This Is What A City Should Look Like


Or so says Kaid Benfield…

But I rather agree, but I am also biased.

Definitely read the piece, though. The picture at the top is of the George Mason monument. You are unlikely to find it unless you happened to take the long route around from the Rev. Dr. King memorial to the Jefferson memorial. If I recall, those two books by Mason’s side say “Locke” and “Rousseau.”

The Franciscan monastery pictured has some gorgeous gardens and is one of the best places to sit, stroll, and relax, regardless of one’s sectarian stance. And the monks, being mostly older brothers, retired from having watched over sites in the Holy Land, are pretty laid back (having gone to confession there several times, I appreciate the presence of laid back monks when listing my faults).

2016 Kicks Off


Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell is headlining a dinner for the Iowa state GOP and Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker is doing the same in New Hampshire. Two more prominent Republicans working under the assumption that Mitt Romney will be going back to Bain Capital rather than to the White House.

Cokie, I’m Afraid I Have To Disagree With You


I was tuned into NPR (WAMU) on the commute this morning, listening to Cokie Roberts talk about what may or may not happen during the lame duck session.

Part of her point was that not just the results of the election, but the narrative, will have a great effect on how the lame duck session (which will be one of the most critical in recent memory) will play out.

If, she argued, Romney loses but the narrative is that Romney just ran a poor campaign and that he was just a fatally flawed candidate and if other things happen (GOP’ers hold the House and take the Senate, for example), nothing will change and the Republicans in Congress will simply continue to obstruct and be of as little use as they possibly can (and they can be of remarkably little use, as we have seen).

However, she continued, if that doesn’t happen, then the Republicans will have to reevaluate their positions and may work more closely with the President to actually accomplish something verging on the proactive in the lame duck.

Cokie, I must respectfully disagree.

The Republicans will continue to do what they’ve been doing (which is basically to sabotage the country and our economy). The only way it will play out differently is if Obama loses, in which case, they will only pass things that will expire a week after Romney is sworn in so that their new Gordon Gekko can start signing extreme right wing legislation with a clean slate, as it were.

And let’s not pretend that the narrative has not been preset. The GOP establishment is already setting the narrative to do just what Roberts described as being something that might happen. There’s no question about it – if Romney loses, the narrative is already in place to make sure that the results are defined as not being a repudiation of real Republican principles (which Romney will be defined as somehow not espousing), but rather as a failure to either hold or articulate those principles, i.e., that those principles would naturally have won out if Romney had really been a believer or if he hadn’t been so bad about explaining them.

Yes, if Romney loses, the narrative that he was a flawed candidate who, mainly because of the flaws, ran a flawed campaign, will actually be more or less true.

But what that will miss is that Romney’s flaws have so far led him into the trap of having to run a campaign of two visions.

The whole point was the Romney wanted to run as a bland, safe, generic ‘not that guy’ against Obama. He did not want to have to articulate anything. It is because this race is being framed as a choice between Democratic and Republican principles that Romney is losing; because this race has become a real choice between that ‘real’ Republican vision and the one being promulgated by President Obama.

 

P.S. – This post is dedicated to my Aunt Anna, who kindly asked me to write a little less about poetry and a little more about politics. I hope she enjoyed this post and the post immediately preceding it.

Happy Birthday, Mark Rothko


I’m not so enamored of him as I once was (though I still enjoy his work), but when I was in college, I used to head over to the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts and look at the Rothko on their wall (along with a Hopper and Marsden Hartley, it was among my favorite pieces there).

So, happy birthday, my friend.

Make It So


Fans of Jean-Luc Picard will know what I’m talking about.

Anyway… warp drive!

When Do They Give Up On Cornelius Harvey McGillicuddy The Fourth?


Cornelius Harvey McGillicuddy The Fourth, otherwise known as Connie Mack, otherwise known as a remarkably hapless candidate for US Senate.

Really, that man should have stayed in the House.

So the polls all show him trailing, his fundraising is lacking, and Obama looks like a narrow favorite to win Florida at the presidential level. This, friends, is a recipe for outside spending to dry up.

Outside groups might easily spend another $10-15 million trying to take down the broadly (though not deeply) liked Bill Nelson, but it’s more likely that number will be much, much less. Still a lot in comparison to my own, meagre bank account. But in this situation, little more than a sop to Mack’s supporters, so no one will say too loudly the hated words, that ‘they’ have given up on Mack.

Nelson was always going to run 5-8 points ahead of the president and Mack needs Romney to win an absolutely resounding victory in the Sunshine State and if you still think that’s going happen, then please contact me about some spectacular investments in mortgage-back securities available from a Pasco County condo developer.

Michael Moorcock


The Onion asked, ‘Where to start with fantasy overlord Michael Moorcock?

The unsurprising answer were his Elric stories.

As a youthful fantasy nerd, Elric was one of the shibboleths used by my fellow travelers. To be totally honest, I actually discovered him because he was written up in a 1st edition Dungeone & Dragons rulebook entitled Deities & Demigods. But that was how things were done. In the absence of the internet, such things seeped into the brain by different means.

And, in the mid eighties through the early nineties (roughly my Moorcock period), those books were damn hard to find. Naturally, once I’d succeeded in tracking down the books, one at at time (mostly from used bookstores), they became popular and were reasonably widely published.

That’s one of the things that rarely gets mentioned when talking about liking something before it was cool. Before something is cool, you can’t freaking find it. It’s like trying to put together a puzzle when you have to buy pieces one at a time. And you’re buying the pieces from guys who like they live in their moms’ basements and you try to not ask yourself if that’s your future, too.

I haven’t read the Elric stories for a long time and one wonders what it would be like to read a deliberate attempt to read a Conan novel written for a David Bowie, counter-culture world – which is pretty much what we’re talking about.

Is The Absence Of Leisure The Result Of Society’s Moral Failings?


In Praise of Leisure

Because It Never Ceases To Be Awesome


Intellectuals & Artists In Politics


The role of artists and intellectuals in political resistance is a well documented and generally well respected modern and contemporary feature, but their role in actual governance has been littered with failure and ignorance.

Up until fairly recently, art and intellectuals were primary supported by (or actually part of, by way of birth) the governing class, which placed them in a different role vis a vis politics.

But at least since the Romantic period, certainly artists and also, to a great extent, I think, intellectuals have been put into a role as outsiders.

This is all about Ezra Pound and what to do with him. Because that question never goes away, does it?

I was reading this article about Pound’s relationship with Mussolini and the impression is that Pound was roundly duped by Il Duce.

Listen to this comment by Mussolini’s aide:

This is an eccentric proposal thought by a foggy mind lacking any inkling of reality. Keeping in mind the affection Pound has for Italy and the enthusiasm that motivates him, it is sufficient to let him know that his interesting proposal is being studied…

Pound as a stupid little man, tossed meaningless sops to keep him happy with being effectively ignored so he could be blithely trotted out as a meagre tool of propaganda when time permitted.

The great genius… reduced to so little.