the birdman cometh

Banter? I just met her...

 

 

3.30.2004

I'm tired of this thing.
Later.


sez jefe on 3:03 PM link me

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3.18.2004

I'm tired of this thing.
Later.

sez jefe on 2:55 PM link me

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3.16.2004

'Eternity is going to feel like forever.'
--Chuck Palahnuiuk from "Survivor"

sez jefe on 10:17 AM link me

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3.12.2004

I saw some food that looks exactly like beef, but it is not beef. If it's not beef, then why does it need to look like beef? People who don't eat beef, it would seem, wouldn't want to eat something that looks like beef...would they?

sez jefe on 3:16 PM link me

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3.11.2004

I was walking home the other night and I saw Michel doing his famous slo-motion shuffle towards the bus stop. I have never known a person to walk so slow, yet go so far. Michel is an elderly man who works on a radio show called Point of Law; we don't work together, just in the same office. I waved and told him to have a good night to which he replied, "Hi Jack." He's older, a little slow on the uptake, and has called me Jack for years. So I walk along Battery street at my usual post work walking pace, mindless meandering shall we say. I finally get to the corner of Battery and Market and I look up and there is Michel. I do a triple take. Am I insane? Am I in another dimension? He just says, "Hi Jack." and shuffles away.

sez jefe on 9:30 AM link me

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3.10.2004

My brother is going to be interviewed by Anderson Cooper on CNN today at 7pm est, 4p pct today. So ya'll tune in.

sez jefe on 2:12 PM link me

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3.09.2004

Can anyone explain how married gays threaten marriage?
By Bill McClellan
Of the Post-Dispatch
02/26/2004


I support the death penalty, and have served as a state's witness at an execution. But I understand the arguments from death penalty opponents, and I think some of those arguments are pretty darned good. I am strongly in favor of tort reform, but I think the other side makes some good points. I am against reparations for African-Americans, but if somebody came up with a plan to give money to Americans of Scotch-Irish descent, I suspect I'd be a supporter.

On and on it goes. It is easy to see both sides of all the issues that land in the news.

But now we come to gay marriage.

Like most Americans, I had not given much thought to gay marriage until recently. In fact, I had given it no thought. Then the Massachusetts Supreme Court ruled that same-sex couples had the right to marry, and the mayor of San Francisco decided that his city would also sanction such marriages. There was, then, a hue and cry about the sanctity of marriage between straight people. Opponents of gay marriage declared that the glorious institution of marriage, this bedrock of civilization, was suddenly in jeopardy.



President George W. Bush announced that he was in favor of a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage. We need to protect marriage, he said.

Huh?

There is no question that marriage can be a precarious thing. Half of all marriages end in divorce. All sorts of things can do in a marriage. Well, maybe not all sorts of things. Generally, the problems have to do with the conduct or attitude of one or both of the people inside the marriage. But if two gays get married in San Francisco, might their marriage threaten mine? What if the two gays live in St. Louis? Frankly, I don't see the threat.

It is for just such occasions that I subscribe to the Wall Street Journal. If you want to be exposed to an intelligent, thoughtful version of conservatism that rises well above the ranting from the radio, I recommend the Journal. If anybody could explain the danger posed by gay marriage, the Journal would find that person. It found Mary Ann Glendon, a law professor from Harvard.

She wrote about the "economic and social costs of this radical social experiment." The economic costs had to do largely with Social Security survivor benefits. I was unconvinced. I figure that gays pay into Social Security the same as the rest of us. She also wrote about the dangers to children. In school, words like husband and wife would be replaced by partner and spouse. Again, I wasn't convinced. Personally, I think kids are more threatened by the 50 percent of straight marriages that end in divorce.

In other words, even after consulting the Wall Street Journal, I didn't get it.

I've heard folks say that if you let gays get married, then you have to let anybody marry anything. That same argument was made, I'll bet, when the Supreme Court ruled in favor of interracial marriage not quite 40 years ago. Besides, I don't buy the slippery slope argument. One thing doesn't necessarily lead to another. We can say yes to this, and no to that. We can set standards. That's what makes a civilization. Of course, sometimes those standards change. Slavery used to be legal. When that was stopped, there were probably folks saying: Pretty soon there won't be any private property at all.

So if you discount the slippery slope argument, where's the danger in gay marriage?

Tinkering with the Constitution is no small thing. An ill-conceived effort to do so could have unintended consequences. After all, the last time a president pushed the notion of a constitutional amendment, the president was Ronald Reagan. He was pushing the balanced budget amendment. He thought deficit spending ought to be illegal. It's not fair to lay a debt on our children and grandchildren, he said. That was an argument anybody could understand, which may be why the current president wants to talk about gay marriage.


via Jay O

sez jefe on 6:35 PM link me

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3.08.2004

my teeth are better

sez jefe on 3:06 PM link me

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3.06.2004

I do. I need to jump off and tell them. My stories. Money can't matter. A risk to take. Jump. Shit, dive.

Kersploosh


sez jefe on 4:39 PM link me

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3.03.2004

I can see the life being sucked out of me here in my work hole...there goes a big chunk.

sez jefe on 7:18 PM link me

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3.01.2004

I am in my new studio but it is not even close to being set up. I am slowly realizing what little amount of stuff I have. It's kind of depressing.

sez jefe on 9:51 AM link me

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jefe

San Francisco, California, United States
fishin' with firearms