From Pine View Farm

2008 archive

Post-Election Post Mortem 0

No, not a post mortem on the election.

A post mortem on the post election.

Share

Don’t Get Fooled Lost Again 0

Oh, my.

Via Wait! Wait!

Share

Lieberman–>Leaverman 0

Why Joe has got to go (from the Washington Monthly):

This seems to be routinely overlooked, but take a moment to consider what the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs actually does: it’s the committee principally responsible for oversight of the executive branch. It’s an accountability committee, charged with investigating the conduct of the White House and the president’s administration.

As chairman of this committee for the last two years, Lieberman decided not to pursue any accusations of wrongdoing against the Bush administration. Lieberman’s House counterpart — Rep. Henry Waxman’s Oversight Committee — was a vigilant watchdog, holding hearings, issuing subpoenas, and launching multiple investigations. Lieberman preferred to let his committee do no real work at all. It was arguably the most pathetic display of this Congress.

And yet, now Lieberman acts as if keeping this chairmanship is the single most important part of his public life. Why would he be so desperate to keep the gavel of a committee he hasn’t used? I’ll let you in on a secret: he wants to start using the power of this committee against Obama.

It’s time to consign Joe Lieberman to the dustbin of Republicanism where he can feel at home.

Via Andrew Sullivan.

Share

From Blue States to Red States 0

I just got an email including a memo “From Blue States to Red States.”

I haven’t found the original, but I did find a source on the web.

You can read an excerpt below the fold.

Read more »

Share

TV News 0

There’re reasons I watched the returns on NPR.

Reality-based. No screaming.

Bill Shein sums it up nicely here.

Share

Bushonomics 0

Bonddad on the National Debt (follow the link to see the full analysis):

I’ve been complaining about the deficit for the last 4 years. And I will continue to complain about the deficit for one primary reason: as a country we have to make choices. Some things are more important than others. Those things we find important we should spend more money on.

Over the last 8 years we have not made any choices. Instead we have funded, well, everything that has come down the pike. In addition, we cut taxes, further exacerbating the problem of deficit financing. As a result, we have issued mammoth amounts of public and intra-government debt. Here’s a reading of the last 8 years from the Bureau of Public Debt:

    09/30/2008 $10,024,724,896,912.49
    09/30/2007 $9,007,653,372,262.48
    09/30/2006 $8,506,973,899,215.23
    09/30/2005 $7,932,709,661,723.50
    09/30/2004 $7,379,052,696,330.32
    09/30/2003 $6,783,231,062,743.62
    09/30/2002 $6,228,235,965,597.16
    09/30/2001 $5,807,463,412,200.06
    09/30/2000 $5,674,178,209,886.86

The current total is $10,566,146,196,490.58.

My words, not Bonddad’s: Republican Economic Theory is beggaring the nation.

And anyone who understands arithmetic saw it coming.

Share

Stray Thought 2

Now that baseball is over, the Sports Section has lost its allure.

Share

The Party of Thelma and Louise 1

The Republican Party ignores the warning signs and chooses to drive off the cliff.

This is good news.

Share

Kristol Klear 0

Dick Polman is one of my favorite political analysts. He’s perceptive and fact-based, writes well, and has a sense of humor.

His blog post today is a potpourri of comments about the election and its aftermath; it is well worth five minutes.

The best part, though, is this, occuring about 2/3rds of the way down the page:

I wasn’t totally sold on the notion that Obama would win this election…until the 30th of October, when Bill Kristol let loose with a bullish prediction about the GOP, declaring on TV that John McCain would “win huge.” Given Kristol’s long track record of being grievously wrong almost all the time (starting with his pie-eyed prognostications about an Iraq war), that’s when I knew Obama truly had it in the bag.

The neoconservative talking head and columnist is always worth hearing and reading, if only so that we can safely conclude the opposite of whatever he is predicting. For instance, he said during the runup to ’08 that “Fred Thompson knows what he’s doing, and he will be formidable,” which meant, of course, that Thompson didn’t have a clue and was destined to be toast.

This summer, Kristol envisioned a GOP ticket of “McCain-Lieberman” or “McCain-Ridge,” which meant that we could safely conclude that neither guy had a prayer of being picked.

Last year, he predicted that voters would “recoil” from the prospect of electing a Democratic president and Democratic Congress, thereby alerting us that ’08 would be a good Democratic year.

Last year, he also predicted that George W. Bush would go down in history as a successful president, in part because he would leave behind “a strong economy,” which meant, of course, that Bush would play out his string with the economy in free fall and the conservative deregulation credo in disrepute.

And his sunny 2005 economic prediction – “Last week the Bush Administration’s second-term bear market bottomed out” – was sufficient proof that the worst second-term bear market was still to come.

Obama supporters can only hope that Kristol will soon insist, in his New York Times column, that the new president will prove to be an unmitigated disaster. Such a prediction may well trigger further dancing in the streets.

I wish I could get established as a right-wing pundit; I’d love to be in a line of work where being consistently and persistently wrong just seems to cement job security.

Never happen, though. I’m not a very good liar.

Share

A Dose of Reality 0

From John Cole.

Share

Pop Pyschology 0

Does this help us understand wingnut talk radio hosts?

Brain scans of teens with a history of aggressive bullying behavior suggest that they may actually get pleasure out of seeing someone else in pain, U.S. researchers said on Friday.

Share

Bushonomics 0

So far this year 1.2 million jobs have been lost, 651,000 in the past three months alone, showing labor markets are crumbling faster and heightening chances of a deep recession.

Share

Election Tidbit 0

Cumberland Country, North Carolina:

Obama: 73,926

McCain: 51,596

Cumberland County is the home of Fort Bragg.

Share

Facebook Is a Public Place 2

It doesn’t take an IT certification to know that nothing that passes through the internet is private.

Exhibit one:

See, here was Buck’s (Buck Burnette–U. of Texas footballer–ed.) Facebook status following Barack Obama’s win the presidential election:

    “all the hunters gather up, we have a #$%&er in the whitehouse”

Geez, Buck. Even if you actually feel that way — which is sad — why not just keep it to yourself? You know, instead of telling five million people. But he didn’t, and naturally, he is now paying the price; he’s been kicked off the UT football team.

Exhibit two (from across the Big Pond–later in the article, the author explores whether such a firing would be legal in the US):

Virgin Atlantic airline fired 13 employees for what they said on Facebook. The charge: The employees “brought the company into disrepute.” The evidence: a discussion that said its airplanes (their workplace) harbored cockroaches and that its customers were “chavs,” the British slang equivalent of “white trash.”

Share

Legacy 0

From the Guardian:

“Go enjoy yourself,” said President Bush in his congratulatory telephone call to Barack Obama on election night. It was like a child who has just smashed up all his toys inviting another to come and play in his nursery. To inherit two wars and a broken economy would not be most people’s idea of fun. But that’s pig-headed Bush for you.

His remark made me brood about the trials that Obama will face as president and the sad likelihood of disappointed expectations . . . .

Share

Power Blip 0

This morning. Had to turn the one printer back on and reset the clocks on the microwave and the DVD player.

But the UPS’s worked. The servers, the modem, the router, and the hubs stayed up and the internet connection held.

Share

Swift Recoveries 0

A few days ago, Jon Swift wrote one of his usual brilliant, prescient posts, enumerating the many reasons why John McCain was going to win the election.

It is well worth five minutes of your time, even though, well, he sort of, like, you know, blew it. Like, totally, Dude.

But he has recovered quickly, and here explains how the election of a scary black man is a good thing for conservativism and presages its resurgence.

It is worth a read.

Share

Bachman Censure Overdrive 0

Fight the effort to revive McCarthyism and bring shame to the United States of America.

Sign the petition.

Via Phawker.

Share

Make It Happen 0

Let the Republicans all sit together:

From Josh Marshall:

Contact the Democratic Steering and Outreach Committee here.

Sign the petition here.

H/T Brendan for the link.

Share

The Culture of Life 0

From Brendan.

Share
From Pine View Farm
Privacy Policy

This website does not track you.

It contains no private information. It does not drop persistent cookies, does not collect data other than incoming ip addresses and page views (the internet is a public place), and certainly does not collect and sell your information to others.

Some sites that I link to may try to track you, but that's between you and them, not you and me.

I do collect statistics, but I use a simple stand-alone Wordpress plugin, not third-party services such as Google Analitics over which I have no control.

Finally, this is website is a hobby. It's a hobby in which I am deeply invested, about which I care deeply, and which has enabled me to learn a lot about computers and computing, but it is still ultimately an avocation, not a vocation; it is certainly not a money-making enterprise (unless you click the "Donate" button--go ahead, you can be the first!).

I appreciate your visiting this site, and I desire not to violate your trust.