozen people who’d foolishly assumed that the printed schedule was accurate. Here’s the best part: when I got to Room Whateveritwas, a gaggle of Teen Dems was already there. One had already laid out fliers on every seat (he was running for something, natch). First Random Person tells the kids to move out, we all help Flier Boy gather his stuff with, hopefully, a minimum of crumpling, and the kids shuffle off to some other room.
Then, moments later, yet another Random Person pops his head in and asks, “are y’all here for the session on Peer-to-Peer Outreach?” Now, who woulda thunk that? “That’s in the auditorium. This is the Teen Dems,” Random Person says before disappearing. I can only think about two things: that famous Will Rogers quote, “I don’t belong to any organized party, I’m a Democrat,” and that poor kid who’s going to have to put out all those darned fliers yet again.
Fortunately, the session is worth the wait. Toni Cani, a bona fide gets-paid-for-this staffer from Young Democrats of America, talks to us about the best ways to communicate to the under-35 set. (Gist: we’ve been marketed to all our lives, so we can spot BS a mile a way. Don’t you dare hit us with a sales pitch, i.e. “Do you know about Kay Hagan for Senate?”) I liked.
So here’s what it’s like to be in Session One. Toni starts off by asking us to introduce ourselves, warning us not to do the typical young politico “I worked on this campaign, aren’t I such hot sh*t?” thing – just name, rank and serial number, so to speak, because we’re short on time. He points at me first. So hi, I’m Sara, from
There’s an actual Hillary Clinton campaign worker at the opposite end of the front row from me. She gets really excited at one of the first questions for Toni, when a woman at the back asks how we, as women, talk about politics without coming off as if we’re lecturing – exact quote: “…without reminding them of their seventh grade English teacher.” (Or, as I record it in my notes, “how to talk to chickensh*t men.” Seriously, welcome to my world.)
It’s a valid question, but one that Toni admits he’s ill-equipped to answer. It seems he was raised in a family of strong women. “I like women in politics,” he says. The Hillary woman is about to rapture.