Amuse yourself

How did American men win the right to vote? By taking up arms against the British and winning a brutal war, at the cost of great loss of life, liberty, and property. How did American women win the right to vote? By nagging their husbands, mainly. See Dean’s World: Special Message To Judith Weiss, Meryl … Continue reading “Amuse yourself”

How did American men win the right to vote? By taking up arms against the British and winning a brutal war, at the cost of great loss of life, liberty, and property.

How did American women win the right to vote? By nagging their husbands, mainly.

See Dean’s World: Special Message To Judith Weiss, Meryl Yourish, and Susan B. Anthony:

So, for Judith Weiss, Meryl Yourish, and all the other resentful feminists I know, I have a special message for you. It’s from all the males of America. It’s a message not just from us, but from your fathers and grandfathers and great-grandfathers:

YOU’RE WELCOME.

Is it any wonder that men and women use the vote to accomplish different ends?

Governor Bustamante

Things are looking pretty rosy for Arnie right now, and Garamendi’s last-minute withdrawal at union request doesn’t make any difference. Note also that joke candidate Arianna has more support from Repubs than from Dems, confirming every suspicion of Republican stupidity we ever had. Will these numbers hold up? Probably not. 26% of Dems are undecided, … Continue reading “Governor Bustamante”

Things are looking pretty rosy for Arnie right now, and Garamendi’s last-minute withdrawal at union request doesn’t make any difference.

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Note also that joke candidate Arianna has more support from Repubs than from Dems, confirming every suspicion of Republican stupidity we ever had.

Will these numbers hold up? Probably not. 26% of Dems are undecided, and most of them will go for Bustamante, who’ll most likely pickup at least 60% of the Democrat vote. He’ll also attract a lot of otherwise not-voting Latinos to the polls to elect the first Latino governor in modern times. Arnie, meanwhile, will have to fight tooth and nail with death-wish wing of the Republican Party, most of whom will end up voting for Simon and McClintock. So Bustamante will Cruz to victory in October.

Is he a bad guy? Yes, pretty much. He’s indebted to the Casino-Americans, and he’ll have to support their Sacred Sites land-grab and all the other nefarious stuff they have to do in order to retain the image of victimization, such as stopping research on predecessors to the so-called Native People and on their cannibalistic practices. Bustamante will also be a pawn to the prison guards and the other unions that own little pieces of Gray.

The only significant difference I can see is that Cruz won’t be as indebted to the gay lobby as Davis, whose first real supporter was Sheila Kuehl, and he’ll obviously be way more indebted to the Latino lobby. That’s not a big difference. The people pulling Bustamante’s strings are more to my liking than those pulling Davis’, so in that sense it will be an improvement.

Dem unity shatters

Bustamante and Garamendi in: By late Wednesday, Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante, who had insisted for weeks that he would not be on the Oct. 7 ballot, announced he was entering the race. “It’s definite,” said Richie Ross, Bustamante’s political consultant. Bustamante has scheduled a news conference for this morning. Insurance Commissioner John Garamendi, another Democrat, … Continue reading “Dem unity shatters”

Bustamante and Garamendi in:

By late Wednesday, Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante, who had insisted for weeks that he would not be on the Oct. 7 ballot, announced he was entering the race.

“It’s definite,” said Richie Ross, Bustamante’s political consultant. Bustamante has scheduled a news conference for this morning.

Insurance Commissioner John Garamendi, another Democrat, said Wednesday evening that he too was considering entering the race and would make an announcement today. On Monday, Garamendi had said he strongly opposed the recall and did not plan to run. “A lot of things have changed since Monday,” he said.

Like we said, the Dems can’t afford to stay out. Bustamante has extra incentive to enter the race, since Davis has treated him like dirt the entire time they’ve both been in office, and extra-extra incentive in case the courts rule the replacement ballot isn’t needed: then it’s a head-to-head between Gray and Cruz, now sworn enemies.

This is way more fun that daytime TV.

Good Arnie profile

Not yet up-to-speed on the Grayminator? Check Patrick Reddy on National Review Online: Schwarzenegger seems a bundle of contradictions: an outspoken Republican who’s married to Democratic stalwart Sen. Ted Kennedy’s niece, Maria Shriver (and the daughter of George McGovern’s running mate!). A man who proclaims his life story to be a triumph of individual will, … Continue reading “Good Arnie profile”

Not yet up-to-speed on the Grayminator? Check Patrick Reddy on National Review Online:

Schwarzenegger seems a bundle of contradictions: an outspoken Republican who’s married to Democratic stalwart Sen. Ted Kennedy’s niece, Maria Shriver (and the daughter of George McGovern’s running mate!). A man who proclaims his life story to be a triumph of individual will, yet often reaches out to people less successful than he. An actor who has regularly been roughed up by critics, yet won a Golden Globe Award for Best Acting debut. A dedicated “jock” who spent years in the weight room, but also has a master of business administration degree. A brutally tough business negotiator who’s given away millions to charity. An aggressive bachelor in his younger days who also helped advance women’s bodybuilding. A “health nut” who has also taken massive doses of steroids. A man whose father was literally a Nazi in occupied Austria, but whose career has been immeasurably helped by Jewish promoters and producers and calls himself an “honorary Jew.” A top-notch athlete whose first charitable work was with handicapped children.

Reddy’s a Democrat, so the article’s safe for children of all ages.

Now we’ve got a horse race

Now that Arnold Schwarzenegger has announced he’s running for governor we’ve got a serious contest going, which only happens in California when pop culture and politics are fully overlapped. Arnie’s being in the race means that people will get excited over it, feeling like they now have to take a position on his candidacy one … Continue reading “Now we’ve got a horse race”

Now that Arnold Schwarzenegger has announced he’s running for governor we’ve got a serious contest going, which only happens in California when pop culture and politics are fully overlapped. Arnie’s being in the race means that people will get excited over it, feeling like they now have to take a position on his candidacy one way or another instead of going on ignoring politics as we obsess over the latest movie release, whether SPF-20 really makes you safe, and whether botox is really worth the bother. We live in a world of trivia and pop, and only care about politics when it comes into this world.

While he’s never held office, Arnie’s clearly been planning a run for many years, maybe as long as he’s been married to Maria Shriver. He’s got his own set of consultants already, enough money to finance his own campaign (if he needs to) and a good, positive, and well-informed message: “Gray sold California to the special interests (read: unions) and I’m here to take it back. I don’t care what you do in your private life, and I don’t want to impose my values on you. I want a state government that works and doesn’t break the backs of the average taxpaying citizen, and a society that offers opportunity and hope as it did to me as a humble but legal immigrant.” Echoes of “shining city on a hill”.

So he’s off and running, having faked Feinstein out of the race, and having picked up some excellent blocking from the unions who’ve threatened to black-ball any Democrat who runs against him. Despite these threats, insurance commissioner John Garamendi, Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante, and Congresswomen Loretta Sanchez may still enter the race on the Democratic side, and if they do the dam will break and Bill Lockyer will either have to jump in or risk ending his political career by having to run against an incumbent Republican in his long-planned run in 2006.

Arnie’s choice tells us something about the pundits, most of whom predicted he wouldn’t be running, some on the basis of alleged insider tips. It turns out Dan Walters, dean of the capitol press corps, was right not to try and jump the gun:

Schwarzenegger’s political advisers had hinted for days that he was ready to make a move into the race, but they pulled back last week as the recall election became a reality, and they were forced Monday to deny media reports that he had finally decided not to make the run.

“These reports are incorrect,” a midday Schwarzenegger statement said. “Arnold spent the weekend continuing his due diligence regarding a possible run. He has made no decision at this time. He will continue to weigh the pros and cons with his family and will continue to seek the counsel of supporters and colleagues. When Arnold has made his decision, we will announce it to the media.”

The decision was just made, and when this column was printed it was still up in the air. LA Weekly columnist William Bradley, who really does have insider connections, called it right:

In discussions with California political associates on July 18, the superrich superstar said that the race was probably on. Schwarzenegger?s veteran campaign team, former top aides to Pete Wilson in his four winning campaigns for governor and senator, shifted into gear. Important campaign meetings were scheduled for July 22.

(via Kausfiles)

The best outcome from all this would be a whole generation of Californians getting turned-on to politics, at least a little. Increased awareness of what goes on in Sacramento automatically translates into more rational politics, mainly because it couldn’t get any worse.

See Rough & Tumble for links to more articles about Arnie and the recall.

Red Hat

I’m posting this from my Linux box at the world headquarters of Network Strategies in beautiful downtown Santa Clara, in the heart of Silicon Valley. Installing Red Hat 9 was by far the easiest OS installation I’ve ever experienced, and that includes lots of OS installations. It’s way easier than Windows, and that goes for … Continue reading “Red Hat”

I’m posting this from my Linux box at the world headquarters of Network Strategies in beautiful downtown Santa Clara, in the heart of Silicon Valley. Installing Red Hat 9 was by far the easiest OS installation I’ve ever experienced, and that includes lots of OS installations.

It’s way easier than Windows, and that goes for 3.1, 95, 98, 2000, Me, and XP, although version 1.0 was almost as smooth. But it should have been, because it didn’t do anything.

Lots of Silicon Valley dudes live double lives, using Solaris or Linux at work, and then regressing to Windows at home because the computer’s shared and Windows used to be so easy to install, manage, and use. But that era is rapidly coming to an end, if it’s not ended already.

And since this is a computer I put together out of old parts laying around, if my packet-scheduling kernel doesn’t work right away, nobody cares but me.

Excusing the inexcusable

John Gilmore, the EFF board member who boarded an international flight wearing a button proclaiming his contempt for authority and was kicked-off, has naturally come under a lot of criticism for his ridiculous, narcissistic stunt. Lawrence Lessig, a fellow EFF board member, gives Gilmore some space on his blog to try and justify himself, which … Continue reading “Excusing the inexcusable”

John Gilmore, the EFF board member who boarded an international flight wearing a button proclaiming his contempt for authority and was kicked-off, has naturally come under a lot of criticism for his ridiculous, narcissistic stunt. Lawrence Lessig, a fellow EFF board member, gives Gilmore some space on his blog to try and justify himself, which Gilmore uses to dig a deeper hole. Some of the comments are interesting, or at least more interesting than Gilmore’s childish response to his critics, which is nothing more than name-calling.

Intelligent conservatives please apply

It would be nice if some of you intelligent conservatives would go on over to Cam Barrett’s Watchblog and sign up to be editors on the Republican side. He’s trying to put together a group blog to cover the election from all sides of the spectrum, and despite his own bias as a pinko liberal … Continue reading “Intelligent conservatives please apply”

It would be nice if some of you intelligent conservatives would go on over to Cam Barrett’s Watchblog and sign up to be editors on the Republican side. He’s trying to put together a group blog to cover the election from all sides of the spectrum, and despite his own bias as a pinko liberal commie bastard, he’s doing a fair job of staying out of the ideological fray and letting the people speak.

See the application.

The grounds

Bill Maher and others have asked what crime Gray Davis committed such that he has to be recalled. While the law doesn’t specify a “crime”, the petition did have to list grounds: The grounds for the recall are as follows: Gross mismanagement of California Finances by overspending taxpayers? money, threatening public safety by cutting funds … Continue reading “The grounds”

Bill Maher and others have asked what crime Gray Davis committed such that he has to be recalled. While the law doesn’t specify a “crime”, the petition did have to list grounds:

The grounds for the recall are as follows: Gross mismanagement of California Finances by overspending taxpayers? money, threatening public safety by cutting funds to local governments, failing to account for the exorbitant cost of the energy fiasco, and failing in general to deal with the state?s major problems until they get to the crisis stage. California should not have to be known as the state with poor schools, traffic jams, outrageous utility bills, and huge debts….all caused by gross mismanagement.

So there you have it, courtesy of Calblog.

Two million California voters agreed with this.

Incidentally, your best source of political news in California is always Rough and Tumble, although Justene has been doing yeoman duty on the recall.

And who’s advising Weinberger?

David Weinberger announces he’s joined Howard Dean’s campaign: I now have an official title — “Senior Internet Advisor” — so I figure I should come out of the closet entirely. I was going to leave this comment on Weinberger’s blog, but thought better of it: It’s great that you’re advising Dean on the Internet, David, … Continue reading “And who’s advising Weinberger?”

David Weinberger announces he’s joined Howard Dean’s campaign:

I now have an official title — “Senior Internet Advisor” — so I figure I should come out of the closet entirely.

I was going to leave this comment on Weinberger’s blog, but thought better of it:

It’s great that you’re advising Dean on the Internet, David, as he clearly needs to understand it.

Now the question that pops into my little mind is: “who’s advising you?”

That would have been rude, of course. But the point is that Weinberger, as a card-carrying, charter member of the Larry Lessig “End of the Internet” club has consistently demonstrated a lack of understanding of what the Internet is, how it’s put together, and where it’s going. In this job, that’s not a disadvantage, as all he needs to do is rail against Big Everything to advance the Little Guy’s campaign.

So good luck to all concerned.