Booman Tribune





Find textbooks at Alibris!

NOTE: Overstock bests Amazon's prices and is "blue."

THE BOOKS WITH "BUZZ":
______________

Senator Edward M. Kennedy tells his extraordinary personal story:

True Compass: A Memoir
by Edward M. Kennedy.

Read Barack Obama's vision for America:

The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream
by Barack Obama

Boran2 and maryb2004 recommend:

The Big Over Easy: A Nursery Crime
by Jasper Fforde

Must-have information for all presidents-and citizens-of the twenty-first century?

Physics for Future Presidents: The Science behind the Headlines
Richard A. Muller

rae recommends:

Dark Ages America: The Final Phase of Empire
by Morris Berman.

On BooMan’s shelf:

Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln
by Doris Kearns Goodwin

This looks interesting:

Adventure Divas
by Holly Morris

Here’s a good one from
Elizabeth Gilbert:

Eat Pray Love
by Elizabeth Gilbert

"Crash" * Best Motion Picture, Academy Awards * Only $11.79 at Overstock * 2006 SAG Winner, Best Ensemble

Check out
Powell's new section:
NEW FAVORITES

Selected new arrivals at 30% off

Recommended by Indianadem and ejmw:
The Conscience of a Liberal
by Paul Wellstone

From northcountry’s bookshelf:

The New Golden Age:
The Coming Revolution Against
Political Corruption and Economic Chaos
by Ravi Batra

A novel about contractors in Iraq from the woman that runs The Spy That Billed Me:

Outsourced: A Novel
from RJ Hillhouse.


Great Deals
----- * ^ * -----

Find mystery novels by Nancy Pickard ("Kansas")



Challenging Empire: How People, Governments, and the UN Defy US Power by Phyllis Bennis (interviewed on DN!)


Featured by Keith Olbermann, New (Powell's Sale): Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only Superpower by William Blum (whose other books merit serious consideration)


"Explosive" State of War: The Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration
by James Risen


The book the CIA doesn't want you to read: Jawbreaker: The Attack on Bin Laden and Al Qaeda: A Personal Account by the CIA's Key Field Commander
Larry Johnson's review


BT's all-time best seller:

PERMACULTURE:
A Designers' Manual

$79.95 * Sale: $59.95


Unequal Sisters: A Multicultural Reader in U.S. Women's History (Third Edition)


The Undercover Economist: Exposing Why the Rich Are Rich, the Poor Are Poor And Why You Can Never Buy a Decent Used Car!


The Worst Hard Time: The Untold Story of Those Who Survived the Great American Dust Bowl
by Timothy Egan


Green Press Initiative
----- * ^ * -----


Journalistas: 100 Years of the Best Writing and Reporting by Women Journalists by Eleanor Mills * NYT review


Bury Me Standing: the Gypsies & Their Journey


1491: New Revelations of the Americas before Columbus



Brokeback Mountain
by Annie Proulx
----- * ^ * -----
Check out Powell's
"At The Movies"


Imperial Ambitions: Conversations on the Post-9/11 World by Noam Chomsky (Power & Terror: Post 9-11 Talks)


The Price of Privilege:

How Parental Pressure and
Material Advantage Are Creating a Generation of
Disconnected and Unhappy Kids

by Madeline Levine


Save 35-70% on
name brand clothing,
footwear, and outdoor gear
at SierraTradingPost.com

:





We listened to PEN American Center's "State of Emergency" and found 1940s books by Curzio Malaparte only at Alibris. (Selection (MP3) excerpted from "The Skin.")

Alibris - Books You Thought You'd Never Find
Banned Books * Are you a fan of Film Noir, Art House, Documentaries or Hong Kong Action? * Searching for a long-lost children's book or a first printing of Miles Davis' Kind of Blue on vinyl? Find it at Alibris!

:
:
www.Patagonia.com


Everyday this is someone's life

by Steven D
Tue Feb 9th, 2010 at 05:24:31 PM EST

Remember my friend who was beaten to a pulp in a hate crime committed by two bigoted animals? He had to get stitches for facial injuries. But when it came time to remove the stitches he didn't go back to a doctor or hospital. He had them removed by non-medical professionals.

Why would someone do this? Because he has no health care coverage. None. Nada. Not since he was laid off by a subsidiary of a multinational mega-corporation (name withheld for privacy purposes). He does odd jobs now while he waits to find a real job. Just like millions of other people who lost their health care coverage when they were laid off and couldn't afford to keep paying for the cost of continued care under COBRA.

One out of three Americans under 65 were without health insurance at some point during 2007 and 2008, according to a report ... commissioned by the consumer health advocacy group Families USA, [which] found 86.7 million Americans were uninsured at one point during the [2007 and 2008].

Want to bet that the number of uninsured people rose significantly in 2009 as the official unemployment rate rose to around 10%? The more accurate statistical measure of unemployment and underemployment, referred as U6 by the Bureau of Labor statistics, which includes discouraged workers and workers who have part time jobs but would prefer to be working full time has been in excess of 16% for some time now.

Which means the millions of people, such as my friend are foregoing necessary medical treatments and care. Fortunately for him, having stitches removed by someone other than a medical professional is not as risky as many of the other treatments, doctor visits, preventive care, vaccinations, etc. that millions of Americans are choosing to forego because without health insurance they can't afford the cost.

So, while Washington fiddles, many, many people across our country our burning because they have no health care coverage. Average people. People who may be your family, friends, neighbors, or the proverbial boy or girl next door. Likely someone you know is uninsured. Maybe even you.

Others, like our family, have insurabnce that requires high deductibles be met before any poayment is made. This means that the fuirst few months of the year are extremely costly, as we pay for medical care directly out our pocket for my wife's chemo brain symptoms and diabetes medicines, for my treatment for my chronic autoimmune disorder and for my daughter's medications for her ADD. And we're lucky, because despite two disabled adults we still can afford some care (so far), lousy as it is.

I can't imagine what our lives would be like if we had to choose between health care and -- food, rent, heat and electricity? But far too many of us are facing that onerous situation.

President Obama, and you Democrats in Congress who have sided with the insurance companies please quit dicking around and get something passed to help us. Otherwise (and this is not a threat, it's merely a prediction) millions of Americans will not vote to re-elect you to office this November. Failure to act is not an option if you want to retain your job as a representative of your fellow citizens.

Comments >>

The Evil Rahmbo

by BooMan
Tue Feb 9th, 2010 at 02:52:01 PM EST

A funny thing about all the criticism of Rahm Emanuel is that no one that I can remember ever blamed Andy Card for Bush's policies and failures. I used to wonder about Card a lot. He had a reputation as a fairly moderate Yankee Republican, and I thought at the time he was hired that it was a nod to Poppy Bush. Card would be the adult who kept the crazy conservatives at bay. It didn't turn out that way. In all the time he was Bush's chief of staff I never saw Card's fingerprints on anything. And when it came time to visit Attorney General John Ashcroft in the hospital and try to strong-arm him into authorizing more illegal warrantless wiretapping, it was Card who made the trip with Alberto Gonzales. It turned out that Card was just as dim-witted and evil as Dick Cheney. So, who knows what goes on between a president and his chief of staff? Ideology isn't necessarily a predictor.

What matters in the end is results. It's not a bad thing that Emanuel is taking the heat off his boss. Whether he really deserves all the criticism is a different question. I've seen some legitimate criticism in recent days, but I've also seen some pretty blatant monday-morning quarterbacking and some real idiocy, like this:

“I like Rahm; he's always been a straight shooter with me," said a Democratic centrist senator who was closely involved in the healthcare debate.

The lawmaker said Emanuel misjudged the Senate by focusing on only a few Republicans, citing Maine Sens. Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins as too narrow a pool.

“In the Senate, you have to anchor in the middle and build out," said the lawmaker.

“They just wanted to win," the source said of Emanuel and other White House strategists. "Their plan was to keep all the Democrats together and work like hell to get Snowe and Collins. The Senate doesn't work that way. You need a radius of 10 to 12 from the other side if you're going to have a shot."

The stupid, it burns.

Comments >> (10 comments)

Remembering History

by BooMan
Tue Feb 9th, 2010 at 10:58:17 AM EST

Do you know what Tsar Bomba was? It was the biggest nuclear bomb ever exploded. You don't hear much about it, do you? It was 50 megatons. The Soviets dropped it from a plane in the Arctic Circle in 1961. Ever hear of Castle Bravo? That was the biggest bomb the United States ever exploded. We don't hear to much about it, either. The bomb, which was set off in 1954 on the Bikini Atoll in the South Pacific, was 15 megatons due to a design flaw. It was supposed to be about 5 megatons. The increased power caused increased fallout:

The fallout spread traces of radioactive material as far as Australia, India and Japan, and even the US and parts of Europe. Though organized as a secret test, Castle Bravo quickly became an international incident, prompting calls for a ban on the atmospheric testing of thermonuclear devices.

In addition to the radiological accident, the unexpectedly high yield of the device severely damaged many of the permanent buildings on the control site island on the far side of the atoll. Little of the desired diagnostic data on the shot was collected; many instruments designed to transmit their data back before being destroyed by the blast were instead vaporized instantly, while most of the instruments that were expected to be recovered for data retrieval were destroyed by the blast.

As for the Tsar Bomba:

Since 50 Mt is 2.1×1017 joules, the average power produced during the entire fission-fusion process, lasting around 39 nanoseconds, was about 5.4×1024 watts or 5.4 yottawatts (5.4 septillion watts). This is equivalent to approximately 1.4% of the power output of the Sun

So, yeah, I support Obama's efforts to eliminate these weapons. And scientists should not play around with making different designs, as there can be unpredictable consequences (as the Castle Bravo test demonstrated).

The cause of the high yield was a laboratory error made by designers of the device at Los Alamos National Laboratory. They considered only the lithium-6 isotope in the lithium deuteride secondary to be fissionable; the lithium-7 isotope, accounting for 60% of the lithium content, was assumed to be inert.

It was expected that lithium-6 isotope would absorb a neutron from the fissioning plutonium and emit an alpha particle and tritium in the process, of which the latter would then fuse with the deuterium and increase the yield in a predicted manner. Contrary to expectations, when the lithium-7 isotope is bombarded with high-energy neutrons, it absorbs a neutron then decomposes to form an alpha particle, another neutron, and a tritium nucleus. This means that much more tritium was produced than expected, and the extra tritium in fusion with deuterium (as well as the extra neutron from lithium-7 decomposition) produced many more neutrons than expected, causing far more fissioning of the uranium tamper, thus increasing yield.

This resultant extra fuel (both lithium-6 and lithium-7) contributed greatly to the fusion reactions and neutron production and in this manner greatly increased the device's explosive output.

So, yes, I support all nuclear non-proliferation efforts.

Comments >> (12 comments)

We Need a Public Option to Stop This

by Steven D
Tue Feb 9th, 2010 at 07:23:10 AM EST

If we don't create competition for our bloated American Health Insurance Corporations (and a public option like Medicare for all would provide that necessary element), we will continue to see these large corporations manipulate their markets to raise rates for health care policies to levels that few if anyone can afford.

Example? Anthem Blue Cross, a subsidiary of WellPoint Incorporated, which raised rates on policies held by 800,000 people in California by from 30 to 39%, effective March 1st:

In a letter faxed to Anthem Blue Cross, US Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius called for the insurer to publicly explain why it raised premiums.

"With so many families already affected by rising costs, I was very disturbed to learn through media accounts that Anthem Blue Cross plans to raise premiums for its California customers by as much as 39 percent," or 15 times faster than inflation, Sebelius wrote.

The rate hikes were "even more difficult to understand" in the light of soaring profits at Anthem Blue Cross's parent company, WellPoint Incorporated, Sebelius said.

WellPoint earned 2.7 billion dollars in the last quarter of 2009, she said, calling on the insurance company to "provide a detailed justification" for the increase.

2.7 BILLION DOLLARS in profits for one quarter? That's getting close to real money, the kind Goldman Sachs steals from the US public generates. Wellpoint must need that extra money really badly. I mean consider its expenses: it paid its CEO $10 Million and spent $9.5 Million to lobby against health care reform. That money has got to come from somewhere, folks:

The AFL-CIO calls out Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield, which has requested a rate hike of up to 30 percent in Connecticut, for example, while spending more than $9.5 million on lobbying activities.

Oh my! There's another Wellpoint company in Connecticut which hiked its health insurance rates 30%? It obviously doesn't pay to live in a state that starts with the letter C (or in which Wellpoint operates), unless you are a Wellpoint senior executive, that is. But give them this: Wellppoint is a very understanding company if its PR department does say so itself:

Many policyholders say the rate hikes are the largest they can remember, and they fear that subsequent premium growth will narrow their options -- leaving them to buy policies with higher deductibles and less coverage or putting health insurance out of reach altogether.

"I've never seen anything like this," said Mark Weiss, 63, a Century City podiatrist whose Anthem policy for himself and his wife will rise 35%. The couple's annual insurance bill will jump to $27,336 from $20,184.

"I think it's just unconscionable," said Weiss, a member of Blue Cross for 30 years.

Woodland Hills-based Anthem declined to say how many individual policyholders will be affected or what a typical increase will be under the new pricing, which will vary from one individual to another. But the company defended its premiums, even as it tried to strike a sympathetic tone.

"We understand and strongly share our members' concerns over the rising cost of healthcare services and the corresponding adverse impact on insurance premiums," the company said in a statement.

See, they care, Californians. Just not enough to stop raising the cost of your insurance to a level 15 times the rate of inflation.

Well, teabaggers, I hope you're happy now. You helped the insurance industry defeat even a very limited health care reform bill, one that did not include a public option which would have provided real competition in the marketplace for health insurance. You do know what competition is, right, being defenders of Capitalism and all? It's the prime ingredient for any market to self regulate. Without meaningful competition you end up with a country that pays on average twice the amount other developed nations pay for their health care.

Employer-sponsored health insurance premiums have more than doubled in the last 9 years, a rate 3 times faster than cumulative wage increases.

The United States spent approximately $2.2 trillion on health care in 2007, or $7,421 per person. This comes to 16.2% of GDP, nearly twice the average of other developed nations.

Health care costs doubled from 1996 to 2006, and are projected to rise to 25% of GDP in 2025 and 49% in 2082.

[Links to footnotes providing sources for this information is not provided in this excerpt. Please go to the website from which this excerpt is taken to find those sources]

And now you and the rest of us get to reap the reward for your efforts: higher prices to pay for the one thing that, next to food and shelter is a critical necessity for life in our times: health care coverage. I sure hope none of you have health insurance policies with a Wellpoint company. That might be poetic justice, but I don't wish ill on anyone, even those who consider progressives and liberals like myself to be their sworn enemies.

Comments >> (6 comments)

Casual Observation

by BooMan
Mon Feb 8th, 2010 at 08:18:42 PM EST

This is why every Democratic blogger in the known universe advises their readers not to donate to the DSCC, DCCC, or DNC, and only to donate directly to individual candidates. If I send money to the DSCC and they use that money to help Ben Nelson, then I've just effed myself in the a, have I not?

Comments >> (12 comments)

RIP John Murtha

by BooMan
Mon Feb 8th, 2010 at 04:03:16 PM EST

John Murtha has passed away from complications arising from his gall bladder surgery last week. He was a controversial congressman, but he served his country both as a serviceman and representative. He will long be remembered for his turn against the war in Iraq. My thoughts are with his family.

Comments >> (2 comments)

What's So Hard About This?

by BooMan
Mon Feb 8th, 2010 at 02:02:28 PM EST

Maybe I am a poor judge of the mood of the electorate, but it seems to me that people are pissed off right now. And I don't think they are pissed off that those people living on Staten Island who make more than a quarter million dollars a year in gross income are paying too much in taxes. I don't think people are looking to the government to extend the tax cuts that the well-to-do received under President Bush. I know that the populist mood of the country is a bit inchoate and not necessarily logically consistent, but a common theme of anger is that we're running deficits that are too big. Since no one wants to pay for our government, it seems only natural that most people would support making people who make over $250,000 a year pay for it.

Yet, once again, we have a bunch of Democrats who don't want to change the Bush tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans. They say it will be a tough sell. Maybe it will be, I don't know. However, I think most people want to see financial services workers drawn and quartered, not extended more tax breaks. Is it me, or is everyone in Washington friggin' crazy?

Comments >> (18 comments)

Steve Clemons and the Chicago Gang

by BooMan
Mon Feb 8th, 2010 at 12:19:17 PM EST

I like Steve Clemons even though he occupies a place in Washington that I distrust pretty deeply. Clemons is a progressive-minded fellow who successfully maintains relationships on both sides of the aisle and gets along well with some people like Grover Norquist who I have no respect for whatsoever. But, these are the kinds of things you have to do to have a place at the table on foreign policy issues. To have your voice mean something to our permanent establishment, you have to become part of it in some ways. Clemons's reward is not only influence, but access. I think there are some serious compromises that have to be made to play that game, but I understand those compromises and respect them. In any case, I wouldn't say that I read Clemons with a jaundiced eye, just with a certain detachment. I don't want to shake hands with people like Brent Scowcroft, James Baker, and Zbigniew Brzezinski because I see all three of them as causing America to make some pretty disastrous foreign policy blunders that we're still paying for. I think they all share a fatally flawed view of American power and its proper role in the post-Cold War world. It's true that they aren't neo-conservatives, but they're not terribly different in the larger picture. Yet, they do represent a kind of center-right position when you compare them to loonies like John McCain, Joe Lieberman, and Lindsey Graham. And if you want any kind of bipartisan agreement on foreign policy...if you want any kind of cover from the right for tough decisions...these are folks you need to respect and cultivate. I get that.

On the other hand, Clemons's decision to sign-on with Richard Luce's Financial Times (subscription required) criticism of Obama's inner sanctum on Chicago advisers strikes me just a tad too Sally Quninish for my tastes. It wouldn't be so hard to take the criticism if the solution wasn't to listen more to Katrina vanden Heuvel, Arianna Huffington, and Fareed Zakaria. Not to be a rube, but Obama isn't going to benefit from listening to those creatures of Washington so much as he'd benefit from listening to his Secret Service detail, or the White House pastry chefs and florists. He should spend a little time (not too much) reading political commentary from people who live outside the beltway and have no pretensions to power. That's the beauty of the internet. The opinion gatekeepers are long gone.

It may be that Obama's closest advisers (Axelrod, Jarrett, Emanuel, and Gibbs) are mucking things up. Maybe they are better at campaigning than governing. Maybe they have too much influence. That's a conversation I'm willing to have. But the solution ain't to listen to more Washingtonian old-hands. Old hands are invaluable for some things and can be of some assistance in helping you figure out how to strategize getting stuff through Congress. You can't come to Washington without massaging some of the egos around town because you'll pay a price that hurts your agenda and the people who are depending on your help. But you can take it too far. I'm happier having some new blood in the president's inner circle. If there's a problem with Emanuel it wouldn't surprise me. He's not new blood. He's there because he is supposed to know how to get things done. And he didn't do it on health care. I just don't know how much he is to blame for that. I do know that almost no one seems to like the guy and the long knives have been out for him since the day he took the job.

Comments >> (18 comments)

Obama's Big Meeting

by BooMan
Mon Feb 8th, 2010 at 01:31:55 AM EST

I can't say that I know where this is going, but its got the wingnuts in a tizzy, so it has that going for it. Obama is going to hold a bipartisan, bicameral health care meeting at Blair House on February 25th. It's supposed to last half the day and be broadcast on CSPAN. Here is how Obama explained it to Katie Couric:

“I want to come back [after the Presidents Day congressional recess] and have a large meeting — Republicans and Democrats — to go through, systematically, all the best ideas that are out there and move it forward,” Obama said in an interview with Katie Couric during CBS’s Super Bowl pre-game show Sunday.

Obama said he wants to “look at the Republican ideas that are out there.”

“If we can go, step by step, through a series of these issues and arrive at some agreements, then, procedurally, there’s no reason why we can’t do it a lot faster the process took last year,” he said.

That basically tracks what he said at the DNC.

“Let's just go through these bills — their ideas, our ideas — let's walk through them in a methodical way so that the American people can see and compare what makes the most sense,” Obama said.

Here's why this is important. Listen to what Minority Leader John Boehner has to say:

"Obviously, I am pleased that the White House finally seems interested in a real, bipartisan conversation on health care,” said House Republican Leader John Boehner (R-Oh.) in a statement Sunday. He added: “The problem with the Democrats' health care bills is not that the American people don't understand them; the American people do understand them, and they don't like them.”

Actually, Boehner is dead wrong. The American people have been subjected to an unrelenting misinformation campaign without a fair referee.. Almost everything the Republicans say about the health care bills is wrong, and the rest is distorted. Making the Republicans sit down in a room with independent budget experts and health care experts and accept the facts that they've been lying and that they have no alternative plan, and doing it on television in order to keep a campaign pledge to negotiate on CSPAN? Well, for those who watch it (hopefully, it will be broadcast on cable news as well) it will probably be a slaughter in the president's favor, which is why this strange little man has the following advice for the Republicans:

Republicans would be crazy to rise to this bait. A big photo-op for Obama with zero chance for any meaningful changes to a bill that steals liberty from American citizens. Kill the bill(s) and start over from scratch.

Do not walk into this, Republicans. Standing strong against this abomination has worked so far and the American public is grateful. (Need proof? Look to Massachusetts, Virginia and New Jersey.)

You really do not want to follow George Armstrong Obama to the place he is leading his cavalry. This is really shaping up to be a throw the bums out election.

Bad time to join the bums.

You can see the concern. Supposedly, this is a terrible idea on Obama's part (an auto-de-fe, he calls it). But then he warns the Republicans not to let the president get a giant photo op where he'll make no concessions. The bottom line? The Republicans thought they had this health care bill whipped when they won the Massachusetts election and now they're getting nervous that the president is going to pull some kind of stunt at the last minute and save the day for the Democrats. Well, I hope so, too, but I don't write confusing posts about Little Big Horn and inviting the Republicans to join in the slaughter.

Now, as far as I am concerned, the virtue of this plan is that it will do a lot to expose the Republicans for what they are. But it won't convince any of them to vote for any health care bill of any kind. As far as I'm concerned, Rep. Joseph Cao and Sen. Olympia Snowe were the only Republican members of Congress who ever considered voting for a health bill, and Snowe's probably out of reach now. The problem is still Democrats who are looking at bleak re-elect numbers. They're spineless and stupid, and some are just corporate shills. So, this meeting has to address that problem more than it has to do anything else. I like the idea, even if the Republicans think discussing health care on teevee is a way to bore us to death.

Comments >> (20 comments)

Super Bowl Thread

by BooMan
Sun Feb 7th, 2010 at 06:46:35 PM EST

These things are supposed to have funny ads.

Comments >> (20 comments)

Serious Question

by BooMan
Sun Feb 7th, 2010 at 02:43:01 PM EST

I'm not sure why Kevin Drum is neutral on a sugared beverage-tax. I like to drink soda that has cane sugar in it every once in a while, but I've done my best to completely eliminate high fructose corn syrup from my diet. You should do the same. And diet sodas are just as nasty. Our society pays an enormous price in health-related costs due to the omnipresence of high fructose corn syrup in our diets. It's on a par with tobacco use, and we have no problem forcing smokers to subsidize everything from our health, to our roads, schools, and property taxes. Why should users of high fructose corn syrup get a break?

Comments >> (31 comments)

Greatest QB's

by BooMan
Sun Feb 7th, 2010 at 12:39:47 PM EST

Peyton Manning is a very, very good quarterback. But he hasn't come close to proving himself the best quarterback ever. He hasn't even proved himself to be better than his contemporary, Tom Brady. Brady had an off season after losing the prior season to injury. But, Brady's resume is much more impressive than Manning's.

He has played in four Super Bowls, winning three of them (XXXVI, XXXVIII, XXXIX). He has also won two Super Bowl MVP awards (XXXVI and XXXVIII), has been selected to five Pro Bowls (and invited to six, although he declined the 2006 invitation), and holds the NFL record for most touchdown passes in a single regular season. Brady has the sixth-highest career passer rating of all time (93.3) among quarterbacks with at least 1,500 career passing attempts. He was named Sports Illustrated's Sportsman of the Year in 2005. He also helped set the record for the longest consecutive win streak in NFL history with 21 straight wins over two seasons (2003-04).

Manning has won four Most Valuable Player awards and was the MVP of the one Super Bowl he has been to before today. His stats are incredible. But the test of a quarterback is in the playoffs. The Colts have won at least 12 games every year since 2003, but this is only their second Super Bowl appearance. Two of those years, it was Tom Brady's Patriots that knocked the Colts out of the playoffs.

In my opinion, Joe Montana is the greatest quarterback to ever play the game, followed by Tom Brady and John Elway. For Manning to move up the list, he must win today, and then win at least one more Super Bowl.

And Drew Brees ain't chopped liver. That boy can play.

Comments >> (30 comments)

Quote of the Day

by BooMan
Sun Feb 7th, 2010 at 11:11:07 AM EST

"The tea party movement is dead. The one I was familiar with anyway. Judson Phillips held it down and Sarah Palin drove a stake right through its heart live last night on C-Span in front of an unsuspecting audience." - Kleinheider at the Nashville Post.

Comments >> (19 comments)

Tea Party Cat Fight

by BooMan
Sat Feb 6th, 2010 at 10:48:56 PM EST

I knew I should have gone to that damn Teabagging Convention. Just standing around in the halls talking to those nutters would have been high comic relief. I could have even called myself a journalist and compared notes. But, seriously, it's belly-achingly funny to picture Andrew Breitbert and WorldNetDaily Editor-in-Chief Joseph Farah having a public argument about who is and isn't a real journalist. It's also hilarious that the subject of contention was whether the Obama birth certificate issue is divisive to the nascent Tea Bagging Party. And the guy arguing that Birtherism is dumb is the guy who brought you the ACORN-steals-elections nonsense.

Hey, their bullshit is effective in its own way. But to argue that any of it is true, or journalism? Yeah, it makes me giggle.

By the way, how'd Palin do? I was too busy watching real hypnomedia. That shit is hilarious. And I say that as a non-Guido Jersey Boy.

What do you want? It's a snow-day.

Comments >> (11 comments)

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