Paul Ryan Winning Any Award For Healthcare Policy Besides ‘Most Full Of Crap When He Talks About It’ Or ‘Most Likely To F–k It Up’ Is A Joke


The Nation provides a nice little takedown of the ridiculousness of Politico giving Paul Ryan their ‘Healthcare Policymaker of the Year’ award.

My question is how in God’s green earth did Ryan ever get a reputation for being some of budget guru or ideas man anyway? Nothing he has ever put forth has ever had the numbers add up and I don’t consider regurgitating the latest b.s. from ALEC or some right wing hack think tank to be the same as actually having an ‘idea.’

You know who Paul Ryan is? He’s the guy who reads Time Magazine and then tells you with great authority some stupid prescriptive he pulled out of it and then expects you to laud him for being so very well informed on public policy.

Poor Old Bodhi Tree


The Bodhi Tree Bookstore, once a favorite haunt of mine back in my Hollywood days (the location, not the industry), will, apparently, disappear from existence should a buyer not be found by New Year’s Eve.

Raise a glass of green tea (which they used to offer for free to visitors) in their memory, should, as expected, no white knight come in to save them.

Parks


In this list of top cities for various kinds of parks and public swimming pools, I’m pleased that DC tends to do well. Somewhat surprisingly, Orlando also figures highly.

DC Minus The Metro


Every wonder what Washington, DC would be like if the Metro had never been built?

Me neither. But I’m glad some one asked the question anyway.

Here’s their answer.

This Would Be A Great Way To Stimulate The Economy


Invest in ‘Limitless Libraries.’ Help the economy. Improve cultural literacy and promote long term reading habits.

A Poet’s Manifesto


Australian poet and activist John Kinsella was shortlisted for the T.S. Eliot Poetry Prize. He and the poet Alice Oswald subsequently removed themselves for consideration on the basis that Aurum, the hedge fund sponsoring the prize, was not a moral company and neither wished to whitewash their money.

Kinsella responded to the controversy by publishing a manifesto of ‘linguistic disobedience’ in the New Statesman.

It’s well worth reading.

 

P.S.
For those keeping score, The New Statesman was one of the Christopher Hitchens’ earliest writing gigs. He was with them when he came to America to write for The Nation as part of an exchange program between the two magazines.

Obama Shops At Kramerbooks


Kramerbooks, one of DC’s many fine independent bookstores, was perused by President Obama last Saturday.

He shopped there explicitly in support of small businesses. Good for him.

Another Bookstore Chain Falls – Atlantic Books


It’s never been a big chain.

I first encountered it visiting my sister and later working in Delaware. There are only four Atlantic Books left – two of them being the ones I know. The store in Dover, Delaware and the store in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware. I bought Gao Xingjian’s One Man’s Bible from the Dover branch, but I have more memories of the Rehoboth one.

When visiting my sister in summer, you go down to the Boardwalk and right there is the bookstore. You can browse a not great but surprisingly good selection and pick up an inexpensive book there. I’m never comfortable living far from a bookstore and Atlantic Books assuaged that need over there.

At least indie bookshops appear to be doing well this holiday season.

That Which Does Not Kill Me Makes Me Stronger


Note:
I wrote this several days and was basically saving it for another day, but then I learned that Christopher Hitchens died yesterday at the age of 62. He was suffering from esophogeal cancer.

Like many liberals, I have mixed feelings about Hitchens. Great respect for him as a stylist and a polemicist. But, like many, I diverged with him over the Iraq war. But, unlike say an Irving Kristol, he did not allow his break with the left on a particular issue lead him to become a right wing figure.

For Christmas, some half dozen years ago, my Aunt Millie gave me a copy of his Letters to a Young Contrarian, titled after Rilke’s Letters to a Young Poet. Hitchens’ book is almost certainly more enjoyable to read, not in the least because you can’t shake the feeling, when reading Rilke’s book, that the young poet to whom he addresses himself is probably also a very bad poet.

I don’t know how he will be remembered. For the next decade, probably as an English speaking, more biting and more witty equivalent to France’s Bernard Henri-Levy (though Hitchens did not wear his shirts unbuttoned nearly to his navel, like Henri-Levy, and generally stopped at a sufficiently rakish spot at the base of the sternum; he was also not nearly as much an unjustifiably pompous an ass as Henri-Levy and also, Hitchens did actual research, while there is not prove to Henri–Levy does any before spouting off). In decades to come, I suspect he will placed with figures like Arthur Koestler who were influential and much read in their day but whose relevance was more timely than timeless.

But I still loved his magazine pieces and watching him stab and barb debate opponents on CSPAN-2 on the weekends and I am very sad to know he is gone.

So soon after George Whitman’s passing, too. We are losing figures whose personal importance to my time I will never be able to explain to those that follow me.

There are various translations, of course. But it occurs in Nietzsche’s Twilight of the Idols in a section of aphorisms. It is one of the more enjoyable of his books to read (I prefer to the more novelistic style of Thus Spake Zarathustra; and I should note that Nietzsche is one of the easiest and most enjoyable philosophers to read and is supposedly known in Germany less as a philosopher and more as a literary stylist ), but does not hold so well, intellectually speaking, compared to works like The Genealogy of Morals or his first tome, The Birth of Tragedy.

Christopher Hitchens recently wrote about that phrase, which he said he often used before but now that he is living very close to death’s edge (achieved a relative state of being-there as regards understanding of being-approaching-death, to needlessly throw in some references to the great German obscurantist philosophy, Martin Heidegger) he sees its flaws.

Of course, one wonders if Nietzsche was really referring to things that lead up to the final death. The weakening of the body and mind. Or was he speaking more about the potential to take wisdom from suffering?

But it is easy to read it literally. It wasn’t written with any real context. Also, like many Americans my age, I first encountered it within the opening credits of the 1982 movie, Conan the Barbarian, where it was taken somewhat literally – since Conan did not die of exhaustion pushing that great wheel in circles, he was able to become impossibly strong, almost as if he were actually a semi-articulate Austrian body builder.

This is the problem with Nietzsche, that most literary of philosophers. Because literature, even more than the majority of nineteenth century German philosophy, lends itself to a certain ambiguity of interpretation.

Higgs Field


These are exciting days for people who like particles.

First there was the whol ‘neutrinos moving faster than the speed of light’ thing, which instantly made me think of building my own Millenium Falcon from part taken from a pair of fifteen year old Ford Escorts, immediately followed by thinking of ways to create a time machine using a french press and a toaster oven.

Now, we the Large Hardon Collider seems to finally be ready to experimentally confirm the presence of the Higgs Field, a field which theoretically permeates all space and that gives particles mass.