Tuesday Morning Staff Meeting – Writing For The Dead


The poetic chronicler of Montana’s graves.

Actually, if you think there’s a conspiracy, you’re deluded…

Why? Cheap rents and a weak currency, that’s why!

Monday Morning Staff Meeting – Bridging The Continental Divide


Philosophy is a science.

Why should they not meet?

Limbaugh and language.

Dave Aronberg’s St. Pete Fundraiser


Former State Senator Dave Aronberg is having a fundraiser in St. Pete and I’m pleased that a lot of popular and well known pols and activists are coming out to support him. Dave is a great guy and he’s running for State Attorney in Palm Beach County. In 2010, he lost the Democratic primary for Attorney General to Dan Gelber (also a good guy, though I enthusiastically voted for Aronberg in that race). Of course, that year was bloodbath for Dems, especially in Florida (ironically, Obama is even money or slightly odd to win Florida this year).

So if you can, stop by and say hello to Senator Aronberg and give his campaign a little love. Whatever bench Florida Dems have, you can bet that he’s one of the best prospects sitting on it. Let’s get him on the field.

Weekend Reading – The Reason For Poetry Is Hope


Ariana Reines reviewed.

Of what stuff books are made of.

Less than you might think.

An analysis of lyric poetry reveals hope.

Corcoran Gallery of Art


The other night, I attended a fundraiser for the Center for American Progress, a progressive think tank and strategy clearinghouse at the Corcoran Gallery of Art.

Mostly, it was a crowded room filled with progressive semi-luminaries (Andy Stern, Ruy Texeira, etc), your usual political/policy hacks (no disrespect intended).

But some of the galleries on the first floor were open, containing a beautiful collection of about half American and half European art, mostly from the late eighteenth through the late nineteenth centuries. And that was why I came. In a city filled with free museums, I am resistant to paying for one and the Corcoran is not free, so I naturally finagled myself a couple of tickets so we could go and see what was open to see. We had done the same thing when we went to an inaugural party there in January 2010, though far fewer galleries were open.

My date and I were cornered by two strange men. One man named Bill described his tangential participation in that nastiness in Beirut in 1982 and the other, named Jean-Pierre described how he had begun “treating his glaucoma” at age twelve (I’ll leave you to read between the lines as to his true meaning).

Thursday Morning Staff Meeting – The Limits


The limits of Cornel West.

The limits of evolutionary theorizing about morality.

The limits of proving faith through archaeology.

Sunday Book Reviews – Utopia Hates You


‘Sty­lis­ti­cal­ly, Lev­in dis­plays many marks of the bad­ly edu­cat­ed writ­er, such as mis­use of the word “com­prise,” re­pet­i­tive quotes, and un­fa­mil­iar­i­ty with the “that/which” dis­tinc­tion. He’s just as care­ful and ac­cu­rate when mo­tor-mouth­ing on the air.’

Maybe he doesn’t really ‘get’ Ellington.

Why The Death Star Was A Bad Investment


The Death Star was not an intelligent allocation of resources towards the goal of maintaining power.

Gregory Koger explains why, offers some alternative investments the Emperor could have made.

Weekend Reading – Eat Your Broccoli


Read more fiction, it’s good for you. More importantly, it’s good for society (which benefits you).

Counting the human cost of General Franco.

Where’s the bailout for creative types?

Thursday Morning Staff Meeting – DC’s ‘Secondary Sights’


A better way to enjoy Washington, DC.

Conservatives are aroused by feeling outraged.

The neuroscience approach can sometimes be too simplistic.