I’m not much of a baseball fan, but congratulations to the Boston Red Sox for completing yet another epic choke and missing the MLB playoffs. Coupled with the Patriots losing to Buffalo (Buffalo. Hah!) last week, my hope is that this is particularly devastating to my friends to the east of Lake Champlain. Keep electing the likes of Scott Brown, and this is the miserable existence you can expect. If you want to save yourselves, vote for Elizabeth Warren, or not only will you never win another championship, but the Yankees will win every World Series forever. And nobody wants that.
Today is National Coffee Day, so I’m going to do something a little different this morning. I’m gonna hang out, surf the Internet with one eye and watch the lo-cal news with the other eye, all while drinking as much coffee as I can manage before I have to go to work.
Oh, and I’ll bring a cup with me, too.
Apparently you can get lots of deals out there, so check your favorite coffee joint. Even Starbucks has something going on, though I’m not sure you can call that shit they sell coffee. As for me, I’ll stick to the home brew.
In fact, I think I’ll have another one right now.
Happy Birthday, Pugsley!
Now that the ‘loupies have beaten the Giants in the season closer, the MLB season is over for me. For starters, way to much of the post season is on cable but the MLB turned its back on the common people long ago.
I watched the wild card battles out of the corner of my eye on iPhone scoreboards and figured there had to be at least one playoff today. I mean the Yankees were up 7-0 and lost!? I am expecting some BoSox fans to be demanding an investigation soon. I guess I am happy Tampa Bay won (Kevin, where art thou?) but I’ll never forget that they took the :satan: out of :satan: Rays while another Floridian is trying to put the 999 into the tax code like some pizza chain promotion. I am always happy to see the Braves lose with their racist imagery and mascot and the odious Tomahawk Chop. Then again, I can’t stand George Will’s :jerk: favorite lapsed lawyer turned manager Tony LaRussa with the Cards. I just lost any interest in that race once the Giants fell by the wayside.
‘loupies?
Happy Tidings From the Hill
By GAIL COLLINS
Published: September 28, 2011
In our never-ending battle to bring you good news from the world of politics, let’s focus today on the fact that Congress appears to have reached a deal to keep the government operating for seven more weeks.
Earl Wilson/The New York Times
Think of all the things you’ll be able to do in October if there’s a government. Camp out in a national park! Mail a letter! Fly to Omaha without fear that your plane will crash into a plane flying to Sioux Falls because of a lack of air traffic controllers! Wage war in Afghanistan!
Life doesn’t get any better than that.
The latest stalemate in Washington has been over the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which had been running out of cash what with all the recent fires, floods, earthquakes, plagues of frogs and what have you. Republicans wanted to balance any new FEMA money with cuts elsewhere. Democrats said that when disaster strikes, the tradition is to pony up and deal with the financing issues later.
Republicans said yeah, and that’s how we wound up $14.7 trillion in the hole. And then the Democrats said no way, we got the hole from the Bush tax cuts, and then the Republicans kicked them in the groin and everybody had to go to the emergency room.
O.K., I can hear you all asking: Whatever happened to Willow the cat?
Willow, you may remember, disappeared from her home in Colorado five years ago and turned up recently in a shelter in New York City. Now that was a feel-good story. Her whole family was flown to New York to appear on the “Today†show for a reunion. Why can’t Congress ever do things like that?
Back to Congress: The government’s fiscal year ends this weekend, and FEMA decided it could make it to Saturday on spare cash that it had found in the sofa. Whew.
The Senate then voted 79 to 12 to keep the government running for the following seven weeks. “It shows us the way out. It means we no longer have to fight,†said Harry Reid, in a deeply uncharacteristic show of euphoria.
You may be wondering about the 12 people who voted against this idea. They were all Republicans, and their most common argument was that they just wanted to make things work better. “Americans are tired of gridlock and games in Washington, and so am I,†said Senator Roy Blunt of Missouri in a press release.
Way to battle gridlock, Senator Roy Blunt!
Marco Rubio of Florida, who is constantly being mentioned as a possible vice presidential candidate in the event the Republicans ever find someone to nominate for president, said that he had voted against the bill because he wanted to protest “this dysfunctional Washington way†of running the government. This is a little like protesting the slowness of rush-hour traffic by abandoning your car in the center lane.
But back to Willow the cat. During one of her TV reunions, Willow bit her owners’ 3-year-old daughter. In the flesh, Willow looked pretty standoffish. We might as well have been celebrating the return of a long-lost goldfish. Maybe she liked living in New York.
Meanwhile, the bill to keep the government operating for seven weeks now goes to the House, where it’s expected to pass. Probably. They think.
But wait! There’s more! Remember when I told you the current fiscal year ends this weekend? (It was a few paragraphs back, before Willow bit the 3-year-old.) Congress is on vacation. So in order to get us through the gap, the Senate passed yet another spending bill, this one to keep things running for four days.
That was on a voice vote, depriving anybody of the opportunity to take a strong, principled, public stance against having government on Saturday.
It now goes to the House, where in one of those parliamentary thingies that drive us all to discussions of missing cats or the possible breakup of Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher, the bill is supposed to be passed on Thursday in an empty chamber.
If a single representative shows up and objects, the four-day funding bill is dead and the government shuts down this weekend. But, of course, what would make anyone think that there could be a member of the House of Representatives crazy enough to make the trip back to Washington just to bring the entire federal government to a crashing halt?
“Actually, we’re holding our breath,†said one House staffer, who claimed that the Republican leadership had made a list of the most free-spirited members of the Tea Party cadre and got commitments from everyone to get through the weekend with the Grand Canyon open for business.
Which, if it works, would be pretty good news, don’t you think? No one in the House of Representatives actually wants to single-handedly shut government down in its tracks.
Ever lower, goes the bar.
I’m not sure what I find more erotic. Art’s Rick Perry going down on the corn dog, or Vernon’s vintage Boeheim in VW seat cover jacket and matching striped tie.
An awesome choice, PJ.
You can’t argue taste vs class.
Here’s another example of Republican “thinking:”
At a campaign event in Des Moines, Iowa Thursday, Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich answered a question from a woman who was concerned that he supported the idea of religion imposing values on Americans.
“I’m very concerned that a branch of Christianity has gotten some of its tenets into our laws like stem cell research, linking foreign aid to reproductive issues and so forth,†she told the former House Speaker. “If you were president, would you work hard to make Christian social issues the law of the land?â€
“I don’t know that the two you just cited are Christian social issues,†Gingrich replied. “I think Orthodox Jews probably have as profound a belief as Christians do on both those issues.â€
“I don’t regard that as imposing a particular branch of Christianity. That’s an argument about what values do you have whatever your religion happens to be. My argument about religion is different. We said in our founding document, we are endowed by our creator with certain unalienable rights. Now should we teach children that or not? Should they learn what the founding fathers meant or not?â€
He continued: “The idea that taking school prayer out in 1963 made the country better, I don’t see any evidence that children who don’t spend a moment recognizing that they’re subservient to God let’s you approach God in anyway you want to. There is an enormous difference between a culture which believes that it is purely secular and a culture that believes that it is somehow empowered by our creator. And I always tell my friends who don’t believe in this stuff, “Fine, how do you think we came to — we’re randomly gathered protoplasm? We could have been rhinoceroses but we got lucky this week?’â€
“Now, that is if you assume it is lucky to be human rather than rhinoceros. I don’t want — knowing the way the news media works, I do not want ‘Gingrich announces anti-rhinoceros hostility’ to come out of this meeting.â€