January 8, 2012
Calling for a Convention

To keep money from corrupting our democratic politics, we need constitutional change. No doubt lots can be done by statute alone—meaningful transparency rules, such as the Disclose Act, and small-dollar public funding, such as the Fair Elections Now Act. The Supreme Court, however, has all but guaranteed that these won’t be enough. Transparency by itself won’t build trust; public funding can only be voluntary; and independent expenditures are all but certain to swamp even the best reforms tolerated by the Court. If we’re ever going to get a Congress “dependent,” as James Madison put it in Federalist Paper No. 52, “upon the People alone,” and not “the Funders,” it is clear that Congress will need new constitutional authority.

Yet it is also clear that Congress won’t ask for this authority itself. The chance that this Congress, or any Congress elected in the current environment, could muster 67 votes in the Senate to alter Washington’s economy of influence is zero. Congress is the problem. Fixing itself is just one of the items on a very long list of things that it simply cannot do. A whole industry of influence depends upon preserving the status quo. For that industry, blocking change is child’s play.

At some point, we reformers must consider the one way the framers gave us to revise the Constitution when Congress itself is the problem. This is the Article V convention. If 34 state legislatures apply, then Congress must “call a Convention for proposing Amendments.” The product of such a convention is just that—proposals, not constitutional change. As with amendments proposed by Congress, those put forward by the convention become law only if ratified by 38 states. But the convention is the one path to making such proposals that Congress can’t easily control, and the one path that could create enough of a mandate to force Congress to act.

(Source: azspot)

January 6, 2012
Superman

Superman

(via aretrofuturist)

January 6, 2012
Mornin’ folks!
Let’s chew through this day like it was made of spare ribs.

“Steelworker” by Big Black

Mornin’ folks!

Let’s chew through this day like it was made of spare ribs.

“Steelworker” by Big Black

January 5, 2012
newsweek:

We’re not so sure if telling fat kids they’re fat is the right way to battle childhood obesity.

You want thinner kids?
Stop cutting school budgets so they can make the days long enough for recess and PE.
Pay parents more so they don’t have to work two jobs and can get home and cook and eat as a family.
Stop rewarding monoculture farming by overturning the legislation enacted during the Nixon administration.
You know what? You could take the corn subsidies and give them to schools.
Oh, and how about building communities that encourage a front-yard way of life so kids can meet and play? 
And finally, everyone should stop buying into the culture of fear perpetuated by nervous white folks in homes and on television.

newsweek:

We’re not so sure if telling fat kids they’re fat is the right way to battle childhood obesity.

You want thinner kids?

  1. Stop cutting school budgets so they can make the days long enough for recess and PE.
  2. Pay parents more so they don’t have to work two jobs and can get home and cook and eat as a family.
  3. Stop rewarding monoculture farming by overturning the legislation enacted during the Nixon administration.

You know what? You could take the corn subsidies and give them to schools.

Oh, and how about building communities that encourage a front-yard way of life so kids can meet and play? 

And finally, everyone should stop buying into the culture of fear perpetuated by nervous white folks in homes and on television.

January 5, 2012
Morning, Tumblr!



Flesh and Bones by The The on Grooveshark

Morning, Tumblr!

Flesh and Bones by The The on Grooveshark

January 4, 2012
It’s time.
(Unless the outside will kill you. If that’s the case, stay inside and dance to Prince)

It’s time.

(Unless the outside will kill you. If that’s the case, stay inside and dance to Prince)

January 4, 2012
newsweek:

urlesque:

Faces of Rejected Bachelorettes

Genius gallery. May the Internet rain pageviews on this, in the interest of justice and love.

Yeah, because this is worth anyone’s time.
Worth my time? A brief list of people who should starve to death:
Kim Kardashian
Everyone ever on The Bachelorette
The staff of Urlesque

newsweek:

urlesque:

Faces of Rejected Bachelorettes

Genius gallery. May the Internet rain pageviews on this, in the interest of justice and love.

Yeah, because this is worth anyone’s time.

Worth my time? A brief list of people who should starve to death:

  • Kim Kardashian
  • Everyone ever on The Bachelorette
  • The staff of Urlesque

January 4, 2012
Glenn O’Brien is smarter than all of us

I’m chest-deep in Glenn O’Brien’s How to be a Man: A Guide to Style and Behavior for the Modern Gentleman, and I’d say it’s anything but what you might expect. Rather than concise, bulleted lists of tie and belt do’s and don’ts, O’Brien gives us an arch, snarky, intelligent guide to taking no shit. The book is filled with references to classical literature, modern philosophy and a hard gaze at America’s far right wing. It stakes personal style as a political statement and asks all readers to be more mindful of their clothes and their place in the world (the clothes as well as the man). It’s good and funny and every few pages I find myself reaching for the dictionary.

January 1, 2012
Some brief notes I scribbled by way of resolutions for 2011

  1. Read 52 books
  2. Start getting some exercise
    • 3 days a week
      • Skate on a weekend day
      • Walk/run two other days (bike?)
      • Make sure to stretch every day
  3. Program reminders for feed the bird, stretch, read to Aiden, bath time. (DONE!)
  4. Celebrate small victories. (ongoing)
  5. Finish editing that fucking book
    • I’m giving myself through summer for this one. Right now I’m working on three pages a day, which puts a completion date out 55 days or so. However, I imagine there may be some distractions along the way (see #6), so I’m shooting for next small-press submission season, which begins in August/September.
  6. Drupal, PHP, & rails(?)
  7. Launch [Giant Website] @ end of February
  8. Fail gracefully

I’d also like to land a front-side rock in the shallow end of the pool at Possum Creek skate park. To do so, I’ll need to these things:

  1. Buy some pads (see 2.)
  2. Re-learn how to drop in
  3. Get some more strength in my legs
  4. Land it

It’s all in the planning.

      January 1, 2012
      You want to be a writer?

      Don’t. It is thankless and brutal work. If you want to live like a writer, which I understand is some of the allure of this whole being a writer, become a mid-level accountant instead. It will give you salary enough for cigarettes and booze and be rote enough you can stay out late smoking and drinking and getting your art talk on and still be able to do your work and get paid, which will fund your next night and etc.

      If you still want to be a writer, if for whatever reason you can’t fathom not writing, and it bugs you when you’re not putting words to page in the same way that people who run get grumpy when they’ve missed some days, know this: you probably need to read more than you’re currently reading, and you’ll probably need to write more than you’re currently writing (this advice, of course, is for me, in as much as it’s advice for anyone. And really, isn’t all advice somehow rooted in the things we know are best for ourselves?)

      And if you want to make any kind of money being a writer, go ahead and make good on making and keeping connections. This is where I’ve failed and continue to fail. And while yes, it would be nice if art for art’s sake was able to rise above and remain pure and unmarred from the business of art, that’s not the case. To be a writer you’ve got to be able to sell, too. So practice that, and put forth effort towards forging lasting relationships. You can’t make it without them.

      9:00am  |   URL: http://tumblr.com/ZlJibyE5ZOU6
        
      Filed under: writing advice 2012