Monday, June 01, 2009

Sentential Links #172

Linkage for the weary:

:: Look, it’s not racist to oppose a Latina judicial nominee, or to oppose affirmative action, or to point out genuine evidence of ethnic bias on the part of minorities. What we’re seeing here, though, is people clinging to the belief that Sotomayor has to be some mediocrity who struck the ethnic jackpot, that whatever benefit she got from affirmative action must be vastly more significant than her own qualities, that she’s got to be a harpy boiling with hatred for whitey, however overwhelming the evidence against all these propositions is. This is really profoundly ugly.

:: Libertarians actually have an entree into the debate. But because they generally act like jerks, freaks, or both, their ideas are generally rejected by the people. (Alan decided to poke some Libertarians with a stick, which is always a fun thing to do. I especially love how Libertarians think that the way to convince people to support them is to start lecturing on how our problems today are all Woodrow Wilson's fault, because when someone's struggling to keep a job, find a job, make a mortgage payment, or get health care, they're really keenly interested in learning how everything is the blame of the guy who was in charge a hundred years ago.)

:: This a website promoting hitchhiking. (Wow, I thought hitchhiking was gone. I haven't seen a hitchhiker in years. Decades, perhaps. "Cool Tools" is a nifty blog, by the way.)

:: What a computer would need to compete in Diplomacy is the ability to read human beings' intentions (which is no doubt coming) and the ability to mimic human behavior by convincingly lying its ass off, which one hopes is a little further down the road.

:: Not only is the car a mistake, but the Renaissance notion of tidy, regular street geometry is an error. The use of paper to plan cities, which also originates in the Renaissance, is also an error. The notion that architecture is an art form, not a craft, is another crucial error in thought about urban design.

:: Thank heavens aliens and their flying saucers are so thoughtful! As reported by Fox news — yeah, imagine that — a Russian scientist claims that an alien spaceship crashed into an incoming asteroid in 1908 to save the Earth.

:: One can be an environmentalist and a humanist. The key is to make this planet habitable, sustainable and humane. It is this last crucial point that the Gainists and deep ecologists have failed to grasp, and in so doing, have come to represent a dangerous and misguided ideology.

:: It hurts me to read that. No. It's not hurt. It's fear. I don't want to go back there.

But I do want to write about it.

I want to write about so much.

Nothing is wrong. Everything is going according to plan. I just can't see the end. The conundrum of the writer. Neither could Fitzgerald. But he wrote it all down anyway.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hitching is against the law in New York, if I'm not mistaken. That may be why you don't see them. In other states, Appalachian Trail hikers routinely hitch into towns to resupply.

Thee Earl of Obvious said...

Actually what we are seeing here is some major league double speak with regard to Sotomayor. The double standard with regard to hurling the racism charge became obvious after people objected to her FILMED race based statement.

So whats the answer? Let it be said that objecting to affirmative action is not racist. Even one step farther, let it be said that objecting to a Latina nominee is also not racist.

That's very generous EXCEPT it wont pass the litmus test. Not until a white U.S. Senator can say those things that is.

I mean can you imagine the backlash if one of them said: I don't agree with affirmative action or putting a latina on the bench.

When did it become ok to purport double standards?

Roger Owen Green said...

Htchhiking (in NYS) was my primary form of transportation from 1971 to 1979.

Thee Earl of Obvious said...

I am posting as I read.

Why not blame the imperialist views especially as it manifested on culture of a former PRESIDENT who was very powerful and capable of planting these seeds for the future? We have no problem lauding President Lincoln for every thing he said.

I can think of nothing better than a world without city planners and the power the gain from the elected town councils (elected usually by a small amount of voters) who give them carte blanche to dump charm and functionality create retail meccas that soon become obsolete.

Thee Earl of Obvious said...

In honor of Jane Jacobs I must really continue my rant on planners:

Yes, functionality. For instance; wider roads DO NOT decrease traffic. Traffic is like a liquid that will conform to any container in which it is held. Wider roads are built for the sole purpose, in my opinion, of accommodating large trucks that deliver large amounts of inventory that is designed to turn over frequently and never run out.

Narrow roads do not accommodate large trucks very well. They also do not accommodate people who drive fast and recklessly. Narrow roads are normally designed to be flanked by sidewalks that, get this, have people walk on them. I for one would not walk on a side walk near a mega retailer that is next to a wide (SOMETIMES SIX LANES OR MORE) road. Because I believer people who careen across 2 lanes of traffic at 25 to 30 mph in order ot enter the mega parking lot are usually NOT looking for a pedestrian on these side walks.

This is just one way small town functionality has been usurped by the short range, profit centered, trend driven focus of planners and their brothers developers.

yeah,

HitcherofOz said...

I am the co-editor of 3 books of hitchhiking stories and have been surprised to find that, while this pursuit isn't so popular in the US and Western Europe anymore it still is in Australasia, Africa, Russia and Eastern Europe. There's even an international hitchhiking conference in Vilnius every year!

So are you worried about the possible dangers? The chance of being picked up by a nutcase or picking one up if you are driving? Or does this risk factor add to the excitement? Are you drawn to it by the cheapness and notion that you could end up anywhere?

If you have any hitching stories set in the USA, we are currently putting together a new book for that market. Please feel free to email us on hitchtales@hotmail.com. The blurb below from our latest book, The Hitchers of Oz: Hitchhiking Stories and Observations from Australasia and Beyond, should give you an idea as to what it's all about:

World famous actor Sam Neil and rap legend Chuck D rub shoulders with writers like JP Donleavy and Carmel Bird. Physicists, business leaders, publishers, political activists, soldiers, poets, athletes and comic book creators are brought together by their common experience of hitching a ride sometime in the past. Since the '60s and '70s - the heyday of hitching - people have thumbed rides worldwide. Money never changes hands, but all manner of social transactions take place. These tales will open your eyes and take you back - of forward. Just when you think you've heard it all, turn the page. You'll discover you haven't!

Start reading The Hitchers of Oz on your Kindle right now:
http://www.amazon.com/Hitchers-Oz-Simon-Sykes/dp/1921479191

Or order a proper 3 dimensional book that you can hold in your hands and turn the pages of:
http://www.ipoz.biz/Titles/THO.htm

If you want to buy a copy signed by the editors and with a personalized message, contact us at hitchtales@hotmail.com.