Saluting Back...
I'm sure by now, most of you have seen the One Fingered Victory Salute that Bush gave during a pre-broadcast interview... Daily Kos put together this clip Salute Back in response.
Insights from the wee hours of the morning gleaned from various crevices of the internet. Media, politics, sex, and art from an(other) asian queer perspective
I'm sure by now, most of you have seen the One Fingered Victory Salute that Bush gave during a pre-broadcast interview... Daily Kos put together this clip Salute Back in response.
But instead of working on various application that I have to get done, I am watching Broadband TV from Taiwan, France, and China...
I think I really want to go and watch The Forgotten... there has been a spate of new movies that have come out but I've been way to busy to even begin contemplate going to the movies.
We know that Derrida died last week. But those who have been following the New York Times also know about the furor over the obituary written by Jonathan Kandell for Derrida (all's I got to say after reading it is that I hope he doesn't write my obituary when I die). But good ol' Butler wrote a scathing letter to the editor that starts: Jonathan Kandell's vitriolic and disparaging obituary of Jacques Derrida takes the occasion of this accomplished philosopher's death to re-wage a culture war that has surely passed its time. Why would the New York Times assign the obituary to someone whose polemics are so unrestrained and intellectual limitations so obvious? Whereas Yves-Alain Bois starts his letter: Topping the usually Philistine relationship of the Times to just about everything academic, and its habit of entrusting the composition of obituaries to overt opponents of the deceased supposed to be memorialized, the article by a Jonathan Kandell on Jacques Derrida, who died this past Friday, reaches a peak of populist anti-intellectualism--not to speak of the countless distortions it contains--that I thought only possible in a Murdoch publication. There is a petition to the editors of the Times about how it "has done its readers an injustice in publishing such a dismissive article as its official obituary".
From a Craigslist ad:
I don't remember hearing about the federal investigators looking into how the Bush administration created fake news that was to be distributed to local television stations at all last spring. Apparently TV news reports in America that showed President George Bush getting a standing ovation from potential voters have been exposed as fake, it has emerged. The US government admitted it paid actors to pose as journalists in video news releases sent to TV stations intending to convey support for new laws about health benefits. From an article in the Guardian as the New York Times piece has expired: