A blog doesn't need a clever name
Cyberethics, Crypto, Community, Freedom, Privacy, Property, Philosophy, MP3, Online Ed, Copyright, Iran, other current topics and fun stuff
Last updated:
9/30/05; 10:56:02 AM


September 2005
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30  
Aug   Oct



Subscribe to this blog in Radio:
Subscribe to "A blog doesn't need a clever name" in Radio UserLand.

Click to see the XML version of this web page.

Didn't find what you were looking for?




-
Listed on BlogShares

E-mail this blog's author, Bruce Umbaugh:
Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.
 

Saturday, September 03, 2005

Some "looting" vs. "finding" answers found. A photographer clears up how he came up with a controversial photo caption. [Salon.com]
11:20:16 AM    comment []

Bob Dole Issues Jailed Reporter's Plea. The former senator read a letter by Judith Miller in which she repeated calls for a federal shield law that would enable journalists to protect their sources. By LYNETTE CLEMETSON. [NYT > Washington]
11:17:13 AM    comment []

They Knew What to Expect. Computer models accurately predicted what would happen if the levees gave way. Lavish exercises supposedly had agencies ready to respond when they did. But when Katrina slammed into New Orleans and the Gulf Coast, the emergency response was almost as chaotic as the hurricane itself. Why? [Wired News]
11:15:34 AM    comment []

I Am Thinking of You. Emily Gertz 

IM'ing yesterday with a friend in England, I was surprised when he said that on his side of the Atlantic, it kind of looked like most Americans didn't care a lot about the crisis in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast. That's not true, I said: A lot of us are simply very far away. (Although I allowed that if this was how it looked from oversees, that was interesting to know.)

I'm clearly one of millions in dismay over this appalling humanitarian aid disaster, and also grappling with what our responses as citizens need to be. The (welcome, vital, essential) examination of what's gone down here is already underway. But there's also the intense desire to reach out from whatever remove of hundreds or thousands of miles away one may be, and and just let those people know right now they're not forgotten.

Along comes anomalous and his New Orleans Flickr set -- most are simple people holding cards reading "we are thinking of you." Like the We're Not Afraid website that went up right after the London tube bombings, it's answering an emotional need -- and demonstrates how thanks to the Internet, public statements of solidarity are no longer solely in the hands of the politicians.

[WorldChanging: Another World Is Here]


11:14:58 AM    comment []

Reality strikes back.

These days I live in something of a cocoon here, doing my writing and dispatching my parenting duties, almost entirely disconnected from the currents of a pop culture that, once upon a time, it was my job to cover. So, for instance, Kanye West is someone I know little about; I've heard a bit of his music, but I'd hardly claim to be knowledgeable. I cannot offer critical insight into his actions tonight. But I can applaud his guts.

A few hours ago West got on live national TV during an NBC charity fundraiser for Katrina's victims and "went off-script" -- way off. In a heartfelt, disjointed ramble that went on for close to two minutes, he complained that aid for the poor was coming awfully slowly. He pointed out that a lot of the people who might have helped were busy fighting a war overseas. He said "They've given them permission to go down and shoot us." Finally, he blurted out, "George Bush doesn't care about black people." (The clip can be found here.)

Mike Myers stood there next to him, stonefaced, after one futile effort to return to the teleprompter's dialogue. Curiously, the show's producers allowed West to keep up his off-script ranting until the very moment he mentioned the president's name. Then it was CUT CUT CUT.

It wasn't the most carefully composed or easy-to-parse tirade. Maybe some of the words were intemperate. (With what's been happening in New Orleans, intemperance is surely a natural reaction.) But it was clearly from the heart.

John Darnielle, the Mountain Goats' singer/songwriter who moonlights as the author of Last Plane to Jakarta, has posted about this and encouraged the dissemination of the image below. I am happy to join the movement.

As the week's awful events rolled on and the media grew increasingly willing to ask angry questions and confront business-as-usual politicans (Tim Grieve and the War Room gang have kept up with it all), I started wondering, could it happen? Could the Bush administration's five-year-long winning streak at the reality-subversion game finally be breaking?

If so, it's fitting that the event that has cracked the spell is not a complex and difficult international crisis, the kind of issue that the president and his men have long used to "create their own reality" around. Nor is it a numbers game like Social Security reform or the inheritance tax, where the administration has gotten away for years with making stuff up. It is a straightforward domestic natural disaster, whose contours are clear to anyone with eyes.

There's something about corpses in the gutters and starving refugees thronging the streets that brings us all back to the "reality-based community," real quick.

The delays in the government response this week and the uncomfortable juxtaposition of Bush-on-holiday with the unfolding disaster carried loud echoes of 9/11. But in 2001 it took Bush only three days to respond to the trauma with a moment that appealed to Americans. There was a critical difference then, of course: a human enemy to unite against. "I can hear you!," Bush shouted into the bullhorn at Ground Zero. "The rest of the world hears you! And the people -- and the people who knocked these buildings down will hear all of us soon!"

But who will Bush rally us against this time around? There is no "evil one" to "smoke out." Nature is not a terrorist. You can't start a Global War on tropical storms.

You just have to dig in and try to help people, first -- then remember to ask what went wrong, figure out who was responsible and plan to do a lot better next time around. The Bush administration seems to lack all interest in that second phase. "Learn from your mistakes" is simply not in their playbook. Still, it seems just possible, in Katrina's wake, that enough Americans are angry enough to force the president to some kind of accounting.

[Scott Rosenberg's Links & Comment]


11:14:52 AM    comment []

Iran Has Produced Tons of Compound Needed for an Atomic Bomb, IAEA Says [Washington Post: Top News]
11:13:12 AM    comment []



© Copyright 2005 Bruce Umbaugh. Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.
Last update: 9/30/05; 10:56:06 AM.
Powered by
(-- £ Salon Bloggers & --)