I hope he has a great tour, and I hope he pays royalties...
Saturday, February 23, 2013
Ted Nugent celebrates Black History Month by being an ill-informed douche.
Usually I ignore Ted Nugent's rants precisely because they are rants. After I turned 20, I realized there is no point in reasoning with someone whose primary argument is that if you disagree with him you can suck on the end of his gun.
Nevertheless, recently Nugent strung a few words together in World Nets Daily (notorious conspiracy theory kooks) that included no discernible threats. Instead, Nugent argues that his way of celebrating Black History Month is more respectful and more to the advantage of the black community than any Democratic policy has ever been. I'll dismiss outright the argument that Obama is the best policy-maker for the black community because he is black--that is just silly. Armed with a fact or two regarding unemployment among the black community, Nugent claims the failure of the New Deal and every other democratic policies intended to close the equality gap between whites and blacks in America. Indeed, in some instances he may be right, though he offers no analysis, no statistics to support his claims. I'd like to point out that that the Republican party went out of its way to exclude black and other minority voters in many states this election cycle. I'd like to point out that certain Republican states are trying to repeal the voting rights act, and that Mississippi (a predominantly Red state) just ratified the 13th Amendment a few days ago (in case you are unaware, the 13th Amendment outlaws slavery). I'd like to point out these sorts of things, but I won't because they are not entirely relevant. The best part of Nugent's article is his preferred way of honoring the black community during Black History Month--it's not to push legislation that will solve the economic or social gaps between the black and white communities; it's not a proposed fix to public education. Nugent is going to honor the black community by playing black music.
I hope he has a great tour, and I hope he pays royalties...
I hope he has a great tour, and I hope he pays royalties...
Labels:
birthers,
black history month,
democrats,
new deal,
ted nugent,
world net daily
Monday, February 18, 2013
Never Miss a Good Conversation.
David Frum has been Tweeting ideas in rapid succession this morning regarding solutions to gun-death problems in the States.
Indeed, this series (the list above is partial) represents ideas from his CNN column, found here. Some of his ideas are interesting, several are new to me, others seem like they'd not work or would be impracticable. Nevertheless, his Tweets should have started an interesting conversation. Instead, they've started this:
Score for the day: F@cking cat memes:1 Reason: 0.
Monday, February 11, 2013
Reforming the GOP.
Here's John Dickerson's competent analysis from this morning.
Sunday, February 3, 2013
The Godly Grammar of Theology.
I am not particularly fond of Bill Maher--not so much because of his opinions, but because of his 'shock-jockeyness'. He seems to belong to the same school of thought as Neal Boortz and Michael Savage, who believe that the greater the number of your detractors the more correct your opinion. Nevertheless, Maher's comments regarding today's Super Bowl led to a sublime exchange on Twitter.
In general, I agree with Maher's sentiment, though I think 27% is not nearly as impressive as Maher seems to think. However, what is more interesting is Maher's evident orthographic error, which was noticed by very few to begin with. Obviously "thing" should read "think", and there is a certain irony in making such a blatant error when calling someone stupid. Maher could have been taken to task by the Twitterverse. Instead, Maher's detractors doubled down.
Not only have these tweeps failed to identify the most obvious error in Maher's tweet, the supposed error they've 'corrected' is not an error at all. The word god is a common noun, not a proper noun (like God Jones, or God Jefferson).
In general, I agree with Maher's sentiment, though I think 27% is not nearly as impressive as Maher seems to think. However, what is more interesting is Maher's evident orthographic error, which was noticed by very few to begin with. Obviously "thing" should read "think", and there is a certain irony in making such a blatant error when calling someone stupid. Maher could have been taken to task by the Twitterverse. Instead, Maher's detractors doubled down.
Not only have these tweeps failed to identify the most obvious error in Maher's tweet, the supposed error they've 'corrected' is not an error at all. The word god is a common noun, not a proper noun (like God Jones, or God Jefferson).
Friday, February 1, 2013
The Internet is a Beautiful Place.
Do you want to translate a Greek phrase? The internet has got that covered. Do you want help tuning your guitar? There are thousands of Youtube videos to guide you (not to mention dozens of iPhone apps). Do you want a great recipe for spaghetti squash? No problem. The internet is a repository of an incredible amount of information--more than any one person can handle alone. It's also a repository of f@cking cat memes. The internet is neither good nor bad; it's a matter of how you use it. I hate cat memes, but not for their content. As cat memes, they are relatively benign. Nevertheless, wasting your time on cat memes is a little like admiring how clean the windows are at the Louvre--you're not only missing the point, you're losing out. Other memes are more nefarious, largely because they pose as information when they are no more accurate than the idea that a cat "can haz a hamburger". Case in point:
If you type "11 states have more people on welfare than employed" in Google, the first response is Politifact.com with an explanation of this chain mail meme.
They give it their worst rating: Pants-on-Fire. How did I know to look it up? Easy--it smells like bullshit on the surface (do you know the population of California?). Even so, I'd have looked it up anyway. Why? Because that is what the internet is for.
If you type "11 states have more people on welfare than employed" in Google, the first response is Politifact.com with an explanation of this chain mail meme.
They give it their worst rating: Pants-on-Fire. How did I know to look it up? Easy--it smells like bullshit on the surface (do you know the population of California?). Even so, I'd have looked it up anyway. Why? Because that is what the internet is for.
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