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Bob



Last Updated: 11/24/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: In a Relationship
Age: 32
Sign: Aries

City: Hollywood, USA!
State: CALIFORNIA
Country: US
Signup Date: 8/20/2004

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Tuesday, December 05, 2006 

Category: Movies, TV, Celebrities
I am so deeply proud of Battlestar Galactica.

I just finished watching season two of the show, and I just watched the premiere of the third season, which features -- as I'm sure all you die-hard BSG fans know -- a suicide bomber in a central role.

Awesome. The show elects a WTB -- Worse Than Buchanan = Dubya -- idiot as the president of the humans (the good guys) and has then settle on a crappy planet where they turn into Iraqis to be occupied by the monotheist cylons. And then we get to watch the good guys become the insurgents.

I hope there was fear in the writers' meetings for these shows. I hope they fretted over whether to go this deep and hard with their story. I hope they weighed the possibility that an anti-free-speech, right-wing backlash would erupt against this show that dared to argue that maybe some suicide bombers aren't crazy -- they're just grief-stricken to the point of suicide.

But even a cursory Google search turns up no right-wing vitriol against this show, so it looks like I'm building a big straw man, ignorant of the democratic triumph in Congress recently.

All the same -- I'm proud of Ron Moore and his staff for taking a stand in the name of creativity and free speech. And more speech. And more speech. And more.
Currently listening:
Hoppípolla
By Sigur Ros
Release date: 01 December, 2005
Thursday, June 22, 2006 

Category: News and Politics
I guess it was the right call to go to war!!!



Oh, wait ...



From FOXNews' own Web site, in the very story with the headline "WMDs found in Iraq":



Offering the official administration response to FOX News, a senior Defense Department official pointed out that the chemical weapons were not in useable conditions.



"This does not reflect a capacity that was built up after 1991," the official said, adding the munitions "are not the WMDs this country and the rest of the world believed Iraq had, and not the WMDs for which this country went to war."




Is this how bad it's gotten? Are we no better than some fucking tinplated banana republic, with state-sanctioned propaganda and lies? Aren't we fucking better than that?



Heads-up, the rest of the world! I am PROUD to be an American! To quote the esteemed Neal Town Stephenson, we do three things better than anyone else:



Music
Movies
High-speed pizza delivery



And our cultural dominance -- for better or worse -- confirms that for some dumb reason, people like American shit. The USSR fell because people like our shit.



But thanks to a perverse, diabolical combination of bible-thumping, gay-bashing and bigotry-baiting, a beer-swilling frat boy somehow exploited a national tragedy to do the craziest shit imaginable.



What damage will WTB do before he's done?
Tuesday, June 20, 2006 

Category: News and Politics
Holy fuck! Check it out!!!

I'm going to have a heart attack and die I'm so fucking stunned. Sure, it's just a book review, but I am simply stunned that Time has taken a break from running a credulous cover story about ancient religion ("Golly! Maybe Jesus didn't actually walk on water!") to come out and say -- however indirectly -- that the GOP doesn't know how to fucking fight terrorists.

And to the deranged one-third of our population that still thinks WTB is doing a good job -- all you closeted bigots, proud misogynists and trembly voiced heartland evangelicals -- think back to the start of the Iraq war and ask yourself:

Was that our only option in the war against terror?

Was that our best option in the war against terror?

Once again: The "war" on terror has been a detective job from the get-go, and Bush, et al., have been treating it like a conventional war. To say they're like a general fighting the previous war is too kind. They're simply putting on the biggest show -- a gigantic, deadly piece of sleight-of-hand -- to distract you.

And they're endangering all of our lives to do it.
Friday, June 09, 2006 

Category: News and Politics
Thanks to Garrison Keillor for putting this in simple terms:

I see by the papers that the Republicans want to make an issue of Nancy Pelosi in the congressional races this fall: Would you want a San Francisco woman to be speaker of the House?

Will the podium be repainted in lavender stripes with a disco ball overhead? Will she be borne into the chamber by male dancers with glistening torsos and wearing pink tutus? After all, in the unique worldview of old elephants, "San Francisco" is a code word for "g-a-y," and after assembling a record of government lies, incompetence and disaster, the party in power hopes that the fear of g-a-y-s will pull it through in November.

Running against Ms. Pelosi, a woman who comes from a district where there are known gay persons, is a nice trick, but it does draw attention to the large shambling galoot who is speaker now, Tom DeLay's enabler for years, a man who, judging by his public mutterances, is about as smart as most high school wrestling coaches.

For the past year, Dennis Hastert has been two heartbeats from the presidency. He is a man who seems content just to have a car and driver and three square meals a day. He has no apparent vision beyond the urge to hang onto power. He has succeeded in turning Congress into a branch of the executive branch. If Mr. Hastert becomes the poster boy for the Republican Party, this does not speak well for them as the Party of Ideas.

[.....]

The iPod was not developed by Baptists in Waco. There may be a reason for this. Creative people thrive in a climate of openness and tolerance, since some great ideas start out sounding ridiculous.

Creativity is a key to economic progress. Authoritarianism is stifling. I don't believe that Mr. Hewlett and Mr. Packard were gay, but what's important is: In San Francisco, it doesn't matter so much. When the cultural Sturmbannfuhrers try to marshal everyone into straight lines, it has consequences for the economic future of this country.

Meanwhile, the Current Occupant goes on impersonating a president. Somewhere in the quiet leafy recesses of the Bush family, somebody is thinking, "Wrong son. Should've tried the smart one."

And thanks to the New York Times for this pissed-off editorial about bullshit voting tricks up in Ohio. The "liberal media" has some fuck in it yet.

If there was ever a sign of a ruling party in trouble, it is a game plan that calls for trying to win by discouraging voting.

The latest sign that Republicans have an election-year strategy to shut down voter registration drives comes from Ohio. As the state gears up for a very competitive election season this fall, its secretary of state, J. Kenneth Blackwell, has put in place "emergency" regulations that could hit voter registration workers with criminal penalties for perfectly legitimate registration practices. The rules are so draconian they could shut down registration drives in Ohio.

Mr. Blackwell, who also happens to be the Republican candidate for governor this year, has a history of this sort of behavior. In 2004, he instructed county boards of elections to reject any registrations on paper of less than 80-pound stock about the thickness of a postcard. His order was almost certainly illegal, and he retracted it after he came under intense criticism. It was, however, in place long enough to get some registrations tossed out.

This year, Mr. Blackwell's office has issued rules and materials that appear to require that paid registration workers, and perhaps even volunteers, personally take the forms they collect to an election office. Organizations that run registration drives generally have the people who register voters bring the forms back to supervisors, who can then review them for errors. Under Mr. Blackwell's edict, everyone involved could be committing a crime. Mr. Blackwell's rules also appear to prohibit people who register voters from sending the forms in by mail. That rule itself may violate federal elections law.

Mr. Blackwell's rules are interpretations of a law the Republican-controlled Ohio Legislature passed recently. Another of the nation's most famous swing states, Florida, has been the scene of similar consternation and confusion since it recently enacted a law that is so harsh that the Florida League of Women Voters announced that it was stopping all voter registration efforts for the first time in 67 years.

Florida's Legislature, like Ohio's, is controlled by Republicans. Throughout American history both parties have shown a willingness to try to use election law to get results they might otherwise not win at the polls. But right now it is clearly the Republicans who believe they have an interest in keeping the voter base small. Mr. Blackwell and other politicians who insist on making it harder to vote never say, of course, that they are worried that get-out-the-vote drives will bring too many poor and minority voters into the system. They say that they want to reduce fraud. However, there is virtually no evidence that registration drives are leading to fraud at the polls.

But there is one clear way that Ohio's election system is corrupt. Decisions about who can vote are being made by a candidate for governor. Mr. Blackwell should hand over responsibility for elections to a decision maker whose only loyalty is to the voters and the law.
Friday, June 09, 2006 

Category: News and Politics
From XBiz World

I'd like to send a big fuck you to every pro-business, money-grubbing asshole who voted for this bill.

WASHINGTON The idea of maintaining an even playing field for all Internet services offered to consumers took a nosedive in the U.S. House of Representatives late Thursday.

In a 58-211 vote, with Republicans taking the lead, the Communications Opportunity, Promotion and Enhancement Act was firmly rejected, signaling to broadband providers that they can forge ahead with creating a two-tiered Internet and are in no way obligated to treat all Internet traffic in a nondiscriminatory price manner.

The COPE Act, proposed by Rep. Ed Markey, D-Mass., aimed to restrict the major broadband providers from being able to offer varying pricing structures to consumers based on different access speeds.

The rejection of the bill also sends a direct message to the Federal Communication Commission that it can no longer maintain regulatory control over Internet services. The FCC can now only deal with case-by-case basis allegations of network neutrality violations.
Thursday, June 08, 2006 

Category: News and Politics
So is Osama Bin Laden going to turn up dead right before the elections in November?
Everyone please feel free to tell me I'm a paranoid liberal. It'll make me feel better.
Wednesday, June 07, 2006 

Category: Religion and Philosophy
From the A and A forum:

first...im not 100 ure i understand your first point. i dont think theism is a driving need either, and its certainly not something that keeps me up at night (or helps me get to sleep for that matter). its also not a big deal -- its just my perception of the nature of the universe. there are those for whom it is a big deal, those who need it to get to sleep at night, and there are atheists in the same vein. for athiests who chant "i wont believe, i wont believe, " it seems like it is a big deal. again...im a little confused at what youre trying to say here, so i may not have really answered your point. if i didnt, try to rearticulate.

Oh, who cares. Fair enough.

but here is where arguments about how atheism, secularism, etc, are a lacl of something kick in, IMO. -- I'm sure there are a couple type-o's here, but i couldnt make out exactly what you meant. atheism is a lack of something to kick in? i dont understand. sorry.

AAA. Sorry. "Lack."

as for you second pont: i can only emphatically disagree with this comparison. although i dont presume to know you or your life, i doubt that anyone who's ever had the kind of spiritual experiences i'm talking about would compare them to a book or a sunset. and its not as if ive never had the emotional responses to those things in the same way that youve had. from my perspective, ive experienced both, and theyre not the same thing. im not sure how a person who hasnt experienced both can make that comparison. respectfully.

most of the people ive known who have left various religious groups and become atheists are people who spent their lives in search of those kinds of experiences (or, more often, waiting for those experiences to smack them in the face), but never found them. but obviously, i can only speak for such people that ive known personally.

Here it comes:

I used to be an evangelical Christian. I've had my share of fulfilling religious experiences. I've felt like god had a hand in the goodness that happened in my life.

Among the many reasons I moved away from religious belief was that I couldn't be as good a person as I wanted to be, and in the time since I left religion, I have -- again -- come to realize that these great religious experiences are simply people feeling really great.

And the world and the natural universe are sources of that great feeling. The universe and the world are worthy places to direct good feeling.

So I've experienced both, and I make the comparison with vigor, yes, but not as a challenge. Rather, I make it as an overture.

I once asked my mom's preacher if Jews were going to hell. He laughed and said, "No, we all love god, we just have different ways of saying it."

I have deep, serious reservations about religion and religious belief because we live in a dark era for faith. We live in an era of jihadists and biblically literal fundamentalists.

Imagine what is must have been like to be alive in the 1960s, when religious leaders marched at the vanguard of the civil rights movement -- when there were more religious leaders like this.

Listen, man, I appreciate that it's alarming to consider the possibility that secular spirituality is as valid and as fulfilling as religious spirituality -- that Shakespeare and Tolkein move me more than my brushes with "god" ever did.

But I submit that not only might we be calling happiness by different names, but also that this knowledge might temper your faith and help it become something bigger and better.

Because if your faith can't take a few good frontal assaults, what the fuck good is it?
Tuesday, June 06, 2006 

Category: News and Politics
The Republican-appointed judge in the Dover evolution/ID case has been crusading for judicial independence:

One particularly strident commentary piece by conservative columnist Phyllis Schlafly, published a week after the ruling, really set Jones off.

Schlafly wrote that Jones, a career Republican appointed to the federal bench by President Bush in 2002, wouldn't be a judge if not for the "millions of evangelical Christians" who supported Bush in 2000. His ruling, she wrote, "stuck the knife in the backs of those who brought him to the dance in Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District."

"The implication was that I should throw one for the home team," Jones said. "There were people who said during trial they could not accept, and did not anticipate, that a Republican judge appointed by a Republican president could do anything other than rule in the favor of the defendants."

Read more here.

Kudos for Judge Jones for his upright decision, and kudos to him for going to bat for the separation of powers.
Tuesday, June 06, 2006 

Category: Religion and Philosophy
Wednesday, May 31, 2006 

Category: News and Politics
The frat boy coalition to make America tax free and less gay marches on.

Also, what is Jeb's military record? Am I missing something here?