Poor Boo Boo

DAVID: another example of poor judgment by gw bush:
when he owned the texas rangers, he traded sammy sosa

SHAC: he also was the only owner to vote against the wild-card playoff system

ERIC: The sad news is, that if Kerry used this in the debates, it would probably be effective.

BRAIN: so the question is: why doesn’t he?

ERIC:

Kerry: Bush illegally invaded Iraq, is bankrupting the country, making the USA
the most hated country in the world, dismantling social security, subsidizing
big business, exporting jobs, exposing CIA operatives, etc.

Electorate: Zzzzzzzzzz

Kerry: He traded Sammy Sosa away!

Electorate: OH MY GOD!

AARON: omg harvey birdman just had a night of gay lovin with boo boo bear

Life Eaters

An incredible graphic novel about how the Nazis won World War Two – by allying with ancient Norse gods, who turn the Earth into a giant death factory.

It has the kind of dramatic epic action that we expect from modern comics, but also has a lot of philosophical themes, such as the nature of faith.

(By David Brin)

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The Phoenix Pastifico

This place is truly amazing- it’s a pasta shop in Berkeley which supplies pasta to the restaurants – they have about 50 kinds of pasta, flavors like “lemon-leek” and “rose petal” (made with real roses). You order your pasta, and they bring out the sheet, to be cut at whatever thickness you desire.
Web link of note: The Phoenix Pastifico
(At http://www.phoenixpastificio.com/)

It Can’t Happen Here

Novel by Sinclair Lewis, published in 1935. It is a cautionary tale about the rise of fascism in the United States. During the presidential election of 1936, Doremus Jessup, a newspaper editor, observes with dismay that many of the people he knows support the candidacy of a fascist, Berzelius Windrip. When Windrip wins the election, he forcibly gains control of Congress and the Supreme Court, and, with the aid of his personal paramilitary storm troopers, turns the United States into a totalitarian state. Jessup opposes him, is captured, and escapes to Canada.

From a review by Charles Haberl:

Surprisingly, Sinclair Lewis’ darkly humorous tale of a fascist takeover in the US, “It Can’t Happen Here,” is not merely out-of-print, but also quite hard to find. As dated as it is (1935), its themes will be quite familiar to Americans today. It starts with the highly contested election of an oafish yet strangely charismatic president, who talks like a “reformer” but is really in the pocket of big business, who claims to be a home-spun “humanist,” while appealing to religious extremists, and who speaks of “liberating” women and minorities, as he gradually strips them of all their rights. One character, when describing him, says, “I can’t tell if he’s a crook or a religious fanatic.”

After he becomes elected, he puts the media – at that time, radio and newspapers – under the supervision of the military and slowly begins buying up or closing down media outlets. William Randolph Hearst, the Rupert Murdoch of his times, directs his newspapers to heap unqualified praise upon the president and his policies, and gradually comes to develop a special relationship with the government. The president, taking advantage of an economic crisis, strong-arms Congress into signing blank checks over to the military and passing stringent and possibly unconstitutional laws, e.g. punishing universities when they don’t permit military recruiting or are not vociferous enough in their approval of his policies. Eventually, he takes advantage of the crisis to convene military tribunals for civilians, and denounce all of his detractors as unpatriotic and possibly treasonous.

I’ll stop here, as I don’t want to ruin the story — I can imagine that you can see where all this is going.

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