Northern luminaries

Categories: General

My friend Rob MacDougall has a nifty new blog, which I cannot recommend strongly enough if you are interested in the history of technology. Share and enjoy.

November 10, 2004 · 1 min · Bryant

Inner voice

Categories: Personal

My pal Jamie’s doing a music exchange — burn a CD with your favorite songs of all time on it, send it to everyone on the list, you know the drill. In one of those fleeting moments of personal revelation I sometimes indulge in, here’s mine. (Yeah, that’s a pretty weak excuse for personal revelation.)

November 10, 2004 · 2 min · Bryant

No more song

Categories: Politics

Ashcroft has resigned (original). That’s good.

November 9, 2004 · 1 min · Bryant

Irony

Categories: Culture

“Listen… There’s another national anthem playing, Not the one you cheer At the ball park.” “We’re the other national anthem, folks, The ones that can’t get in To the ball park.” Available from iTunes, happily enough.

November 8, 2004 · 1 min · Bryant

Polish and publish

Categories: Politics

If anyone was paying attention to my list of criteria for judging Bush’s success, it’s been updated.

November 7, 2004 · 1 min · Bryant

Terse

Categories: Reviews

The Incredibles is really really good, but if you’ve been reading reviews, you don’t need me to tell you that. I teared up a bit, I forgot it wasn’t a live-action movie, yes it really is one of the best superhero movies ever period. I got nothing much to say beyond “Wow, awesome.” Go go go.

November 6, 2004 · 1 min · Bryant

Public service message

Categories: Culture

The song entitled “Going Through The Motions” on the new Aimee Mann live album (original) is not the song sung by Sarah Michelle Gellar on Buffy during the musical episode. So don’t get your hopes up like I did.

November 4, 2004 · 1 min · Bryant

Collected thoughts

Categories: Politics

Probably not my last note on this, but quite possibly my last for today: Kerry was not a bad candidate. There was not a magic candidate who would have gotten the Democrats 51% of the vote. Clinton didn’t win because he was from Arkansas, he won because he was an incredibly good campaigner. He might not have won this election. It’s not as if there’s any evidence that a more moderate candidate (and Kerry’s fairly moderate) would have done better. ...

November 3, 2004 · 4 min · Bryant

Signposts

Categories: Politics

Regarding new directions, I recommend to you David Neiwert, who remembers that the American progressive movement started both inside and outside the cities. But we have terminology issues here. At present, progressive is used as a substitute for liberal. I’m not entirely sure that’s accurate, considering that Teddy Roosevelt wound up a progressive in the end. My personal current bet is that within ten years we’ll have a moderate party and a conservative party. I hedge this by saying that I don’t think civil liberties are a liberal or a conservative issue — see also William Weld and (odd fellow traveller, here) Bob Barr. I think there’s a small chance that neither of these parties will be the Democratic Party. It’s possible that one of them will be progressive. ...

November 3, 2004 · 1 min · Bryant

Huh!

Categories: Politics

Well, that was unexpected and I have no explanation. Ohio is within the polling margin of error, so I’m disappointed but not shocked. The 5% margin in Florida is surprising. Possibly I should have been paying attention to Gallup. The interesting question for me, right now, is how the pollsters failed to catch a chunk of Bush voters, cause Florida wasn’t even close. And Zogby’s not gonna have quite as many clients next cycle. Ah, the perils of being a celebrity pollster. Then again, I seem to have made similar mistakes. ...

November 3, 2004 · 1 min · Bryant