12.31.2008
Testing, Testing
I'm giving CellSpin Soft's free mobile blogging app for iPhone a test spin. Sp far, it seems fairly simple to set up and post media - but limited features such as no rich-text support or tagging. Hmmm. I'm thinking an app specifically for Google Blogger might be a better option. If one exists.
12.29.2008
Happy New Year or April Fool's Day?
Two quick hits today. Although there is much to rant about in the news today, two stories in particular elicit an OMFG reaction. Frankly, I wish it was April Fools' Day.
WTF?
CNN reports that GOP reaction to a controversial parody song "Barack the Magic Negro", distributed as a Christmas gift by party chairman Mike Duncan on a compliation CD entitled "We Hate the USA", is divided. Well, what else can I say except WTF?
Reaction is divided? Really? Even if you accept that the CD was meant as a gag gift -after all, Duncan didn't write the song; it first aired on Rush Limbaugh's radio show in 2007, which is about the only unsurprising factoid in this whole mess - it is at best a joke in exceedingly poor taste. Show me a Republican who can defend Duncan on this with a straight face, I dare you. How about trotting out Sarah Palin?
Gov. Sarah Palin (R - AK): I'm telling you, Anderson, this is some funny shit.
Anderson Cooper: Excuse me?
Gov. Palin: Trust me on this. I speak for the entire GOP when I say, laughing at n------ is funny, funny shit.
Anderson Cooper: Doesn't that show stunning racial insensitivity?
Gov. Palin: It might, if any of 'em voted for us.
Sigh. I miss her.
The problem with defending the song as satire - duh - is that is misses the point. When the Chairman of the GOP sends the song around as a Christmas gift, it cannot help but to be seen as a statement. It legitimizes race as a suitable vehicle for attacking or denigrating the President. What should an African-American voter think but that the GOP has written them off?
O RLY?
Since the prorogation of Parliament and the selection of Michael Ignatieff as Liberal leader, not much news has seeped out of the federal parties. At least, until now. What better way to ring in the New Year than to re-open the debate on abortion. Frankly, I prefer to have the Conservative "secret agenda" out in the open. The Tories are not defenders of womens' rights; don't let anyone tell you otherwise.
In an opinion piece in the National Post, Tory MP Rod Bruinooge, chairman of a secretive parliamentary group known as the Pro-Life Caucus, pledges a new era of advocacy on behalf of the unborn. Mr. Bruinooge illogically compares kidneys to fetuses and raises the spectre of late-term abortions. Legal or not, I dare Mr. Bruinooge to show me one single legitimate doctor who would perform an elective abortion "moments away from delivery".
Unless Mr. Bruinooge can point to a recent spate of questionable late-term abortions in Canada, this issue does not deserve the attention of the criminal law but is a question of ethics and practice for the medical profession.
Until then, I'll assume Mr. Bruinooge is playing up to the social conservative base of the party - one more round of ammo for the Torys to use should a coalition emerge or the country heads back to the polls.
YA RLY!
Oh, one more. I couldn't resist.
Providing a great capper to the shitty, shitty year that was 2008, one BILLION gallons of coal waste sludge has been spilled in the Clinch River, a tributary of the Tennessee River. Congratulations for this epic environmental fail go to the Tennessee Valley Authority.
How many days left in 2008?
Labels:
abortion,
CNN,
GOP,
Mike Duncan,
Rod Bruinooge,
Rush Limbaugh,
Tennessee River,
TVA
12.28.2008
The Second Coming
And what better way to announce my return during this holiday season than to invite comparisons to the resurrection of Jesus Christ? Hey, at least it ain't Easter. I'm moderate in my blasphemy.
Eating Out or Let's Talk About Lunch, Baby
Yeah, that's a Salt 'n' Pepa joke. What of it?
I've enjoyed two exceptional lunches this December. Earlier in the month, I dined at Canoe. What can I say that hasn't already been said about this legendary Toronto restaurant? Nothing, so I won't bother to try - other than to add we saw Rick Mercer waiting in line in front of us.
Last week, our office took our Christmas lunch at Nota Bene. The meal was great and the service top-drawer. If I had to nitpick, I'd say I found the open concept dining room to be a bit loud.
New Years' Eve will find me at Marcel's on King West following the Raptors game. My father likes Marcel's quite a bit, although after checking his "records", he advises me we haven't dined there since 2003. This begs the question: why in the hell is my father keeping records on where we ate five years ago?
Labels:
Canoe,
Christmas,
Easter,
Jesus Christ,
Marcel's,
Nota Bene,
Rick Mercer,
Salt N Pepa
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