David Brooks has an instructive column on the Olympics and patriotism in The Weekly Standard. Here’s a bit I particularly enjoyed: We are about to enter the Olympic season, and there are going to be a bunch of obnoxious stories about the overbearing patriotism of the host Americans. My point is first that all nations are overbearingly patriotic come Olympics time. And all nations should be. Patriotism, the love of
Treacher Feature II: Teddy Dearest (annotated)
Via email: Underground cartoon sniper Jim Treacher follows up his editorial work on a typically sneering Rall scribble with a riposte to a typically sneering Teddy posting (‘tseems Teddy scans the message boards looking for references to himself, then responds!; how long before he discovers the job bloggers are doing on him…?). Jim writes: In a recent message board conversation , Mr. Rall indulged in his usual habit for labeling
Oil-based Plaints
“Dump the Saudis,” Rich Lowry counsels in today’s NRO. But first, topple Iraq and obviate the very need for the relationship of convenience we maintain with the House of Saud: […]a successful U.S. effort to topple Saddam and install a friendly regime in Baghdad would make the U.S.-Saudi alliance far less important. In many ways, Iraq seems a more natural candidate for friendship with the U.S. than does Saudi Arabia,
Pencils: Still a bargain at 3 cents each…
In his “Impromptus” column today, The National Review’s Jay Nordlinger writes: A story from Texas two days ago said that education secretary Rod Paige had returned home to Houston to ‘tout education spending increases’ in the administration
Paying for our own Addictions
Christopher Caldwell of The Weekly Standard offers a scathing critique of the National Drug Control Policy’s SuperBowl advertisements. After noting that “We can leave aside the general question of whether government agencies ought to be spending the public’s money to — in effect — lobby that very same public to keep shelling out money for them,” Caldwell takes issue with one ad in particular, the 30-second spot in which the
“…It’s only life, After Rall”
Reader (and undergroundish cartoon sniper) Jim Treacher takes this typically nonsensical Rall scribble and turns it into something far more instructive: a dig at Teddy Boy his own silly, Bush-baitin’ self… [Hmm. Just had an idea: If Teddy hires Jim as his ghostwriter, a-and then gets somebody with a bit more artistic talent than himself to draw the pictures (like, say, any ten-year old hard up for a five spot)
Life in the Big Hizzouse
The Weekly Standard’s Matt Labash offers this primer on prison speak — providing me with just enough verbal Lego to build this hard-ass insider’s primo slickwilly: “Yo, fish! Don’t make me no nevermind whether you’s a diaper sniper or a tree jumper, you gonna be tossin’ salad on this here skin beef muthaf**ker — family style and on the flip flop, cuz’ — else your june buggin, butterfly-ass gonna’ be
Plug ‘n’ Stay
Crazed Avenger™ Matthew Edgar introduces us to the next wave in computing, the IBM MetaPad — a brick-sized computer designed to “interface” (and this may be the first time I’ve ever used that word in a sentence I was serious about) with strategically-placed docking stations. Matt’s reminded of 1984 (“who,” he asks, “controls the docking stations and how does that impact privacy”), whereas I immediately thought of both William Gibson
A Sign of the Times…
From Online news: A bus driver thwarted a suicide bomber today when he alerted Israeli police to a suspicious passenger who was found to have a explosives belt strapped to his body. The bus was travelling from Jerusalem to the nearby Jewish West Bank settlement of Maale Adumim when the driver spotted the passenger. The driver stopped at an Israeli police checkpoint and informed officers there of his suspicions, said
