if you aren’t angry, you have your head in the sand.

April 5th, 2008

i am finding it difficult not to get sucked into politics while i am here. two things that i read and saw this morning particularly resonated for me. one was barack obama’s explanation of his comments at a fundraiser about the bitterness of voters in places like pennsylvania, the other was a post by robert reich regarding the spin surrounding the comments.

and robert reich:

Listen to this morning’s “Meet the Press” if you want an example. Tim Russert, one of the smartest guys on television, interviewed four political consultants – Carville and Matalin, Bob Schrum, and Michael Murphy. Political consultants are paid huge sums to help politicians spin words and avoid real talk. They’re part of the problem. And what do Russert and these four consultants talk about? The potential damage to Barack Obama from saying that lots of people in Pennsylvania are bitter that the economy has left them behind; about HRC’s spin on Obama’s words (he’s an “elitist,” she said); and John McCain’s similarly puerile attack.

Does Russert really believe he’s doing the nation a service for this parade of spin doctors talking about potential spins and the spin-offs from the words Obama used to state what everyone knows is true? Or is Russert merely in the business of selling TV airtime for a network that doesn’t give a hoot about its supposed commitment to the public interest but wants to up its ratings by pandering to the nation’s ongoing desire for gladiator entertainment instead of real talk about real problems.

We’re heading into the worst economic crisis in a half century or more. Many of the Americans who have been getting nowhere for decades are in even deeper trouble. Large numbers of people in Pennsylvania and across the nation are losing their homes and losing their jobs, and the situation is likely to grow worse. Consumers are at the end of their ropes, fuel and food costs are skyrocketing, they can’t go deeper into debt, they can’t pay their bills. They aren’t buying, which means every business from the auto industry to housing to even giant GE is hurting. Which means they’ll begin laying off more people, and as they do, we will experience an even more dangerous downward spiral.

Bitter? You ain’t seen nothing yet. And as much as people like Russert, Carville, Matalin, Schrum, and Murphy want to divert our attention from what’s really happening; as much as HRC and McCain seek to make political hay out of choices of words that can be spun cynically by the mindless spinners of the old politics; as much as demagogues on the right and left continue to try to channel the cumulative frustrations of Americans into a politics of resentment – all these attempts will, I hope, prove futile. Eighty percent of Americans know the nation is on the wrong track. The old politics, and the old media that feeds it, are irrelevant now.

latest from puerto viejo

March 26th, 2008

i rode over to the store earlier in a light rain and returned with four big bags of groceries hanging off the handlebars. i made it back here without bruising any of the fruit, but i forgot coffee filters and something else that i remembered when i walked in the house but have forgotten again. i rinsed off and reused a filter and sat down with a cup of organic cocoa and coffee with a little sugar to read through my RSS feeds. i am sitting on my inflatable mattress in the house listening to NPR’s marketplace podcast, eating a bowl of papaya, banana, watermelon, mango, granola and yogurt.
if the weather is true to form, in an hour or so the rain will let up, the sun will break through the clouds, and i will hop on the bike and roll out the main road stirring up large neon blue morpho butterflies as i ride by. a five minute cruise under the almond trees along the beach will bring me over to rocking j’s, where i’ll find a spot to flip open the laptop and do some interneting for a few hours. i have no plans for tonight. last night was the weekly discussion group i attend at echo books. the topics were edward bernays (my presentation), scientology, and the history of chocolate. tomorrow night our band plays at cafe rio negro, then friday at e’s restaurante at rocking j’s. having two regular weekly gigs and many one-offs have gotten my chops back in shape, and rekindled my love of playing for people. we are playing covers at this point but i now have incentive to write some songs. this is an  area with a unique blend of cultures and musical styles, and i am letting them all sink in as i reinvent my writing.
i fly back to the US in a little less than two weeks. i’ll be there bouncing between LA and ojai for a couple of weeks and then i am coming back here. that’s the latest from costa rica.

iran threatens costa rican bookies?

March 24th, 2008

 this article is fairly interesting. i *think* i know what it is trying to say, just not sure if i believe that anyone would actually *print* what i think it is saying. i better read it again. here is the lead:

 Costa Rica Fears Iran’s Interest in Region: Bookies Watch Closely

Iran’s interest in Latin America is getting a little too close to home, and we are not necessarily talking about the United States.  The peaceful military-free Central American nation of Costa Rica finds itself surrounded by leftist sympathizers of Iran’s President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.  Costa Rica has the largest concentration of online gambling operators than any other nation. 

in other news today, it seems like the good ol’ USA, not iran, is having the most success squeezing the online gambling business here, by paying the costa rican government to block their connections to america:

 According to The Tico Times, the United States and Costa Rica have agreed a compensation package after The White House breached of World Trade Organization (WTO) obligations involving online gambling.

The Costa Rican daily newspaper stated that the trade dispute began when the US enacted laws designed to target online gambling, forcing the Central American nation to take the giant from the north to arbitration before the WTO. Under a WTO agreement on services, any country blocking access to one of a range of markets must provide compensation to the affected countries.

As compensation for cutting off Costa Rican access to online gambling customers in America, the US has agreed to offer greater access to other service markets including research and development, storage, technical testing and analysis. This is almost identical to the deal previously worked out between the US and Canada, Japan and the European Union over the same issue.

wsj on bear stearns

March 19th, 2008

the wall street journal has a good blow by blow of a collapse of the US financial system narrowly avoided. it’s not likely that this crisis is over yet.

UPDATE: sorry, the WSJ is apparently a walled garden still. that link turned into a preview (i.e. useless to both you and the WSJ) after i posted it.

ADDITIONAL UPDATE: looks like crossing wall street has most of the article up as quotes.

stolen shoe

March 19th, 2008

i usually leave my two pairs of “high performance sandals” (or at least that is what i imagine someone in marketing might call these) sitting out on the back porch. one morning i opened the door and discovered that the right shoe from both pairs had gone missing. i found one of them in the front yard an hour later, but the other was missing for about a week and a half or maybe two. yet another lesson on patience. just as i was starting to wonder when i should give up and toss out the orphaned lefty, one of the neighbors returned its match. the dogs here like to play with shoes.

parrot imitating rooster

March 7th, 2008

a parrot i saw on a finca near here has spent too much time hanging out near the roosters, and now wants to be one:

completely lazy sunday

March 2nd, 2008

i haven’t really been posting much lately i guess, so what better way to ease back into it than a quick blast remarking on how lazy of a day this has been. there are a couple of backpackers talking up the benefits of wordpress behind me. i learned the chords to girl from ipanema on the guitar today.

yeah, i guess that is about it. i have mostly been posting to twitter and the link blog, although i have been thinking about that lately, that i am posting all my updates to outside services now, which seems like something i should evaluate. and by that, i mean start posting things to here more often and to other places less often.

highlarious

February 26th, 2008


Diebold Accidentally Leaks Results Of 2008 Election Early

changuinola panama

February 19th, 2008

i went over to panama for a few hours today and checked out the city of changuinola. my camera is “kind of” working now, so i got some shots of the trip. a very interesting place. prices are pretty low for food and goods there, and there are tons of chinese products with curious names.

changuinola panama

i guess my camera is not working

February 17th, 2008

i am giving up on the camera i brought here, the screen seems to not be working. pretty frustrating because now i will be photoless for a good while, while simultaneously seeing lots of things that would make good pictures.