“Thank God that’s over.”
Eric Alterman commenting on 2004.
“Thank God that’s over.”
Eric Alterman commenting on 2004.
What I don’t understand are these reports that some of the tourists who booked New Year’s package tours to these poor drowned places SHOWED UP ANYWAY! I mean, Jeebus Christmas, the body count’s well into six figures, and these people come to toss frisbees and drink MaiTais surrounded by mass graves. Who are the people who would do that? The rich are different from you and me, Doc. Many of them are morons.
Charles Pierce at Altercation
From the Santa Fe New Mexican:
Starting Saturday, New Mexicans shopping for food at the grocery store can concentrate on feeding themselves — not the tax man.
The gross-receipts tax on food — a fixture on New Mexico’s law books since the days of the Great Depression — goes kaput New Year’s Day.
The Legislature repealed the tax on most groceries and food staples last spring. Gov. Bill Richardson pushed the measure and House Speaker Ben Luján, D-Nambé, ramrodded it through.
Of course, the sales tax on everything else is going up 1/2 percent.
Best quote from the story:
“Beginning Jan. 1, baby food will have the same treatment as horse feed, which is tax-exempt here in New Mexico,” Nathan said.
… of Anthony Hopkins. The Oscar winner is 67. Hopkins has been nominated for Best Actor three times, winning for The Silence of the Lambs. He was also nominated as Best Supporting Actor for Amistad.
… of Tim Considine. Spin is 64. Considine played the soldier slapped by General Patton in the film Patton.
… of Ben Kingsley. The Oscar winner is 61. He won Best Actor for his portrayal of Gandhi. He was also nominated for Best Actor for House of Sand and Fog and twice for Best Supporting Actor.
… of Donna Summer. The Bad Girl is 56.
… of Bebe Neuwirth. Lilith is 46. Ms. Neuwirth won the Emmy twice for this role on Cheers.
From the Los Angeles Times:
Artie Shaw, who rose to fame as one of the Swing era’s finest band leaders and most innovative clarinetists before slamming the door on the music business with a Shakespearean flourish, died today. He was 94.
Unwilling to compromise and play just what the audience wanted (the same stuff), Shaw retired at age 44 in 1954. He never again played or recorded publicly.
Shaw was married eight times, including to Lana Turner and Ava Gardner, and he reportedly had affairs with Betty Grable and Lena Horne.
The title for this post stolen unabashedly from dangerousmeta!. Begin the Beguine was Shaw’s most famous hit recording.
Roger Ebert’s list (he also has a worst 10):
1. “Million Dollar Baby”
2. “Kill Bill, Volume 2”
3. “Vera Drake”
4. “Spider-Man 2”
5. “Moolaade”
6. “The Aviator”
7. “Baadasssss!”
8. “Sideways”
9. “Hotel Rwanda”
10. “Undertow”
David Pogue on security experts have now unveiled an even more insidious hole. Phishers (people who try to intercept your Web passwords and private information) can now make any text they like appear in the address bar. They can, for example, make it look like you’re viewing the Web page of PayPal or eBay; when you “log in,” you’ll actually be sending your account information straight into the phishers’ databases.
So what should you do? If you ask me, you should switch immediately to the free, infinitely superior browser Firefox (if you use Windows or Mac) or Safari (Mac OS X). You’ll absolutely love its tabbed browsing, pop-up window stopper and other advanced features-and you’ll be safe from most of the security holes in Internet Explorer.
The SportsProf has quite a bit on the BCS, the Cal-Texas scandal, etc., including Paterno’s vote for USC, Oklahoma and Auburn all as number one in the coaches poll.
Meanwhile, some people will scoff at Joe Paterno, say he’s the modern day Don Quixote, that he’s tilting at windmills trying to find his perfect world in the midst of the BCS madness.
And Coach Paterno is right, he may well be a voice in the wilderness.
And a powerful voice at that.
After all, his graduation rate exceeds the combined graduation rates of Utah (41%) and Pitt (31%), who are meeting on January 1 in the Fiesta Bowl.
Yet, it’s Utah coach Urban Meyer and Pitt coach Walt Harris who are moving on to “bigger” jobs, at Florida and Stanford respectively — who get rewarded, while Coach Paterno has been under siege at Penn State. True, his team’s on-the-field performance has been found lacking in the past five years, but, in the midst of all of the hypocrisy out there in BCS-land, Coach Paterno is a shining beacon of integrity and forthrightness.
A collection of Briscoe one-liners.
Link via dangerousmeta!
From The Christian Science Monitor:
Just ask Stanley Logue of San Diego.
For 45 years, the defense-industry analyst paid into the system until his retirement in 1994. But with all the recent hoopla over reform, Mr. Logue, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology graduate, decided to go back and check his own records. Would he have done better investing his money than the bureaucrats at the Social Security Administration?
He recorded all the payroll taxes he paid into the system (including the matching amount from his employer), tracked down the return the Social Security Trust Fund earned for each of the 45 years, and then compared the result with what he would have gotten had he been able to invest the same amount of payroll tax money over the same period in the Dow Jones Industrial Average (including dividends).
To his surprise, the Social Security investment won out: $261,372 versus $255,499, a difference of $5,873.
Read more. Link via Michael Froomkin.
So far the aid promised to the Asian relief effort by our government approximates the funding for the inaugural ceremonies next month.
NewMexiKen just donated $100 to the American Red Cross (via Amazon).
What about you?
How to Help (washingtonpost.com)
The Command Post – Global Recon – Earthquake: How to Help [Updated 12/30]
James Gadsden, U.S. Minister to Mexico, and General Antonio López de Santa Anna, President of Mexico, signed the Gadsden Purchase in Mexico City on December 30, 1853. The treaty settled the dispute over the exact location of the Mexican border west of El Paso, Texas, giving the U.S. claim to approximately 29,000 square miles of land in what is now southern New Mexico and Arizona, for the price of $10,000,000.
Source: The Library of Congress
… of Bo Diddley. “One of the most original and fertile rhythmic intelligences of our time,” the Rock Hall of Famer is 76.
… of Russ Tamblyn. Riff is 70.
… of Sandy Koufax. The most dominant pitcher in the game in the early 1960s, the man who threw four no-hitters including a perfect games is 69.
… of Paul (Noel actually) Stookey. Paul of Peter, Paul & Mary is 67.
… of Fred Ward. The actor (Gus Grissom in The Right Stuff) is 62.
… of Monkees Michael Nesmith (62) and Davy Jones (59).
… of Patti Smith. Punk rock’s poet laureate is 58.
… of Matt Lauer. The Today show host is 47.
Politician Al Smith (he lost to Herbert Hoover in 1928) was born on this date in 1873.
Albert Einstein was born on this date in 1880.
LeBron James is 20 today. Tiger Woods is 29.
A year ago NewMexiKen ran across this essay by historian Thomas P. Slaughter on the real significance of Lewis and Clark. I thought it worth repeating today:
The Lewis and Clark expedition did not matter two centuries ago. The explorers were not the first to make the transcontinental journey, as they well knew, having been preceded in both travels and publication by the Canadian Alexander Mackenzie. They followed Cook, Vancouver, and dozens of trading ships that made landfall on the West Coast and had ongoing contacts with Indians in the Northwest, just as French and Anglo-Canadian fur traders had already engaged Indians east of the Rockies.
And if Lewis and Clark didn’t get there first, neither did they achieve any of the major goals of their expedition: they did not find a water route to the Pacific, a Lost Tribe of Israel, or Welsh Indians. During the return leg of their journey, they met up with traders who had believed them dead and were proceeding west nonetheless. The explorers’ survival and the information they brought back with them were irrelevant to the westward course of American empire. They did not publish their journals in a timely fashion and eventually did so, after Lewis’s death, in an abridgement that achieved limited circulation. Quickly, the explorers and their achievements faded from public memory.
Lewis and Clark were rediscovered after the passing of the American frontier. Celebration of them is a twentieth-, now twenty-first-century phenomenon that reflects more on the creation of a national origins myth than it does the historical significance of the expedition in its own time….Lewis and Clark matter, then, because our nation needs their contribution to the multicultural and ecologically sensitive stories that we now tell about ourselves. They are central characters in the superficial “feel-good” brand of American history that catapults books to the top of nonfiction bestseller lists.
Slaughter is the author of Exploring Lewis and Clark: Reflections on Men and Wilderness (2003).
Dan Neil profiles 10 of the great cars of the year, but begins with this commentary:
Think of our relationship with the internal combustion engine as a roller coaster ride. We’ve had our ups and downs, but 2004 was the first year most people could see, clearly, that the tracks were out ahead. Californians saw gasoline hit $3 per gallon and not for the last time. American foreign policy is bloodily fixated on a region of the world whose single strategic value is oil. Even the Bush administration had to concede this year that there was something to all this talk of global warming. But automakers, suing to stop California’s new carbon-emission standards, are in greenhouse denial.
Whose air is it, anyway?
The future belongs to automakers who embrace change.
One feature (in addition to security) that makes Firefox better than IE:
But my favorite aspect of Firefox is tabbed browsing, a Web-surfing revolution that is shared by all the major new browsers but is absent from IE. With tabbed browsing, you can open many Web pages at once in the same browser window. Each is accessed by a tab.
The benefits of tabbed browsing hit home when you create folders of related bookmarks. For instance, on my computer I have a folder of a dozen technology-news bookmarks and another 20 or so bookmarks pointing to political Web sites. A third folder contains 15 or so bookmarks for sites devoted to the World Champion Boston Red Sox. With one click, I can open the entire contents of these folders in tabs, in the same single window, allowing me to survey entire fields of interest.
Walter Mossberg prefers Firefox:
Meanwhile, other people have been building much better browsers, just as Microsoft itself did in the 1990s, when it challenged and eventually bested the then-dominant browser, Netscape Navigator. The most significant of these challengers is Firefox, a free product of an open-source organization called Mozilla, available for download at www.mozilla.org. Firefox is both more secure and more modern than IE, and it comes packed with user-friendly features the Microsoft browser can’t touch.
Firefox still has a tiny market share. But millions of people have downloaded it recently. I’ve been using it for months, and I recommended back in September that users switch to it from IE as a security measure. It’s available in nearly identical versions for Windows, the Apple Macintosh, and the Linux operating system.
Texas by 7½ over Michigan
Utah by 16 over Pittsburgh
Auburn by 7 over Virginia Tech
USC by 3 over Oklahoma
On December 29, 1890 at Wounded Knee Creek, on the Pine Ridge Reservation, South Dakota, some 500 soldiers of the United States Seventh Cavalry opened fire on approximately 350 Lakota (Sioux) Indians of Chief Big Foot’s Miniconjou band. At the end of the confrontation, between 150 and 300 Sioux men, women, and children, including Chief Big Foot, were dead. This event marked the end of Lakota resistance until the 1970s. Apart from the few minor skirmishes that followed, the Wounded Knee massacre ended the Indian Wars.
In many ways, the massacre resulted from the Ghost Dance movement. The movement was led by a Paiute named Wovoka who claimed to have had a vision that the “Old Earth” would be destroyed and a new one created in which Native Americans could live as they had before the coming of the European. He preached that the only way to survive the impending apocalypse would be to faithfully perform the Ghost Dance and the ceremonies associated with it.
Wovoka’s movement began as a peaceful one, which did not exclude other races from participating. Unfortunately, certain followers, most notably Kicking Bear, a member of the original Lakota delegation sent to learn of Wovoka’s teachings, changed the non-violent message into a call for the destruction of the white man that resonated with many members of the Lakota tribes of South Dakota. Many of the more traditional Lakota, with memories of better times still fresh in their minds, took up the Ghost Dance on these violent terms. In October 1890, the Ghost Dance movement reached Sitting Bull’s Hunkpapa Lakota nation on the Standing Rock Reservation in Northern South Dakota. Although it is unlikely that the powerful Lakota chief took an active role in spreading the Ghost Dance doctrine, he was pleased that the movement banded his people together and he allowed its practice.
U.S. government officials became deeply concerned about the popularity of the Ghost Dance movement and its increasingly destructive message. And because of Sitting Bull’s notoriety, the government mistakenly identified him as a major leader of the movement. On December 12, days after Sitting Bull asked for permission to leave the Standing Rock Reservation to visit with uncooperative Ghost Dancers, General Nelson Miles issued the order for his capture. Hearing of the warrant for Sitting Bull’s arrest, Buffalo Bill Cody, a confidant of Sitting Bull’s, volunteered to facilitate the arrest, presumably, to assure Sitting Bull’s safety. He was rebuffed by the Standing Rock Indian Agent, James McLaughlin. Then on December 15, a scuffle erupted outside of Sitting Bull’s home between Ghost Dancers and the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) officers sent to arrest the Lakota chief. During the fight Sitting Bull was shot and killed by BIA officer Red Tomahawk. In the aftermath eight Lakota and six BIA officers lay dead.
Sitting Bull’s death created confusion and anger among many Lakota bands. Big Foot, leader of one of the most fervent bands of Ghost Dance practitioners, feared that the Army was ready to retaliate forcefully against the movement’s practitioners. To avoid capture, he and his followers wandered through the South Dakota Badlands for several days. Once his people’s supplies became scarce, he began a trek toward the Pine Ridge agency. His ultimate goal was to reach the protection of Chief Red Cloud, who had a reputation for negotiating well with the U.S. government. On December 28, during what would have been the last leg of their journey to Pine Ridge, Big Foot and his followers were intercepted by cavalry troops under Major Samuel Whitside and escorted to the Wounded Knee army camp. There the Lakota camped under a flag of truce, surrounded by Seventh Cavalry troops under the command of Colonel James W. Forsyth.
On the morning of December 29, Colonel Forsyth ordered the disarmament of Big Foot’s band. The disarmament proceeded slowly as the Miniconjou were reluctant to give up their only means of protection. The slow progress of disarmament frustrated the cavalry officers, increasing the already heightened tension. The conflict came to a head when a young deaf Sioux named Black Coyote resisted the seizure of his brand new rifle. In the ensuing struggle between Black Coyote and the two cavalrymen who were attempting to disarm him, the rifle discharged into the air. Almost immediately after this first shot, the cavalrymen returned fire with an opening volley that struck and killed Big Foot. Hearing the fire in the Sioux camp, soldiers posted on the ridges overlooking the camp opened fire with light artillery. The soldiers fired indiscriminately on men, and women and children who were unarmed and fleeing the battle scene. The Lakota suffered hundreds of casualties; twenty-five soldiers perished mostly due to their own crossfire. One Lakota survivor was an infant who was found at her dead mother’s side. Named Lost Bird she was adopted by Brigadier General Leonard W. Colby, commander of the Nebraska National Guard.
The Wounded Knee massacre was the last major confrontation between Indians and the American military until the late twentieth century. On February 27, 1973, conflict erupted again near the site of the massacre eighty-three years earlier. This time members of both the Lakota tribe and the American Indian Movement seized control of Wounded Knee to protest the U.S.-sanctioned Lakota tribal government, and to demand a government review of all Indian treaties. The protestors were confronted by officers of several federal agencies including the FBI, U.S. Marshals, Bureau of Indian Affairs police, as well as the National Guard. By the end of the ensuing seventy-one-day stand off two protestors were dead and twelve others injured, including two marshals. Over 1,200 people were arrested.
Source: The Library of Congress
Barbara Enrenreich’s Nickel and Dimed filled much of NewMexiKen’s 10 hour trip home last night. The book, published in 2001, may change the way you feel about a lot of things, or perhaps reinforce them. As with Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle, which was written to describe the life of the industrial worker and ended up primarily as an expose of meat packing, Ehrenreich writes to tell about the life of working at $6 and $7 hour jobs, but you can’t help learning more than should know about restaurants and maid services.
An important, revealing, yet entertaining book; highly recommended.
Orbach said he didn’t know “where I stop and Lennie starts, really.”
Jerry Orbach died yesterday of prostate cancer at age 69.
NewMexiKen acknowledges that he can be cranky but the two twenty-something guys on the flight from Dallas to Albuquerque late last night really wound me up. These two, who seemed to have just met when we boarded, played a non-stop game of Mine Is Bigger Than Yours the whole flight — longest flight and layovers, fastest computers, most countries visited (each described in detail), largest music collection, most stuff sold on eBay, etc., etc., etc., etc., etc.
Even with my iPod and Bose headphones I could hear them droning on and on. Next time I’d prefer to sit next to teething infants with ear infections.
Excerpts from the U.S. Geological Survey page on the past century’s worst natural disasters:
The planet’s deadliest earthquake of the century, by far, was a magnitude 8.0 that struck Tianjin (formerly Tangshan), China, on July 27, 1976. The official casualty figure issued by the Chinese government was 255,000, but unofficial estimates of the death toll were as high as 655,000.
Bangladesh lost 300,000 people in November 1970 and more than 130,000 in April 1991, from cyclone-induced flooding, and the massive flooding of the Yangtze River in China in 1931 caused more than 3 million deaths from flooding and starvation.
NewMexiKen believes FunctionalAmbivalent is right.
The calls for a more comprehensive worldwide tsunami warning system call to mind the time, a few years ago, when we lived in California. There was a large subsea earthquake off the Aleutian Islands. The quite-well-developed American tsunami warning system kicked into gear, alerting people up and down the American west coast of the possibility of deadly tsunami.
In Los Angeles, where people sometimes view the world as if it were only as real as something on TV, thousands of people headed for the coast to watch the tsunami come in. Restaurants with decks overhanging the sand were packed. You couldn’t find a place to park at the beach as the throngs standing on the sand awaited, apparently, the excitement of their own horrifying death. Action news crews, broadcasting live from the potential devastation, reported that those who had gathered to experience the predicted killer wave were disappointed that it did not materialize.
Perhaps giving people a lot of notice of impending tsunami is not really what we need to do, at least in California.