Pondering Minstrel

Saturday, October 09, 2004

PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE - MISSOURI

The second presidential debate in Missouri didn't appear to shed any more light on the differences between the candidates for many undecided voters. I was personally disappointed that much of the debate consisted of the stump speeches from the respective campaigns. I wanted to hear real policies. Occasionally we got glimpses of policies from Kerry, but Bush's answer to reducing the deficit was, "Well, look at the budget... Make sure Congress doesn't overspend" Come on. That doesn't answer the question at all. How many voters are actually going to look at the budget? But Kerry didn't answer that question either. He just attacked the President's record. In fact, except with a very few exceptions, most of the night, each candidate just traded barbs instead of really talking about the issues.

With that said, I was impressed with Kerry's response to the partial-birth abortion question. It came across as sincere and earnest, and more importantly, he directly and pointedly addressed two primary issues with the bill. It doesn't allow doctors to perform partial-birth abortions when the mother's life is endangered, and it requires minors to inform their parents of an abortion, without any judicial wiggle room in situations where the minor may be impregnated by her own father, or other extenuating circumstances.

On the other side of the fence, there was one question regarding Iraq that Bush started off answering very well. He spoke of how Iraqis want freedom. That was the first time I ever heard him speak that sounded sincere, but it quickly degraded to more of his usual blind insistence that he's doing the right thing and wouldn't change a thing, regardless of the evidence. The way the President continued to jump off his stool and talk over Charlie Gibson in order to respond to Kerry made me embarrassed for him. He lacked decorum and grace under pressure. If I were undecided, it would certainly make me question his decision-making process and his ability to accept criticism and, more importantly, different points of view. I recently watched Fog of War, a documentary that interviews Robert McNamara, Secretary of Defense during Vietnam, and the similarities in the war and the similarities between Bush and LBJ are astounding.

The debate issue over pharmaceuticals from Canada was extremely interesting to me because it was something that I really hadn't thought about. I agree with Bush (you'll hardly every hear me say that) regarding releasing patents earlier in order to get generics on the market, but I still don't see why we cannot purchase prescription drugs from Canada. His argument that he wants to protect us from unregulated drugs that could potentially harm consumers doesn't hold water because we're not talking about getting prescription drugs from Guatemala! Canada is, arguably, one of the most regulated countries in the world. I don't hear about Canadians dropping dead because of "bad" script drugs.

However, I do recognize that there is another, trickier issue here as well. Pharmaceutical companies, like all companies, are in business to make money. They have every right to charge a premium for a drug that took them 15-20 years to develop. In order to get the best minds on a project, you need to pay them well and get the best testing and research equipment, etc. Even though it only costs them a few dollars to actually manufacture the drugs, it cost them millions in R&D to get to that point. If the pharmaceuticals become unprofitable, there will be fewer that venture into that industry. Everyone wants to feel that they have some job security, so why go into an industry that's going down the tubes. However, how can you put a price on someone's well-being? There needs to be some sort of balance.

Back to the debate. Even with Bush's over-zealousness to defend his positions, he still did much better than the first debate. I don't think he really could have done much worse, unless he completely lost it, like Perot's running mate.

Go to the Commission on Presidential Debates to view the transcript of the second debate.


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Friday, October 08, 2004

THE DANTE CLUB - CANTICLE ONE

I was turned onto The Dante Club, by Matthew Pearl, because it was on the New York Times Bestseller list, and Dan Brown, author of The DaVinci Code, praised the book. However, completing Canticle One was something of an effort. Pearl's prose is elegant and beautiful, which is something I cannot say of Brown, but so far, his story is not as engrossing as The DaVinci Code.

The Dante Club reads more like literature than a murder mystery which was something I enjoyed, but I had anticipated reading a murder mystery. Very little regarding the murders, or solving the murders, is actually presented in Canticle One, which is roughly one third of the book. Because Pearl's writing is so good, I continued on, but I was not drawn in by the way Pearl chose to weave the story of the murders and the development of the main characters, until the last 15-20 pages of the Canticle. At that point, I found myself eager to discover what happens next.

Off to Canticle Two!


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GEORGE W. BUSH'S CONVERSION

I just started reading a blog called Get Religion. I don't have an opinion on it yet, but some of their members have run across some interesting articles. MSNBC recently wrote an article related to Bush's conversion story. I personally do not think there is any way for us to know if Bush is a born-again Christian, but I do find it interesting that I have never heard him refer to himself as being born-again.

Initially, it was refreshing that he did not spew canned phrases regarding his salvation, but is it really benign or is political strategy involved? Setting aside the exact verbage of "born-again", I don't recall a time (and I am not watching/reading news constantly) when he referred to himself specifically as a saved Christian. There have been moments when he said that he has a higher responsibility and he would hold up a bible or point upward, but nothing more explicit.

Most of these moments were in the presence of leaders of many faiths. However, as President, he can still be inclusive of other religions while proclaiming his own salvation. The fact that he has not been that explicit, combined with the high probability, according to PBS, that a candidate can win the US Presidency with only the Evangelical Christian vote, makes it appear like he's pandering to the public but does not really believe.


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Thursday, October 07, 2004

NIP/TUCK

The season finale of Nip/Tuck featured a guest appearance from Joan Rivers. For those of you that have watched Joan Rivers on E!, you're probably not at all surprised by her current appearnce, but for those of us that haven't seen her since the eighties, the effects of her cumulative facial "enhancements" was nothing short of startling.

She certainly doesn't look older than maybe 40/45, but she doesn't look right either. Her cheek bones encroach on her nose, the nose itself looks too narrow and it appears that she's lost the use of the muscles in her upper lip area. I'm sure she had some of the most talented plastic surgeons around working on her face, but with as far as plastic surgery seems to have advanced, you'd think they'd be able to make her look more natural.

Maybe she's just had too much work done? Who knows, but it seems that, aside from your first rhinoplasty, face work still doesn't look very natural, unless you're taking a picture that requires you to have a frozen look of surprise.


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Tuesday, October 05, 2004

Virgin Blogger (No relation to Virgin Mary)

This is my first blog... ever. I was consuming my friends' time and (I believe) patience with all the thoughts, sometimes random, crowding my tiny brain. I'd never even kept a diary before, so we'll see how this goes.

I will not exclusively discuss one subject. In fact, I like discussing many different subjects. (ADD? I prefer not to think so.) However, much of my free time, lately, has been spent reading political and religious books. I often contemplate my spirituality, my religious beliefs and my value system, and in so doing, it leads me to research some of the origins of my beliefs, both within and without, in an attempt to understand myself and learn more about the institutions that have, it seems inextricably, become part of my life. I know there are probably those that will think my ceaseless questioning is fruitless, but I do not think that anything is lost in educating yourself. More is lost in shuttering your mind and soul.


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