BMT ArtFair 2007: The Sequel

(Not crossposted at my blog as the chirping  crickets didn’t want to be disturbed.)      

Here’s the BMT ArtFair 2007 sequel.

In our last post, no preference for the date was stated so I am proposing the Saturday after new years, January 6, 2007.  If this presents a problem of any kind, please indicate this in the comments section below.

Being a slacker at heart, I’m proposing that we model this after the PhotoFair.  Why reinvent the wheel when Olivia, emjw and others did such a great job.  However, if you are planning to post only a photo or two, feel free to post in the thread that I will put up where I will post only one previously unseen work.  The bulk of that thread will be yours as my things are seen here all year long.

If you are posting more than one or two works, please utilize the photofair materials found here.  You can create clickable thumbnails for your photos.  I would ask that you title your thread BMT ArtFair 2007 and your screen name, as we did for the PhotoFair.

There were a number of questions about posting the work of family/friends.  Feel free to post any original artwork that you wish, that of family or friends.  I would simply ask that you indicate the artist in some way.    

To avoid any potential licensing problems, I have created a logo seen directly below.  Feel free to right click it or I can send the photobucket address if you e-mail me.  It was created in MS paint, a program that is still fun but makes for a fairly rough result.  I like it anyway.

As always, your comments are appreciated.

Enjoy Your Democratic Majorities? So Do We!

From Next Generation Democrats Blog

Hey Readers,

Next Generation Democrats is a newly created organization and PAC to help cement our Democratic majorities gained in the 2006 elections by helping the next generation of Democratic leaders NOW, so that they are ready to step up as the current generation of leaders steps down.

We just wanted to introduce ourselves and let you know a little bit about us.  Our four founders are all young Democrats under the age of 25 with a combined total of 16 campaigns of experience.

Basically, we intend on helping the next generation of Democratic leadership now in two ways.  First, we will give direct campaign donations to candidates under the age of 40 (at all levels, with a focus more on local level elections) that meet our values.  Secondly, we intend to give earmarked donations to NGD endorsed candidates of any age for matching funds to help pay for young campaign staffers just starting out under the age of 28.  We will also be assisting campaign staffers we support with trainings and guidance.
We are starting out strong!  In our first week alone, we raisedclose to $400 for Ciro Rodriguez for the runoff election in Texas, and over $1,100 for ourselves just from friends and family.  Now that we have reached out to our closest and have some seed money, we wanted to reach out to you and introduce ourselves.

Visit our website www.nextgenerationdemocrats.blogspot.com

And if your so inclined, feel free to Contribute here

More importantly, if you’re a candidate or a young staffer (even a potential young staffer) who think you meet our values and would like our assistance, email us at NGDPAC@gmail.com

Or, if you’d just like to be on our email list for updates, e-mail us at NGDPAC@gmail.com and we’ll keep you up to date on our happenings.

Froggy Bottom Lounge

Froggy Bottom Lounge

Newcomers and Lurkers are welcome!.
Just jump right in and introduce yourself.

We like to both shake AND stir things up around here!

Please recommend (and unrecommend the Cafe/Lounge from earlier)
Hey! That 4 looks good on you!

On Calling Bullshit

Dan Froomkin gives his media masters some flawless advice. Froomkin explains the appeal of bloggers and comedy news as a manifestation of our willingness to ‘call bullshit’. This is absolutely true. Calling bullshit probably constitutes 95% of everything I do. It’s why people sometimes mistake me for a ‘serious’ person. I’m not really very serious. I don’t know how often I hear, “If your readers knew what an a-hole you are, they’d never visit your site.” That’s not true, of course, I am actually quite lovable. I’m just not always that nice. And a large part of the reason that I am not that nice is that I have a tendency to call bullshit. I do it when it is socially inappropriate. It’s a character trait I seem to share with the majority of other bloggers I know. We are not strictly cynics, we’re too young to be curmudgeonly, but we are serious about calling bullshit. Froomkin explains:

Calling bullshit, of course, used to be central to journalism as well as to comedy. And we happen to be in a period in our history in which the substance in question is running particularly deep. The relentless spinning is enough to make anyone dizzy, and some of our most important political battles are about competing views of reality more than they are about policy choices. Calling bullshit has never been more vital to our democracy.

It also resonates with readers and viewers a lot more than passionless stenography. I’m convinced that my enthusiasm for calling bullshit is the main reason for the considerable success of my White House Briefing column, which has turned into a significant traffic-driver for The Washington Post’s Web site.

I’m not sure why calling bullshit has gone out of vogue in so many newsrooms — why, in fact, it’s so often consciously avoided. There are lots of possible reasons. There’s the increased corporate stultification of our industry, to the point where rocking the boat is seen as threatening rather than invigorating. There’s the intense pressure to maintain access to insider sources, even as those sources become ridiculously unrevealing and oversensitive. There’s the fear of being labeled partisan if one’s bullshit-calling isn’t meted out in precisely equal increments along the political spectrum.

If you poll blog readers you will quickly discover that they tend to share a disdain for ‘passionless stenography’ as well as mealy-mouthed ‘on-the-one-hand-on-the-other’ journalism. Let’s face it. We are in Iraq because journalists did not call bullshit. Bush got re-elected because the press treated minor flaws in Kerry as equal to glaring sociopathic tendencies in the administration.

If the old media wants to revitalize themselves they need to start calling bullshit…and do it with great enthusiasm. People won’t necessarily like you any better, but they will respect you…and read you.

Iraq War Grief Daily Witness (photo) Day 431

this diary is dedicated to all who suffer because of war

we love and support our troops, just as we love and support the Iraqi people – without exception, or precondition, or judgment

we have no sympathy for the devil

image and poem below the fold

A man cries after his relative was killed in crossfire on Tuesday, in Baquba, 65 km (40 miles) northeast of Baghdad, November 29, 2006.
REUTERS/Helmiy al-Azawi (IRAQ)

All Things Must Pass
by George Harrison

Sunrise doesn’t last all morning
A cloudburst doesn’t last all day
Seems my love is up and has left you with no warning
Its not always going to be this gray

All things must pass
All things must pass away

Sunset doesn’t last all evening
A mind can blow those clouds away
After all this, my love is up and must be leaving
Its not always going to be this gray

All things must pass
All things must pass away
All things must pass
None of life’s strings can last
So, I must be on my way
And face another day

Now the darkness only stays the nighttime
In the morning it will fade away
Daylight is good at arriving at the right time
Its not always going to be this gray

All things must pass
All things must pass away
All things must pass
All things must pass away

Open Thread

Is anyone else sick of seeing the same tired old wise men of Washington paraded before the cable news’ cameras to pontificate on the items of the day? I swear Pat Buchanan was given two solid hours of pontification time on MSNBC this afternoon (and he is still there right now). Gen. Wayne Downing has never been right about anything in his entire history of pontificating. Someone should keep a scorecard on how wrong each talking head has been about the Iraq War and their political predictions, and just fire everyone that falls below a certain level of ineptitude.

Either that, or they should just replace the cable news entirely and air footage of old tired men wanking.

The Conservative Media

A post of Josh Marshall’s crystallized an idea in my head today–the media, or large segments thereof, really has gotten pretty conservative.  Marshall wrote about Mort Kondrake’s column in Roll Call that included this bit of Bushery:

President Bush bet his presidency — and America’s world leadership — on the war in Iraq. Tragically, it looks as though he bit off more than the American people were willing to chew.

He assumes that it’s the people’s fault that Bush’s “bet” is going to fail.  Incompetence?  No, couldn’t be that.  But I digress.

There’s a lot of this crap floating around–how about how conservative the dems are and how much that had to do with congressional gains?  I suspect I am somewhat late to the party in this realization, but what I want to do here is make the point that the Republicans have been successful in sowing the idea that the media has a liberal bias, and the media themselves bought into this enough to move rightward.  

One way to combat this in a grass/netroots way is to challenge this assertion and make the contrary one–the media has become conservative, to the ruin of all.  They need to be skeptical, objective, and not allow themselves the sort of spoonfeeding by the administration that is all too common.

It will not be easy or quick to reverse the unfortunate rightward list of the media, but with time, I hope that at the very least our side can generate enough tension to cancel out that of the rightwing crybabies.  If we can pull them back to true objectivity, I’d count that as a victory, inasmuch as the facts have a liberal bias.

‘Jim Crow Joe’ Biden from Delaware

Thanks to the folks at TalkLeft blog for finding this tidbit on GOP wanna-be ‘Jim Crow Joe’ Biden.

The Associated Press reports in the Wilmington Star that Delaware’s United States senator, ‘Jim Crow Joe’ Biden, in a 2008 presidential campaign stop in the deep South of Columbia, S.C. told a Republican audience: ‘Biden noted Delaware was a border state and “a slave state that fought beside the North. That’s only because we couldn’t figure out how to get to the South – there were a couple of other states in the way.”

So Biden would have preferred it if his state had fought for the Confederacy in the Civil War. Why am I not surprised? Democratic U.S. senator Jim Crow Joe thinks the state of Delaware should have been on the other side of the Mason-Dixon line. What a thug!

MORE: ‘Jim Crow Joe’ Biden from Delaware

Froggy Bottom Happy Hour

Froggy Bottom Cafe ~ Happy Hour

Image hosting by Photobucket

George Is Your Bartender ~ FM Is Napping

Newcomers welcome and join the fun.
Your first drink is on us!
Rude, Crude and Lewd language is encouraged.
Please recommend
(and unrecommend the Cafe/Lounge from earlier)
May the 4’s be with you

The Pet Goat

A children’s story by Siegfried Engelmann and Elaine C. Bruner, “The Pet Goat” rocketed to pseudo-stardom on September 11, 2001, when ‘President’ George W. Bush sat with a group of children in their classroom reading it while the United States experienced the most heinous acts of terrorism in history.

At the time of the attacks, Andrew Card slipped into the classroom and notified Mr. Bush of the attacks; the next seven minutes of silence as he continued to sit in the room will never be forgotten.

This is not a diary about a book, but on the eerie appropriateness of the story as an analogy to what we now see unfolding in our nation today — the abandoning of Mr. Bush by his party and minions, and the equally damning confirmation that he has been, all along, their pet goat. A scapegoat, to be precise.  Jump with me…
Ttraditional meaning of the word “scapegoat” is a very literal one: a goat, upon which all the sins and sorrows of a town were symbolically placed, who was cast out (driven out) of town to die alone in the desert.  

This symbolically cleansed the town, leaving the actual sinners somehow blameless or redeemed, and the town was then ready to start the new year “fresh” and free from sin or blame for past transgressions.  

We’ve seen the adoption of this strategy in many areas of life. The current (and departing) Republican regime have given us a multitude of examples of this, accusing others of engaging in what they call “The Blame Game” while not accepting any responsibility or accountability for their own obvious malfeasance.

Wikipedia provides the following history of “the scapegoat” (only the beginning is excerpted here):

Two very similar-appearing billy goats were brought into the courtyard of the Temple in Jerusalem on Yom Kippur as part of the Holy Service of that day. The high priest cast lots for the two goats. One goat was offered as a burnt offering, as was the bull. The second goat was the scapegoat. The high priest placed his hands on the head of the goat and confessed the sins of the people of Israel. The scapegoat was led away and let go in the wilderness according to Leviticus 16:22, although the Talmud adds that it was pushed over a distant cliff.

[Emphasis mine]

A cliff.  How…appropriate.

As we watch the halls of Congressional power change hands from the Republicans, who ran roughshod over the nation and the world for the past 12 years, to the Democrats, who have promised investigations into suspected Constitutional violations and criminal activity, we’ve seen more examples of our would-be “boy king” flubbing it up in public discourse.  More embarassing information has been leaked. Bush has been snubbed and undermined by world leaders and the popular press.

Pre-emptive investigations are being started. The GAO has sent a memo to Congress suggestion areas to investigate first. The GOP financial levees have been breached and their main supplier of their core aphrodisiac (cash) imprisoned. At least sixty-five Republicans are going to take a hit on that last item, and that doesn’t take into account the recent unconstitutional laws that essentially turn our nation into a police state.

On November 7, the balance of power was changed by the people of the nation, and effective January 1 of 2007, no existing Republican or enabler on the Hill or in DC is safe. They know this. They fear this.

They will do anything to prevent it.

The easiest method available to them — tried and true, so far, during their regime — is to create a scapegoat that will take the burden off of them, and along with it the glaring lights of the investigators (or so they hope).  George W. Bush is now being positioned as that scapegoat.

Don’t let them do it.  

A single person, acting alone and regardless of position, could not have wrought such devastating corruption and destruction upon our nation and the nations of the world.  Do not accept a single goat when ten (or, in this case, a little more than 65) are due.

I warned of the possibility that George would find himself conveniently and solely held responsible for the mess we’re in. And, true to form, George has sought out his father to help him bail out of yet another failure, all the while still seeking to rewrite the historical record by throwing money at his “legacy” and spinning as fast as he can in the manner to which he has grown accustomed.

He is a loser.

Let him get strung up, but don’t allow him to be isolated and strung up alone.  Do not accept a single goat, when ten (or a little more than sixty-five) are due.

Re-establish the value of accountability and ownership as part and parcel of the responsiblity that those who seek to “serve” our nation agree to shoulder. It’s part of the job description.  

Let’s make it a core tenet that must be adhered to.

Crossposted at DailyKos, Booman Tribune, ePluribus Media, My Left Wing and Never in Our Names.