Life needs good books and stories and articles as well as movies that matter (or not) and a few photographs. Read about some of them here.

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Long Time Listening

The last post on this blog was nine months ago. At the time, I was saying goodbye for a while. You'd think after all that time something fresh would show up. That just shows you how safe and anonymous a blog can be. The fact is, if you want to keep something a secret these days, the best place to hide things is in a blog or any individually owned website. Trust me. It would seem by now that if you wanted to totally hide your identity you'd be best off taking up space in YouTube or MySpace. But I admit to having been to YouTube only once in my life, and Istill don't know where they hide MySpace. I'm not a late bloomer. I was planted upside down. Any response?

Sunday, January 28, 2007

Off to Another Venue for Now

All of the entries in this free Google blog (whyknott.blogspot.com) have now been moved to my older site (www.bruk.us), a commercial spot I've owned for several years at another host (Gate.com).

The old www.bruk.us site held a blog for a couple of years using software called Greymatter. I lost interest in the site, but can't tell you why. Maybe I got tired of the sound of my own voice. In any case, I've resurrected the old blog at www.bruk.us using WordPress, a newer and much respected "open source" blog program.

I've a great deal to learn about how to run a blog using the controls WordPress places at our disposal. And I'm excited about the prospect. In small ways I hope to give you a feel for building and nursing a blog, yet not bore you with the details. We'll see if that's possible.

In any case, you can expect to see less traffic here at whyknott.blogspot.com and more at www.bruk.us. Why not hop over there and check it out right now? Click here.

Sunday, January 21, 2007

Heavy Hitter Swings Late?

The article that most impressed me in today’s Sun News appeared in a section called "Nation & World". The piece stands under the heading of "Voices of Dissent" -- which may cast a shadow on the validity of the section since it must be by “one of them other guys”. The title of the article in 48 point type shouts, "Experts Warn of Repeating Cold War Folly". The gist of the article is that George W. Bush misinformed us about Iraq's alleged holding of weapons of mass destruction and that the President planned a war on Iraq prior to September 11, 2001, though he just thought of going after Iraq when it terrorized New York City that day.

These are not new assertions but to see them now in orderly assembly as a "lead" article in the Sunday paper may give heart to those who oppose the administration's enthusiasm for war. The article points out that the four decades of the Cold War and the era of the Vietnam war rehearsed arguments virtually the same as those George W. Bush now advances for continuing our war in Iraq, to whit, we're battling a worldwide movement that will rain bombs on our heads in the U.S. and will in turn lead to the domino collapse of nations around Iraq and further out.

The byline of the article identifies Ron Hutcheson as the author speaking to us from "Washington Bureau". I'm not sure where that Bureau is or who owns it. The section of the paper where it appears is subtitled with a red header “MYRTLEBEACHONLINE.COM” (yes, in caps), probably implying what appears there lacks the kind of journalistic review typical of a Sunday paper.

I congratulate the Sun News for printing the article/opinion.

I criticize the Sun News for presenting Hutcheson's piece with insinuations that it as an orphan. Hutcheson's work is on the contrary an informed analysis and a professionally argued opinion, backed by current facts and authorities, and really well done.

Friday, January 19, 2007

Death and the Maiden

A dear friend is quite heavy and had an infected gall bladder. She said afterward the pain was so severe she would rather have a baby (she has had two) than have a gall bladder attack or have the organ removed. She said this after the operation. The discussion took place when I had my gall bladder removed and was recuperating and probably asked for sympathy. But she was the first and only woman I’ve met who says there is any pain greater than childbirth.

Some don’t often think of women as subjects of torture, where the pain could be increased ad infinitum, but there were women who were tortured in Argentina thirty years ago who could testify to the horrible talents of dictators in an era when young people were “disappearing” there by the thousands. The bodies of the desaparecidos were hidden partly to conceal evidence of the torture that killed them. Iraq competes for the worst torturer’s award today, I think, in numbers if not in degree of pain administered. Wouldn’t you think humanity would have better things to do than practice giving pain to its own kind?

If you ever have a chance to see the movie entitled “Death and the Maiden” you would see magnificent performances by Sigourney Weaver (as Paulina Escobar), Ben Kingsley (as Dr. Roberto Miranda) and Stuart Wilson (as Gerardo Escobar). The characters are caught up in their own hate and fright and flashbacks of the horror. And they are only too human in the face of their accusers.

I mention this movie (directed by Roman Polanski) because it deals with the torture of Paulina in the past maybe by Dr. Miranda and displays the depth of psychological damage to the subject years later – the time of the drama. Her husband is about to be appointed to the supreme court of a Latin American republic that regrets its bad past. Dr. Miranda gives the husband a ride home in a storm. Paulina thinks she hears her old torturer’s voice. It must have been a stage play done up for movies, but it is powerful and significant on film. Rent it. It will never come back to your theater.

Where's the Reader Headed?

There's a lot of talk about the dark future of the newspaper. The story goes that old duffers who read the newspaper are dying off and youngsters are not replacing them. The Nation says we have the same number of subscribers now as in 1950 though we now have twice as many reading citizens. In spite of newspaper profits being much better than other kinds of large corporations, many pundits predict a fall-off in circulation as management pares staff and readers stop their subscriptions even before they die off. The problem is that no one I've read talks about what has always been wrong with newspapers, since long before the Internet. Newspapers are one-way streets.

True, newspapers speak out to us. But till lately readers could not talk back in large numbers. Letters-to-the-editor have always been filtered by staff with agendas. The result was two or three paragraphs from a half dozen subscribers sampling a readership of tens or hundreds of thousands. Yet the Internet has shown us with blogs and you-tubes that news and opinion can be fed back into the media stew by independent citizens at a rate that must make elder newsfolk's heads spin. If newspapers are on the wane it is perhaps because readers have found a voice, can talk back, and will not have to wait for the clerk in charge of the op-ed page to filter what's coming in. Newspapers like Kafka's Castle cannot accomodate feedback, while the Internet can. That's why these days newspapers add a slug to nearly every article that identifies a website and often a staff member's email address.

It's also true that the Web gives voice to many with less authority, to scribblers with few credentials. Why, they may only be voters. As a result of the amateur's ascendance, it's more work staying informed. We have to sift and filter for ourselves. This reminds us that liberty is hard to live with. But it's time to declare that newspapers and internets offer remarkably different chances for the individual to matter. We may see not only a better informed public when search engines roam oceans of opinion, but also a better informed government by an electorate that votes with its words long before November.

Thursday, January 18, 2007

All for One and One for All

THOMAS B. EDSALL, an op-ed writer in the NYT today, says the eight-point Democratic laundry list voted or advanced during the first 100 hours of this term in the House suggests that our two parties in Congress are in an encouraging mode of cooperating to get new laws passed or old laws corrected. At the same time, he argues, you can’t enact measures that cost money without either raising taxes or cutting what else is spent, if you intend to hold the line. I want to go down on the list of those courageous citizens who are willing to cut federal costs for programs that don’t affect them, and the increase in funds for measures that do. I also want to note that Edsall has (1) come down as pleased that Democrats got things done in the early hours of this Congressional term and has (2) declared his reservations about a party that could end up increasing taxes to pay the bills. The country needs more of that kind of bipolar commendation.

Saturday, January 13, 2007

Drug Block

Q: What three factors in a 2003 federal law have boosted the price of prescription drugs?

Answer:

- banning the import of cheaper medicines from Canada,
- forcing 7 million Medicaid patients to buy drugs that lack price limits
- requiring private insurance plans to stay “small and numerous” to keep them from gaining leverage and bargaining with drug makers.

Related Facts:
- President Bush got $1.17 million from the drug companies for his 2004 reelection campaign
- Bush has promised to veto a Democrat bill that would modestly change prescription legislation.
- To block this legislation, drug lobbyists plan to ignore the House and focus on the Senate where 51 members are Democrats and 49 are Republicans. And 60 Senate votes are required to change the legislation.

Check it out!!!

Friday, January 12, 2007

Steve's Camelias


In the dead of winter you ought to expect less of Mother Nature. But this winter has been an Arctic summer, and nowhere does it get prettier than this display in Steve's Garden.

Movie Popcorn

The Washington Post makes reference to a movie playing this afternoon in the Maryland House of Delegates. The flick is Al Gore’s egghead blockbuster about the death of the planet Earth. It may be pretty good stuff, but when you have to show it at work, it may mean that our republican version of democracy is too busy to consider the limits of life on Earth. I say Eco-Advocates may be showing the film at the wrong parliament. The U.S. Senate might be a better forum. Yet I wonder who sweeps and removes the popcorn boxes: Interns, learning about a free movie economy?

Competing Games' Rejection :-(

Wired, the online parrot, tells about going to a convention in Las Vegas and marching into a tent with a cell-cam to see how competitive gaming is going. I don’t know much about CG, but it seems you can use one of the games alluded to in another blurb here and pit yourself against the player of the second one sold this afternoon. That’s what I think competitive gaming would be about. The writer says the universe agrees with him: few people give a damn about CG. I certainly don’t. But I’m pleased to think that others are bright enough to choose something that more handily displays their initiative. Like a go-kart kit.

Jean Shepherd Footnote

What's NOT new: There’s a fresh monster game available today for the Xbox, Microsoft’s stage/platform for virtual warfare and tests of wit. The Xbox sells between $350 and $550, and the game I read about cost $60. A pittance set against tax breaks for the wealthy. I remember the days when we could build a go-kart with an apple crate if we could find wheels. On my block we marveled when folks found wheels. Wheel-rationing offered traffic control on the sidewalks. When a new “box” did enter the track I suspected someone had taken apart a neighbor’s wagon, proving you could learn from play in Stealing 101. Not really. That would’ve been theft, and we knew the difference, at least by age six. Some mothers advised against building models of the Graham Supercharger -- "You could put your eye out."

Adam, Try a Bite.

Steve Jobs is promoting his new Apple cell phone. The folks I’ve read think it will be an uphill battle for Apple, since the market is already flooded with cell phones. When he succeeded marketing the iPod, a music player so portable everyone could find a pocket for it, he opened up a new market area, and succeeded bigtime. The prognosis is that Jobs will find it difficult to enter a cellphone market already crowded with novelties and ballyhoo. You may remember that “the Apple Computer” was a new idea as a desktop, and the Mac was refreshing principally because it promised us the next major tool, an operating system almost everyone could understand. And then Bill Gates’ modest entry steamrolled across Jobs’ forehead under the name of Windows. While I forecast doom for the Apple cellphone, Jobs laughs all the way to the bank. He says I was wrong about the internal combustion engine too.

Hand Me That Book

The world is intently decrying George Bush’s resolve to add 20,000 troops to the complement in Iraq, raising the tally beyond 150,000. Blessed with this surge he’ll resolve all problems in Iraq and get our armies out safely and promptly. Democrats and Republicans and folks of other persuasion find his plan puerile, at least that was the word used more than once in characterizing the emperors new wardrobe. Insiders allege that the word is not listed in W’s pictured dictionary.

Ye gods and little fishes.

Ye gods and little fishes. (I cannot tell you how much trouble it took to punch through the spellchecker with that title, but it took me close to 10 minutes because of the word ye. That's what it's like with the technologically impaired. "What's going on?" you ask. I’m working on a belated New Year's resolution, after exhausting topics for journal entries. After only 50 years of composing this drivel I've gone to current topics for inspiration. (Lucky you, if I'd started at the other end of the historical gamut I'd take up the Sumerians in Iraq ala 5,000 BC.) Yes, to spur me on, I might have drawn topics from the morning newspaper. But in this case I’m inspired by online newsfeeds to pep up my sagging journal. I'll check out better feeds, if you'll suggest them.