DougDay
Fire closes Hot Doug's. Now, the good news about those duck-fat fries...
[cross-posted from DougDay.org, "for Dougs everywhere"]
Home from a fine family reunion (no fist fights and only a few, quickly-forgotten bitter words among siblings, in-laws, and cousins, plus great food and Christmas cheer), unpacking many thoughtful gifts and now catching up with email, this timely quote from Robert Louis Stevenson (included in a recent A.Word.A.Day message):
I am in the habit of looking not so much to the nature of a gift as to the spirit in which it is offered.
GuitarBot claims its ancestor not in the golem - which, after all, has decidedly human characteristics - but in the ingenious automated machines of the last three centuries. In the mid-18th century, the Maillardet brothers created an astonishing writer-draftsman that could write poetry and do amazing drawings of ships and buildings. Around the same time, Jacques de Vaucanson created his famous defecating duck, which could eat, digest and all the rest. He also created a flute-playing android, which offered 12 tunes, perhaps an ancestor of the robot that recently conducted Beethoven's Fifth Symphony in Tokyo. While audiences may be titillated by the prospect of seeing such devices and their descendants do "human" things, Mr. Singer and Mr. Adamson have something else in mind. Mr. Adamson, in particular, is more concerned with technical issues and the ability of machines to do things that humans cannot accomplish.
"Agreed, you must consider how best to defend yourself,-- wear clothing it cannot bite through, leather, or what's even more secure, chain-mail,-- its Beak being of the finest Swedish Steel, did I mention that, yes quite qable, when the Duck, in its homicidal Frenzy, is flying at high speed, to penetrate all known Fortification, solid walls being as paper to this Juggernaut.… One may cower within, but one cannot avoid,-- le Bec de la Mort, the…'Beak of Death.'"
...from: Growing Up in the Weather Underground: A Father and Son Tell Their Story , Democracy Now!, 3 December 2004:
THAI JONES: Well it starts on a night that my parents were arrested. We were sitting around, it was World Series time, we had just had dinner and the telephone in the apartment rang and because we were underground, no one had that number. That phone had basically never rung in about the six months we had lived there. And Jeff picked it up and it was an F.B.I. Agent and he said, “We have the building surrounded. We have sharpshooters on the rooftops and in a few seconds, the F.B.I. Is going to knock on your door.” So Jeff turned to Eleanor and said, “We are busted.”
AMY GOODMAN: Eleanor is your mom?
THAI JONES: Eleanor is my mom. The next thing I knew, there was banging on the door. About 20 fully armored swat, F.B.I. And police officers with M16's and shotguns stormed you this the house. They took Jeff out into the hallway and made him crawl down the hallway. What I remember is that there was a moment in all this sort of craziness when people had forgotten about me and I went down to my little bedroom at the end of the hall and I was sort of looking through my belongings to see if I could find some way to help out. And I just had this feeling of, you know, I had like a cowboy hat, I had some stuffed animals, I had a little pair of child's safety scissors, so I just remember feeling helpless and I went back out and just stood with Jeff in the hallway. And I had no idea what was happening. I had no idea that our family was different. I mean I knew that we had had different names but I had never questioned that. And so this book is sort of about exploring how that came about.
So into it and then on Prairie followed, a girl in a haunted mansion, led room to room, sheet to sheet, by the peripheral whiteness, the earnest whisper, of her mother's ghost.
There's a schizoid quality to our relationship with animals, in which sentiment and brutality exist side by side. Half the dogs in America will receive Christmas presents this year, yet few of us pause to consider the miserable life of the pig -- an animal easily as intelligent as a dog -- that becomes the Christmas ham.
-Michael Pollan, professor and writer (1955- ), via A.Word.A.Day
William must have been waiting for the one pig that wouldn't die, that would validate all the ones who'd had to, all his Gadarene swine who'd rushed into extinction like lemmings, possessed not by demons but by trust for men, which the men kept betraying … possessed by innocence they couldn't lose … by faith in William as another variety of pig, at home with the Earth, sharing the same gift of life.…
-Gravity's Rainbow, p. 555
Another Doug who doesn't know when to stop with the Christmas lights.
(EL CERRITO, CA) A squirrel and a blue rub jay this morning took turns disturbing an unknown number of house finches, purple finches, chestnut-backed chickadees, dark-eyed juncos, bushtits, titmice, and sparrows (several species) at a recently-installed backyard birdfeeder in this bedroom community overlooking the San Francisco Bay.
This memorial site links to articles by and about Webb, and notes that a "memorial service for Gary Webb will be held at The Doubletree Hotel in Sacramento on Saturday, December 18th at 2:00 p.m. The address is 2001 Point West Way. It will be in the Garden Terrace Room. Hotel phone number: 916-929-8855." R.I.P.
On one level it's reassuring to learn that US soldiers in Iraq are growing disgruntled, beginning to question and even to resist their officers, and that new recruits are staying away in droves. Lack of trust, tension, public challenges of Pentagon policy, desertions are all on the rise, says the Christian Science Monitor. This is beginning to sound more like the Army I knew: even the slowest and most uninformed recruits figure out, sooner or later, when they're being lied to, manipulated, mistreated. As these reactions filter back into stateside discourse - via soldiers' communications with family, friends, press - pressure will mount to change course: a glimmer of hope.
Webb committed suicide with two gunshots to the head, the coroner says, responding to suggestions that he may have been murdered for exposing the Contra-cocaine connection in his ground-breaking Dark Alliance investigation:
Coroner Robert Lyons said his office had been swamped with calls. "It's unusual in a suicide case to have two shots," he said, "but it has been done in the past, and it is in fact a distinct possibility."
The Hollywood adaptation of Philip Pullman’s trilogy His Dark Materials, in which two children do battle with an evil, all-powerful church, is being rewritten to remove anti-religious overtones.. . . read it all: God is cut from film of Dark Materials by Sam Coates, The Times
Chris Weitz, the director, has horrified fans by announcing that references to the church are likely to be banished in his film. Meanwhile the “Authority”, the weak God figure, will become “any arbitrary establishment that curtails the freedom of the individual”.
The studio wants alterations because of fears of a backlash from the Christian Right in the United States.
"....There is a large community of hashish smokers in this city, who are daily forced to indulge their morbid appetites, and I can take you to a house up-town where hemp is used in every conceivable form, and where the lights, sounds, odors, and surroundings are all arranged so as to intensify and enhance the effects of this wonderful narcotic.”
“I must confess that I am still incredulous.”
“Well, if it is agreeable to you, meet me at the Hoffman House reading-room tomorrow night at ten o'clock, and I think I shall be able to convince you.”
I finished reading The Sorrow of War, by Bao Ninh, a novel as sad as the title promises (but with a story of young love that stays sweet until the bitter end) and somewhat hopeful - despite its devastating condemnation of war - with a message of redemption through art. Highly recommended.
A day where the sky grows younger: from grit on grey to silver to feathers bright as youthful dreams on baby blue.
Millison Grove is one of the hot-spots targeted by police in Solihull, UK, "under the Anti Social Behaviour Act."
The areas have been identified as a locality suffering from significant and persistent problems of anti social behaviour caused by groups of two or more persons.
Sergeant Carol Alldred from Shirley Problem Solving Team said: "The roads included in the order are plagued by young people hanging around in groups drinking, using abusive language and causing damage. This has affected the quality of life of the residents so much that they have fully supported the order coming into force. Before we can get an order we have to consult widely with the community, we have received a overwhelming yes vote"
Following authorisation between police and the local authority, officers can make any group of two or more people to disperse if they are causing - or likely to cause - intimidation, harassment, alarm or distress. If they refuse they can be arrested. People believed to be under the age of 16 and not under the effective control of an adult can be taken back to where they live.
Military officials must win back the confidence of the people whose city they have just destroyed