Jan
30
2012
2

Tree-hugging socialist lunacy

The alleged entertainment value of this endless Republican primary campaign is, to a very great extent, lost on me. I consider the whole spectacle an unhelpful, absolutely ludicrous farce, which of course consumes real attention and other resources which could be better spent on just about anything you care to name. I stand by my assertion that Mitt Romney is the Republican presidential candidate, and all the continued insistence that there is some sort of competitive race still in progress is just meaningless noise.

All that said, this is so choice that I do feel a smidge of gratitude for the context which prompted it, however ludicrous it is otherwise. Economist blogger N.L. of Chicago examines Newt Gingrich’s recent new personal record in campaign-trail clowning, the promise of a “permanent moon base” within just a dozen years, which would seem to exemplify the silliness of most coverage of this campaign. Yet in giving this implausible dream-scenario a serious look, N.L. somehow confounds all logic to produce results which are nothing short of sublime:

Technologically, then, it is feasible to get 15,000 people onto the moon for the kind of money that exists in America’s treasury. But then things start to enter the realm of fantasy [...] it will become necessary to work out how to create a closed-loop ecological system—where everything is recycled, reused and entirely sustainable. Energy must be renewable. Food must be grown, waste water must be reused and the air must be kept clean. In other words it would resemble the sort of crazy liberal fantasy that drives Republicans nuts on Earth.

Yes, that is quite good. Quite, quite good. The closing paragraph is really almost overkill, but hey, so is the entire campaign, so:

…as [Moon Base Gingrich] pursues statehood, we must consider whether it will swing Republican or Democrat. Lets think about this, the population will be highly educated, eco-friendly and very likely dependent on vast government support. Perhaps Newt [genuinely] has gone mad.

Written by matt in: Politics,technology | Tags: , ,
Jan
25
2012
3

State of the Union 2012

Yeah, I don’t have much at present. I’m sure you’re coping.

I didn’t watch the State of the Union address, as per usual (or the rebuttals or, gods help us, the probably a permanent fixture from now on “prebuttals”), and having looked at various summaries and commentaries I struggle to find anything to even fix on.

Which is why I couldn’t resist highlighting this one reaction from The Atlantic Cities:

The Urban Message Missing From the State of the Union
The issues facing the nation’s cities were largely ignored in the president’s speech

I mean, the general impression I get of Obama’s 2012 address was that it was a piled-up heap of just about everything but the kitchen sink. But, y’know, hey. We’ve still got to have at least one (and probably more than one) person coming along the next morning to lament that “well, the president didn’t even mention xyz issue once!” (Though “largely ignored” suggests to me that there wasn’t even a complete absence, here, and this guy’s still complaining.)

Apparently we still expect the president to be not only all things to all people but to be all those things at all times. Right-o, that’s realistic, then. Carry on everyone.

Written by matt in: Obama | Tags: ,
Jan
18
2012
0

Small victories: Keystone and SOPA

I’ve already posted about one of these, earlier, and neither is really yet at the point of being anything like what you could call a real “mission accomplished,” and etc., etc., so-on so-forth.

But I think the combination of these two positive policy developments, on the same day, is enough to really demand a brief note. Not often do we get even one item of good news like these, however compromised, let alone both:

That’s not too bad. Both of these proposals epitomize the “migod can we just not do this completely stupid unhelpful horrible abomination” ideas that are all-too common in American politics. Yeah, sure, the list of reasons for restraining the urge to celebrate is long and familiar: Neither measure is really necessarily “dead” yet; industry-backed monstrosities like these are never really truly “dead” anyway. Even if stopped, for now, they’ll sneak back. Neither measure’s defeat really amounts to any kind of actual progress. Nor do these limited little “non-defeats” come close to being “enough” relative to the big-picture of the challenges we’re facing. Nothing ever seems like it is or will be enough.

All true, but, aside from the fact that if this is about as good as we ever actually do we might as well take the opportunity to celebrate when we can because otherwise we’ll eventually just die without ever having let ourselves enjoy the feeling of winning… (more…)

Written by matt in: Politics | Tags: , , , ,

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