Welcome to my asylum for ideas and thoughts on movies, politics, culture, and all things Bruce Springsteen.

Thursday, March 24, 2005

Break From Spring Break!

These last couple of weeks have been absolutely crazy. I've been on Spring Break, which normally is nice, as I can relax, be lazy, and put off for two more weeks what I had planned to do during the time that I have off. My first week I was racked with a nasty cold. Thanks, son. Oh, well. I was on daddy duty and the two of us had a fun time together, regardless of our health. I've watched some cool stuff. All About Eve, the two volumes of music videos of the Boss (must say that the 80s Born in the U.S.A. sure brought me back to my junior high years!), Garden State, which is the best movie I've seen this year, and Control Room, a documentary about Al Jazeera's coverage of the first month of the Bush War. Extremely interesting and highly recommended as well. A cool St. Patrick's Day party with neighbors and friends, and a couple over for dinner on Saturday. Since then, things have sucked. On Tuesday, we had to put our cat to sleep, which came totally unexpectedly. Our pet, Miss Emma, developed a kidney infection and more or less hid it from us until it was too late. Several hundred dollars and no improvement later, we decided that Emma's health was not in good enough condition to keep living. Putting her down was one of the hardest decisions I've ever had to make. She was the only pet that Heather and I have had as a couple, and we considered her our little baby until our son arrived. I know that we as Americans have developed such a strange attachment to our animals (look at the chain of pet stores, car accessories, and new leash laws to see how we've made them parts of our families) and are willing to anything to keep them alive. Very similar to people; in fact, we probably spend more to keep our pets alive and healthy than we do to others who need assistance financially and medically. The night before we had to make our decision, we were able to see Anne Lamott read from her new book, Plan B, in Berkeley. Truly wonderful. This author knows how to reflect the true pain, joy, wonder, doubt, and faith of the human condition, and her new book is no different than the other books in her canon. An irreverent Christian who loves God but refuses to deny her humanity, Lamott seeks to be a better person and starts by accepting her own personhood as beautiful and "good enough". I love her writing, her politics, and her philosophies on life. Fitting that I was able to see my favorite author in the midst of a really low point in my own life. And yet, a silver lining to the cloud this week; she has a chapter titled This Dog's Life in which she discusses how she needed to put her own beloved pet down and how animals touch us in a way that we'll never forget them. I'll always love my cat and project that love into new pets, people, and the world around me, since something other than another human being chose to show love and acceptance of me.

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Wednesday, March 23, 2005

Trying To Trump Lefty

Okay, please go here before reading my post. Whether I'm trying to out-do Chris, there's no way I could choose my top twenty favorite albums of all time. However, to make things easier on myself, here's my list for my favorite twenty bands. The top two are solid but the other eighteen are in no order. Here goes.

1. Bruce Springsteen, with and without the E Street Band (no brainer)
2. The Allman Brothers Band
3. U2
4. Led Zeppelin
5. Van Morrison
6. Bob Dylan
7. John Coltrane
8. Eric Clapton, esp. "Derek" and his blues renaissance era
9. Eagles
10. Pink Floyd
11. Simon and Garfunkel
12. Derek Trucks Band
13. The Beatles
14. Grateful Dead
15. Joni Mitchell
16. Creedence Clearwater Revival and John Fogerty
17. Jackson Browne
18. James Taylor
19. Rush
20. Stillwater!

What are your favorite bands?

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Tuesday, March 22, 2005

I Think St. Augustine Was Right About Animals

I love you, Emma.

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Friday, March 18, 2005

Getting a Liberal Ed..er...

This is an excellent article in this week's Nation magazine here. UCLA Professor Russell Jacoby raises many great concerns about "crybaby conservatives" that feel that universities, "bastions of liberal thought", discriminate and marginalize conservatives due to their beliefs. I'm not going to rehash the article; read it for yourself. Whether one agrees with Jacoby or not, more valid arguments must be presented to derail the Right's (especially David "Benedict Arnold" Horowitz and William F. Buckley, Jr.) efforts to use government regulation enforcing "balanced" political perspective on college campuses.

The point that "more liberals attend college than conservatives" does ring true: the sole purpose of education is to learn about the world in which one lives. If that means studying or being exposed to ideas, religions, people, political beliefs, or other "different" or "foreign" concepts, then so be it. The purpose of education, as I have to continually remind many of my religious high school students to to educate, not indoctrinate. If one wants to be taught what one already believes, what is the purpose of attending a university in the first place? A university's true calling for society is to serve as a center of intellectual exercise: examine and analyze, debate, accept and reject, create and deconstruct, demythologize and verify. In order to grow, by concept one must be "liberal" to think outside the box, allow for individual exploration and discovery. Conservatives are so terrified that people think diffently than they do; their own insecurities are a reflection more about themselves than the society in which they live. However, as Jacoby points out, "crybaby conservatives" are taking action to stop this dreaded cancer from spreading. Ironically, aren't these the same people who appear in the press as absolutely ecstatic for President Bush's and the United States' efforts of crushing the Taliban, many Middle Eastern governments, and al Qaeda, which, in effect, are doing in their own countries what these conservatives wish to do here? Poor grammar and sanctimoniousness aside, I believe that what "crybaby conservatives" is not a libertarian, government-free society in which people have the freedom to do as they choose, but a fascist one where they can control all aspects in society in order for the "conservative" voice to be everpresent. How's that for ya?

Props to my good friend, Lefty Brown, who continues to humor me and my narcissism. Please read his blog. He's funny, caring, politically dangerous, and has read more comic books than you'll shake a stick at.

Man, and I was going to talk about Anne Lamott's new book, Plan B. Maybe later.

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Wednesday, March 16, 2005

Let's Clear the Air

Lot's o' stuff to vent about, so look out:

Saturday night, I had the privilege of seeing the Branford Marsalis Quartet recreate John Coltrane's A Love Supreme in the first night of the SF Jazz Festival's Spring Season. No words can do justice in explaining what I saw that night. Sheer genius. Coltrane's a genius for writing and composing the piece; the Marsalis 4 are geniuses for performing it as they did. Truly magnificent. Superlatives galore for the entire sixty-minute performance. I will never witness anything like this again for the rest of my life. There will be the great; there may even be better; there will be nothing like what I saw.

Am I the only one that's more than pissed off by the knee-jerk reactionary conservative wing-nut Republican Party and the Bush Administration specifically? Today, the Senate approved of drilling the ANWR strictly by a partisan vote. Bush named Wolfowitz the head of the World Bank? Well, looking at the way he guided the nation into war based on sheer bullshit intelligence and ideological fallacies, all Third World nations should be doing the potty dance. He could either run the World Bank's accounts into the ground or justify a war to invade South America based on the fact that two governments (Uraguay and Chile) are moving to the left and are tired of U.S. strongarm policy.

Other news briefs that have pissed me off to no end:

The new bankruptcy laws, which do have merit, in order to keep people from taking advantage of the system, will do truly nothing to stop corporations from pulling the same shit: declaring bankruptcy and pushing off the responsibilities and costs to others. Watch Pacific Graft and Electric and other companies pan off the bad bookkeeping (the only word with triple-double consonants, by the way) and nothing happens; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Smith, who rack up credit card debt because Mr. Smith hurt himself on the job but can't afford health care, look out. You're the real problem in society. See, we have what we call an "ownership society". Fuck up just once, and the Bush Administration will fight with a large company over who owns YOU.

Glad the Governator went to Washington to show those Feds just how much they owe California. Great, now most districts will face funding crunches, hospitals will face nurse shortages, and all-around, Arnie will claim that the systems that help people are special interests that drain the system.

Am I the only one who sees the hypocrisy in the Bushies' Kiss-Ass European Tour '05 (look for a second leg in the summer)bookended with the nomination of John Bolton as the U.S. envoy to the U.N.? For crimony's sake, it's like nominating an avowed atheist as the next Pope. Geesh. Now we'll really earn respect because we can now officially and diplomatically tell the rest of the world to fuck off without having to pay attention to the blowback.

Watch how much fun the U.S. Congress has with athletes who shoot 'roids. Too much profit to be made, too many "American heroes" to be defaced, to attack such an institution as the MLB. Man, more dope has been done in baseball than Hollywood, and yet no one will face a bum rap. Look out, though, teenager, who smokes a joint at the next concert; you'll face five to twelve.

Bernie Ebbers, I hope you learn to swallow as you serve all that time in prison for screwing workers out of their life savings, their health care, and their faith in a system that promised that hard work would be rewarded with future security. You wrecked countless people's lives all for the sake of more money. At the risk of sounding hypocritical AND self-righteous in the same sentence, remember what Jesus said about the love of money, you prick. At least justice was seen in New York yesterday.

What the hell can be done with Allan Greenspan? Tax cuts for insanely wealthy people and corporations that move overseas to already evade paying income tax: good for the economy. Social Security as it's currently running, based on the current pattern of deficit spending: bad. Wait a second, ass wipe, your blessings on the tax cuts are partly responsible for the mess the messianic Bushies have put us in. Pray that my ability to teach economic history ends soon with a fiery bus accident on Rte. 75 on a snowy night. Oh, sorry, Al, I was just granted tenure this month. See, another huge hassle enacted by a terrorist organization (Bush Admin's terms) that wants nothing but to see the future collapse and our youth get stupid.

Tom DeLay, I hope you enjoy the same downward spiral that many of your political opponents suffered at your hands. No ethics violations or political double-standards that you applied to the Democrats? Again, look out when I return from Spring Break and review with my students the events of the two weeks previous. "Why, Mr. _ would Tom DeLay face criminal charges and impeachment?" Revenge is mine, sayeth he who survives the slaughter.

Banning gay marriage in California is seen as unconstitutional based on the case of the defense. Welp, we've got a Plessy, Dred Scott, and Griswold trainwreck happening for the Supes, who will eventually have to rule on. Tell me, based on the defense's arguments, how does hetero- only marriage not deny gay couples the civil liberty to marry? The defense claimed two arguments: 1. gays have all rights in unions, just not the title "marriage"; 2. marriage's major purpose is for procreative purposes. Okay, based on those positions, tell me how 'separate but equal' arguments won't arise with the first? Why deny gays the same legal right and standing if they already have everything barring the certificate? Rings of discrimination to me. Number two, does the government set limits to non-procreative periods for married couples? Do couples unable to bear children be barred from marrying? I've got the names of some really beautiful people that the government can start rounding up if it wants to abide by such crappy reasonings. How many members of the conservative interest group that pursued this case do not have children? Sex offenders all of them! I smell a witch hunt here.

The U.S. is losing more and more allies in Iraq. Italy's pulling out, and more or less based on U.S. marines' actions of shooting up a rescue mission and then denying it. What a tragic incident, all around, for the marines who happened to make a split decision based on given circumstances as well as for the Italian reporter and rescuer to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. This, on top of the fact that that a coalition government being form by the new Iraqi government will seek to push the American presence out as soon as possible. Quagmire or boondoggle? We'll let events play out.

Let's hope that the events occurring in Lebanon bring about a fruitful and democratic change, not some trainwreck in which Bush claims that he's personally responsible for. The only democratic change he's responsible for is the overwhelming number of Iraqis that want him to burn in Hell.

Whew. I think I'm almost done. On a good, no AWESOME note: The Allman Brothers Band will be returning to California in May with dates to be announced. They're playing at the Santa Barbara County Bowl, which is a stunningly beautiful place to see a show. The band, currently in the midst of its umpteenth Beacon run, is tearing things up with amazingly varied setlists, new material, dusted off old tunes, and a spirit that will not die, even when they do decide to hang things up. Everyone, go catch the band. Just make sure that Steve can buy enough tickets for us this Saturday.

Bruce Watch: Devils & Dust comes out on April 26. Tour to follow. Sounds promising. I just received a copy of his 6/26/00 show from Madison Square Garden. One of the very last dates of the '99-'00 reunion tour, it's a gem. Great setlist, incredible energy, and an undying passion for playing music that continues to touch and change people who listen to the music years after it's been made. For those who still find necessity in racing in the streets, this is your music.

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Tuesday, March 08, 2005

Circle the Wagons

Read this about Philip Morris and its manipulative efforts to create research. Further evidence that self interest and corporate profits trump the health and welfare of human beings. Stop giving this company your business. Take a stand. Companies like this need to know that what they are doing is evil. Now, those on the right will scream that I am going calling for good, hard working people to lose their jobs, but they are wrong. What I am calling for is a total and complete boycott of all companies, subsidiaries, and products owned or overseen by Philip Morris. Philip Morris runs: Kraft, Post, Miller Beer, Jell-O, Miracle Whip, Velveeta, Maxwell House, Oscar Mayer, Minute Rice, and Stove Top Stuffing. From now on, all are off-limits. Every time you buy these products, you are essentially giving money to a tobacco company to buy off either government or scientific officials who will state that cigerettes are not as harmful as they really are. You are paying this company to increase the chances of kiling you, your friends, and your children. Last straws are last straws; what will it take for you to learn about where your money goes; it doesn't just go into the pocket of the grocery store manager, it goes into the coffers of companies that have lied, bribed, and stone-walled their ways into making the practice of killing their clientele legal.

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Saturday, March 05, 2005

Random Rants and Raves

The U.S. charged that the Iraqi military was abusing prisoners of war. There's the pot calling the kettle black.

China called the U.S.' stance on human rights "hypocritical". Touche.

The last week and a half has been stable and calm. I'm glad to be home and sleeping in my own bed. Maybe one day I'll tell the tale of how last Monday I slept in my car.

On Thursday my son celebrated his six monthday or half-birthday.

Tonight I'll be watching Alice, one of the last Woody Allen films in his cannon that I have yet to see.

Seven weeks until new Bruce...

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Wednesday, March 02, 2005

When You Go To Sleep Say A Little Prayer

To those who read this,

Please listen to, sing, or hum a verse of "Beautiful Boy" by John Lennon. Those of you who know, know why.

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