Memorial Day Open Thread
Posted: May 28, 2012 Filed under: just because | Tags: Furry Vets, Memorial Day, War Dog Memorials 62 Comments
There are all kinds of veterans to remember today!
Don’t forget our furry heroes!
This an open thread.
I thought I’d post this picture of my mom and dad. My dad is a veteran of World War 2. He was a bombardier fo
r the 8th Air Force–although it was the Army Air Corps when he joined– and was stationed in Northern England. He once flew under the command of Jimmy Stewart. He said he sounded just like he did in the movies. He flew missions over Northern Europea in B-17s. Anyway, he’s nearly 90 and will finally share his war stories with us after years of not wanting to talk about it. I took him to the WW2 Museum here in New Orleans on his last visit. He really liked that. There’s very few of his crew left but they all remained in contact with each other until the day they died. He’s a young lieutenant in this photo. I’m going to have to get him to remember exactly when it was taken but that’s by the front porch of my grandparent’s house. I’m posting this in remembrance of all his buddies that are no longer able to reminisce with Dad. I keep asking him to give me all his stuff–including their pictures and logs–so I can put them in the WW2 museum documents library. We all will never forget their service.
So, if you have any one you’d like to remember, please post their picture or a remembrance!
UPDATE by Boston Boomer: Here’s a photo of my Dad in his National Guard uniform. I couldn’t figure out how to put it in a comment, so I took the liberty of putting it here. I hope Dak won’t mind. The little girl is my cousin. He was really young. He lied about his age to get into the Guard so he could use the money for college. Dad didn’t meet my mom till after the war and returned to school.
This must have been taken before Dad left for Louisiana for training. His National Guard regiment, the 164th, was the first army regiment to be shipped out after Pearl Harbor. They went right to Guadalcanal to support the Marines who were stranded there with diminishing supplies. They were down to one meal a day by the time Dad’s unit got there. I think Ralph’s father was one of those marines.
When the bombs were dropped my Dad was on the way to Japan. Ironically, I might never have been born except for the bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
I miss my dad so much. He died on March 11, 2010. He was almost 88.
Leave Elizabeth Warren Alone!
Posted: May 27, 2012 Filed under: U.S. Politics | Tags: Bill John Baker, Cherokee Nation, corporate media, Elizabeth Warren, Native American ancestry, right wing nuts 30 CommentsQuixote wants the media to leave Ann Romney alone. In that spirit, I say it’s time for the media to get off Elizabeth Warren’s back about her Cherokee ancestry. Good Grief! This is the woman who stood up to Wall Street, Barack Obama, and Tim Geithner. Now she has to prove she’s 1/32 Cherokee?
Guess what? The Chief of Cherokee Nation is only 1/32 Cherokee. That ought to be good enough to satisfy the corporate media, although nothing will ever satisfy the right wing nuts, as we know from their continued demands to see a different birth certificate than Barack Obama has already provided.
Just plug in “Elizabeth Warren” on Google News, and all you’ll see are headlines about Warren’s Native American heritage, as if it mattered one bit as to her qualifications to serve in the Senate. Here are a few examples:
Elizabeth Warren shuts the door on Herald’s inquiry
Who’s an American Indian? Warren Case Stirs Query
And in the midst of the madness, it looks like Warren is going to have to deal with a primary challenger.
At the Daily Beast, Michael Tomasky calls it a “witch hunt,” and I agree with him. He calls it “the biggest media-manufactured story since the Lewinsky scandal.”
So now Elizabeth Warren has to prove that she’s 1/32nd Cherokee? The temperature on the story is rising. There was a huge article in the Boston Globe on Friday written to raise a number of questions and suggest that Warren used the minority designation to get her job, or get ahead—exactly at the same time that a poll was released (PDF) showing that 69 percent of Bay State voters don’t consider her heritage to be a “significant” story. It reminds me of nothing so much as Monica Lewinsky, and of the media’s need sometimes to get a grip.
Why Lewinsky? The situations are in fact almost precisely the same. You had then a press pack that had decided that whether Bill Clinton was telling the truth about Monica was a question on which the fate of the republic hinged. The press became self-righteously consumed with its search for The Truth. Meanwhile, outside the Beltway, and outside of Wingnuttia (it existed then, just at about half of its current GDP), nobody cared what the truth was. The media kept producing revelations; surely, now, swore Maureen Dowd and Michael Kelly, America will see this man for the reprobate he is! America looked, yawned, told the press to start acting like grownups, and continued to approve of the job Clinton was doing as president at rates near 70 percent and to oppose impeachment at similar levels.
The appearance Thursday morning of this Suffolk University poll (linked to above) made me think: Well, this story line is about to wrap up. If more than two-thirds of voters don’t care, then that’s that. But no—still going strong! And now it’s not the loopy, right-wing, and pro-Brown Herald, which pushed the story first, but the Globe trying to play catch up. Yes, yes, it’s all in the public interest. What, you say, the public says it isn’t interested? Well, we’ll teach them what’s in their interest!
This is sheer insanity.
Ann Romney and her horses
Posted: May 27, 2012 Filed under: 2012 presidential campaign | Tags: Ann Romney, horses, media coverage 92 CommentsYou know what? LEAVE ANN ALONE. She will not be running the country. What she does with her time is not relevant to the election. How about — I know this is a weird idea — telling us about Mitt’s record as Governor of Massachusetts?
I’m talking about this sort of thing from the NYTimes, which is all over the place right now.
…a glimpse into dressage, the chosen sport of Mitt Romney’s wife, and into the rarefied world of horses that cost up to seven figures….
We get it. She’s rich. The Mitt is rich. They’re rich.
That is also irrelevant to being President, just as it would be if the candidate was poor.
FDR was rich. That didn’t make him a bad President.
Reporters are needed to cut through the candidates’ speeches and tell us what they have actually done as leaders. That’s the part that’s hard for a mere amateur to find out. That’s relevant to being President.
So, O great Paper of Record, how about getting on task? And that goes for everyone else too. Including me, I guess.
Caturday: Sisters of the Moon edition
Posted: May 26, 2012 Filed under: just because 39 Comments
Good morning, news junkies! I’m super-tardy, so this will be short and sweet.
- The Sleeping Brain may come undone so we can start afresh, according to this piece in Sci Am Mind.
- MUST-SEE FOOTAGE: Saudi woman stands her ground against religious police telling her to leave; tells them it’s none of their business if she wears nail polish!
- via MFAH… This day in history: American documentary photographer Dorothea Lange was born on May 26, 1895. Lange took the iconic Depression-era Migrant Mother photo.
- Taylor Marsh: “the Obama administration has instead led a crack-down on medical pot that exceeds anything George W. Bush did.” Apparently Obama’s “Are You In?” (drug verbiage) campaign is all smoke and mirrors…
- Romney sticks with Birther Fool. Gotta love hating this election…
- Charles Blow: Plantations, Prisons and Profits [NYT, via Reader Supported News]…I’d be remiss not to tease a little of this for you:
Lnouisiana [sic] is the world’s prison capital. The state imprisons more of its people, per head, than any of its U.S. counterparts. First among Americans means first in the world. Louisiana’s incarceration rate is nearly triple Iran’s, seven times China’s and 10 times Germany’s.”
That paragraph opens a devastating eight-part series published this month by The Times-Picayune of New Orleans about how the state’s largely private prison system profits from high incarceration rates and tough sentencing, and how many with the power to curtail the system actually have a financial incentive to perpetuate it.
The picture that emerges is one of convicts as chattel and a legal system essentially based on human commodification.
First, some facts from the series:
• One in 86 Louisiana adults is in the prison system, which is nearly double the national average.
If you’ve got the time this weekend, you best read the rest.
- A bit of local news this week that has everybody here I know all smiles: Houston Hobby is on track to go international! …not only that, but our mayor, Annise Parker, has struck a deal for Southwest Airlines to foot the entire $100m bill for the airport’s expansion. Whee-haw! You cannot understand how huge this is unless you live here or have spent time here–Houston is a very LARGE city, as in physically stretched out, and driving out to Bush Intercontinental for many of us is a mini-road trip in itself. An independent peer review commissioned by the City of Houston–of existing studies by the City, Southwest, and United–gives the green lights as well, confirming a positive economic boost/outlook in response to a Hobby expansion. If you’re interested in reading more on this, I found the following interesting take while perusing the headlines: Southwest Can Take Latin America By Storm If Houston Hobby Gains International Routes.
- Oh and before I close this… a Very Happy Birthday to Ms. Stevie Nicks! “She is like a cat in the dark, and then she is the darkness…” Here’s one of my favorite live performances of hers on youtube… “Sisters of the Moon”… absolutely mesmerizing, just WOW…
Alright. Comments, Sky Dancers. You know what to do! Have a wonderful Memorial Day weekend.








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