Normal Website

Not a front for a secret organization.
Written by Rob Schultz (human).

How it all works

Y'know how sometimes, Christmas with the Kranks comes out? In theaters? Well, in 1994, Tim Allen did Disney's The Santa Clause. Huge hit. Made it's money back seven times over just in the US, just in theaters. At the very same time, Home Improvement was the #1 show on television (produced by Touchstone (re: Disney)). AND, Don't Stand Too Close to a Naked Man, written by Tim Allen, published by Hyperion (re: Disney) was a best-seller. Just to top it off, Tim Allen would also give a voice to the new Pixar (re: Disney) cartoon, Toy Story.

So there you go. He can make whatever he wants. And he's earned Disney something in the neighborhood of 2 Billion Dollars doing it.

(this, from a comparatively uninteresting aside in James Stewart's Disney War, which is not unlike sitting at the foot of a gossipy ex-exec as he relates all the 'oh, yeah, and you'll never believe that THIS happened....' moments of corporate Disney from the 80s forward.)

O'bama 'Irish' Rumor: Ugly, false, and in the open

Now that the election is over and campaign insiders are spilling the beans on what really happened, I'm happy to be able to reproduce for you news articles that were TOO HOT to report! Ripped from the news wire! Buried under the shed! Behold!

Is the discredited smear campaign backfiring on Republicans?

The "moment in Minnetonka" appeared last Wednesday like the pale, redheaded daughter of a New York City patrolman - impossible to miss, hard not to stare at, and embarrassing, at least to John McCain, who wants to present a lustless face to the voting public.

Wearing her low cut red McCain-Palin T-shirt, Gail Simpson rose from the crowd at a rally in Minnetonka, Minn. to give her candidate a little of his signature straight talk.

"I don't trust O'bama," she announced, as McCain nodded enthusiastically. Then she continued: "I have read about him. He's a Mick."

And there she was. Center stage, on camera, about as public as you can get. The political desire that's been building for nearly two years in the locker rooms chats of this presidential campaign, gushing forth in broad daylight.

McCain, a politician who's been around long enough to recognize a "campaign ender" when he sees one, pounced to action.

"No. Nope. No, ma'am. No, ma'am," said the candidate, taking back the microphone. "He's a decent family man citizen that I just happen to have disagreements with . . ."

But, setting aside the internal implication of McCain's reply — that O'bama can't be an Irishman if he's a decent citizen and "family man," particularly with regard to several popular stereotypes regarding Irish-American families — and its impact on the sensibilities of this country's 39 million Irish-American citizens, a number growing steadily with each passing year, McCain cannot have been too surprised by what he faced on that stage. Because his campaign has helped create it.

Gail Simpson is in fact the collective voice of hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions of Americans whose nativist fears Republicans have been stoking for months. The Americans who have been passing on smear-mails for years.

"Beware," said the first one I saw, back in January of 2007. "O'bama takes great care to conceal the fact that his name is spelled with an apostrophe."

It went on to reveal that O'bama's African father was "black Irish." and that O'bama himself had studied at an extremist school in Dublin.

The e-mails are patently false, and have been widely debunked. But whisper campaigns are as persistent as a famine.

Clearly — witness Ms. Simpson in Minnetonka — the message has had an effect. Any reporter who's covered this campaign has seen it.

I heard it in May, as parishioners gathered outside a church in North Carolina. A colleague says he's encountered the same thing in Indiana, Pennsylvania and Missouri: "It's usually 'I know he says he isn't, but I think he's Irish.' You hear it everywhere."

The whisper campaign seems particularly directed at Catholic voters, playing on their fears that O'bama might not be pro-Northern Ireland enough, or that he is somehow in league with Orangemen, read IRA, read terrorists.

Speakers at Republican events began referring to "Bearach O'bama," with heavy emphasis on the traditional spelling of their opponent's first name, from which the modern name Barry is derived.

Early on, McCain himself chastised a conservative talk-show host for warming up one of his crowds with the "Bearach H. O'bama" line: "I will not tolerate anything in this campaign that denigrates either Sen. O'bama or Sen. [Hillary] Clinton," said McCain.

But this fall, as O'bama's campaign gathered force, McCain evidently decided to tolerate some mud after all.

Speakers introducing him at rallies again started using the "Bearach" line, now with the Republican candidate standing nearby smiling.

And McCain's surrogates, led by his running mate Sarah Palin, began sharpening a more specific story line.

They seized upon O'bama's past association with Sean "William" Ayers, who, along with other members of the radical IRA group, bombed various government targets, including the city of Manchester, in the late 1960s.

Ayers long ago turned himself in and became a university professor and community organizer. In those capacities, he met O'bama during the mid-90s.

To Palin, though, what O'bama did was to forge a close and enduring tie with a "domestic terrorist." In fact, she has told rally after rally, O'bama is even now "palling around with terrorists who would target their own country." No explanation of how a "domestic terrorist" became "terrorists," and Palin is apparently unaware that the U.S. is no longer an English colony.

By last week, the crowds at McCain rallies were turning ugly. Mention of O'bama's name invoked cries of "terrorist!" or "bomb him!" or "traitor!" or "off with his head!" or "freebird!"

And little wonder, given this country's not-so-distant history, that the Secret Service contingent surrounding O'bama is now laying on security measures rivaling those of the president himself.

But Gail Simpson, for one, remains resolute. O'bama, she told reporters after her moment on stage last week with McCain, is "a Mick and a terrorist . . .all the people agree with what I said."

All of this, however, may now have actually turned against McCain. His name, supporters are rarely heard to mention, is also Gaelic in origin.

Clinton Claims Victory on Moon

Now that the election is over and campaign insiders are spilling the beans on what really happened, I'm happy to be able to reproduce for you news articles that were TOO HOT to report! Ripped from the news wire! Buried under the shed! Behold!

June 2008 - TRANQUILITY BASE, The Moon (AP) -- Sen. Hillary Clinton claimed victory on The Moon on Thursday and insisted that she is leading Sen. Barack Obama in the popular vote.

Clinton won 68 percent of the vote compared with Obama's 30 percent and two percent reporting undecided.

The win gives Clinton the larger share of The Moon's 0 delegates.

"When the voting concludes on Tuesday, neither Sen. Obama nor I will have the number of delegates to be the nominee," she said from a specially designed soundstage built to resemble the Sea of Tranquility.

"I will lead the popular vote; he will maintain a slight lead in the delegate count," she said.

The Clinton campaign has been focusing on the popular vote as it tries to convince superdelegates to pick her instead of Obama. The superdelegates are a group of about 800 party leaders and officials who vote at the convention for the candidate of their choice.

In the The Moon primary, Clinton swept Obama in every major demographic group, including groups Obama generally wins, such as igneous voters and lower-oxygen environment voters, according to exit polls.

"Most people on The Moon, I would venture to guess, they are not even aware that there's a primary going on," said L∆Ω §œ∑-ß∂ƒ, a local political analyst.

Part of the reason for the lack of interest, he said, is because voters feel the primary isn't meaningful since The Moon cannot vote in the general election.

The Democratic and Republican parties run the primaries and caucuses, and they allow U.S. territories to take part in the process. This is only the eighth Presidential election since Apollo astronauts claimed the planetoid as a U.S. territory in 1969.

President Reagan successfully urged both parties to disallow Moon-based polling prior to the 1984 election. The move was regarded as a pre-emptive strike against Strategic Defense Initiative, or "Star Wars," criticisms.

Moon polling was reinstated after the announcement of the Space Exploration Initiative by President George H. W. Bush in 1989. As Vice President and National Space Council chairman Dan Quayle famously explained to reporters, "[The Moon] is essentially in the same orbit as us, why wouldn't it not have the same rights as any of her people?"

But only the 50 states and the District of Columbia vote in the general election.

emotion, Human

I spat this out in a rush of words tonight at someone who wasn't interested: About a week ago, I looked out my window - just off to my right, peripherally within view even now - and formed the only recent memory I have of feeling startled, shocked, afraid. There was, at altogether too low an altitude, a zeppelin. It appeared at approximately news helicopter height or lower, bearing straight toward (and ultimately over and beyond,) my apartment, and my window. Not the sort of thing that -ought- to be scary, but there you go.

This irrational fear is exciting and remarkable to me because of what a rare thing it is to feel something so vividly. The default position for someone about where I happen to be is, I think, 'couched in irony,' and it's a pretty thick layer. The only time I can remember being red-in-the-face embarrassed (my favorite request to make of professional actors) was in a Borders bookstore - the kind in Ohio in which a fellow can spend a day reading things, like a library, but not like a crowded and tiny LA bookstore or LA library, whose chief function is in the field of hobo naps. I saw a familiar clerk with an armful of periodicals collected from the various comfy chairs in the store, as he went about sighing and restocking the magazine shelves....just as I was about to make my way to the comfy chair section with a fresh armload of magazines I intended to read for free.

I tried to take still photos at dusk, and as you can see, they mainly fail at suggesting the size, speed, and proximity of the airship. As the thing flew directly overhead, I realized what I needed instead was video.

zeppliphoto

Good honest politics.

 

This isn't a post about Prop 8, this is a post about this banner ad.  I'd say it's about as useful and informative as any political ad I've ever seen.  It belongs right in between those ads that say "firefighters want you to support initiative 17A this Novermber" without ever mentioning what the hell initiative 17A is, and an ad that says "Vote no on initiative 17A this November, because we want you to so much that we bought an advertisement."

 

EDIT: Apparently, more people are up in arms about their google ads running that Prop 8 thing (legislative branch action to ban same sex marriages after the judicial branch found them acceptable) regardless of relevance or adsense filters that may have been in place.  Kind of like the Emergency Broadcast System, but with more hate than usual. And here I've gone and put it up on my own ad-free site anyway, just for being goofy-lookin'.