Thursday, March 31, 2005

One more writer to ignore at the New York Times

It's Thursday and I am still reeling over a story called "Broke: Why is a nation that considers spending a civic duty approving harsher ways to punish the bankrupt?", written by Walter Kirn for the New York Times Sunday Magazine.
He blames bankruptcies in America on credit card and finance companies, financial pages and cable business channels touting consumerism and generally speaking, our entire capitalist economy.

He summons up our compassion and sympathy with statements like "And then someone falls ill or is divorced or suffers a loss of emotional control and buys a $9,000 plasma tv...""The next day a letter from the National Guard arrives informing the fellow to pack a duffel bag because he's headed to Iraq...the telephone rings...but he doesn't answer" because he knows it's the credit card co. at least that is what Mr. Kirn implies. Good grief! This guy has a flair for the melodramatic. He should be writing soap operas or be in the entertainment business.

I check his byline, "a frequent contributor to the magazine" and a novelist. That explains it! No business background, no money or finance education, no experience as a credit counselor or a loan officer, just a dramatic story written by a fiction writer.

There was a time when you were expected to know something about the subject you wrote about. Mr. Kirn should at least read the business pages before he condemns their messages. But this isn't really what I object to.
Increasingly "journalism" relies on feelings over facts. Emotions reign over reason. Analysis and critical thinking are considered hostile, antagonistic and (horrors) lacking compassion.
When facts are presented, they only reflect a small part of the story. Divorces and medical expenses are cited as major reasons for bankruptcies. But aren't these really just bad decisions? Afterall we choose who we marry. I don't know of many arranged marriages anymore. Furthermore if my husband spent 3 years worth of medical insurance on a plasma tv, I would probably divorce him too. But you see that is MY choice.

Mr. Kirn never mentions the choices individuals have or the decisions they make that contribute to their situations. He never mentions who PAYS for these bankruptcies, you know like you and me with our increased interest rates and the higher prices of goods & services. He never mentions the enormous BENEFITS of credit. It finances college educations, builds homes, starts businesses. Women fought for the same priviledge to obtain and use it as men. It literally can mean the difference between hope & despair. Even Third World countries know what a difference a loan can make.

I do not consider Mr. Kirn's writing as responsible, credible journalism so I won't be reading any more of his articles. But I wonder why The New York Times publishes his work.
Last I heard Walter was also writing/working for a calling card company. That sounds pretty close to those evil credit lenders with escalating unfair rates he so adamantly objects to.

Wednesday, March 30, 2005

Problems in Paradise aka Blogger Blues

Sorry! It's been one thing after another...I can open my blog but I can't post. Sometimes I can't even find myself. No I'm not having identity problems, or on some existential trip but Blogger seems to be testing me. Just how much frustration am I willing to tolerate? One day I didn't have any links. That was weird, alone floating within the blogosphere, no direction, no connections, my favorite places just out of reach. I have since corrected that problem. But it makes me wonder, what will be next? So I'll be quick.
Some of the things I will be working on in April: It's POETRY MONTH. So I'll have to celebrate by posting short little ditties and providing links (if able) to favorite longer ones.
I am also, anxiously looking forward to receiving my new bass viola da gamba. I actually commissioned an artist/craftsman to copy an original on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art over a year ago. This is a huge treat for an amateur like myself and I am very excited. When it arrives I will probably post photos and possibly a small audio sample.

Thursday, March 24, 2005

Breaking the sound barrier


F18 jet breaking the sound barrier, courtesy of Oscar Medina, CE of KNSD (TV) San Diego Posted by Hello

I love photos like this and this one appeals to me on so many levels.
First of all, I think it is beautiful and inspiring...and who couldn't use an uplifting image now when the media is consumed with covering the sad story of Terri Schiavo???
Secondly, even though jets regularly break the sound barrier, capturing the exact millisecond of the resulting "plume" on film or digitally is very rare.
Thirdly, in the face of all our shortcomings, that we human beings are able to design, and build and even dream such a magnificent thing is truly awesome.

High Flight: By John Gillespie Magee Jr.

Oh! I have slipped the surly bonds of Earth
And danced the skies on laughter-silvered wings;
Sunward I've climbed, and joined the tumbling mirth
Of sun-split clouds - and done a hundred things
You have not dreamed of - wheeled and soared and swung
High in the sunlit silence. Hov'ring there
I've chased the shouting wind along, and flung
My eager craft through footless halls of air.
Up, up the long delirious, burning blue,
I've topped the windswept heights with easy grace
Where never lark, or even eagle flew -
And, while the silent lifting mind I've trod
The high untrespassed sanctity of space,
Put out my hand and touched the face of God.

Monday, March 21, 2005

Yo! Johann as in Sebastian Bach, Happy Birthday!

J.S. Bach was born on March 21, 1685 and died in 1750. He married once, fathered 20 children (with the same woman) of which 8 died in infancy and 1 as a young adult. He lived and worked his entire life in Germany. His musical contemporaries were Teleman, Vivaldi, Scarlatti, Handel and many more too numerous to list here. An interesting website detailing his life with modern pictures and great old drawings is here .In honor of his work, my quartet (sometimes quintet) played Bach all morning: Two Little Fugues, Sheep May Safely Graze from Cantata 208, Air and Gigue from Suite No. 3 in D Major. I marvel at music still being heard and played today written by a man born 320 years ago . I wonder what present day music will be performed and listened to in the next 300 years?

Friday, March 18, 2005


circle indulgence Posted by Hello

Another nail in the coffin of MSM

My initial reaction to Steven Levy's article in Newsweek at MSNBC - Blogging Beyond the Men's Club was that the mainstream media still doesn't get it. How can a technology writer understand so little about the blogosphere (which he dares to write about) and the people who populate it (bloggers & blog readers)? No wonder I haven't renewed my subscription to Newsweek.
He says "Since anyone can write a weblog, why is the blogosphere dominated by white males?"
My answer to him is, only a white, male, mainstream media representative would ask that question and think it was the least bit pertinent. And only a white , male , mainstream media representative would believe it!
None of my experiences or perceptions support Mr. Levy's assertions.
First of all, I believe the majority of blogs belong to teenage girls, at least that has been my experience, followed by women who write personal journals. I do not believe either one of these groups would consider the blogosphere to be "dominated by white males". But then again, I can't imagine any female I know, using that language without smirking, if not guffawing.
Secondly I question the criteria used in determining Mr. Levys' "top rung" blogs. "Voluminous traffic, links from other bigfeet, conference invitations, White House press passes", isn't why I prefer some blogs to others and doesn't fit my idea of "top rung". I don't covet any of those things but clearly they are important to Mr. Levy.
Obviously he and I visit different blogs. Some I check out a couple of times a day, if only for 30 seconds. Others I may visit only twice a week, but find myself lingering, and reading a variety of articles. They are, of course entirely different kinds of blogs with their own unique appeal. I would be hard pressed to pick a favorite between them because they are so different.
In fact I find a great deal of diversity within the blogosphere. When Levy asks why "the top rung look so homogenous " and then answers himself with "it appears some clubbiness is involved," I have to laugh. He sets his own narrow parameters by defining "top rung" restrictively, and then critisizes, how exclusive the group is.
All this is, is just one more attempt to discredit bloggers and their phenomenal growth on the internet and maybe a splattering of personal resentment.
Afterall, the blogosphere represents a truly free press; something Mr. Levy apparently has so little appreciation for he cannot recognize or comprehend its' value and appeal.
Just about anyone, at anytime, can post anything in the blogosphere. In other words, everyone can have a voice if they choose so. No one cares who they are only if what they produce has some merit. It is a forum that is open, unregulated, often unedited and highly responsive to the changing requests and needs of its users. As a result it is constantly in flux, changing, adapting, morphing to better serve its readers,writers, and listeners. No other media reflects its' readership as well and adjusts as quickly to their changing demands.
8 million and counting bloggers "get it", so why can't mainstream media?
Links to other bloggers with posts on the same subject:
Buzz about women bloggers,women and political blogs
Blogging white male,
Whos Steven Levy? All the commentors "get it"

Saturday, March 12, 2005

Free People Create Prosperity

Star Parker has written an excellent response to Columbia University professor Jeffrey Sachs plan to cut world poverty by half. Her entire article can be read here. So what is his plan?
"Quadruple U.S. foreign aid. Add a total of about $130 billion to foreign-aid expenditures of the world's industrialized countries and recycle these funds into spending programs in developing nations. According to Sachs, these programs will reduce global poverty by 50 percent by 2015."
"Sachs talks about "ending poverty in our time," which we can do by adopting his "new method." Tax and spend to end our problems? A new method?"
"But government spending programs do not create prosperity. Free people do."

"Regarding U.S. generosity, Sachs seems to have little interest in work done by Carol Adelman of the Hudson Institute, who has shown that U.S. philanthropy going abroad from private sources is three-and-a-half times larger than official U.S. government foreign aid."
"Sachs is promoting exactly the wrong message in parts of the world that need to hear the opposite of what he is telling them. I hope our own government does not cave in to his demands. We should listen to President Bush that freedom is the message America should be sharing with the rest of the world."
This is mighty powerful stuff.

Speech: Individual Freedom and the New Economy

Speech: Individual Freedom and the New Economy is another on target article.

Friday, March 11, 2005

From left to right preserve our rights

The Online Coalition :: Letter to the FEC:
The Online Coalition is a bipartisan group that is trying to preserve bloggers' rights to free speech despite the FEC's intention to regulate political speech on the Internet.

"One area of great concern is the potential regulation of bloggers and other online journalists who distribute political news and commentary exclusively over the web. While paid political advertising on the Internet should remain subject to FEC rules and regulations, curtailing blogs and other online publications will dampen the impact of new voices in the political process and will do a disservice to the millions of voters who rely on the web for original, insightful political commentary."
Don't let them shut you up. Sign the letter. Tell a friend.

Wednesday, March 09, 2005

King of the Blogs

King of the Blogs
Jeremy over at American Warmonger is going for a threepeat. So go vote for him again and again and again, every 3 hours I'm told is allowed. Afterall he is everywhere these days (and his computer savvy). Check out some of his designs while you're cruising his website. Besides he always has good indie music.
I'm delighted he wants to be King for Three. Hmmmm King Cubed..."to raise to the third power". It all makes perfect sense to me...

Tuesday, March 08, 2005


Busy Thoughts  Posted by Hello

Side Effects

Offline, out of sync, nervous, on the edge...30 hours down.
Calling. Holding. Calling .Holding. What's going on?
Whew!
Back online! Feeling fine.

Thursday, March 03, 2005

Too Cool To Be a Neocon?

Many of my friends cannot believe it. How can a nice ( read- intelligent, creative, fun, caring, tolerant, hip, conscientious... or anything positive) person like me SUPPORT President Bush? How can I be a Registered Republican, you know someone from the DARK SIDE? They find it incomprehensible and insist I must be in the fringe...

For those who do not know my political affiliations, they simply assume that I am one of them, "the enlightened ones" or to steal a phrase from Thomas Sowell, "one of the annointed". The presumptions are staggering and if I did not find humor in their ill informed narrow views and their preponderance for stereotyping, I would be offended. But, hey I have a sense of humor, something else they can't seem to comprehend.

So what does this mean? My liberal friends apparently believe neoconservatives cannot be artists, or academics and that "they" couldn't possibly be interested in the arts or culture, or engage in any intellectual pursuits. "They" certainly couldn't reside in inner cities and live happily with respect and tolerance for diverse friends and neighbors. But most of all, they can't believe that "they" could be me.