4 December 2009

ROLDO RIGHTS…

1230 by Jeff Hess

Roldo Bartimole writes:

Do you think we have the right to ask Sen. George Voinovich to speak out against the ugliness of the Republican Right? I think we do. Ask him why he”s silent on this issue.

Republican forces have been waging an ugly war against President Barack Obama since his election. Few Republicans have had the courage to speak out against these malicious attacks. Instead, they remain silent as the ugliness builds.

What brought this to my mind was an article about two conservative commentators who made their views clear on the craziness Continue Reading »

4 December 2009

MY COMMENTS…

1102 by Jeff Hess

1102: Jennifer Brunner wants troops to build bridges

1051: An Afghanistan surge is precisely what you voted for. Yes you.

0949: 5,000 Strong!

4 December 2009

FROM MY DAD…

0630 by Jeff Hess

I could never bring myself to forward all the email jokes, cartoons and other Internet comedy that land in my inbox. But then I started posting the ones my dad sends me. Judging from my comments and emails, my dad has become one of my greatest blogging assets. So for your morning blog chuckle I present: From My Dad.

ATTORNEY: Are you sexually active?
WITNESS: No, I just lie there.

Attributed to Disorder In The Court.

4 December 2009

FROM MY CHAPBOOK…

0030 by Jeff Hess

Found in my electronic chapbook.

The cartoon showed a sullen eight-year-old boy facing an earnest principal. “It”s not enough to be a genius, Arnold,” the man was saying. “You have to be a genius at something.” I recall identifying very strongly with Arnold. I had known early on that I wanted to be a writer. But it seemed that it wasn”t enough merely to be a writer. You had to sit down and write something. p. 25

From Telling Lies for Fun and Profit: A Manual for Fiction Writers by Lawrence Block.

I wrote 642 words yesterday morning and my total word count is now 17,054.

3 December 2009

GOOD MORNING MYANMAR…

2130 by Jeff Hess

Part of me wants to get all indignant about the more than 1 million people who remain homeless 18 months after Cyclone Nargis, but, to be fair, I have to wonder how many citizen of New Orleans, living in the richest country in the world, remain in the same state four years after Hurricane Katrina?

From Reuters:

For about 100,000 people in Myanmar who have been living in makeshift shelters since Cyclone Nargis hit 18 months ago, Wednesday’s news of fresh donor money spells light at the end of the tunnel.

But for the remaining 900,000 people whose homes were destroyed or damaged, the prospects are dim.

International donors pledged a fresh $88 million for new houses, schools and employment programmes for the cyclone’s survivors. The money will help fund 17,800 new family homes.

Using a U.N. standard of five to six people per family, it works out that the new houses will accommodate around 100,000 people. But about one million need help with shelter, according to the United Nations.

3 December 2009

ENGINEERING AND EVOLUTION…

1830 by Jeff Hess

3 December 2009

MY COMMENTS…

1530 by Jeff Hess

1530: Should Powerful Men Not Get Married?

3 December 2009

PHOENIX COFFEE MAY WANT TO HIRE YOU…

0935 by Jeff Hess

From Superbarista…

Dear Friends of the Phoenix,

Happy Holidays!

Just wanted to reach out to all of you to let you know that Phoenix is hiring a foodservice professional to help us redo our menus at our five cafés. We are excited to serve food that will complement the quality of our coffee & teas. We are accepting applications from both consultants and from prospective full-time foodservice managers.

The job should be attractive to folks in the restaurant biz because it is a food job with day time hours. All the details of what we are looking for is described in the document “Phoenix Coffee Now Hiring Foodservice Professional,” Continue Reading »

3 December 2009

FROM MY DAD…

0630 by Jeff Hess

I could never bring myself to forward all the email jokes, cartoons and other Internet comedy that land in my inbox. But then I started posting the ones my dad sends me. Judging from my comments and emails, my dad has become one of my greatest blogging assets. So for your morning blog chuckle I present: From My Dad.

ATTORNEY: What was the first thing your husband said to you that morning?
WITNESS: He said, ‘Where am I, Cathy?’
ATTORNEY: And why did that upset you?
WITNESS: My name is Susan!

Attributed to Disorder In The Court.

3 December 2009

FROM MY CHAPBOOK…

0030 by Jeff Hess

Found in my electronic chapbook.

From the preface:

I read every letter I get, and I reply to most of them. I almost always reply to those accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed envelope. A word to the wise… p. 13

From Telling Lies for Fun and Profit: A Manual for Fiction Writers by Lawrence Block.

I wrote 1,587 words yesterday morning and my total word count is now 16,412.

2 December 2009

GOOD MORNING MYANMAR…

2130 by Jeff Hess

Here in the United States — because we love a good sex scandal — we’ve been all a twitter (no pun intended, I used the word first) over Tiger Woods and his philandering ways. But sport’s writer Dave Zirin nails a much more important dalliance than any Tiger had with white Nordic blonds around the country.

From The Nation:

When you factor in advertisements, corporate appearances and other off-course aspects of “Tiger Inc.,” it makes sense that Tiger Woods is America’s first athlete to reach billionaire status.

As the saying goes, behind every great fortune is a great crime. Following his car “accident,” Wood s’ agent says it’s unclear whether he will attend his foundation’s Chevron World Challenge Golf Tournament. In 2008 Chevron entered a five-year relationship with Tiger Wood s’ foundation under the guise of philanthropy. But if Woods had a shred of social conscience, this partnership never would have existed. Lawsuits have been issued against Chevron for dumping toxic waste all over the planet. Alaska, Canada, Brazil, Angola and California have all accused Chevron of dumping. Even worse, Chevron has a partnership with Burma’s ruling military junta on the country’s Yadana gas pipeline project, the single greatest source of revenue for the military, estimated at nearly $5 billion since 2000.

Ka Hsaw Wa, co-founder and executive director of EarthRights International, wrote in an open letter to Woods, “I myself have spoken to victims of forced labor, rape, and torture on Chevron’s pipeline–if you heard what they said to me, you too would understand how their tragic stories stand in stark contrast to Chevron’s rhetoric about helping communities.” Chevron is underwriting a dictatorship, but Tiger Woods apparently sees them as upstanding corporate partners.

How does this fit with Tim Russo’s campaign against the wrong-wing hate on Cleveland’s WTAM?

2 December 2009

HOW TO REACH EACH OTHERS MINDS…

1830 by Jeff Hess

2 December 2009

ROLDO RIGHTS…

1230 by Jeff Hess

Roldo Bartimole writes:

The Call & Post has always been used as a political tool. It has a great history of standing up for blacks, especially when white newspapers didn”t give a shit about blacks.

That”s why it”s troubling to see a racist stereotype used to attack a black person in the weekly newspaper.

I”d suggest a good read and assessment has been written by blogger and writer Richard Andrews. He reminds us of George Forbes”s attack on Jeff Johnson some time ago. He called Johnson a “mulatto punk.”

2 December 2009

MY COMMENTS…

1200 by Jeff Hess

1216: A Visual Tale of Two Speeches

1207: The Cleveland racial circus goes big time – pull up a chair

1147: In praise of cockfighting…

2 December 2009

FROM MY DAD…

0630 by Jeff Hess

I could never bring myself to forward all the email jokes, cartoons and other Internet comedy that land in my inbox. But then I started posting the ones my dad sends me. Judging from my comments and emails, my dad has become one of my greatest blogging assets. So for your morning blog chuckle I present: From My Dad.

ATTORNEY: What gear were you in at the moment of the impact?
WITNESS: Gucci sweats and Reeboks.

Attributed to Disorder In The Court.

2 December 2009

FROM MY CHAPBOOK…

0030 by Jeff Hess

Found in my electronic chapbook.

[Block] too, has suffered resistance, bewilderment, occasional lapses in faith. He has begun and abandoned manuscripts, been blocked, given up all hope, has returned to half-finished books with puzzlement about why he broke off the writing, turning them into some of his most accomplished published works. p. 10

-from the introduction by Sue Grafton

From Telling Lies for Fun and Profit: A Manual for Fiction Writers by Lawrence Block.

I wrote 1,227 words yesterday morning and my total word count is now 14,285.

1 December 2009

GOOD MORNING MYANMAR…

2130 by Jeff Hess

Can Nobel Prize Laureate Joseph Stiglitz leverage his knowledge in economics to move the State Peace and Development Council (aka, Myanmar’s military dictators) to policies that would stop the systematic destrcution of their country’s rural rice farmers? He’s travelling to Myanmar in two weeks to at least explore the question.

From IPS:

“He will share his ideas on what kind of economic decision making is critical for growth in the rural economy and poverty reduction,” adds the executive secretary of the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific. “He will be there for a couple of days.”

“We hope that this mission will be able to open up a new space in economic decision-making and policy formulations,” Heyzer tells IPS. “The focus is on how do we reach the poorest people in Myanmar.”

Stiglitz, who has engaged with poorer countries to offer development models through the Initiative for Policy Dialogue, a think tank he founded, will meet Burma”s Agriculture and Rural Development Minister Maj Gen Htay Oo and National Development Minister Soe Tha during this visit.

Both ministers are reportedly close to Burma”s strongman, Senior Gen Than Shwe, who presides over a regime notorious for its oppression and secrecy.

Stiglitz is due to deliver a lecture on ‘Economic Policies and Decision Making for Poverty Reduction: Reaching the Bottom Half” in the afternoon of Dec. 15. The two ministers and Heyzer have also been billed as speakers during this ‘development forum” under the theme ‘Policies for Poverty Reduction- Effecting Change in Myanmar”s Rural Economy”.

Burma is the rice basket of South Asia, but no thanks to the generals.

Currently, some 7.8 million hectares are under paddy cultivation, producing an estimated 30.5 million tonnes of rice during the 2008-2009 harvest period, states the Food and Agriculture Organisation.

Such rice production has come at a heavy price for Burmese rice farmers. Most of them, who are small farmers, have had difficulty accessing rural credit, according to Sean Turnell, an Australian academic who publishes the ‘Burma Economic Watch”, in an interview with IPS.

“The policies of the Burmese government have been anything but helpful,” he says. “They have, in essence, stood by while Burma”s rural credit scheme has collapsed.”

Burmese economists wonder how open the junta will be to Stiglitz”s policy prescriptions given previous foreign attempts to suggest improvements to the country”s beleaguered economy, which were initially received with much fanfare but then ignored by the regime.

Why should they listen now?

1 December 2009

RALPH’S SKETCH ‘N’ KVETCH…

2000 by Jeff Hess

solonitz091201

1 December 2009

ROLDO RIGHTS…

1830 by Jeff Hess

Roldo Bartimole writes:

The Plain Dealer is playing games with us about “Progress.” The paper wants to make us feel good. So Good News makes for good Page One copy. It also makes for misleading information.

It”s important to keep Progress reality based. If you raise expectations too high and don”t produce you have a problem. Ask Barack Obama.

It can discourage people in the end. More than they are already in that condition.

Once again we have it in a piece this past Sunday emblazoned across Page One: “Revival continues despite recession.” Oh, hope! Continue Reading »

1 December 2009

TURNING DUNES INTO ARCHITECTURE…

1830 by Jeff Hess

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