Posted 12:25am
pst, Monday, May
30, 2005
A
Memorial Day message from JFK
This
was forwarded to me from my Politics
discussion group:
THEODORE C. SORENSEN
What JFK might tell our leaders
By Theodore C. Sorensen | May 28,
2005
TOMORROW WOULD have
been John F. Kennedy's 88th birthday.
Were he still alive, I have no doubt
that, with his customary idealism
and commitment to country, he would
still be offering advice to our current
leaders in Washington. Based upon
his words of more than 40 years ago,
he might well offer the following:
To President George
W. Bush on Iraq, Iran, and North
Korea:
''The United States, as the world
knows, will never start a war. This
generation of Americans has had enough
-- more than enough -- of war."
(American University commencement,
1963)
To President Bush on
stem cell research:
''For those of us who are not expert
... we must turn, in the last resort,
to objective, disinterested scientists
who bring a strong sense of public
responsibility and public obligation." (National
Academy of Sciences, 1961)
To Vice President Dick
Cheney on international organizations,
alliances, and consultations:
''The United States is neither omnipotent
nor omniscient. We are only 6 percent
of the world's population... we cannot
impose our will upon the other 94
percent of mankind." (University
of Washington, 1961)
To Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice on terrorism:
''If a free society cannot help the
many who are poor, it cannot save
the few who are rich." (Inaugural
address, 1961)
To United Nations ambassador-designate
John Bolton on diplomacy:
''Civility is not a sign of weakness.
The United Nations [is] our last
best hope in an age where the instruments
of war have far outpaced the instruments
of peace." (Inaugural address,
1961)
To Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld on space:
''We have vowed that we shall not
see space filled with weapons of
mass destruction, but with instruments
of knowledge and understanding. This
new ocean must be a sea of peace,
[not] a new terrifying theater of
war." (Rice University, 1962)
To House Majority Leader
Tom Delay on fund-raising:
We need ''men of integrity whom neither
financial gain nor political ambition
could ever divert from the fulfillment
of our sacred trust."
(Massachusetts farewell, 1961)
To Senate Majority
Leader Bill Frist on judges:
''To maintain the constitutional
principle, we should support Supreme
Court decisions, even when we may
not agree with them." (News
conference, 1962)
To White House Press
Secretary Scott McClellan on negative
news media:
''It is never pleasant to be reading
things that are not agreeable news,
but it is an invaluable arm to the
presidency as a check on what is
going on... [e]ven though we never
like it... and wish they didn't write
it... we could not do the job at
all in a free society without a very,
very active press." (Television
interview, 1962)
To pastor-in-chief
Pat Robertson on church-state separation:
''I believe in an America where no
[clergyman] would tell his
parishioners for whom to vote, where
no religious body seeks to impose
its will directly or indirectly upon
the public acts of our officials,
where no church or church school
is granted any public funds or political
preference. The presidency must not
be the instrument of any one religious
group." (Houston ministers,
1960)
To Undersecretary of
State for Public Diplomacy Karen
Hughes on propaganda :
''The United States is a peaceful
nation where our strength and determination
are clear, our words need merely
to convey conviction not belligerence."
(undelivered Dallas speech, 1963)
How I miss his friendship.
How our nation misses his wisdom.
Theodore C. Sorensen
is former special counsel to President
Kennedy.
Another fun exchange from my Politics group:
I don't know if it was intentionally written that way, but
Revenge of the Sith could be compared to the current political arena. Did
anyone else catch that? It seems some of Darth's quotes were almost like
Bush's...
- CHRIS
And the reply from another group member:
Intentional it is. Evil is Bush. Told you we did. Now, matters
are worse.
-LEONARD
"Should any political party attempt to abolish
social security, unemployment insurance, and eliminate labor laws and farm
programs, you would not hear of that party again in our political history.
There is a tiny splinter group, of course, that believes you can do these things
. Among them are ... a few other Texas oil millionaires, and an occasional
politician or business man from other areas. Their number is negligible and
they are stupid."
–President Dwight
D. Eisenhower, 1954
::Permalink::
Posted 11:40pm
pst, Saturday, May 14, 2005
Tiger
update and a lesson learned, again
Earlier this year, I made a post about
losing all my iTunes bookmarks. That sucked so bad, I immediately got a .mac
account to back up all my important data.
Except I fucked up. I didn't back up all my important
data.
I upgraded to Tiger a couple of weeks ago. Did
a clean install. In other words, I erased my hard drive and started from scratch.
Then I tried to do a restore off my iDisc .mac account. Everything seemed in
order. All my work was intact; all my bookmarks and yes, all my iTunes folders.
It appears that I forgot to check the box for
backing-up my mailboxes. I (twinge of pain) lost all my e-mail for the the
last three years. A lot of important stuff was in those mailboxes. They're
all gone.
That setback fucked me up pretty bad, which explains
the lack of posts of late. Plus, I'm going headlong into production for the
next few weeks. I may try to post for L.A., but more likely, I'll veg out in
my hotel room at night.
::Permalink::
Posted 11:30pm
pst, Monday, May
2, 2005
The
Democrat's plan
The Dem
platform on Social Security has always
been solvency and not dismantling.
Until we get a majority in office,
there's not a lot to talk about. Introducing
legislation that has zero chance of
passing through a republican-controlled
Congress and House is stupid. It will
only give the right-wing time ot build
their bullshit arguments and wall of
lies.
Some
of the solutions include <GASP> raising
taxes, or at the very least, returning
to pre-Bush tax numbers. Those are
not the kind of evening news soundbites
that the Left can win hearts and minds
with. You know it and I know it.
Make
no mistake about it, Bush won on the
fear platform. They were supposed to
protect us from the terrorists. No
surprise then that they've decided
not to report that worldwide terror
has gone UP (doubled?) under their
leadership. They made terror the defining
issue of the campaign. No one in the
White House is talking about the 11
Americans killed over the weekend.
Wonder why.
Now,
Bush has made Social Security the most
important thing on his agenda. It is
the Democrat's job to call him on his
bullshit. Some pundits on the Right
say the Left needs to present their
ideas, but fail to call Bush to the
floor to do the same. His entire privatization
roadtrip has been personal accounts-this
and personal accounts-that wih no concrete
proposal in place. The only detail
he gave out last week is that anyone
making over $20,000 is going to get
their benefits cut.
Doesn't
sound like such a great plan to me.
::Permalink::