Natter 48 Contiguous States of Denial
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Connie, I hope you don't feel ganged-up-on. There's nothing wrong with feeling sympathy for an individual.
Hell, no. I keep having to smack down the self-righteous part that wants to feel superior, because I agree with 99% of what all of you are saying. The size of the offense does make sympathy difficult.
Hubby doesn't like Carter, but that's because he agreed to give up the Panama Canal. Hubby agrees that Carter is probably the best damned ex-president that ever was. Watching Carter on TV, as old as he is, with exact dates and figures for whatever he's discussing right to hand, is a joy.
I do wish Carter could have gone directly to the ex-presidency and skipped that messy president part. While I like the idea of a president who's not part of the Washington establishment, Carter's administration was an example of how that can go terribly wrong.
True, bon bon. He also did an amazing job organizing food supplies in Europe right after WWI. He just turned out to be the wrong president at the wrong time.
As opposed to Nixon, who caused some things (Watergate, Cambodia) and had some things thrust on him (Vietnam, the '73 energy crisis).
Last year, Carter was in Cuba giving a speech, and he gaev the whole speech in Spanish. Now, it was
terribly accented
Spanish, and complex enough that it was certainly scripted for him and he read the speech rather than extemporaneous; but when you listen to a guy make a speech in a foreign language, you can tell whether or not he understands what he's saying, and by gum Carter understood what he was saying. And that was so cool.
The stereotype I always liked about Carter was the one from SNL -- that he would hold weekly fireside call-in shows, and people would ask him about the bizarrest obscure things, like the handle you have to jiggle on the Super Froominator Stamp Machine, you know model 123-X-1? And he would be able to answer these questions off the top of his head.
Like, he was so gosh-darned
nice
that they couldn't bear to do any biting satire of him!!
Cute pix, David! Such a pretty little girl!
Also, given the timing of my visit, I'm assuming I need to figure out exactly when I'll be there and reserve a room tout de suite. I've never been to Austin, any recommendations?
Hip, in the middle of things, but pricey: The Hotel San Jose
Green, out of the way (you will need a car), and a little pricey: Habitat Suites
Beyond that, just ask me.
Oh, on the Bush thing, some conservative commenters on Matt Zoller Seitz's blog have been talking about their belief in personal responsibility and how it affects their viewing of The Wire. I don't get where conservatives say they believe in personal responsibility, but somehow find a loophole for Bush and his ilk while rushing in to discuss the personal responsibility in the limited choices made by fictional children born into the most dire circumstances in the US (poor, mostly parent-less, surrounded by drugs, abandoned by the education and social services systems). Must be hard to hold that many contradictory thoughts in your mind at one time, unless, that is, you have a Wile E. Coyote-like ability to remain unaffected by the things you don't examine.
The stereotype I always liked about Carter was the one from SNL -- that he would hold weekly fireside call-in shows, and people would ask him about the bizarrest obscure things
"Now, Billy, do you have any Allman Brothers?"
Peanut farmer or no, the man is in fact a rocket scientist.
(Not literally, to be clear, but damn close, with graduate studies in nuclear physics. Smart man.)
t hearts Jimmy
This was the worst strategic mistake in the entire history of the United States
That's a pretty strong statement. There has to be some others, Vietnam comes to mind as a competitor. Central American policy hasn't exactly been brilliant, but Iraq seems worse than that. There's the backing of the Shah and Hussein that probably has produced a lot of anti-American sentiment in the area. I don't know the events leading to the Civil War very well, but I guess that would be more political rather than strategic. I can't think of anything right off the top of my head that definitely trumps it.
I really don't remember enough about the Carter administration (I was just a kid at the time) to really comment about it. Hell of an ex-president though.
The stereotype I always liked about Carter was the one from SNL -- that he would hold weekly fireside call-in shows, and people would ask him about the bizarrest obscure things
I liked it when he talked the caller down from a bad LSD trip.