URLs du Jour

2009-02-02

  • Happy Groundhog Day, everyone! I'll be watching the obvious movie at some point; it's a personal tradition. If you haven't read Jonah Goldberg's essay on the film, check it out. If you can stand clicking over to the Huffington Post, Perry Garfinkel introduces "a new sect I call Groundhog Day Buddhism."

    Oddly enough, I don't care whether the groundhog saw his shadow or not.

  • But that Buddhism thing reminds me. In his Inaugural Address, President Obama rattled on inclusively:
    We are a nation of Christians and Muslims, Jews and Hindus -- and non-believers.
    Over at BeliefNet, Steve Waldman says (paraphrasing), hey, waitaminnit. If you're going to be pandering to religious (and non-religious) diversity, you should really kick in a mention of Buddhists: they outnumber both Hindus and Muslims in the US.

    Simple explanation: there's no detectable political upside in pandering to Buddhists. Because, as near as I can stereotype, unlike some religions I could name, they don't much care whether they're being pandered to or not. Good for them.

  • At Kausfiles, Mickey is, if possible, even more mystified than I about Judd Gregg's apparent ambition:
    What could Sen. Judd Gregg possibly do in a second-tier cabinet position--Commerce--to advance his conservative philosophy that would possibly make up for giving his ideological opponents a 60-seat majority in the Senate? Stop card check? Achieve a free trade agenda? ... Quick, name Bush's last Commerce secretary. ... Even if New Hampshire's Democratic governor angers his party by appointing a Republican to replace Gregg, will it be an anti-card-check Republican? ... Gregg could go down as the biggest sucker since Arthur Goldberg, who let Lyndon Johnson con him into giving up a lifetime Supreme Court seat to become Ambassador to the U.N.
    Yeah, I don't get it either. Seems like an obvious poor choice.

  • And, oh yeah: appointing Gregg to a cabinet post is unconstitutional. Um, technically.

    But there's a lawsuit in the works to determine just how "technical" that is; if it succeeds, Hillary Clinton will have to go back to baking cookies in Chappaqua. Does Judd want to take the risk of meeting a similar fate?

  • Drew Cline has informed speculation on two women mentioned as Gregg's possible replacement, both safely from Snowe/Collins RINO-land.

  • And now for something completely different: comic Steve Martin hosted Saturday Night Live over the weekend. The comedy was—sorry, Steve—eh, but he sang (sort of) and played the banjo, performing an original song:

    "Hey, this guy's good."

    The New York Times had a good article about Mr. Martin's longtime banjo passion on Sunday; there are also links to a couple more songs, one with Vince Gill and Dolly Parton singing—sorry again, Steve—much much better than Mr. Martin.


Last Modified 2012-10-08 7:43 PM EDT