Posted on June 8, 2006 in Gyms
Today’s rug bug sits on the bench in front of the lockers, his gear spread everywhere. He’s half naked, reading a paper, sitting about a locker and a half away. When I open my locker to get my stuff, he moves his clothes, but doesn’t move and keeps reading his paper. I watch my butt around him.
Posted on June 7, 2006 in Biomes Routine
A canyon does not weep. It gathers the waters of rains and dews, spews a runoff that floods sand and rubble hidden beneath more of the same. The alders and the mulefat betray the stream’s presence, but they do not drag it to the surface and force it to wet the parched banks.
In my car, I thought about what I could not see and what I could not reveal. Secrets that I had to keep. That left me with the election. I hated writing about politics because though there was rage, I had no excitement for it. Stretching out to create a political opinion exhausted me with a slow, velvet rasp. I was bored because there was no canyon, no trees, no mulefat with its froggy-bottom-smell. The rain misted the road and the air.
I do not do well at these times when others belittle me into silence, leaving me with only ordinary current affairs. I feel intensity with no purpose. Reminding me that a canyon cannot weep.
Damn it! Say something or let me!
Posted on June 7, 2006 in Journalists & Pundits Mania Scoundrels
I take exception to the declaration that Ann is crazy. She is not.
Posted on June 7, 2006 in Class Journalists & Pundits
Some reporters downplayed the seriousness of changing the U.S. Constitution by suggesting that the Republicans’ proposed amendment was a routine political ploy of the sort both parties engage in. As National Public Radio political editor Ken Rudin put it on CNN (6/5/06): “It’s politics, not politics in a bad way, but it’s politics. Democrats have done the same thing. They’ll insist on a vote on raising the minimum wage, not that they’ll have it or not, but to put Republicans in the uncomfortable position of having to vote for and against it. A tactic that’s been used since the dawn of creation.”
One might point out that there’s a significant legal and qualitative distinction between a constitutional amendment limiting the civil rights of Americans and a legislative attempt to give poor workers a raise.
Norman Solomons, FAIR
The Usurper is far too hungry for adulation and a Congress that will wreak his will. He has screwed the country over, gaining for himself the dishonor of being known as the worst and most corrupt president in American history. We cannot be sure that his legacy will be undone in our lifetime. It will take a great president and a united American people to reverse corporate power’s hold on our government. We must have the courage to take it back.
The issues are twofold: the limiting of civil rights and redirection of resources. It’s bad enough that a minority of Americans support institutionalized homophobia. I oppose it now and I will oppose it because the government — not the People — must be limited in what it can do. No matter how many housewives complain about how they can’t imagine themselves in bed with a woman or how a man can take another man to wife those housewives have no business changing the law of their land towards this end. Diversity is about getting along with others. Diversity is Democracy.
Isn’t the gap between the richest and the poorest in this country an entirely different matter? Where the Republicans champion a measure which will only entangle us in bureaucratized homophobia, the Democrats offer a plan which will improve the quality of life of the working poor and do a small bit to lessen the gap between the rich and the poor. There’s a big difference between these and I protest the oversimplication.
The gay marriage ban is nothing more than a maneuver by corporate America to swell the number of conservative voters going to the polls, shore up the base of a disastrous chief executive, and prevent working Americans from empowering themselves. I shall not be fooled and neither should you.
Posted on June 6, 2006 in Gyms
A man stood before the grooming station, blow-drying his pubes.
Posted on June 5, 2006 in Mania Stigma
A very real danger of not telling is to find yourself in a position like that of Professor Magloe: the administration will observe your behavior in the worst possible light and punish you for “character” shortcomings.
Posted on June 5, 2006 in Bugs
This is my second choice of page design and I hope it works well for you while I tinker with the theme-switcher.
The flowers will be back!
Posted on June 5, 2006 in DBSA Support Groups and Conferences
A support group must be about honesty, tears, and trust.
Posted on June 4, 2006 in Bugs
The theme switcher (which was the source of the problem) will be back later this week. (Hack hack hack.) In the meantime, you get to enjoy my Jakarta. Sorry for the inconvenience. By brute force, if necessary, I will have this working again.
Posted on June 4, 2006 in Browsers Bugs
Something weird is happening and I am trying to isolate the problem. It may come and go. (It didn’t turn up for me when asked about this before. Now it is there.) In the meantime, please try using Opera or IE.
It might be related to the last Firefox upgrade. There is documentation that I will attempt to implement.
Posted on June 3, 2006 in Bipolar Disorder
It is even worse to be caught, to be called a dullard or a bore or a narcissist.