We all have these moments. This is my friend Becky having one. It turned out well for her in the end. I just wonder whose laptop she’s using. Isn’t it a shame when we have difficulty with a childs laptop. It’s really cool to be able to share video easily on flickr.
Read MoreEditorial: Rendell should push casinos to give up their waterfront sites. With a few well-chosen words — “the two proposed sites are no longer viable” — two veteran state lawmakers, Rep. Dwight Evans and Sen. Vincent J. Fumo, have prompted Gov. Rendell to concede the obvious: The Delaware River waterfront casino locations are high and dry.Any public support that still exists for the Foxwoods and SugarHouse casinos at their proposed locations in South Philadelphia and Fishtown, respectively, is running out faster than a slots player goes through a fistful of quarters.
This is an old editorial but I just had to post this. These freaking politicians, especially Rendell think that a decision is forever. They make a bad decision and push it through when the city is vulnerable. This was opportunism at it’s height. The Casino’s and the expansion of the convention center are crazy. The costs are soaring and the city needs housing, new small businesses, and community space.
Naomi Klein has a book about this : The Shock Doctrine — Disaster capitalism
We are no longer the wimpy city that let Rendell get away with this. Not anymore.
Tags: philadelphia, casinos, riverfront, community
Read MoreI know that you must have seen Matt . Who? Matt Harding.
Everyone I know has. My bud George Graves sent me the link weeks ago. I was amused. Its just fun and we all should have some fun. I don’t want to talk about the video alot because talking isn’t what the video is about. Just enjoy it a few times yourself.
You know its gone mainstream when the New York Times is writing about it. Don’t forget to check out Matt’s blog. Hey maybe you’ll want to do this too.
Oh don’t forget, if you watch this video Google may have to give up all your viewing habits to Viacom so it will help in a lawsuit. That’s actually another post. I’ve begun writing it but its no quite ready.
Read MoreThis phenomenonal rise of Barack Obama has bothered me from the beginning. Who is this person of little experience that has used the void of positive rhetoric to win his party’s nomination? Has the nation been so humiliated by George Bush that any breath of air would be good enough to run for the whitehouse?
What the times said today isn’t news. These are the things I have worried about from the beginning. The mainstream media was so enamored that it wasn’t paying attention. [ Wow a person that can speak in full sentences, good looking, clean cut, goes to church on sundays, listens without interrupting, has a good vocabulary.] Maybe it isn’t even news to the people that wear the buttons and carry the signs and chant Yes we can. I don’t stand with Obama on a slow and painful withdrawal from Iraq, I don’t agree with Barack Obama on his new stand on FISA, I don’t agree with his abortion position, and I don’t agree with his so called expansion of faith-based initiatives, or his pro death penalty stands or his position on guns. I didn’t agree months ago and I don’t agree now.
So, who do I have to vote for?
—
from The New York Times
July 4, 2008
Editorial
New and Not Improved
Senator Barack Obama stirred his legions of supporters, and raised our hopes, promising to change the old order of things. He spoke with passion about breaking out of the partisan mold of bickering and catering to special pleaders, promised to end President Bush’s abuses of power and subverting of the Constitution and disowned the big-money power brokers who have corrupted Washington politics.
Now there seems to be a new Barack Obama on the hustings. First, he broke his promise to try to keep both major parties within public-financing limits for the general election. His team explained that, saying he had a grass-roots-based model and that while he was forgoing public money, he also was eschewing gold-plated fund-raisers. These days he’s on a high-roller hunt.
Even his own chief money collector, Penny Pritzker, suggests that the magic of $20 donations from the Web was less a matter of principle than of scheduling. “We have not been able to have much of the senator’s time during the primaries, so we have had to rely more on the Internet,” she explained as she and her team busily scheduled more than a dozen big-ticket events over the next few weeks at which the target price for quality time with the candidate is more than $30,000 per person.
The new Barack Obama has abandoned his vow to filibuster an electronic wiretapping bill if it includes an immunity clause for telecommunications companies that amounts to a sanctioned cover-up of Mr. Bush’s unlawful eavesdropping after 9/11.
In January, when he was battling for Super Tuesday votes, Mr. Obama said that the 1978 law requiring warrants for wiretapping, and the special court it created, worked. “We can trace, track down and take out terrorists while ensuring that our actions are subject to vigorous oversight and do not undermine the very laws and freedom that we are fighting to defend,” he declared.
Now, he supports the immunity clause as part of what he calls a compromise but actually is a classic, cynical Washington deal that erodes the power of the special court, virtually eliminates “vigorous oversight” and allows more warrantless eavesdropping than ever.
The Barack Obama of the primary season used to brag that he would stand before interest groups and tell them tough truths. The new Mr. Obama tells evangelical Christians that he wants to expand President Bush’s policy of funneling public money for social spending to religious-based organizations — a policy that violates the separation of church and state and turns a government function into a charitable donation.
He says he would not allow those groups to discriminate in employment, as Mr. Bush did, which is nice. But the Constitution exists to protect democracy, no matter who is president and how good his intentions may be.
On top of these perplexing shifts in position, we find ourselves disagreeing powerfully with Mr. Obama on two other issues: the death penalty and gun control.
Mr. Obama endorsed the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn the District of Columbia’s gun-control law. We knew he ascribed to the anti-gun-control groups’ misreading of the Constitution as implying an individual right to bear arms. But it was distressing to see him declare that the court provided a guide to “reasonable regulations enacted by local communities to keep their streets safe.”
What could be more reasonable than a city restricting handguns, or requiring that firearms be stored in ways that do not present a mortal threat to children?
We were equally distressed by Mr. Obama’s criticism of the Supreme Court’s barring the death penalty for crimes that do not involve murder.
We are not shocked when a candidate moves to the center for the general election. But Mr. Obama’s shifts are striking because he was the candidate who proposed to change the face of politics, the man of passionate convictions who did not play old political games.
There are still vital differences between Mr. Obama and Senator John McCain on issues like the war in Iraq, taxes, health care and Supreme Court nominations. We don’t want any “redefining” on these big questions. This country needs change it can believe in.
Tags: politics, obama, editorial, new york times
Read MoreI’ve been a bit more focused on words lately. I attribute that to the fact that I have been designing communication architectures for the past few weeks and have not spent any time in my art studio. This changes me into a person who really depends on language much more. When I spend time making art there’s little to say until after the art is finished.
A look at my tags at del.icio.us using WORDLE. The WORDLE BLOG.
Tags: type, thoughts, clouds, words, verbal, communicate
Read MoreDATE: JULY 1, 2008
Mandela shared the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993 with F. W. de Klerk, the South African president and National Party leader who worked with Mandela to end apartheid. Mandela replaced him as president in 1994 and served until 1999.
Did you know that Mandela and other members of the African National Congress have been on the list because of their fight against South Africa’s apartheid regime, which gave way to majority rule in 1994? That’s right, they couldn’t get Visa’s to the USA. That’s our sharp as a tack president and his behemoth Homeland Security for ya.
from his speech June 28, 2008
“Friends, 20 years ago London hosted a historic concert which called for our freedom. Your voices carried across the water to inspire us in our prison cells far away. Tonight, we are free. We are honoured to be back in London.
As we celebrate, let us remind ourselves that our work is far from complete. Where there is poverty and sickness, including AIDS, where human beings are being oppressed, there is more work to be done. Our work is for freedom for all … We say tonight, after nearly 90 years of life, it is time for new hands to lift the burdens. It is in your hands now, I thank you.”
Don’t know much about Mandela?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nelson_Mandela
http://www.nelsonmandela.org/
Tags: mandela, apartheid, human dignity,
Read MoreHow much more can we stand? I was waiting for announcement of the iPhone 3G and it happened. Now all I get is email messages about how the iPhone is coming, the iPhone is coming. You can read : How to hand-down your old iPhone after upgrading to iPhone 3G, Moving to iPhone 3G: a guide for current and non-current AT&T customers, New and old AT&T iPhone plans compared, cost increases detailed, AT&T announces iPhone 3G plans, 8 a.m. launch time on July 11.
I’m dizzy from “if it’s wednesday and a full moon and you were previously a friends and family customer” you can expect to pay up to 50% more on your ATT bill.
Well, maybe an iPhone just isn’t want I am longing for anymore. It’s just not any fun. Who wants to go into the braintrust they call the ATT store? Who wants to figure it all out? Sorry no SMS messages are included with your plan.
I would have rather payed 500 dollars for the iphone and known the ATT couldn’t do this lets screw the customers again routine. Apple and their exclusive deal sucks. I’m out. Too much money. I can open my browser and play my music from my laptop thank you.
I just say no.
Somehow this reminds me of the new gallon milk carton that you need instruction to use. I guess that’s another post.
Tags: iphone, ATT, pricing, launch
Read More

Visit my Klout profile