Thursday, June 24, 2010

Just Change The Channel

2.5 Million Gallons Of Oil Per Day

An undersea robot, operated by British Petroleum and doing Things, "bumped" into the cap which BP had (very expensively) placed over their broken, gushing oil leak a mile below the surface of the Gulf Of Mexico, knocking the cap all higgeldy-piggeldy.

Before the cap was placed, the open pipe was allowing 2.5 million gallons of crude oil (that's 45,456 barrels per day at 55 gallons per barrel -- c'mon, people; do the math) under extreme pressure, its source being more than six miles below the surface of the ocean, to pour into the Gulf.

After the cap had been placed some two weeks ago, the device allowed BP to siphon off some of that 45,000 barrels, but not a great deal -- the flow of oil into the ocean was cut by about a third.

Now, we're back to 2.5 million gallons per day, again. But that's not the horrific part.


Obligatory Leavening Cute Small Animal Photo In Middle Of Oil Rant

The Horror is that in America's last remaining flagship newspaper, the New York Times, this little set of factoids doesn't even rate a headline. It's buried in the back pages of their online edition. In the business section.

Most comments made by media, political or environmental figures about this disaster that I've read or heard tell us that the full costs and effects of this "spill" may not be known for decades. Meanwhile, for teevee and print media, and everyone who doesn't live on The Gulf, it's all part of the daily landscape now, and can be ignored: Yep; oil's still gushin' out down there; oh, well -- hey; looky here -- I can buy a box set of 'MacGuyver' DVDs now...


Nine Out Of Ten Gorts Say, Your Civilization's Priorities Suck --
And The Tenth Gort Wants To Reduce Earth To Radioactive Slag

Just because it isn't a pair of collapsing skyscrapers or an alien spacecraft landing on the Washington Mall doesn't mean it should be buried below the fold with advertisements for hemorrhoid treatment creams.

But, I'm only a Dog, and no one listens to me.

UPDATE: BP now says that the robot "bumped" a vent on the cap, and that the cap itself had to be removed to effect repairs. The cap has now been replaced and is again diverting a few less gallons more oil.

Well, then everything's all right. Whew. I thought for a moment we had a real crisis on our hands.


Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Random Barking


Bark Bark Bark Bark. Bark Bark.

In case it's escaped your notice, the intent of efforts dealing with the worldwide financial crisis have not been to solve the situation, only to shuffle debt, forestall a kind of mathematical inevitability, and slow the fall.

This isn't entirely a criticism. You wouldn't like the kind of sudden, precipitous collapse we think of when when imagining the 1929 Crash of the U.S. stock market; America would look a great deal like rural Bulgaria a few months after that. It's human nature -- no one really wants to live in a Yurt and watch children play with toys made of dried animal dung.

However, if you actually look at what American and European financial mavens are doing, it amounts only to arresting the speed of the drop, because the underlying problem which created all this -- a gigantic bubble of debt, built right here in the USA -- is still there.

And frankly, having a pause, a slower rate of fall, is beneficial to those who have, more than those who do not -- because, bless their big peasant hearts, they don't have the exposure that the wealthy do. There's much less cushion between those who don't, and the hard asphalt of the street. They just don't have the headaches that come with ownership and wealth; they couldn't be expected to understand all of that.

However, it isn't a conspiracy. Businesses and financial institutions want to put off the day of reckoning as long as possible, as they frantically search for someplace to dump the debt, or slowly transfer it from corporations and banks to governments without anyone noticing.

And, naturally, those with money and property will take advantage of the pause to arrange their portfolios in anticipation of... whatever comes next.

No one knows precisely how much debt is hiding out there; some estimates are $50 to 60 Trillion Dollars. But, it's all bad paper owned by financial institutions, pension funds and banks -- investments with a claimed valuation hundreds of per cent more than they're worth. The banks can't admit how worthless they are, or allow them to be properly valued, because -- here, and in Europe -- those banks would fail almost instantaneously. Bang.

In America, $1.53 Trillion of that debt bubble has been transferred to the government, meaning the People. Some of the liability of the Banksters was transferred, deferred, and made to disappear. If you watch enough commercial teevee, the advertisements for cars and clothes and travel and The Good Life Waiting For Us All are supposed to soothe and convince most people that "everything's the same as it always was". Only, it isn't.

European banks, who were just as greedy and short-sighted as their American counterparts, can't do what they did. The debt bubble is still sitting on their books; it can't be transferred to the governments of a half-dozen countries as it was in the U.S. Those same half-dozen countries also spent themselves silly during the Go-Go, Lil' Boots Bush years, too -- Greece, Spain and Ireland are good examples.

The plan of the European banks and governments is to transfer the pain to their citizens: Austerity, slashing budgets; everyone will have to get along with less -- fewer police, fewer teachers; lower pay for public-sector jobs; more "Privatization" and more Opportunities For Speculators and Foreigners Business. No more month-long vacations and good retirement income, fewer health benefits and public welfare.

And, the Europeans blame us... and they have a point.

At some point, Fate will bring us The Check -- probably in the form of a threat from the Chinese, or a financial crisis in some country like Bulgaria or Monaco which threatens to unravel the entire global banking system. A little like waiting for Franz Ferdinand's assassination to trigger a general European war: Some Damn Thing In The Balkans.

I recommend buying your wheelbarrows now, to transport bales of currency in, because the Hyperinflation accompanying a value collapse (this whole crisis is about value, you see) will make Germany in the Winter of 1922 look like a Debutante's Ball.

Think of Our Current Life as a bit like the Cold War -- Americans and Russians, aiming hundreds of missiles with nuclear warheads at each other, and the rest of the world. A brushfire war in one spot could end up triggering a Global Thermonuclear Exchange, and then we all end up living in radioactive Yurts watching mutant children play with toys made from old currency.

I'm starting to sound like a Leftist Glenn Beck, so I'll stop here before I begin barking wildly about giving money to a gold brokerage company.


Friday, June 18, 2010

Alan Furst: A Kind Redux

Author Alan Furst is about to release his newest novel of espionage on the cusp of the Second World War, The Spies Of The Balkans. He will be appearing at The Bookstore, a block or so from the West Portal Muni station in San Francisco, at 7:00PM on Tuesday, June 22nd.

I'll be there, to listen to the man read an excerpt, buy the book and have it autographed. I hope they allow reading Dogs.

I'm doing something now that I don't like to do, which is repost an earlier piece from January about Furst and his writing. But I've put in two twelve-hour days, back-to-back, and don't have the energy to do a completely new take on this good writer -- even though I can't think about him without The Story that's included.






Something about the times we're living through made me remember a scene from one of my favorite Alan Furst novels, The World At Night: In June of 1940, Parisian film producer Jean Casson finds himself remobilized into the army, part of a cinematography unit documenting what ends up as a massive defeat, and on the road walking back to Paris, in that order.

As Casson watched, the country died. He saw a granary looted, a farmhouse burned by men in a truck, a crowd of prisoners in gray behind barbed wire.

One night, he bumps into an old man, drinking something yellow out of a bottle, which he shares around a campfire with Casson. They talk, obliquely, about the coming occupation.

“We’ll all live deep down, now,” the sculptor said, throwing a stick of wood on the fire. “Twenty ways to prepare a crayfish. Or, you know, chess. Sanskrit poetry. It will hurt like hell, sonny, you’ll see.”

Casson has spent his life in the milieu of exclusive, wealthy Parisian society -- not quite Ancien Regime, old-monied nobility, but right next door. He found a niche in film production, made some money at it; but, assigning motive and direction to characters in a script was much simpler than determining where ethical, even moral, boundaries are in his own life.

Casson's story is where he draws those lines, and to what or whom he owes his allegiances. Furst is very good at presenting his character's search, warts and all.


Alan Furst

I admire Furst's writing, and enjoyed World At Night -- and a sequel, Red Gold -- among his ten novels of living in a Europe during the mid-thirties, and espionage, on into the Second World War. I recommend his work without reservation; it's good (You can see an interview with Furst here, talking about his 2008 release, The Spies Of Warsaw).

And, I only have one Alan Furst story: In 2006, with the release of his then-newest novel, The Foreign Correspondent, Furst was scheduled to do make a brief appearance at Stacey's Bookstore, an institution on Market Street since the 1930's; it closed in 2008, a victim of The Crash.

He appeared on the second floor at the back, with windows overlooking the street and a perspective that reminded me of a narrow Gustave Callibote painting of a Paris street seen from a second-floor balcony (the trunk of a tree; a circular iron grate around its base; a glimpse of a pedestrian).

There were thirty or so people there, at one o'clock in the afternoon on a workday in midweek. Furst seemed slightly preoccupied, but read the opening segment of his book easily in a warm contralto. When it was over Furst answered questions, then signed copies of the book.

Stepping up, I mentioned to Furst that I'd particularly enjoyed The World At Night, and the sequel, and particularly liked the Jean Casson character; would he make any other appearances in another book?

Furst took my copy of Foreign Correspondent and looked at me as if stung. "No!" he said, with emphasis. "I had a bad relationship with my publisher at the time, and was locked into a contract. They 'suggested' to me that I write a sequel with Casson in it, and that's why I wrote Red Gold, under protest. It wasn't a happy experience for me."

I was surprised at his response, but added quickly that even so, it was a good read; I'd enjoyed it. Furst, who had bent down over a table to sign my copy of his newest, remained in that position and turned his head to look up at me.

"Thank you; that's very kind," he said quietly, then turned his head back to my copy of the book, and signed it.

Ever since then, when I've wanted to say Hey, pal; know what? You're an idiot to someone without being so blunt, I use that line -- a soft emphasis on the word 'kind', which indicates the comment is anything but sincere, and an assumption that the listener is too ignorant to comprehend the subtlety of the insult -- or, not; in which case the point is made, anyway.

But, fortunately or unfortunately, I don't have to spend time with Furst; I just buy and read his books. He's a good, even gifted, writer; his evocation of Europe on the edge of the abyss of nazi domination and occupation, and of people who resisted it, is brilliant.

Here's a tip: You can find good, used copies in hardback or paperback of any of Furst's work, some even signed if that's your thing, by ordering them through Alibris.com, or ABEbooks.

These bookselling services list inventory held by secondhand booksellers, who were having a hard time competing with McBorders or Burned & Ignoble even before the economy tanked. Want to buy books? Use either or both of these services. You'll wait a few days -- it won't be instant gratification -- but it's worth it.

Of course, Alan won't receive a dime from these sales -- but the secondhand booksellers of America will; I'm really fine with that. And, isn't that gesture, well... kind?


Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Not Good Enough

I don't particularly agree with many things our current President™ is doing -- some of which are Lil'-Boots-Bush Lite, and others just seem like Chicago machine politics. A bit like the Clinton years -- but, national politics is local politics writ large.

Even so -- and let there be no doubt that he applied the pressure of his office to obtain it -- Obama announced today that British Petroleum will finance a $20 Billion fund for claims resulting from the continuing Gulf Oil spill, and I was happy to hear it.

At the same time, I thought The Right will immediately criticize him. It won't be enough; it'll be part of some socialist agenda; why wasn't it more; he still was too slow; it's a gross interference with free enterprise and on, and on, and on. Not a word of thanks, not an acknowledgment of the assistance twenty billion dollars represents to real people in a real world of hurt.

Later today, GOP Senator Mitch McConnell who (god help him, it's not his fault; well, maybe it is) looks like a goggle-eyed turtle with something lodged in his excretory canal, said Obama would use the Spill as part of "a liberal agenda" to "ram" climate and environmental legislation "down our throats, the same way he did it with health care".

Even as a Dog, man; I hate having as good a nose as I do, for these things. That, or these Assclowns are that predictable.

UPDATE: Josh Marshall noted that a reader at his TPM site offered the observation that "The 20 billion fund should be viewed as a huge accomplishment for Obama. He had no actual power to compel that aside from moral [per]suasion and the threat of having an unhappy president. Legally, BP could have just waited for the lawsuits and drawn the whole thing out for years. As a lawyer, I find it a unique and mind-boggling accomplishment."


Love Accountability For Sale


The Corporate Idea Of Partnership With A Sovereign State

As reported by Glenn Greenwald in Salon online magazine, White House adviser David Axelrod appeared on Meet the Press to discuss things, and tried very hard to explain to NBC/MSNBC's David Gregory the concept of holding someone accountable, which Gregory didn't seem to understand. At all.

That might be funny, if Gregory wasn't the chief White House correspondent for that network. Perhaps I'm mistaken in my assumption, but I thought working that kind of beat meant you understood the differences between government, and business, when it comes to a situation like the Gulf Oil Spill.


Dancin' Dave Gregory, NBC's Chief White House Correspondent
And The Host Of Meet The Press On Sundays (Photo: NBC)

So, in discussing The Spill on FTN, Gregory did what nearly all "modern broadcast journalists" do: He focused, not on the continuing despoiling of marine and wetlands ecosystems, and a fishing and tourist industry, but on his assumption that the U.S. government's response is really all about personalities.

It's so much simpler, 'sexier', to talk about whether the President likes British Petroleum CEO, Tony Hayward. As chief White House NBC Guy, you wouldn't want to raise the level of discussion about how the representative government of a sovereign state deals with a corporate entity over issues of liability.

No; leave that to the eggheads on PBS. Aber natürlich, you would want to know the real details -- like, what Michelle Obama was wearing when told Tony Hayward and his BP Crew would be coming to the White House.


MR. GREGORY: Does the president trust this guy [Hayward]?

MR. AXELROD: Well, look, it's not a matter of who -- we, we -- it's not a matter of trust. We have to verify what they're doing, we have to stay on them, and we have from the beginning. That's why we want this escrow account. I'm not here to, to make judgments about any individual's character, but we do know that they have pecuniary interests that may be in conflict with, with the interests of, of our interests, and we...

MR. GREGORY: But, but...

MR. AXELROD: ...need to make sure that the interests of people in the Gulf are protected. That is what our job is.

MR. GREGORY: But this is a straightforward question. If you are in partnership with somebody -- and make no mistake, the government is in partnership with BP to get this problem solved -- does the, does the president of the United States trust the man on the other end who is leading this operation?

MR. AXELROD: Our, our mission here is to hold them accountable in, in every appropriate way... I don't consider them a partner, I don't consider them -- they're not social friends, they're not -- I'm not looking to make judgments about their soul. I just want to make sure that they do what they're required to do.


Let me add an observation from Jay Ackroyd at The Great Curmudgeon:

Deep in what only can be called the ideology of Washington, DC is the idea that the government's role with respect to large corporations is as a partner. Regulatory agencies do not demand compliance with the law. Rather they work with their business partners in some kind of mutual interest.

...much of our difficulties to date stem directly from the idea that the way to fix problems is to partner up with industry -- the NSA with the telcos, HHS with the insurance and drug companies, MMS with the oil companies, Treasury and the banksters -- to deliver "private sector" solutions.

Of course, they say "free market [solutions]," but this kind of thing is pretty much the opposite of a free market, and is... a distance away from [what] anyone would generally mean by "liberal" or "progressive."

Large profit-making entities do not have the public interest at heart; they (at best) care about their shareholders' dividends. The notion that the relationship between them and the government should be accommodating, rather than adversarial is quite a radical shift away from the views of FDR or LBJ.

But this notion runs deep. It is so strong in Dancin' Dave that it is like a fish's awareness of water. He seems to be literally unable to understand what Axelrod means by accountability.


NBC, the broadcast network who employs Dancin' Dave, is just another asset of the Westinghouse Corporation. Once upon a time, the National Broadcasting Corporation understood the difference between its News and Entertainment divisions, and journalists more or less believed in a factually-based world.

That hasn't been the case for some time now. Truth, and accountability, are malleable. Corporations have the same rights as individuals (don't believe me? Go ask 'Tight Tony' Scalia, Oreo Tommy, Joey 'Fingers' Alito and Chief Justice Roberts if it isn't so).

Rather than hold corporations accountable; instead of using even Reagan's laughable "trust, but verify"; we should simply allow businesses to conduct business, and accept their solemn promises that -- like Itchy the Mouse's promise to Scratchy the Cat on The Simpsons -- They Will Never, Ever Hurt Us.

How'd that work out with BP in the Gulf, by the way? The same way it did with Blackwater in Iraq? The same way it did with the BSD's on Wall Street? Yeah...


Monday, June 14, 2010

One Person's Joke Is Another Entrepreneur's Acquisition and Profit Vehicle



The original I Can Haz Cheeseburger was created by Eric Nakagawa, a blogger from Hawaii and his girlfriend, Kari Unebasami. The theme was "Hey! Lets do a site about cats doing crazy stuff and post pictures of them!!", together with humorous phrases in Geek-Textingspeak that Nakagawa and Unebasami added -- including LOL, which Nakagawa and Unebasami didn't invent, but used everywhere they could in connection with those crazy cat photos.

It was a hit -- in the millions, to be exact; because at one level the Intertubes are still just a shiny toy, and sites like Cheezburger provide us with Teh Funny. It's that simple: Funny = Big Traffic, and big traffic can mean ad sales, and ad sales = money. It's all about the money, you see.

Not all that long after, Ben Huh, more entrepreneur and businessman than free-thinking artist, took one look at the level of traffic to Cheezeburger and thought he saw Opportunity.

Huh pulled together a group of investors, kicked in $10K of his own money, and in 2007 bought the domain name from Nakagawa and Unebasami for $2 Million. It became the first site for Pet Holdings Corporation Inc., and the beginning of a dandy little Internet empire.


Not Everyone At FAIL Blog Is A Loser. Well, Okay; Everyone.

Using the same concept, also in 2007 PHC launched the FAIL Blog -- just in time for the implosion of the economy.

As a Dog, I have a different viewpoint on most things. For one, I think original ideas which make us laugh shouldn't be turned into vehicles for profit. There's something about that which, as an artist, just makes me want to sit down and howl: Does everything on this godforsaken dirt ball have to end up being about acquisition, ownership, and arbitrary value??

Okay; I know, I know. It just seems that practical, Left-Brain rationalizing frequently grabs our culture's whimsical, Right-Brain creativity and throttles it, or dumbs it down, in service to the profit motive.

Not that the dumbing down of a concept like Cheezeburger was such a huge step, or anything. But you get my drift.


Friday, June 11, 2010

Running Dogs


Go, Big Pooch.

A recent shakeup at my Place Of Witless Labor™ has put me in a reporting position that is, as the saying goes, "not a good fit". Consequently, there will be some changes; posting will be minimal while this Dog looks for a new place to put my Rug and Food Bowl. How long that will take is anyone's guess.

Reflecting on the post below, about Little Bernie Madoff -- it is interesting what people tell themselves to justify their behavior.

The Germans have a wonderful word that catches some of the flavor of it: Schlau. Cassell's German-English, English-German dictionary lists the definition as

Schlau [zh-lau], adj., sly, cunning, crafty, wily, artful; (coll.) smart, slick; (coll.) slick operator.


I'm no stranger to realizations that I've been unclear about my own motivation, or about creating excuses for my own actions; pas de tout. But the truth is, bound tightly in self-reinforcing belief as they are, people like that have no real ability to see themselves clearly. They believe, strongly, that they do. And perhaps someday, they will. Perhaps not.

That's not my place to say. But, quoting Morgan Freeman, "to tell you the truth -- I really don't give a shit."


Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Unbowed, Unrepentant Little Men

Nature, Red In Tooth And Claw


(© Skip Williamson; ZAP Comix, 1968)

New York Magazine online presented a major piece on Little Bernie Madoff, who (along with The Wall Street Boyz, thousands of Real Estate loan brokers, and Little Jack Abramoff) are the Poster Children of our times -- the Gonif Generation, where not even prison humbles our Masters Of The Universe. They still feel such pride for their, uh, 'achievements'.

But that evening an inmate badgered Madoff about the victims of his $65 billion scheme, and kept at it. According to K. C. White, a bank robber and prison artist ... Madoff stopped smiling and got angry. “F--- my victims,” he said, loud enough for other inmates to hear. “I carried them for twenty years, and now I’m doing 150...”

For Bernie Madoff, living a lie had once been a full-time job, which carried with it a constant, nagging anxiety. “It was a nightmare for me,” he told investigators, using the word over and over, as if he were the real victim. “I wish they caught me six years ago, eight years ago,” he said in a little-noticed interview with them.


Notice that Little Bernie, a textbook sociopath, doesn't show a shred of remorse for what he's done, any real grasp of the twenty years in which he did it, or any empathy with those he harmed. He doesn't actually conceive that he's done anything wrong. It's all about his feelings, his nightmare... "as if he were the real victim."

And in our politics, our business and finance, there are so many like him -- their attitudes unrepentant, their behavior calculating and unjustifiable. And, they're still firmly in control.


Friday, June 4, 2010

An Welcher Seite Sind Sie?

I See A Red Door And I Want It Painted Black

Ladies and Gentlemen... It's days like today when, if I were running the planet, that I would take a State -- say, Arizona -- and scrape all the Wingnut Teabag Fundamentalist proto-nazi White Supremacist Racist Masters Of The Universe up from the rest of These United States, drop them there, then fence the entire area off and patrol its borders as if the rest of our lives depended on it.

Artists who painted a mural at Miller Valley Elementary School in Prescott, AZ, depicting four students -- the most prominent being a Hispanic boy -- were asked to lighten the faces of the four images. Well, not asked, really. Told.


R.E. Wall And Pamela J. Smith Of The Prescott Downtown Mural
Project, Directed To Make Hispanic Boy Into Little White Boy
(Photo: Hinshaw / Associated Press / NY Daily News, 6-4-10)

R.E. Wall, the artist who heads the Prescott Downtown Mural Project, said that during the months of work on the painting, passersby regularly shouted racially-charged comments and insults at his group while they were creating the mural.

The New York Daily News quoted Wall, describing people driving past and frequently yelled comments such as " 'You're desecrating our school,' 'Get the ni---- off the wall,' 'Get the sp-- off the wall,' ". Wall said, "The pressure stayed up consistently. We had two months of [people in] cars shouting at us."

Meanwhile, in South Carolina, Republican State Senator Jake Knotts is a supporter of Republican Lt. Gov. Andre Bauer to be the GOP candidate for Governor. There's a state primary coming up, and Bauer's GOP challenger is Nikki Haley, whose parents are South Asian Sikhs -- she is a conservative, Republican American who identifies herself as a christian.

In a radio broadcast, Knotts referred to Haley, and President Obama, as "fucking raghead[s]".

"We got a raghead in Washington; we don't need one in South Carolina," Knotts said more than once. "She's a raghead that's ashamed of her religion trying to hide it behind being Methodist for political reasons" ... "We need a good Christian to be our governor," he said. "She's hiding her religion. She ought to be proud of it. I'm proud of my god."

Knotts says he believes Haley's father has been sending letters to India saying that Haley is the first Sikh running for high office in America. He says her father walks around Lexington wearing a turban. "We're at war over there," Knotts said. Asked to clarify, he said he did not mean the United States was at war with India, but was at war with "foreign countries."



State Senator Jake Knotts (R-Fat, Racist)

A little later, Knott released a statement that amounted to a nudge-nudge, wink-wink, claiming the radio program was a "freewheeling, anything-goes Internet radio show that is broadcast from a pub... If it had been recorded, the public would be able to hear firsthand that my 'raghead' comments about Obama and Haley were intended in jest... It's like a local political version of Saturday Night Live, which is actually where the joke came from. I still believe Ms. Haley is pretending to be someone she is not, much as Obama did, but I do apologize to both for an unintended slur."

Unintended. Yeah... People like Ol' Jake didn't intend to support segregation, the Klan, or lynchings, either. Not at all -- hey, they had no idear how stuff like that coulda happened...

Discussing this in the context of Arizona's new, arguably racist state immigration law, a blog commentator noted [paragraphing added]:

Remember where you were when you could still laugh about teabaggers and racists and Arizonans, because funny time is almost over.

If the unemployment keeps up — one in five adult white males has no job and will never have a job again — and people keep walking away from their stucco heaps they can’t afford and the states and cities and counties and towns keep passing their aggressive racist laws to rile up the trash even more, shit’s going to very soon become very bad...

..and whether it’s the National Guard having wars in the Sunbelt Exurbs against armies of crazy old white people who are finally using their hundreds of millions of guns, or whole Latino neighborhoods burned to the ground the way the Klan used to burn down black neighborhoods a century ago, we are in for a long dark night and no light-colored paint is going to fix that.


Apparently I'm not the only one who feels we're already deep in the Weimarzeit.

...and, there are approximately 11 other states where racial purity immigration laws like Arizona's are being pushed through their legislatures, along with a number of county and municipal governments in socially-enlightened areas like Texas.


New Local Mandatory Citizen Purity Identification For Honest
Americans With Nothing To Hide (Coming - The Electronic Version!)

What bothers me is that the number of people sufficiently aware of historical precedent to make the comparison appear to be very few -- and so, not many people will recall what form of government came after The Weimar Republic.


Thursday, June 3, 2010

Ruh-Roh

... As a talking, thinking Dog, I occasionally am right in my assumptions about how badly humans are screwing up the planet.

In this case, I'd suggested (in a post below) that at the moment, the level of concern over the Gulf Oil spill in the mind of pundits, public, and some professionals is on a par with how we feel about commercials, or jock itch: We'd prefer to ignore it.

It will take the Conveyor currents running up the east coast moving oil into the Atlantic Ocean, I said, to get people to say Hey! We gotta problem here!

Ooops. Damn; I hate being right, even for a Dog.