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I’m not sure what she means

This comic cracked my wife up this morning. She says it reminds her of someone, but I can’t imagine who.

Friday Night Music

Before their unfortunate veer into disco, the one form of music that is not truly music, the Bee Gees were a decent enough group, featuring harmonies on reasonably decent songs. So, despite their sins, for which I’m sure they have since repented (having pocketed the boodle therefrom) they deserve their .15 seconds of fame on this blog. Anyway, I actually chose this song because it’s the only one I could think of that makes reference, however slightly, to our present plight (or perhaps yours-our lights are back on), albeit in the case of this song they’re referring to our sister state to the North. But there’s not much we can do about that; no one writes songs about Connecticut.

Back from the Shadows again

So, my wife and I were sitting at our dining room table, bitching and moaning about CL&P’s lousy repair record (according to their website, not a single customer in Groton had gotten power for about a day and a half) when suddenly, a fan went on. It took us several seconds to realize what that meant, at which point there was much rejoicing in the land, or at least our little sliver of it.

Do I take back the black thoughts I directed at CL&P? Not a bit of it. These outages should never be so widespread, nor should CL&P employ fewer line persons now than when Gloria struck. I know I grow old and cranky, but this I remember. In my first year of law school, in December of 1972, I resided with my mother in Hartford. There was odd weather that month. Two or three severe ice storms hit the state and the result, not surprisingly, was a lot of downed power lines. There was much talk about implementing a rather obvious, albeit costly (in the short term) solution: burying the power lines. This, I am informed, is what they do in socialistic Europe. Of course, it never happened. I note as well that the two municipal utilities in our area have returned their service areas to about 100% of service, proving that socialism works in some situations, particularly in the case of natural monopolies, and particularly in the case of natural monopolies for the necessities of life, such as water and electricity. Recall, also, that it was only the municipally owned utilities in California that avoided the worst of the supply manipulation several years back. I’m fairly sure that if we broke up our privately owned utilities into smaller, municipal or regional utilities, anything we lost by losing economies of scale would be gained by the fact that we needn’t generate a profit.

This hurricane has taught us several lessons we won’t learn. Here’s one: Those of us in the reality based world should realize that we have to start pushing back, and pushing back hard against the climate change denialists. Unfortunately, being people who appreciate the truth, we are reluctant to assign the blame for any individual climate event to global warming. It wouldn’t be quite honest. But whether we choose to fight fire with fire, or stick with the truth, we have to be aggressive about making the point that these events are, overall, getting more frequent and more extreme. Unfortunately, it does us no good to do this unless the politicians who get our votes join in, but there’s no chance of that. The Republicans are quite capable of convincing a large percentage of Americans that this country, which is currently borrowing money at an effective interest rate of less than 0% (meaning we can, in essence get money for free), is bankrupt, and they can even get the Democrats to go along with the scam, but the Democrats are incapable of, and not interested in, convincing people that climate change is an imminent threat, despite the facts. I personally have long since given up on the idea that this is merely incompetence on the part of the Democrats. The institutional party has no interest in taking on the corporations. The role of the Democrats is to pay impotent lip service to the desirability of dealing with the issue, but to bemoan the fact that there’s simply nothing they can do, and go on to the next surrender. Republicans, on the other hand, never give up. They’re a bit like those punching bag toys: knock em down, and they come back up, insisting, like the knight in Monty Python, that it’s only a scratch. Eventually, the most extreme position becomes palatable by virtue of endless repetition, and they get what they want.

Ah, but this rant must end. Yes, we are, this time, really on the eve of destruction, but for the moment I can savor the cup of hot tea I’ve been lusting for all week, and look forward to a warm shower tomorrow morning.

Closed due to power failure

Realistically, I doubt that our power will be back before the weekend. Maybe, if I’m lucky, in time for Friday night video. Right now I’ve managed to get my iPad near free wireless, but more opportunities will be infrequent, so I’ll stay shuttered for the duration.

Some Political Predictions about the hurricane

What we might expect to hear:

1. Obama failed to take the hurricane’s threat seriously and failed to lead. Also, from the same folks, Obama overreacted. Also, still from the same folks, Obama should have left the hurricane to the professionals and by interjecting himself into the situation he was merely engaging in political grandstanding and was endangering the lives of the storm’s victims.

2. The government’s response to the hurricane was inadequate and also, by the way, the government has no legitimate role to play in responding to natural disasters, all of which should be dealt with by the states, unless they happen to happen in a state in which the speaking politico happens to reside, in which case the government’s failure to assist that state is shocking, appalling, and Obama’s fault, despite the fact that the politico in question voted against properly funding FEMA.

3. There were no mismanaged natural disasters when Bush was president.

4. I’m not saying there’s necessarily a connection, but did you notice that the hurricane hit several portions of the country where gay people live?

Friday Night Music-Everything’s Broken

I’ve put up Ben Sidran before, and ordinarily I wouldn’t deem him worthy of a repeat performance, but his is the best video version of this song that I can find, and for reasons that should be painfully obvious to anyone with their eyes open, this song seems quite timely right now. I’m ordinarily an optimistic kind of guy, beneath my veneer of cynicism, but I’m afraid that recent events have left me with a gnawing feeling that- well, that everything’s broken.

Perry grabs the lead

Rick Perry is now the leading candidate for the Republican nomination, hopefully proving only that no one really likes Mitt, and they will consider any alternative, until that alternative demonstrates that he or she is insane, which, luckily for Mitt, they all eventually do. Still, as H.L Mencken said,
“no one ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American public”, so it is entirely possible that we could get this moron as our next president, the memory of Bush (Jim Hightower says “Rick Perry is George Bush without the intelligence or ethics” ) perhaps dissipating more quickly than we might think. But I’m going to go out on a limb here, and actually bet on the American people (even the very stupid subset of Republicans) are not that stupid, and that Perry will wither on the vine as people get to know and loathe him. Of course, I’m not willing to put up real money where my mouth is. The odds aren’t that good. We must consider, after all, the Republican trend since Nixon, with each president, Bush 1 a possible exception, worse than his predecessor. Bush 2, being the worst ever, should be hard to top ( or is it bottom?) but Perry bids fair to steal the bottom slot should he get a chance.

Inconsistent with Christian values

The Republicans continue to test the limits of what they can get away with, if they only wrap it in Jesus. Here’s a guy who says he stopped going to strip clubs when it occurred to him that his hobby was inconsistent with his fundie Christian values. Apparently, at some point he must have considered that it was consistent with said values, but, upon reflection, changed his mind. I would have thought it was self-evident, but then, maybe not, maybe not, maybe not.

A prediction

I’m easing back into things here, so I figured I’d start with some real fluff, and what’s fluffier than Sarah Palin? Talking Points is reporting that there are mixed signs about her intentions, but that there are indications that she will throw her bonnet into the ring come September. Personally, I hope she runs, and I think she will. For a number of Republicans, running for President has nothing to do with actually wanting to be President-it’s a money making move. Sarah has found, in recent months, that even the idiot media can in fact get enough of her if she’s not in the game. Her shelf life has nearly expired and the only way to reinvigorate it is for her to get back in the mix. She can keep her brand in the black for years after the next election, because after she loses she can play the victim of the media, the Democrats, and the Republican establishment, which she can blame for denying her the nomination she doesn’t really want. She could potentially grift for at least four more years nursing that grievance, and go out with an avalanche of cash in 2012 by going the distance as a third party candidate. If she doesn’t get back in the game she’ll just be another Christine O’Donnell, reduced to walking off of a TV set just to generate some short term buzz.

For my own part, I’d just love to watch the Palin-Bachmann battles, as they fight over the same turf. Bachmann may actually want to win, making her the more vulnerable of the two, as Sarah can stick to nothing but raw meat for the right wing yahoos, while Bachmann will be forced to trim her sails a bit, against the off chance that the Republican party will actually nominate her.

All of which would make the Republican party like a club for the insane, which, come to think of it, it is.

I’ll say it again: Obama is the luckiest guy in the world. No one with the sad record he has put together should be the favorite at this point, but he still is. If he were allowed to pick his opponents, he couldn’t have done better.

Book review

We have returned from Vermont, and it is therefore incumbent upon me to return to this blog, though I’m sure there are many that would urge me to prolong my literary silence of the past two weeks. But, alas, it cannot be.

I am still blissfully ignorant of recent events, except I’m aware that in a recent local probate court race our Democratic candidate prevailed, but probate court elections provide little grist for the pundit. Nor is the Libyan situation clarified enough for comment. The old boss looks to be gone, but we don’t yet know who the new boss will be.

So, I thought I’d write about the book I’m currently reading: Ethan Allen: His Life and Times, by Willard Sterne Randall, a fitting read given my recent Vermont sojourn. I am assuming that most of what Randall has written about Allen is true, an assumption that I would be more confident about were it not for a number of obvious factual errors in the book. I am fairly sure, for instance, that even in the 18th century, Portsmouth, New Hampshire was North of Boston, and I’m also confident that the Connecticut Courant was published in Hartford and not in New Haven. But, putting aside these and other editing errors, the book is worth a read because poor Ethan is a fairly neglected figure, except up there in Vermont, where he is justly honored as a founding figure of the short lived Republic of Vermont which, perhaps to its regret, voluntarily entered this now fraying union.

We all know that Allen captured Ticonderoga, with a little help from Norwich native Benedict Arnold, but he pretty much fades from history after that remarkable feat. This is primarily because he was captured leading a doomed attack on Montreal and spent several years in British prisons, in which prisons more Americans died during the Revolution than in battle. As an aside, we could formerly be proud of the fact that George Washington, et. al., from the start treated their prisoners with humanity, an enlightened precedent that we have, along with so many other enlightened precedents, recently cast away. Allen wrote a book about his experiences, which remained popular until the Civil War era, and which had a salutary effect, according to Randall at least, on this nation’s policy toward wartime prisoners, until recently, of course.

More interesting about Allen, a Connecticut native, is the fact that he led his guerrilla band, the Green Mountain Boys, for several years before the war in a protracted struggle against the royal governor of the Colony of New York, which, along with New Hampshire, claimed what is now Vermont as its own. Allen and his compatriots had titles stemming from New Hampshire grants, and they banded together to resist New York’s demand that they either vacate their lands or buy them for a second time. The struggle was largely successful, and it appears they managed to win through intimidation, some rough justice, and what we might today call terrorism, without ever actually killing anyone, though they did threaten death quite liberally. When Allen entered New York to take Ticonderoga, he was a wanted man, with a price on his head and a sentence of death already imposed. Allen was certainly protecting his own interests-he and his brothers purchased thousands of Vermont acres-but he appears to have acted just as much on behalf of the other settlers who owned small farms. During the war he protected Vermont in another way: by getting the British to believe Vermont might switch sides in exchange for recognition. As a result, the British stopped border raids. The bluff was believable because New York was refusing to let the rest of the country recognize Vermont.

Even more interesting, to my mind, is the fact that Allen, who came from a very religious family, pretty much shed his religion, first becoming an Anglican (which is only barely a religion) and then becoming a deist if not an atheist. He was drummed out of Salisbury, Connecticut, basically for apostasy. He had little formal schooling, but was a voracious reader, and late in his life wrote a book in which he embraced reason (remember reason, it actually was once the guiding principle of American politics) and both rejected and ridiculed revealed religion, much like his soul mate, Tom Paine. In fact, there are some who claim Paine stole from Allen, but that’s maybe going a little far. Allen got the same treatment from the clerics as Paine, but the people of Vermont didn’t turn against him. It never ceases to amaze me how many of these pioneer types educated themselves to such a high degree of both literacy and philosophical sophistication, in Allen’s case, while taking care of his fatherless family and then leading a guerrilla band in Vermont.

All in all, a good read, despite the inaccuracies and a lot of disorienting chronological backtracking. Allen comes across as much more substantial than a mere swashbuckler.

Back to politics tomorrow.