Jun. 29th, 2005

ebonlock: (Super Good!)
I have very little to report today save that it does appear that the Dr. Who eps will play on a computer (only it must be a better one than mine as it freezes up nearly continuously- the system, not the DVD), I made it through work no problem yesterday (having a nice, juicy new project to focus on helped immensely), and my kitchen is now more organized than it has been since I moved in. I see a long weekend spent organizing my place in general. I blame [livejournal.com profile] ravenmb, for having such a well organized and tidy apartment that's even smaller than my own. If she can work wonders with her little place I now know there's no excuse for me not to get mine in better shape.

Also started, gods help me, her requested Snupin screwball comedy fic. It's loosely based on "Bringing Up Baby", though I toyed long and hard with "The Bachelor and the Bobby Soxer" which I'm still convinced would've worked splendidly. I just keep seeing Snape in Myrna Loy's role...it's kind of freaky, actually.

Oh and Aelf, I did record Venture Brothers, and it was indeed the ghost pirate episode "Ghosts of the Sargasso", I'll show it to you this weekend.
ebonlock: (Monarch)
Somehow Jesse at Pandagon always seems to know just how to express something that has been niggling at the back of my brain for a while, and do it far more eloquently than I ever could:

Long story short, when Bush says 9/11 and Iraq, he's playing on a complete lie. The issue is, we're fighting the first postmodern war (and I mean postmodern in the intellectually lazy way that conservatives perceive it). Why are we fighting? Well, everyone has their reasons. Mine are just as valid as yours, unless yours aren't, in which case I'm even more right. When Bush says 9/11 followed by Iraq, he's not referring to what he's obviously referring to - he's referring to an entirely different set of specious assumptions backed up by my ability to choke them out without being struck down by lightning.

This, I think, is the disconnect between reality and much of the pro-war right. When the New York Times or Washington Post criticizes the war, they're criticizing the war that's happening. It's a war where there's a large-scale insurgent movement, where the al-Qaeda interest in Iraq was seeing Hussein gone and using the subsequent unrest to recruit and attack, where new cafeterias aren't replacements for dead kids. In the Fighting Keyboarder world, everyone's got their own version of this war - in some, we're creating a nation of adoring America-fans, in others we've crushed the insurgency and whatever's left is simply a shadow pumped up by the "MSM". But whatever the war, it's theirs, and it can't be argued with because the relevant particulars are determined in their heads and switched as is necessary to accuse you of treason.


Although this comment by a site visitor, Adam, is also beautiful beyond my ability to articulate:

9/11 showed us that if America is attacked by terrorists, we need to kill terrorists. Even if it means going to Iraq and making more terrorists. After all, all the terrorists are fighting for the unified platform of Terrorism, which is the dominant political ideology in Terroristan.

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