Archive for September, 2006
Downtown Greensboro: The Press Wine Cafe
Mike and Aaron opened up a few weeks back, after months of building and prepping the corner of MLK and Gorrel. I’ve wanted to write about them since, as their general manager, Stephanie, fed Lucy treats each day as we passed on our walk, but I’ve been way too busy.
Yep, blogger bought off by dot biscuits.
But with free WiFi, comfy couches, good and decent-priced food, a relaxed atmosphere and local artwork adorning the walls, you really can’t go wrong spending time over there. I’m not a wine fan, but from what Angela tells me, they have a choice selection. And oh yeah, the Ganache Chocolate Cake is ridiculous.
My only criticism so far (they got rid of the canned fresh fruit) is the background music rotation; it leans too much in the Kenny G direction for my tastes (I’m much more of a Mingus, Miles, Thelonious kinda guy). Thursday night is live Jazz night, so we’ll see where this evolves…
Check ‘em out and wish them well, as they’re Southside’s first foray into the restaurant / bar / nightclub world.

My third office (counting The Green Bean)
quick thought... September 30th, 2006 - 4:41PM
Well, I won’t be ordering delicious subs from Jimmy John’s any more. Every time I call, they put me on hold because my street address is Martin Luther King. Only after I assure them that I’m in Southside and that they’ve delivered here before do they take my order. Today, the excuse was that I’m out of delivery range. Bullshit. I’ll tell you why they didn’t want to come out here: I’m on the cusp of the “wrong side of the tracks” and the mental image of the MLK neighborhood from top to bottom scares them. I’ll be eating Panini’s over at The Press from now on.
Like Smelling Salts To Your Noggin’

(originally uploaded by Scoobymoo)
I’d have to say, I once thought terrorists were just religious nuts trying to get their 40 virgins. I thought 9/11 was a cowardly, yet simplistic attack.
Today, I realize how sophisticated crashing unarmed civilian airplanes into buildings really was. That single move has our country perilously close to destruction. Why hasn’t Al Queda attacked again? Because they don’t need to. We’ll do far more damage to ourselves than some cult of nuts with AK47s ever will.
We have played right into their hands. Knowing how badly we needed to go into Iraq, and being able to foresee (unlike us) the costly aftermath, they were able to bank on us depleting our treasury. Of course, this means more cuts to social programs and schools, ensuring we will be weak in the future. Then we really go the extra mile to appease them and take away our own rights to show them just how tough we are.
We now have secret prisons and full government control of our personal lives with no court oversight. The mere mention of terrorism and you can disappear forever with no trial. Hell, who needs evidence when you have torture. With torture, it’s only a matter of time before you get whatever confession you like.
Welcome to Cold War USSR. Goverment control, fear, economy being drained to support the military, secret prisons, the works. Being the ones to set the demise of the Soviet Union in motion, you’d think we’d see this coming. I guess not. I am now convinced Al Queda did.
The top scientific minds and universities in the world are here in the US. The most advanced country in the world being beaten down by a bunch of pink unicorn zealots. How embarrassing. They aimed to make us destroy our own country out of fear. They have been more effective than I had ever imagined.
The only element of Steve’s comment that I don’t particularily agree with is his position on social programs and schools. If it wasn’t Iraq, we would’ve figured out another way to send the majority of our taxes into the military industrial complex. You know, gotta keep making the widgets.
Well, maybe not quite at this clip.
But that’s where we stand, all because 19 men — neither boogymen nor fascists, but men — armed with box cutters, simply outfoxed our minimum wage airport security defenses 5 years ago and murdered 3,000 people in the most spectacular fashion possible.
We respond not by going after the chief conspirator of the mass homicide, instead we initiate “Shock and Awe” in a pre-planned pissing contest, create a killing field in Iraq and alter the most important elements of our DNA as Americans in the guise to protect us from people who would destroy all that we stand for as Americans.
The irony sickens me.
0 CommentsIt’s Pathetic What Our System Boils Down To…

(originally uploaded by squacco)
[…]
“The torture bill is a cruel joke, so riddle with flaws, so unconstitutional, it won’t survive the District Court — which is the calculation Dems in tight races made.
[…]
We cannot give them a pass. We cannot just say that’s the GOP. Because if some Democrats played politics, it is the Republicans who betrayed the constitution. It is far too easy to write off their duty to the nation based on politics. Oh, well, they’re wingnuts. No, they are elected to defend the constitution, not the Republican party. And in that, they have betrayed this country and it’s ideals.”
[…]
And Republicans, somehow, will find a way to use those very same Democratic votes in campaign ads next month against Democrats.
Politics is a no win game; the dice are always loaded.
With that being reality, here’s a clue for Democrats: as the opposition party, your role is to oppose (especially in this case), not to straddle the line of insanity in order to gather the just-right-of-moderate votes.
God forbid if the Judiciary is rigged and this unconstitutional, un-American garbage goes through…
1 Commentquick thought... September 29th, 2006 - 10:27PM
Jesus’ General: …”We need to channel our anger and disappointment into beating these bastards, so we can restore the pieces of the Bill of Rights they’ve gutted. That’ll mean supporting cowardly pieces of shit like Sherrod Brown (please click on that link so they’ll notice it), but we’ll have to stifle our gag reflex and do it. Once we win, we’ll make his life fucking miserable for the next six years before finding someone with more honor, say a pimp or a heroin dealer, to take his ass out in the primary.”…
Graffiti Friday: Reality In Zimbabwe
Violence Begets More Violence?

(originally uploaded by anotherview)
Times Herald-Record
We came, we saw, we made enemies
By Nicole Belle
[…]
Short version: Iraq wasn’t a terrorist threat when we attacked it; it is now because we did attack and botched the job so badly that terrorists are dying to go there and learn how to kill Americans anywhere. So the world is safe from Saddam (who was never a threat) but more vulnerable to terrorism, which (back to the beginning) was on the ropes in the early days in Afghanistan.
* * *
This NIC report, revealed this week in stories in The New York Times and Washington Post, is devastating to the Bush administration argument for continuing the fight in Iraq. John Negroponte, Bush’s national intelligence director and the boss of all 16 intelligence agencies, cautions not to form conclusions based solely on these news reports. There’s more to the assessment, he says, and many more judgments than the one linking the war to more terrorism. He says to do that would be a distortion.
Fine. Then release the 30-page National Intelligence Estimate for all Americans to read. Have congressional committees black out the really classified data, if necessary. But let us know what our intelligence agencies say firsthand, not what Bush decides to tell us they said. We’ve been here before, and there are now 2,600-plus reasons to doubt what the president says.
[…]
Someone, anyone, come up with a scenario for me where invading Iraq wouldn’t have created a similar state of affairs.
Take your time…
Now, it probably would’ve helped if we had taken this operation seriously and created a reconstruction plan before trucking into Iraq, but as Donald Rumsfeld so eloquently stated in the pre-war planning stages, “the American public will not back us if they think we are going over there for a long war.”
The result of such rhetoric, you ask?
Rumsfeld intimidated his planners out of creating any plans for reconstruction following the capture of Saddam — you know, these last 3 years come December.
Now we have jihadists and near enemy soldiers training and killing in the sandbox of our creation, using Iraqi citizens as pawns, targets and propaganda to rile up even more anti-American fury across the middle-east and the world.
But I digress…
Here are my three top reasons for why Iraq has become a hotbed of terrorist activity:
- The Project For The New American Century
If PNAC is the neoconservative playbook, this administration is an all-pro team for its execution. If I stumbled across this direct and coded language for the invasion of Iraq (and anywhere else for that matter) just ten days into the Iraq invasion, I’m betting that this document has been used by a few terrorists to up their enrollment prior to 9/11. And as soon as the invasion of Iraq was a sure bet, I’m guessing it became a major recruitment tool. The only reason I can come up with as to why (potential) leaders of this nation would publicize a document such as PNAC, is that they wanted the reality we now find ourselves knee-deep within and they needed their own recruitment stake-in-the-ground. - Poverty, Chaos And Fear: A Perfect Storm For Revenge
If a child is killed in Iraq nowadays, we’re ultimately held responsible by his/her family. If a child’s father is killed, that child will most likely grow up with a propensity towards revenge. If a child’s uncle’s wedding is wiped out with a car bomb… well, you get the picture. - Let’s Talk About Sects, Baby
Compare how much you know about, say, the Shia/Sunni relationship today with what you knew in 2003. You probably didn’t even know the names of any Islamic sects back then, right? And now I hope you realize that there is more internal conflict within Islam itself than with the West in general. Now realize that our government absolutely understood the issues between these sects — from their religous differences to their standing within the entire middle-east region to how they would respond to the overthrow of Saddam. I’m not cynical; if you believe we went in there without a clue, you’re only kidding yourself.
What are yours?
7 Commentsquick thought... September 28th, 2006 - 2:32AM
Mike Davidson: …”We just released August’s earnings and the top Newsvine earner netted $414.27 for the month! Certainly beats AdSense! Hey, maybe letting users earn their own revenue might actually work.”…
Mulletslinger

(originally uploaded by Lenslinger)
There’s gotta be a muscle car out of the picture somewhere… Stew?
2 CommentsLyricist Wednesday: Regrets
Artist: Ben Folds Five
Song: Regrets
==========
I thought about sitting on the floor in second grade
I couldn’t keep the pace
I thought I was the only one moving in slow motion
While the other kids knew something I did not
But if I acted like a clown
I thought it would get me through, it did
But that don’t work no more
You’re not a kid no more
I thought I’d do some traveling
Never did
Regrets, regrets
I thought about the hours wasted
Watching TV, drinking beer
I thought about the things I thought about
Until immobilized with fear
And all the great ideas I had
And how we just made fun
Of those who had the guts to try and fail
And then I ended up in jail
Regrets, regrets
Regrets, regrets
… but just for a day
Seems the police had made a computer mistake
Said there must be thousands like me with the
Same name
Anyway, I thought about the things I settled for
Or never tried
I never visited my grandma even once
When she was sick before she died
So I don’t blame you if you never come to see me
Here again
Regrets, regrets
Regrets, regrets
Here! See-Through Piggy, Piggy!

Now we’re talking. A couple hundred more good moves and I’ll start to cut President Bush some slack.
(I’m not holding my breath)
0 Commentsquick thought... September 25th, 2006 - 6:18PM
Ed pointed to an article covering James Dobson’s speech from the other day, where the evangelical Dobson said that we are most likely at war with 4% of the world’s Muslim population (50 million people). This NPR interview with The Aga Khan might be a good resource for anyone who tends to blindly agree with that perspective.
quick thought... September 25th, 2006 - 2:24PM
My bud, Jonathan Daniel, was called into the On The Money studio for an interview a few weeks back. For the record, I think the business concept is a tad bit crazy myself, but that’s why I love Jon; he doesn’t see life through the same lens as most of us.
quick thought... September 25th, 2006 - 4:46AM
“Allen said he came to Virginia because he wanted to play football in a place where ‘blacks knew their place,’” said Dr. Ken Shelton, a white radiologist in North Carolina who played tight end for the University of Virginia football team when Allen was quarterback. “He used the N-word on a regular basis back then.”
quick thought... September 24th, 2006 - 2:16AM
Fareed Zakaria: …”Iran’s hard-liners don’t want good relations with the United States. Iranians have been taught for a generation now that Washington hates them, doesn’t want relations with their country and tries to isolate them in the world. What if President Bush publicly offered to open an embassy in Tehran and begin student exchanges with young Iranians? In a country that is yearning for contact with the outside world, it might put the mullahs on the defensive.”…
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