10 minutes

The fact that I can do a countdown to when the bombs could start falling is probably one of the single most freaky and surreal things about this whole mess.

Getting active

I really have no idea how interesting (or horrendously boring) the sudden proliferation of posts falling into my ‘politics‘ category is, but in all honesty, it’s been all sorts of fascinating for me when I stop to step back for a moment and look at myself.

Until recently, I’ve never been overly politically minded, or even very politically conscious. I knew my general outlook leaned toward the liberal side of things, of course, and I’d occasionally make random grumbling noises when I saw or heard about something that I found excessively stupid or aggravating, but that was generally about the extent of it. For all too much of my life, I lived in something of a bubble of my own creation — I had my world, and my friends, and most things outside of that bubble just didn’t get much thought.

It was during the 2000 Gore/Bush presidential race that this started to change for me. I’d given up watching television quite a long time ago (roughly 1990 or so, I think), but I went ahead and got a cable subscription at that point so that I could actually pay attention to the debates. While Gore wasn’t nearly as impressive as I hoped, even then Bush worried me, and I wanted to see if the impressions I’d picked up until that point bore out. Unfortunately, they did — Gore still didn’t impress me as much as I hoped, but Bush worried me more and more every time he opened his mouth.

Watching the rest of the race was an exercise in both fascination and frustration, and by the end when the popularly elected candidate lost due to the ridiculous intricacies of the electoral college system, I more or less threw up my hands in frustration and tuned out again. The cable subscription was turned off, and I went back into my bubble — not quite as much, though. Too much was happening for me to be able to justify tuning out as much as I used to.

Then came 9/11, and suddenly it was impossible for me not to pay attention anymore. There were times when I wanted to tune out, of course, and some of my friends did just that, but I couldn’t do that anymore. Things have gotten too big, too important, not to have some idea of what’s happening.

Suddenly, I’m reading political websites on a regular basis. I’m paying attention to news from all over the world. More than just reading and ranting about things, I’m taking the time to participate when I can by going to rallys around town. I’m looking into the various candidates for the 2004 election cycle, and may have found one worth supporting in more than a “yeah, he seems interesting” lackadaisacal sort of way.

It took me nearly thirty years to get here, but I’m here now. None to sure where the road I’ve stumbled upon is going to lead, but — as frustrating and frightening as it is at times — really enjoying the new scenery, so to speak.

There’s a whole world out there that I’m a part of, and it’s obviously time for me to start acting like I’m a part of it.

I hope this doesn’t bore you all too much in the meantime. I promise to still make my usual inane posts from time to time in the midst of all this. ;)

Exploring Bush's global ineptitude

Two excellent articles have popped up over the past couple days examining Bush’s mind-numbingly painful inability to actually work with the global community to accomplish his goals, putting America in a position of being the agressor ‘rouge state’ that the rest of the world fears.

First, from Newsweek, The Arrogant Empire. This was first given to me at work by one of my co-workers, I also saw it posted by Tom Negrino. It’s a long and very in-depth article, and shows well how pitiful Bush is in comparison to his predecessors:

In diplomacy, style is often substance. Consider this fact: the Clinton administration used force on three important occasions — Bosnia, Haiti and Kosovo. In none of them did it take the matter to the United Nations Security Council, and there was little discussion that it needed to do so. Indeed, Kofi Annan later made statements that seemed to justify the action in Kosovo, explaining that state sovereignty should not be used as a cover for humanitarian abuses. Today Annan has (wrongly) announced that American action in Iraq outside the United Nations will be “illegal.” While the Clinton administration — or the first Bush administration — was assertive in many ways, people did not seek assurances about its intentions. The Bush administration does not bear all the blame for this dramatic change in attitudes. Because of 9-11, it has had to act forcefully on the world stage and assert American power. But that should have been all the more reason to adopt a posture of consultation and cooperation while doing what needed to be done. The point is to scare our enemies, not terrify the rest of the world.

Secondly, from Slate, Turkey Shoot: How Bush made enemies of our allies, also posted by Tom Negrino. While the Newseek article compared Bush to the administrations of the past fifty years, the Slate article focuses more on comparing Bush’s administration to Clinton’s. Bush doesn’t come out looking any better.

Rather than make the most of the extraordinary support the world offered the United States after 9/11, the Bush administration seems almost willfully to have squandered it. In the months after Sept. 11, the administration withdrew from one international agreement after another, from the ABM treaty to the International Criminal Court. It refused NATO’s offer of help in Afghanistan, eventually accepting some troops from NATO-member countries but no shared NATO decision-making. Though German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder braved a no-confidence vote to win parliamentary approval to put German combat troops in Afghanistan, he received little thanks from Bush. Nor was he seriously consulted as Bush formulated his Iraq policy, despite (or perhaps because of) growing signs of German discomfort with that policy. Cut out of the loop, Schröder then began to exploit the anti-Iraq war backlash among German voters and become a fierce opponent of Bush on Iraq.

More on Howard Dean

Gov. Howard Dean has been crossing my radar more and more recently. As it turns out, in addition to his official site, his campaign has an official weblog active (the first time a Presidential candidate has had any form of weblog, as far as I know), and there is also a privately run ‘Howard Dean in 2004’ weblog active.

I’ll definitely be keeping an eye on all of these sites, and — in a first for me — I’m seriously considering making my first ever campaign contribution. The boilerplate for the contribution request letter follows (slightly edited)…

(Via Tom Negrino and Rick Klau in the comments to Tom’s post)

I’m ~~writing all my friends on my email list~~ [posting this message on my website]{.underline} because there is something that is very important to me personally and should be important to the country. [From what I’ve seen so far,]{.underline} Howard Dean is the only candidate running for President who says what he thinks, and acts on what he says. I think he’s dead on, and he’s the only candidate making sense about foreign policy, [and probably]{.underline} health care and fiscal responsibility[, I just need to read more about those before I’m sure]{.underline}. I also think he can win [(though, admittedly, at the rate Bush is going, soon enough people will realize how much of a goob he is that the pretzel he almost choked to death on would be able to win — but I’ll still take Dean over Bush, the pretzel, or anyone else I’ve heard from so far)]{.underline}. If you don’t know about him, visit his website, read his speeches, and ~~call~~ [e-mail]{.underline} me if you want to talk about it.

I [think that I]{.underline} want ~~you~~ to get involved and contribute to his campaign. He doesn’t have the deep pockets of most of the other candidates, but I believe he will make the best president — and I ~~don’t want money to~~ [wish that money didn’t]{.underline} decide who leads this country.

Even if this is the first time you have heard of him, or if you are unsure about your support, your donation at this time will allow his voice to be heard. Please help me and others take the big money out of politics. Please contribute whatever you can — \$10.01 [(like me, since I don’t have much to spare right now)]{.underline} to \$1000.01 (a penny for the internet) — and pass it on to your friends who might be interested. Every dollar you give up to \$250 will be matched (this is only true if you tell the campaign your employer and occupation). Feel free to modify this letter [(not that anyone would do something like that, of course)]{.underline}. Do it now [dammit]{.underline}! March 31^st^ is the big FEC deadline, and we are running out of time to show the power of early netroots support.

Contribute at Dean’s website.

I [think that I]{.underline} feel so strongly about this that I’ve [kind of]{.underline} decided to take the time to ask for money for the campaign, and I hope you will also take the time to make a contribution. I’m [becoming]{.underline} convinced that if we do this, Howard will never let us down.

Thanks for considering this.

PS: If you want to get more involved, visit Howard Dean’s Call To Action blog.

(Disclaimer: The above edits are in no way meant to make fun of or belittle Howard Dean or his campaign — as I said above, I’m very strongly considering making a donation myself, and I do believe that it’s worth considering. However, as I’m still mulling it over, and can’t ever seem to quite completely kill my [possibly overly-]cynical sense of humor, I had to make my mark. So sue me.)

Useful bookmarklets

A ton of useful (and fun, in an extremely geeky sort of way) bookmarklets for digging into the code of a website to figure out just how it all works: Accessibility-checking favelets. I’ve snagged the first two listed already (‘Show and label divs with ids’ and ‘Show and label divs with classes’), and will be checking out more later on.

Geek toys!

(Via Zeldman)

India vs. New Zealand

Ever wondered what would happen if an English sports writer lost it while posting to a live website while covering a cricket match?

Well, okay, neither did I. But now we know…

It’s really simple: India are already through, New Zealand have to win.

Meanwhile, have you ever thought WHAT SORT OF LIFE IS THIS AND WHAT THE HELL AM I DOING BOARDING A TRAIN FOR MOORGATE AT 6.30 IN THE MORNING AND THEN STANDING AROUND FOR AGES WAITING FOR A TUBE WHILE STARING AT A SIGN TELLING YOU THAT IF YOU WAIT FOR FOUR MINUTES YOU CAN BOARD A TRAIN TO UXBRIDGE I’D RATHER WAIT FOUR HOURS FOR A JOURNEY WITH THE GRIM REAPER QUITE FRANKLY…

The entire thing is so worth reading. First the initial outburst, then the rest of the article is cricket commentary mixed with his responses to his readers’ messages. Wonderfully hilarious, and very honest.

If all sports writing were like this, I might pay attention more often.

Peaceblogs

Peaceblogs

I’ve just signed on with PeaceBlogs:

Peaceblogs.org is a site devoted to making connections between bloggers who oppose the impending war against Iraq. Regardless of your ideology or political affiliation, your nation of origin, or the size or scope of your site, if you oppose the war and use your weblog to express that opposition, your site is welcome among our listings.

(Via Stavros the Wonder Chicken)

Blogroll updated

I spent a little time tonight updating my blogroll (on the right, just underneath the WudiVisions icon) to more accurately reflect the sites that I check on a daily basis. It automatically sorts by how recently they’ve been updated, so the most recent bits will always be towards the top, with sites that have been updated within the last six hours bracketed by hyphens. Lots of new reading there — enjoy!

I hope this is a joke

I really, really, really hope this is a joke, but the website looks all too serious. In a move even more mind-bogglingly stupid than the call to rename the second Lord of the Rings Movie, “The Two Towers,” due to post-9/11 trauma, a guy by the name of Josh Wander has posted a petition to give the Statue of Liberty ~~back to France~~.

Located in New York Harbor, the Statue of Liberty was a gift of international friendship from the people of France to the people of the United States and is one of the most universal symbols of political freedom and democracy…

Now it is time to give it back!

They can have their damn Statue!

On the bright side, though, while the petition already has almost 500 signatures, it looks like the majority of them are from people who take this idea about as seriously as I do. Here’s a smattering…

I’ve been joking about it since Freepers starting pouring French wine down sewer grates, but now this nutter’s made it reality. So, I figured I’d better sign the petition. I mean, what with Ashcroft and Ridge running the Department of justice and the Office of Fatherland Security, we clearly have no use for symbols of freedom. I think we also need to take the blindfold off of Justice and stuff a big wad of \$100 bills onto one side of her scales, and stuff the Liberty Bell in a basement in Fort Knox. Since dimplomacy is over, I think pretense should be, too.

I propose a trade — they get the statue, I get Audrey Tautou.

…and let’s give back any stuff we got from the Germans too. And the Russians, Mexicans, … um, all of ’em damnit!

I think we should aboslutely give the Statue of Liberty back. We’ve had it with those commie pinko ideals of freedom, democracy, and equality! Bring on facism, christian zealotry and rampant ignorance! USA! USA! USA!

Yeah! Give it back! And stop drinking Pasteurized milk, too!

Hey, maybe they are more deserving of the Statue of Liberty since they DON’T want to bomb the holy hell out of a third world nation for NO APPARENT REASON. Sounds like their democracy’s in good shape and ours is the one that needs some help…

Ah, well. Hopefully, it’s just a hoax, and the guy’s angling to get some attention. If he’s serious…well, I guess we need people on both ends of the bell curve.