Still censorship high

Got an email today probably based on my old Salon article about internet censorship (letters) (oh fifteen minutes of fame, I thought I had lost you! gee, you sure are dusty…) On the one hand, its just really sad that this stupid fight continues to go on and adults still can’t Get A Clue(tm) about the internet and about kids. On the other hand, its nice that students continue to fight these things, to question stupid rules, to learn how to think for themselves and stand up for their rights. And it makes me feel warm and fuzzy to think that I can play a role — however insignificant — in making that happen.

The _Chicago Tribune_ makes the standard comparison, calling _Veronica Mars_ as good as _Buffy_ but without all the demons: Let’s face it, despite the incredible richness of the stories Whedon told on “Buffy” and “Angel,” some folks were just never going to be down with TV shows involving demons, vampires and other assorted mutants. “Veronica Mars,” on the other hand, has all of the trademarks of Whedon’s shows: witty writing, great acting, strong plotting, a love of the unexpected and a ferocious devotion to emotional truth. And there are no monsters or demons to put off those who might find such fiends off-putting.

_The Monitor_ asks the obvious question, namely, why we put up with so much corruption in government and why campaign finance reform never becomes a big issue. They also state the fact that most all of the scandals coming to light now are from Republicans. Now, granted, they are the party in power, which would explain a lot, but it sure looks bad for the party of reform and under the watch of the President who pledged to clean up Washington.

Can I tell you how much I’m loving Veronica Mars?

Well, I am. I so am. Everything about this show is just done perfectly. And, even better, its not the least bit predictable. It is totally the new Buffy (don’t just take my word for it). If you haven’t checked it out, you should, and if you need season one, I can hook you up.

But I’ve only gotten through three four episodes, and I’m trying to ration them, so *don’t tell me anything about it.* Anything. At all. Let us just bask together in the awesomness, and look out on our current TV landscape, and see that it is good.

Heathers thoughts on pausing real life are spot on. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve found myself reaching for my TiVo remote in random life situations, and especially wishing I could hit the pause button in the middle of conversations. And to some extent the instinct is correct — technology is giving us the ability to leave the confines of a “broadcast” world and conform reality to *our* expectations. Media is becoming “narrowcast” as we are given more options for controlling what and when we see, hear, and read. Sadly, I don’t believe a TiVo remote for controlling “real life” will be forthcoming…

Obligatory welcome

Another time of transition. This is the longest I’ve spent on a design. What you are seeing here has gone through several iterations over many months, and it dawned on me today that if I don’t do something soon, I might never finish. So nothing like switching over to the new design right as the holidays are starting…I’ll either have lots of free time to finish up the design and fix the broken things, or no time at all. Report feedback, praise, and broken-ness to zeno @ agblog, as per usual.

AgBlog is now hosted at TextDrive. I love them in theory with their support for open source projects, liberal hosting philosophy, and amazing hardware, but in practice everything is really darn slow and needlessly complicated and annoying, so I might decide to move to something better if it continues to suck.

Fred Kaplan at Slate charifies Rep. John Murtha’s proposal, noting that what Murtha wants is not a “withdrawal” from Iraq but a “redeployment,” and that no matter what people say to the contrary, it will happen: It almost doesn’t matter whether withdrawing or redeploying the troops is a good idea; it’s simply going to happen because there is no way for it not to happen (short of a major act of political will, such as reviving the draft or keeping troops on the battlefield beyond reasonable endurance). This because, in short, the Army is at a breaking point, and the Army leadership knows it.

In an article about reaction to Murtha’s call to withdraw troops from Iraq, Defense Secretary Donald Rumself is quoted as saying, “The enemy hears a big debate in the United States, and they have to wonder: ‘Maybe all we have to do is wait and we’ll win. We can’t win militarily.’ They know that.”. Really? I thought history was chock fill of examples of terrorists/freedom fighters sticking it out for *years* until the occupier/liberator tired of the situation and pulled out. I think they know they *can* win, and we know it too.