Archive - 2004

August 27th

Watching the Convention

(Originally posted to Greater Democracy

This afternoon, I received an email from Brad Johnson about the Critical Mass bicycle ride this evening. He wrote,


The Critical Mass bicycle ride tonight will be the first real demonstration of NYPD tactics during the RNC. Critical Mass was going to have a post-ride party, but the cops and the Coast Guard intimidated the owners of the space into cancelling it.

Furthermore, the police hand-delivered a lovely letter threatening the riders with mass arrests -- for a ride that has gone on every month for the last 10 years without incident.

If you to be involved or monitor the proceedings, you should head over to the Time's Up space at 49 East Houston Street (btw Mott and Mulberry) during the day or go to Union Square at 7 pm.

The letter: http://www.times-up.org/images/nypd-to-ta-re-cm.jpg
Posts on this: http://the-cunctator.dailykos.com/story/2004/8/27/121244/624
http://nyc.indymedia.org/feature/display/103268/index.php

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Senatorial Blogs

(Originally posted at Greater Democracy)

The other day, I participated in a conference call put together by Mathew Gross for bloggers interested in the Erskine Bowles campaign. I was very interested in this because it was the first conference call I know of by a senatorial campaign aimed at the blogging community. It follows nicely on the blogging of political conventions.

There was a bit of talk about polls and strategy, but the conference call just didn’t get me excited. Bowles has a blog, which is pretty good. There are nearly sixties entries in the blog. Nearly half of them have no comments and only two had more then ten comments, one had 15 and one had 24. It is worth noting that the two entries that had the most comments were primarily about issues. The most commented on entry was about a new ad Bowles is running on health care. The second most commented entry was about an editorial discussion Bowles plan for Homeland Security.

Quite a few of the entries were written by ‘Staff Writer’. Posts which don’t reveal the author always bother me. In some cases, it did reveal the writer in the post. On the upside, six of the posts were identified as being written by Bowles.

Imagine New York

(Originally posted at Greater Democracy)

In 1983, I spent eight months traveling around the United States and Europe. It was a wonderful experience and I learned a lot about myself, my country, and the world through these experiences. I wish more people could spend time traveling like this.

I had been living in New York with a couple struggling actors and seen my share of off-off-Broadway plays. One of my roommates traveled with a company to perform in the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, so I made sure to pass through Edinburgh during the festival.

In spite of having access to lots of wonderful theatre in New York, Edinburgh blew me away. There was so much to see all packed into an incredibly tight schedule. I got my schedule and tried to figure out which plays to see and when to see them. I read the reviews in the Scotsman, and posted on the walls around Edinburgh. I saw five or six plays a day, and stumbled through my nightly pubcrawls, my mind spinning with many new thoughts.

I went back to Edinburgh several years in a row after that, and only stopped going when children made travel more difficult. How I have longed for such an overwhelming smorgasbord of artistic stimulation.

Now, living outside of New York City, and having covered the Democratic National Convention as a credentialed blogger, I have been trying to figure out what I want to do. As I noted in a previous entry, I’m particularly interested in the Progressive Tourist Bureau happening at The Tank, which will also be my home base for blogging when I’m in the city.

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August 25th

Devolve This!

(Originally published at LocalPols, and copied here for consolidation)

John McCarthy from California pointed me to an article by Joel Rogers entitled 'Devolve This' about the need for a coordinated progressive state-level effort in the most recent Nation magazine (8/30/04).

I believe that it presents a good explanation of part of what I have been hoping to contrbute to with this website. I would encourage everyone to read the article.

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Mairead

Mairead

“Yesterday, a child came out to wonder” That is how I started my blog entry about when Fiona was born. That was almost three years ago. Today, is a day of reflection.

I remember when I was about 15, I went to a http://www.njcl.org/ >Junior Classical League event. The Junior Classical League is an organization dedicated to encouraging an interest in and an appreciation of the language, literature and culture of ancient Greece and Rome.

Our local club had built a catapult and we had taken it to the catapult competitions. At one point, we sat in the high school auditorium and watched a multimedia presentation entitled something like, “Life is a voyage on a wine-dark sea.” Slides, references to Homer, and Joni Mitchell playing in the background. I still remember thirty years later.

The Junior Classical League was one of the saving graces of my high school years. I remember later going to the JCL National Convention and wished that there were more events like that for me.

Now, thirty years later, Mairead has set off on her voyage across a wine-dark sea. For the past four years, the high point of her year has been attending the Johns Hopkins University Center for Talented Youth Summer Programs. To attend this program after seventh grade, you need to take your SATs. So while she was still twelve, she took her SATs and scored better than most high school seniors.

I had always thought that the CTY program would be enough to carry Mairead through the difficult high school years, but after seeing her test results, I had to stop and re-evaluate things.

One program I stumbled across was The Program for the Exceptionally Gifted at Mary Baldwin College. I read through the website and to me, it had Mairead’s name written all over it. Perhaps that was partly because of how badly I longed for a program like that when I was Mairead’s age.

Mairead has been fortunate. She has gone to very good schools so far. When she read the Mary Baldwin materials, she spoke as if she wasn’t really that bored, that school wasn’t really that bad and so on.

When we went down to visit Mary Baldwin, I asked her what she thought. She responded by asking me what I thought. I told her this was too important a decision for her to let me make for her. I needed to know what she really wanted. She said that she would love to attend Mary Baldwin if there were anyway it could happen. In promised her that I would do everything I could to help make it happen.

She applied and was admitted. When she spoke with her classmates from last year about what she would be doing this year, she simply said she was going to a boarding school in Virginia. If people asked which school, she would simply say, “Mary Baldwin”.

I believe some of it is because she was tired of having to try and explain it, and tired of listening to well meaning adults talk to her about the importance of the social aspects of high school which she would be missing.

I have been less reticent and have explained to those asking, the details of the program. I have always pointed out that she will get much better socialization by being with a group of girls who are much more like her.

I have been proud of her and excited for her. The past few days were preparation for her trip to Mary Baldwin. It is an eight-hour drive, and her mother, who hasn’t been there yet, is driving her down. I spent a bit of time fixing up an old laptop for her to take with her. However, Tuesday morning, I woke up to find that the hard disk had crashed. In a last minute scramble, I reconfigured an old desktop PC I had around. I upgraded the operating system, installed a few internet telephony programs, made sure things were working well, and got her a memory stick so she could more easily move data between her desktop and any other computers she might end up using.

Last night, we had a special family dinner for her, sending her off. This morning, I loaded her computer in the car, gave her a hug, told her that I loved her and sent her off. She seemed very excited about her upcoming adventure and I didn’t want to bring her down by telling her how much I will miss her; how sad I am that I won’t see her face to face for probably a few months at least.

So yes, I am sad. I miss her and it hurts. But, I am so excited for her. I believe it is going to be a wonderful experience in so many ways. I believe she will grow and change through this. I believe she will greatly enjoy herself, and that makes any pain or sadness worth it.

“But we'll get together then, dad.
You know we'll have a good time then."