Que OTM, sadly.
― you gone float up with it (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Friday, 15 January 2010 22:07 (sixteen years ago)
they could move his show to the middle of the night and broadcast the sound of a braying jackass in his old timeslot, see how long it took people to notice
― Jay Leno's Pony Vivisection Hour (HI DERE), Friday, 15 January 2010 22:08 (sixteen years ago)
i can't imagine the public outcry if the Armed Forces radio ditched Limbaugh--it would never ever ever happen. i'm sure he is popular with the armed forces. and though his comments are nasty and despicable, canceling his show would be censorship
― that sex version of "blue thunder." (Mr. Que), Friday, 15 January 2010 22:05 (4 minutes ago) Permalink
But isn't the programming determined by the military brass? How can it be censorship if all the programming is determined by a few people anyway?
― Matt Armstrong, Friday, 15 January 2010 22:10 (sixteen years ago)
if they cancel his show because of the jackass stuff he says, it's censorship
― that sex version of "blue thunder." (Mr. Que), Friday, 15 January 2010 22:11 (sixteen years ago)
It doesn't matter if its truly "censorship" in the strictest definition of the word, Rush fans will scream it anyway.
― you gone float up with it (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Friday, 15 January 2010 22:11 (sixteen years ago)
It only isn't censorship if he violates a law or a regulation.
Surely they can fuck with his timeslot, though.
ugh I keep looking at "timeslot" and thinking "coinslot" ugh
― Jay Leno's Pony Vivisection Hour (HI DERE), Friday, 15 January 2010 22:13 (sixteen years ago)
and on that note HAVE A GOOD WEEKEND EVERYBODY
Have we covered this already? http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/years/2010/0114102wyclef1.html
Wyclef's YELE isn't the charity it's purported to be.
― Johnny Fever, Friday, 15 January 2010 22:15 (sixteen years ago)
I'm still not convinced that this would be a 'censorship' issue, as he would still be free to broadcast to commercial markets. Therefore it's a subsidy issue or a morale issue. But yeah I know there would be a dittohead outcry if they yanked the AFR contract; just have to hope that those comments make him less popular with serving soldiers. Wesley Clark tried a campaign to get Rush yanked a couple of years ago but like everything else Wes has tried, meh.
― keyser (suzy), Friday, 15 January 2010 22:18 (sixteen years ago)
Happy for him to keep his slot if I can see him being publically horsewhipped.
― Bing Crosby, are you listening? (Billy Dods), Friday, 15 January 2010 22:20 (sixteen years ago)
public outcry if the Armed Forces radio ditched Limbaugh--it would never ever ever happen
I'm in one of my 'you know the Right is right, I need to get a high powered sniper rifle' moods. The man is Satan's monkey and should be shot. Repeatedly.
― Enfonce bien tes ongles et tes doigts délicats dans la jungle de (Michael White), Friday, 15 January 2010 22:25 (sixteen years ago)
Horsewhipping is unhumane, a simple .30-06 perforation in his head would be.
― Enfonce bien tes ongles et tes doigts délicats dans la jungle de (Michael White), Friday, 15 January 2010 22:28 (sixteen years ago)
smdh.. what i think is, rush limbaugh should not be part of the haiti story. i mean, rush limbaugh will say more ignorant shit next week, and the next, and the next, and it's just what he does and what he's always done.
― kicker conspiracy (s. suisham ha ha) (daria-g), Friday, 15 January 2010 22:28 (sixteen years ago)
Actually, I'd just like to see him seriously humiliated in public, HIS public, but I have fonder sentiments about dried pond scum than I do about him today.
― Enfonce bien tes ongles et tes doigts délicats dans la jungle de (Michael White), Friday, 15 January 2010 22:29 (sixteen years ago)
And daria is right, giving ANY attention to this parasite when there IS a real story of human devastation is a needless and foolish distraction.
― Enfonce bien tes ongles et tes doigts délicats dans la jungle de (Michael White), Friday, 15 January 2010 22:30 (sixteen years ago)
There's a reasonable point in this article about being careful with how you donate and how you restrict your donations, but "Don't give money to Haiti" is a stupid fucking headline for it. http://blogs.reuters.com/felix-salmon/2010/01/15/dont-give-money-to-haiti/
― stet, Saturday, 16 January 2010 02:32 (sixteen years ago)
Yeah, thats downright irresponsible.
― you gone float up with it (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Saturday, 16 January 2010 03:05 (sixteen years ago)
Damn David Brooks gets to be on PBS and NPR as some kind of moderate conservative and then he says factually unsupported crap like this:
As Lawrence E. Harrison explained in his book “The Central Liberal Truth,” Haiti, like most of the world’s poorest nations, suffers from a complex web of progress-resistant cultural influences. There is the influence of the voodoo religion, which spreads the message that life is capricious and planning futile. There are high levels of social mistrust. Responsibility is often not internalized. Child-rearing practices often involve neglect in the early years and harsh retribution when kids hit 9 or 10.
We’re all supposed to politely respect each other’s cultures. But some cultures are more progress-resistant than others, and a horrible tragedy was just exacerbated by one of them.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/15/opinion/15brooks.html?em
― curmudgeon, Saturday, 16 January 2010 06:09 (sixteen years ago)
Isn't Haiti about 60-70% Catholic?
― Johnny Fever, Saturday, 16 January 2010 06:15 (sixteen years ago)
That sounds accurate.
Harrison and Brooks blaming Haitian vodou religion rather than say colonialism is ridiculous and I don't know where they got that child-rearing thing from. Yes there's less poverty in the Dominican Republic, But Brooks makes it sound like that country is a country club now (rather than one which still has lots of poverty), and he wrongly suggests that it has suffered through the same number of problems as Haiti. Ugh.
― curmudgeon, Saturday, 16 January 2010 06:24 (sixteen years ago)
also hey david brooks just as a heads up do u think it might be possible that a certain cultural fatalism might itself be a product of economic/structural pressures that make haitian life ~as it is lived~ appear pretty capricious? like if i'm totally poor and my bro died at a young age of a curable disease, and my mom and uncle etc, and i just sorta observe that most people don't live too long and are in general at the mercy of forces beyond their control, maybe it would make sense to me to adopt a worldview that tries to explain that
― everybody's into weirdness right now (gbx), Saturday, 16 January 2010 06:51 (sixteen years ago)
or: http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/abstract/314/7089/1271
In comparisons among Chicago neighbourhoods, homicide rates in 1988-93 varied more than 100-fold, while male life expectancy at birth ranged from 54 to 77 years, even with effects of homicide mortality removed. This "cause deleted" life expectancy was highly correlated with homicide rates; a measure of economic inequality added significant additional prediction, whereas median household income did not. Deaths from internal causes (diseases) show similar age patterns, despite different absolute levels, in the best and worst neighbourhoods, whereas deaths from external causes (homicide, accident, suicide) do not. As life expectancy declines across neighbourhoods, women reproduce earlier; by age 30, however, neighbourhood no longer affects age specific fertility. These results support the hypothesis that life expectancy itself may be a psychologically salient determinant of risk taking and the timing of life transitions.
obv not exactly the same, but the point stands: if you can only expect yr life plans to be thwarted by shit you cannot in any way address, then yr gonna be fatalist
― everybody's into weirdness right now (gbx), Saturday, 16 January 2010 06:55 (sixteen years ago)
also, guys, voodoo isn't a bad word. i know it gets played up a lot in the media, but the fact is that much of haitian life IS informed by voodoo. not like everyone is sacrificing chickens all over the dang place, but like respectable church going grannies still believe (though they may not ~like~) in witch doctors and zombies and what have you.
not that anyone is really doing this but: getting defensive on haitians behalf when someone mentions voodoo is backhanded (and unintentional) culture chauvinism. "how dare he say that people practice voodoo! why, they're mostly christian down there!"
― everybody's into weirdness right now (gbx), Saturday, 16 January 2010 07:03 (sixteen years ago)
(btw my knowledge of this is NOT first-hand, so grains of salt. my friend is an anthro jd/phd who has studied voodoo for years, and has told me that SOME sort of belief in (or deference to) voodoo cultural practice is very tightly woven into what it means to be Haitian)
― everybody's into weirdness right now (gbx), Saturday, 16 January 2010 07:06 (sixteen years ago)
voodoo's basically a syncretic mashup of catholicism and various african traditions anyway isn't it?
― this corpse is reatardo montalban (latebloomer), Saturday, 16 January 2010 07:08 (sixteen years ago)
also lol @ the idea that "life is capricious and planning futile" is somehow unique to voodoo and not present, in some form, in fairly major schools of all of the world's religions
― everybody's into weirdness right now (gbx), Saturday, 16 January 2010 07:09 (sixteen years ago)
btw kenan, not to be pedantic, but many haitians actually DO practice some kind of syncretic version of christianity and voodoo. my bro spent a lot of time down there (and in benin, where voodoo is thought to have originated, as well as in queens, where many recent immigrants live) the boundaries are blurrier than you might think
beside the point, however
― everybody's into weirdness right now (gbx), Wednesday, January 13, 2010 7:12 PM (3 days ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
basically: yes.
― everybody's into weirdness right now (gbx), Saturday, 16 January 2010 07:10 (sixteen years ago)
smdh @ david brooksboring conservative with no curiosity about, or respect for, any culture beyond whatever is middle class, tasteful, and found in bethesda md. yet he writes about religion and culture in haiti like he knows what he's talking about. i don't understand this.
his column on french hip hop back when those riots were happening was also insightful + relevant
― kicker conspiracy (s. suisham ha ha) (daria-g), Saturday, 16 January 2010 07:57 (sixteen years ago)
So I have reviewed for DC newspapers various Haitian bands over the years-Djakout Mizik, Boukman Experyans, Beethova Obas, T-Vice, Top Vice, and others. I am trying to find out more info on how they are doing. Not that their fate is any more important than any others, but I am curious if anyone sees or hears anything. Sadly some have lost their lives and others are missing. I've been posting on ilm here:
Rolling Global Sublime Whirled "World" Music Thread 2010(with an emphasis on African likely)
I wonder if the big Haitian compas concert that was supposed to happen in Miami, Florida happened today?
― curmudgeon, Saturday, 16 January 2010 21:18 (sixteen years ago)
things are looking pretty dire :(
― I can't turn my face into a shart (dyao), Sunday, 17 January 2010 07:17 (sixteen years ago)
Seeing those two imperialist criminals tapped by Bam as figureheads for Haitian relief in the Rose Garden yesterday really warmed the cockles of my heart. I'd love to send the pair of em into Port-au-Prince w/out Secret Service.
― Rage, Resentment, Spleen (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 17 January 2010 17:43 (sixteen years ago)
Jesus Christ dude you think you could set that shit aside for even this?
― you gone float up with it (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Sunday, 17 January 2010 17:45 (sixteen years ago)
things are looking pretty dire :(― I can't turn my face into a shart (dyao), Sunday, January 17, 2010 1:17 AM (10 hours ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
― I can't turn my face into a shart (dyao), Sunday, January 17, 2010 1:17 AM (10 hours ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
yeah :(
― everybody's into weirdness right now (gbx), Sunday, 17 January 2010 17:46 (sixteen years ago)
xp rage, resentment, spleen
― everybody's into weirdness right now (gbx), Sunday, 17 January 2010 17:47 (sixteen years ago)
jon, THEY are not "setting it aside."
― Rage, Resentment, Spleen (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 17 January 2010 18:01 (sixteen years ago)
THEY and their predecessors made Haiti what it is and kept it that way.
― Rage, Resentment, Spleen (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 17 January 2010 18:02 (sixteen years ago)
Okay, I think I misread your intentions with that post. Apologies.
― you gone float up with it (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Sunday, 17 January 2010 18:03 (sixteen years ago)
np.
So Drs w/out Borders says make all donations 'unrestricted' cuz they met their Haiti cash quota? What difference can new donations make now, then? (I'm srsly asking.)
― Rage, Resentment, Spleen (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 17 January 2010 18:09 (sixteen years ago)
yeah, i was wondering the same thing, morbs---i still think that giving to Partners In Health is worthwhile: they've got a nearly 30 year investment in ~long-term~ Haitian healthcare, and will be there after everyone else forgets about Haiti, again.
― everybody's into weirdness right now (gbx), Sunday, 17 January 2010 18:13 (sixteen years ago)
yo i'm goin back upthread but gbx thanks for taking apart brooks so thoroughly--that guy is a fuckin retard
― call all destroyer, Sunday, 17 January 2010 18:37 (sixteen years ago)
i was *just* about to say that
― harbl, Sunday, 17 January 2010 18:38 (sixteen years ago)
:)
― call all destroyer, Sunday, 17 January 2010 18:48 (sixteen years ago)
saying that Brooks is a retard is something that can't be said enough
― everybody's into weirdness right now (gbx), Sunday, 17 January 2010 18:49 (sixteen years ago)
I wish someone could challenge Brooks on one of the tv or radios shows he always manages to get on.
― curmudgeon, Sunday, 17 January 2010 18:53 (sixteen years ago)
and thing is, what rankles most, is that I think his sentiments actually resonate with a lot of ppl. not in a malicious way, but in a lazy way; if someone says Haiti hasn't prospered because of cultural reistance, I honestly think that there are loads of otherwise kind and decent people that will nod and go hmm yeah that sounds plausible. if you gave them the facts they'd probably believe you, but generally it's just easier to go "well they ~do~ believe in zombies I mean srsly" than it is to square up with reality
― everybody's into weirdness right now (gbx), Sunday, 17 January 2010 18:54 (sixteen years ago)
wish I could dig up that nabisco otm post on Brooks. it is...otm
― everybody's into weirdness right now (gbx), Sunday, 17 January 2010 18:55 (sixteen years ago)
yeah it doesn't really stand out from other coverage of this whole thing, sadly
― harbl, Sunday, 17 January 2010 18:56 (sixteen years ago)
my friend was able to talk to his grandma, thank god
― max, Sunday, 17 January 2010 19:06 (sixteen years ago)
oh good!
I am worried about my friends partner. he is alive but he was in Haiti to renew his visa. his documents were lost in the quake and, while this not an immediate concern, it seems unlikely that he will be able to return easily, or soon.
― everybody's into weirdness right now (gbx), Sunday, 17 January 2010 19:11 (sixteen years ago)