Someone with cable, tell me how this goes...
Our Handy Governor and Presidential hopeful Bill Richardson is braving the Daily Show tonight on Comedy Central.
I have no idea: Can Richardson be funny?

She’s looking for someone to bother, she says,
belly swelling beneath pink baby-doll tee.
She points down.
This is what she’s been up to.
“School? I don’t go; I got bored.”
But now? “He works,” she says.
“I sit at home and watch tv
and call him and tell him how bored I am.
It’s
fun.”
This girl, still running from her nightmares –
still dreaming them up –
too smart for school,
not smart enough to amuse herself,
contorts history
to come full feminist circle,
balloon-sculpture
pre-feminist dream,
only this girl can’t talk at dinner parties
or cook for dinner parties
or do much
of anything at all.
Scared of what she could be
and all that she never could,
she’s chosen this store-bought life
of unhappiness pre-packaged,
the tragedy bold-printed
on the family-proof label:
Take two. Wait twenty years.
Take two more.
What is failure to her
when it all means nothing,
and the disappointment
stretching my cheeks red
just enflames the word
judgment?
I want to understand
what she wants,
but am afraid even this
will prove too much for her.
Why must she
want anything at all?
What can she be feeding her baby
when she barely asks anything of the air?
Her attitude
is bigger than she is.
She looks half an ambition away from scared,
half a lifetime away from bitter.
This girl
is
When she laughs,
you can hear empty streets rattle.
Good thing
she does not care.
He works, she says,
and moves off to find someone else to bother.
Somewhere,
he readies himself for her growing anger,
the baby to take its own air,
tiny fingers pushing off against her to gain speed.
I am left empty-handed,
mid-wife to her stillborn dreams.
MAS Poetry | Blue Dragon II | Poetry & Beer |
Jessica Lopez | John Paskiewicz | Tony Santiago |
Don McIver | Jasmine Cuffee | Zach Kluckman |
Ben Boreman | Liza Wolff | Brooke Von Blomberg |
Luke Mitchell | Manuel Gonzales | Joe Romero |
Sina Aurelia-Sao | Jamen | Stephen |
Sean | Angel Ramirez | Jerry Mondragon |
Sal Treppiedi | Lenell Storey | James Altimirano |
And for those who love poetry and want to share, bring your favorite poem & sign up to read it at the open mic. Add a little poetry to your poetry! We all could use the education.
Ok, its not all politics and social justice on my mind.
Social living requires empathy, which is especially evident in chimpanzees, as well as ways of bringing internal hostilities to an end. Every species of ape and monkey has its own protocol for reconciliation after fights. If two males fail to make up, female chimpanzees will often bring the rivals together, as if sensing that discord makes their community worse off and more vulnerable to attack by neighbors.
Dr. de Waal believes that these actions are undertaken for the greater good of the community, as distinct from person-to-person relationships, and are a significant precursor of morality in human societies. ...
These four kinds of behavior — empathy, the ability to learn and follow social rules, reciprocity and peacemaking — are the basis of sociality.
As Dr. de Waal sees it, human morality may be severely limited by having evolved as a way of banding together against adversaries, with moral restraints being observed only toward the in group, not toward outsiders. “The profound irony is that our noblest achievement — morality — has evolutionary ties to our basest behavior — warfare,” he writes. “The sense of community required by the former was provided by the latter.”
[So racism can evolve to community! Woo-hoo! Good news, everyone. The war in Iraq is only a matter of glacial time, now! We'll definitely be ready to pull troop out in another 200,000-1,000,000 years. Hang in there, soldiers!]
Biologists are allowed an even smaller piece of the action by Jesse Prinz, a philosopher at the University of North Carolina. He believes morality developed after human evolution was finished and that moral sentiments are shaped by culture... “[R]ecognition of equal dignity for all human beings … seems to be unprecedented in the animal world.”
Dr. de Waal says, “In the actual world, we are confronted with different people who might be targets of our sympathy. And the business of ethics [and planning, hello!] is deciding who to help and why and when.”
Morality, [Dr. de Waal] writes, is “a sense of right and wrong that is born out of groupwide systems of conflict management based on shared values.” The building blocks of morality are not nice or good behaviors but rather mental and social capacities for constructing societies “in which shared values constrain individual behavior through a system of approval and disapproval.”
Natural selection favors organisms that survive and reproduce, by whatever means. And [morality] has provided people, with “a compass for life’s choices that takes the interests of the entire community into account, which is the essence of human morality.”[Planners as the ultimate in morality. Wow. Evolutionary pinnacle and all that. Is that why this is so damned complicated?]
Here are some of my favorite signs from today’s anti-war march and rally. There were about 1000 people there. For a more comprehensive look at the day, see Jo Ann's pictures on SWOPblogger--they're great.
Donald Shields and John Cragan, two professors of communication, have compiled a database of investigations and/or indictments of candidates and elected officials by U.S. attorneys since the Bush administration came to power.This is not an indication of guilt. It's a clear indication that once again, Bush condones blurring the line between Executive Power and the other branches of government. I see he believes in checks; it's the balances he doesn't seem to recognize.
Of the 375 cases they identified, 10 [3%] involved independents, 67 [17%] involved Republicans and 298 [79%] involved Democrats. The main source of this partisan tilt was a huge disparity in investigations of local politicians, in which Democrats were seven times as likely as Republicans to face Justice Department scrutiny.
It was just three weeks before election day 2006, and Rep. Heather A. Wilson was on the ropes. Opinion polls showed the New Mexico Republican trailing her Democratic opponent in a tough campaign.
...
One person in a good position to help Wilson was U.S. Atty. David C. Iglesias, who was investigating Democratic corruption in her home state. A late-breaking indictment of Democratic officials could help Wilson distance herself from sex and lobbying scandals plaguing the GOP in Washington.
That's why eyebrows raised when it was recently disclosed that, in the heat of her fight for political survival, Wilson called Iglesias to ask about possible indictments. So did Domenici.
Both lawmakers have denied that they called Iglesias for political purposes or pressured him. But questions about their actions have turned what might have been a narrow investigation of the Justice Department's late-2006 decision to fire Iglesias and seven other U.S. attorneys into a broader controversy about the ethical limits of lawmakers' influence on prosecutors.
...
Democrats see the New Mexico episode as indicative of the lengths Republicans were willing to go to gain political advantage in the crucial midterm elections that ended up changing the balance of power in Congress.
...
Iglesias understood that news of indictments against them would probably boost Wilson's chances.
"I was aware that public corruption was a huge battle being waged by Patricia Madrid and Heather Wilson in the 1st District," he said. "And I assiduously tried to stay out of that fight."
So, essentially, there are a number of men who were abducted by the CIA and taken to secret prisons, where we all know they were tortured. They were then transferred to Guantanamo Bay after the public found out about those prisons and reacted accordingly (because many of us do operate from a set of ideals and values). Now the military is secretly determining if they get to try the prisoners in military tribunals.
Folks, our country is founded on checks and balances. The only way these prisoners get a fair shake is if another body has access to all that secret information and has equal power to check the military in these proceedings. Should that body be public? Maybe, maybe not. But it should definitely exist, and it should be completely independent.
And that, dear friends, is exactly the power of events like last night. Sometimes when you make the space for people to tell their stories and be heard, nothing has to change. Sometimes, that's all that has to happen for change to begin.