Archive - Aug 4

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Pictures at a Demonstration

Update: Please check here to see a full set of smaller pictures with links to larger pictures;

Please click on the image to see the full
version:

Blurry Fox Photo

Legal observers at Fox

Starting to get hairy at the 42nd St. public library

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MSNBC'S Poll

MSNBC has a poll asking, “Did Rudy Giuliani's speech reassure you or move you to support the Bush-Cheney ticket?” The two possible responses are ‘Reassure’ and ‘Move you to support’ You have to vote to see the results, so I can’t say how the poll is going.

However, given the choices, I thought I would create the this poll.

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Books done right

(Originally posted to Greater Democracy)

Monday afternoon, I attended a panel discussion on the role of conservative books. Zell Miller’s name caught my eye, and I thought I should try to attend. I know that some of my friends wouldn’t have been able to sit nicely through a panel with people like Zell, but I went and listened.

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Monday Evening Photo Montage

As I was walking from The Tank back to Grand Central to take the train back to Connecticut, I stopped along 42nd street to see Rudy Guilliani on the large screen.

Rudy's comments about appeasing Hitler stood in stark contrast to the Mission Not Accomplished sign above, or the 'For Rent' signs reflecting the continued poor economy
below.

A few people stopped and looked, but most people just kept right on walking.

A little further down 42nd street was to controversial ad, 'Democracy is best taught by example, not by war,' standing in contrast to the Dow Jones newswire proclaiming 'The militia fighters to end uprising.'

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Fired for Blogging at Friendster?

Gee, I'm hoping that my blogging will help me get hired somewhere...

Corrante is reporting that Joyce Park got fired for blogging about what is going on at Friendster.

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Fair and honest elections

(Originally published at Greater Democracy)

Yesterday, I attended a discussion panel sponsored by American Compass, a conservative book club. I will write a more general post about this in a subsequent message.

One of the speakers was John Fund. John is a member of the editorial board of the Wall Street Journal, was the chief investigative reporter for syndicated columnists Rowland Evans and Robert Novack in 1982, and has written a book, Stealing Elections: How Voter Fraud Threatens Our Democracy

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Why blogs are so important

(Originally published in Greater Democracy)

When bloggers descended upon the Democratic Convention, the bloggers were a big part of the news story. Everyone questioned how journalistic bloggers would be, and in the end, the mainstream press seemed to dismiss the bloggers. They didn’t break any important news stories. David Weinberger even questioned a Pulitzer Prize winner how we could adjust for his biases if he wouldn’t even admit to them. The mainstream media particularly rankled at such questions.

Yet all of this greatly over simplifies the process. Everyone does have a bias and it comes through in their writing. An import aspect of blogs are their immediacy. By this, I don’t necessarily mean how quickly things get written. Sometimes bloggers have difficulty getting to a good WiFi hotspot to put up their posts. Sometimes, they spend a bit of time trying to recuperate from their experiences before they can put their post together. However, they have a greater sense of immediacy in the more traditional sense of the word. They are less mediated by editorial boards or efforts to make a very emotional experience falsely seem objective.

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August 30th

Random Convention News

(Originally posted in Greater Democracy)

This afternoon, I explored the city, trying to get a good feel for what is going on with the convention. I stopped in Bryant Park to use the open wifi, and check my email. There was an interesting email from Jock asking to what extent New York is currently Baghdad on the Hudson, “a city occupied by a power elite who treat the residents as second class citizens with fungible civil rights. The way the occupiers have redefined NYC, it now has its own very own "Green Zone" -- just like Bagdad. A bubble of fantasy and dogma dictated "reality".”

There was something that resonated with me about that. Just like the Two Americas, it seems as if there are two New Yorks, one in which people try to go about their daily lives and the other that the Republicans are visiting.

When I was in Boston, I went and hung out in the lobbies of various delegations. It was a great way to get a sense of what was really going on. The delegates and dignitaries would pass through the lobbies. You could pick up information about what is going out through out the day.

Here in New York, it is different. You can’t get into the lobbies unless you are staying in the hotel. The delegates are pretty removed and isolated from New York. It is easy to get information about demonstrations, but not about what is going on for the delegates.

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NYPD Critical Mass




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A new millennium of emperor’s new clothes.

(Originally published in Greater Democracy)

I’ve often wondered how the young boy in the story of the emperor’s new clothes got away with saying that the emperor had no clothes.

Today, the Fashion Network News, which would have been talking so effusively about the emperor’s new clothes, surely would have discredited the young boy. There probably would have been a congressional hearing in which the young boy would have been asked if he was now, or very had been, a member of the communist party. He might have been detained as a suspected terrorist or enemy combatant. If also else failed, he would have been limited to expressing his opinion in a freespeech zone.

On the other hand, maybe he would have started a blog.

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