I am, therefore...

Moose bites, sociopolitical ponderings, and other quality programming.

Thursday, September 30, 2004

"debate" the "issues"

John Kerry and George W. Bush "debate" each other tonight, 9pm.

Keep yourself informed:

Capitol Hill Blue has articles and commentary, both objective and...not objective.

Or, you can read the actual bills that congress is proposing, debating, (not) passing... courtesy of the Library of Congress.

Wednesday, September 29, 2004

I want to be 'Lost' too!

I don't know whether to strangle J.J. Abrams, or worship him. I first became aware of him when he did Felicity, then became a semi-rabid fan when Alias hit the air.

Now, there's Lost.

I screamed at the television when tonight's episode (part 2 of the pilot) ended. This is going to be another of those shows that often elicits that reaction. My family will hear my rather loud reactions throughout the house, and my brothers will make snide comments. Gods, I'm already hooked on this show. Abrams is still able to keep me guessing, still able to shock me.

I don't think its possible to die from suspense...

This in from Crawford, Texas...

Sept. 29, 2004
Bush's Hometown Newspaper Endorses Kerry

CRAWFORD, Texas (Reuters) - The newspaper in President Bush's adopted hometown of Crawford threw its support behind Bush's Democratic rival, Sen. John Kerry.

The weekly Lone Star Iconoclast on Tuesday criticized Bush's handling of the war in Iraq and for turning budget surpluses into record deficits. The editorial also criticized Bush's proposals on Social Security and Medicare.

"The publishers of The Iconoclast endorsed Bush four years ago, based on the things he promised, not on this smoke-screened agenda," the newspaper said in its editorial. "Today, we are endorsing his opponent, John Kerry."

It urged "Texans not to rate the candidate by his hometown or even his political party, but instead by where he intends to take the country."

Bush spends many of his weekends and holidays at his Crawford, Texas, ranch.

The Iconoclast's publisher and editor-in-chief, W. Leon Smith, said the newspaper is sent to Bush's ranch each week. "But I don't know if he reads it," Smith said.

The White House brushed aside the endorsement. "I feel pretty confident about the people of Crawford and the state of Texas in this election," White House spokesman Scott McClellan said.

The Kerry campaign welcomed the move. "Those who know George Bush the best say it the best: John Kerry will restore dignity to the White House and provide the leadership needed to get America headed in the right direction," said Kerry campaign spokesman Phil Singer.


Also, the debates are upon us. The "rules" prevent them from being real debates, of course, but I'm going to try to watch them anyway. The networks seem to be a bit fed up with the "rules" as well, and are doing their best to abide by as few of them as possible. From CNN.com: Networks balk at Bush-Kerry debate agreement.

First Blogger Post

New blog. Hope you are entertained, intrigued, bored, whatever.