They are my oldest and deadliest enemy. You cannot trust them. If Hitler invaded Hell, I would give a favourable reference to the Devil.
Wednesday, July 14
You Can't Make A Silver Tongue Out Of A Tin Ear
Via Insty, Mort Zuckerman gets slapped in the face with the cold, dead trout of reality:
The hope that fired up the election of Barack Obama has flickered out,
leaving a national mood of despair and disappointment. Americans are
dispirited over how wrong things are and uncertain they can be made
right again. Hope may have been a quick breakfast, but it has proved a
poor supper. A year and a half ago Obama was walking on water. Today he
is barely treading water. Then, his soaring rhetoric enraptured the
nation. Today, his speeches cannot lift him past a 45 percent approval
rating.
Soaring rhetoric? When he's on (which is rare these days) Obama is wooden. When he's off (-teleprompter) he's simply inept.
To be fair, Australia's own not-late-but-decidedly-unlamented Kevin Rudd was not merely wooden but utterly leaden; his speeches were actively painful.
To continue:
The president failed to communicate the value of what he wants to
communicate. To a significant number of Americans, what came across was a
new president trying to do too much in a hurry and, at the same time,
radically change the equation of American life in favor of too much
government.
And they were right.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
12:40 AM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 208 words, total size 1 kb.
Tuesday, July 13
Do Senators Make Bad Presidents?
I hold the U.S Senate of recent years in approximately zero esteem (unless esteem can hold a negative value) and it was some dismay that I watched the 2008 presidential campaign narrow to a choice of three senators.
But do senators intrinsically make bad presidents? Let's take a look at what jobs recent presidents held before election.
Senator
Governor
VP
Obama
Bush, G.W
Bush, G.H.W
Kennedy
Clinton
Ford
Harding
Reagan
Johnson
Carter
Truman
Roosevelt, F.D
Coolidge
Wilson
Roosevelt, T
McKinley
Nixon
That leaves out three from the 20th and 21st centuries - Eisenhower, who was a five-star general, Hoover, who was Secretary of Commerce, and Taft, who held a number of roles including Secretary of War.
So, in the last century or so, three men have been elected from the senate directly to the presidency: Obama, Kennedy, and Harding. So, one bad, one potentially great (if flawed), one incumbent. Unfortunately I'll have to rule insufficient data here.
1
The vice-presidency doesn't count - per FDR's first VP, it's not worth a bucket of warm euphemism. Also, the VP's only role is to act as a conditional senator for special tie-breaking and ceremonial purposes. Thus, I'd classify Coolidge and T.R. as falling into the governors-class of presidents, with Taft being a special case because of his immediate experience as a serial colonial governor. Truman, Nixon, and Johnson all get pitchforked into the senatorial claque, with Ford being the sole congressman in the list. Bush the Elder was also a congressman, but he spent far more time as a bureaucratic functionary, and his governance style definitely reflected that mind-set.
That tends to clarify matters somewhat, but the currently favored conventional-wisdom truism that governors' experience prepares for the office while senatorial time-serving ruins a politician for it founders on the rather violent exceptions of Woodrow Wilson on the one hand, and Truman & Kennedy on the other.
Furthermore, the side-theory that primarily non-governmental experience is worthless for the job is spun sideways by the twin contradictions of Hoover and Eisenhower. Hoover's primarily executive experience as the World's Humanitarian Fixer and Eisenhower's service life & apotheosis as Saviour of Europe produced wildly dissimilar White House careers.
I'm inclined to say that experience matters less than personality. Wilson was a ferocious, bigoted, narrow-minded thug, and his single term of office as governor of New Jersey had little bearing on his performance as president. Truman's time in the collegial Senate had little effect on his quietly combative personality and peculiar blend of tenacity and conditional flexibility. I rather suspect that McCain, if elected, would have ended up a second Truman, but obviously Obama has proven to be no such creature.
Posted by: Mitch H. at Wednesday, July 14 2010 03:45 AM (jwKxK)
2
Thanks Mitch. I'll do a new version of the table in the morning with the VP column excised. And always remember that Carter was the Governor of... Someplace or other.
Truman was an interesting character; I'd like to learn more about him.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Wednesday, July 14 2010 04:56 AM (PiXy!)
I don't agree with that. The VP has often been a springboard to national candidacy for the President, for instance Nixon in 1960 and Humphrey in 1968 and Mondale in 1984, not to mention Bush Sr. They generally haven't been very successful at it, but it's widely viewed as a gateway.
Ford, coming out of the House, is a huge exception because he was never elected to the presidency. After Agnew resigned, which wasn't related to Watergate but happened after it, everyone knew that the new VP which would be chosen (through processes of the 25th Amendment) had a damned good chance of becoming President either through Nixon's impeachment or his resignation.
So the leaders of both parties in both chambers went to Nixon and pretty much told him that the only candidate they'd accept was Ford. He was House Minority Leader and was widely respected by both sides.
So he finished Nixon's second term, but when he ran in 1976 he was defeated by Carter, meaning that he and Rockefeller are the only Pres/VP pair in the history of the nation to not have been elected to the offices. And God Willing, it'll never happen again.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at Wednesday, July 14 2010 07:32 AM (+rSRq)
4
As you can see, Senators seldom make it to the Presidency. Most especially long serving Senators. They have to make too many concessions while in office. Concessions put them at outs with their own party. And most of them aren't "pretty" enough for the press to ignore what they have or haven't done while in the Senate. Obama had a huge advantage as he did absolutely nothing while he was in the Senate. (the Illinois State Senate never counted since the press completely ignored the fact that he was ever there).
I always find it amusing when a current serving Senator gets up and starts a speech saying "elect me so I can get things changed" - because being in the Senate would be the place to effect the most change. The President only signs what Congress gets to his desk.
I think you're looking at it the wrong way - it would be more instructive to look at the number of Senators who have run for their party nomination and never made it.
Posted by: Teresa at Thursday, July 15 2010 04:58 AM (ZjbN5)
5
Or simply look at the record of the Senate, to test the hypothesis that senators make bad senators.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Thursday, July 15 2010 11:47 AM (PiXy!)
6
Lately that seems to be damn near a given - no matter who the Senator might be. LOL.
Posted by: Teresa at Friday, July 16 2010 02:33 AM (ZjbN5)
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
04:27 AM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 32 words, total size 1 kb.
You're Listening to Radiolab
The question is, though, what is the name of Zoe Keating's "new piece that doesn't have a name" (as was). I just went to her site (cheaper than iTunes, offers FLAC downloads, and she gets to keep the money, or at least I hope so) and bought all her albums, so I guess I'll find it soon enough.
Meanwhile In C Remixed is $31.99 on iTunes Oz and they don't have their own online store. I'll probably buy it anyway. But they have Zinc (Zoe In C - Zoe Keating's contribution) as a free download, so naturally I grabbed that first.
Update: It's called Escape Artist. I actually like the version she recorded for the Quantum Cello episode better than the album track, though.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
03:45 AM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 135 words, total size 1 kb.
Tuesday, July 06
Counterpoint
Angel Beats is... Not even
worth ranting about. The show only avoids being terrible by not having
enough substance to be anything at all. I don't think any of that
supposed potential was actually there - rather just an illusion of potential. It's pretty clear that no-one
involved in the project had any concept of how to construct or tell a
story, or how to draw faces or to animate, well, anything at all.
If they actually fed Haruhi and Shana into a Markov-chain Lua script controlling Maya and Vocaloid and streamed the results straight out onto TBS, then I give them a B for effort. If there were, unlikely as it may seem, real live humans involved in production, then they should be prevented from ever reproducing. You probably wouldn't need to put too much effort into that; just publicise the fact that they worked on Angel Beats.
I give it no nothings out of none.
Fortunately, there is K-On!!, which has a turtle.
Disclaimer: This review is based on watching only the first episode, since the show was cancelled immediately afterwards. In my universe.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at Wednesday, July 07 2010 11:54 AM (+rSRq)
2
Wonderduck, actually, but more generally to anyone who thought this thing had any redeeming qualities whatsoever.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Wednesday, July 07 2010 04:48 PM (PiXy!)
3
That means as a newfag, I shouldn't be here at all. D:
This show was supposed to be part of an entire media franchise: who knows there's going to be an extra DVD episode, a prequel light novel, a side-story about one of the characters etc. to fill the hearts of every otaku with hopeto milk the cash out of the otaku cow to simply illustrate how bad the franchise was.
Back to Haruhi 101.
Posted by: Hitoribocchi at Thursday, July 08 2010 12:43 AM (T+5m5)
4
If you only watched one episode, how do you know?
I'll admit I took the high road on my review (which, I'll point out, ends with "I cannot, in good conscious, recommend the show."), but I still enjoyed Angel Beats. Maybe I'm wrong, maybe the potential that I see wasn't there... but if I saw it, it's pretty clear that there must have been SOMETHING potentially deeper, even if it's in my own head.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Thursday, July 08 2010 01:25 PM (PiXy!)
8
And HMM had a squidbot, which is even better than a turtle.
-j
Posted by: J Greely at Friday, July 09 2010 03:54 AM (fpXGN)
9
IMHO, HMM was pretty bad and I was unable to complete it. Dropped about 6 eps in. But since everyone praises it (not just in this circle -- J.P. said that he "agreed with every word SDB said about it"), I permit an idea that it has something to it. But hey, tastes differ. And as far as expert opinion goes Angel Beats does not even have that much. The best they say is "unfulfilled" (except Tappan, of course, who really lets his imagination feed on this corpse of a show). The comparison with HMM only says to me that Angel Beats must be dire.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Friday, July 09 2010 06:28 AM (/ppBw)
Posted by: J Greely at Friday, July 09 2010 04:36 PM (2XtN5)
12
Eh, I'm with Pete here. HMM wasn't exactly Perfect Anime, I didn't finish it either. I say Mahoromatic is a better robot-maid show, hated ending and all. And Angel Beats is... not terrible. It lacks focus, and the first episode had some bad CGI integration issues, but overall it's a lot prettier than the not-very-good anime I'm watching right now - Fate/Stay Night. *That* sucker has some serious issues with uneven character animation and off-design blob-faces. It's pretty clear which scenes the directors cared about, because you can *see* when they couldn't care less.
I haven't gotten around to watching the last episode of Angel Beats, mind you. Maybe it's a disaster of Evangelion 25/26 proportions.
Posted by: Mitch H. at Saturday, July 10 2010 12:42 AM (jwKxK)
13Eva only had four episodes. Did they do a remake? I always thought it ended abruptly. Probably that got cancelled too.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Saturday, July 10 2010 01:41 AM (PiXy!)
If the major movie, television and music studios would just ditch iTunes and sign up with Steam, we could turn the global economy around inside of six months.
Today only: Every Humphrey Bogart movie ever made, just $1.99 for the set! The complete anime and manga works of Osamu Tezuka, $3.74!
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
03:51 AM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
| Trackbacks (Suck)
Post contains 56 words, total size 1 kb.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at Saturday, July 03 2010 11:46 AM (+rSRq)
2
Very nicely done. I wasn't positive it was a spoof (as opposed to a scam) until the words 'telekinetic ability' came up. Â Good one. Thanks for the chuckle.
Posted by: Kathy Kinsley at Sunday, July 04 2010 03:51 AM (of4pL)