Politics

Entries related to things political.

March Recap

Here is a post that I put up on Blog for America.

Today, hundreds of thousands of Americans gathered in Washington to express their displeasure with the current administration, it's policies in Iraq and the horrible effect those policies are having on people across America. We will be able to read about it in the newspapers and watch it on TV soon enough; however, the soundbytes of demonstrations—like the soundbytes of politicians—do not adequately reflect what really happens.

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Spammers with a sense of ...

This morning, as I wait for my daughter to get out of the shower so we can go march on Washington, I find that I've won another half million dollars in a lottery in Holland that I've never entered.

I do that several times a week and usually don't pay a lot of attention to the spam.

However, one spam message particularly caught my attention. In an email claiming to be from Jose Padilla, I find that I can buy a replica of a Rolex watch!

Finally, the U.S. Government will be able to find a charge that will stick, sending unsolicited email.

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Being Howard Dean

In a couple of hours, I will hop on a train to Washington DC to join the march. I wrote my DeStefano blog post, “Maybe, this is about us”. Maybe it is all about us. Maybe it is about all of us remembering who we are, a country that cares about every citizen.

I downloaded a newer version of Winamp today, and I’m listening to AOL Folk Radio. Big corporation AOL. What are they playing? Phil Och’s “What's That I Hear?” Joan Baez, “Diamonds And Rust”, and some rendition of “Johnny, we hardly knew ya”.

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Exploring the digital divide

As part of blogging for the DeStefano blog, I’ve been building up my list of Connecticut based Blogs in Bloglines. One site I’ve been watching is The New Haven Independent.

Today, I read Gina Coggio’s latest posting. Please, go out and read it. She is a teacher who has students writing vignettes about their lives. One started off, “My father chose the drug life over his children… He was a crack head whether I wanted to believe it or not and as the days went by I seen more in him. He’d begin to take things that belonged to us to get money for what they call a habit, but I call it evil. It took the loving sweet man out of my father and turned him into a wild fiend… Every time I saw him I seen death. His pale white face, crusty lips, ragged clothes and his body sank in. He was a skeleton.”

Rhetorical followup

(Originally published at Greater Democracy)

My recent blog post has brought up several interesting email discussions and I would like to quote extensively from two different emails I have written in response.

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