blerp

Month

May 2011

20 posts

Play
May 30, 2011
May 30, 20112 notes
“I am looking forward enormously to getting back to the sea again, where the overstimulated psyche can recover in the presence of that infinite peace and spaciousness.” —Carl Jung (via sometimesagreatnotion)
May 27, 201123 notes
May 25, 201125 notes
Play
May 25, 201120 notes
May 25, 2011716 notes
“

I suspect that there’s a legend in the making — one that will come to dominate the conventional wisdom if the GOP does badly next year — which goes like this: Republicans were too noble. They committed themselves to a serious, well-crafted policy plan, but were oblivious to the political realities.


What I hope regular readers of this blog understand by now is that the Ryan plan is, in fact, a self-serving piece of junk. It doesn’t add up — in fact, it would probably make the deficit bigger not smaller. And far from representing some kind of sacrifice of political interests in the service of the greater good, it’s a right-wing wish-list on steroids: sharp tax cuts for corporations and the rich, savage cuts in aid to the poor, and a gratuitous privatization of Medicare.

”
—Paul Krugman (via pantslessprogressive)
May 24, 201173 notes
If you've ever uploaded a photo to TwitPic, you should know that it's now technically owned by the WENN photo service, which now has the right to sell that photo for publication! Aaaah, the maddening digital world. → nytimes.com

shortformblog:

Now’s a good time to note that Tumblr’s own Terms of Service make it clear that you own your work (though you give them a license to spread it). If Flickr were smart, they would’ve made a service that does what TwitPic does already.

May 23, 2011205 notes
May 22, 201194 notes
May 22, 2011161 notes
May 22, 2011268 notes
May 18, 2011104 notes
May 16, 201120,645 notes
May 16, 2011566 notes
May 16, 2011579 notes
May 10, 20112 notes
May 10, 201112 notes
May 9, 2011170 notes
May 6, 201182 notes
“

the Osama bin Laden Exception: yes, I believe in all these principles of due process and restraining unfettered Executive killing and the like, but in this one case, I don’t care if those are violated. Like I said, though I strongly disagree with that view, I understand and respect it, particularly given the honesty with which it’s expressed.

My principal objection to it — aside from the fact that I think those principles shouldn’t be violated because they’re inherently right (which is what makes them principles) — is that there’s no principled way to confine it to bin Laden. If this makes sense for bin Laden, why not for other top accused Al Qaeda leaders? Why shouldn’t the same thing be done to Anwar al-Awlaki, the U.S. citizen who has been allegedly linked by the Government to far more attacks over the last several years than bin Laden? At Guantanamo sits Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the alleged operational mastermind of 9/11 — who was, if one believes the allegations, at least as responsible for the attack as bin Laden and about whom there is as little perceived dobut; why shouldn’t we just take him out back today and shoot him in the head and dump his corpse into the ocean rather than trying him?

…The Allied powers could easily have taken every Nazi war criminal they found and summarily executed them without many people caring. But they didn’t do that, and the reason they didn’t is because how the Nazis were punished would determine not only the character of the punishing nations, but more importantly, would set the standards for how future punishment would be doled out.

I actually believe in those precepts. And if those principles were good enough for those responsible for Nazi atrocities, they are good enough for the likes of Osama bin Laden. It’s possible they weren’t applicable here; if he couldn’t be safely captured because of his attempted resistence, then capturing him wasn’t a reasonable possibility. But it seems increasingly clear that the objective here was to kill, not capture him, no matter what his conduct was. That, at the very least, raises a whole host of important questions about what we endorse and who we are that deserves serious examination — much more than has been prompted by this celebrated killing.

”
—Glenn Greenwald (via jazzysophist)
May 6, 20115 notes
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