Two extraordinarily unflattering articles regarding the Anointed One -
London Times mocks Obama in ways only the British can -
American press corps admits realities of Obama campaign's arrogance, stoking suspicions many Americans have always had of the man. FNC? National Review? Try The New Republic -
Joshua's Journal
My Podcast Link
07/25/2008 10:02 #45134
Love Affair Over?07/24/2008 10:22 #45120
Endless eBay FrustrationI have shit luck on eBay.
I've posted about this before - this is where (e:paul) would find the old link and leave it here but I'm not that industrious.
For years now, I've been looking for a very specific copy of Jack Kerouac's On The Road. I've owned and read several copies previously and I suppose you could say that to me this is more than just a book. My interest in Beat literature has evolved from voracious reading to voracious reading with an additional wish to collect paperback copies with original cover art. Some examples -
I just bought The Subterraneans from another guy on eBay a month ago. Now I wish I would have waited... or maybe I'll buy this one and donate my copy to a local library or a friend.
This is a copy currently up for bid. THIS IS WHAT I'M LOOKING FOR. Cruelly (at least in my view) I just missed out on a copy like this a half-hour ago, for a third of the price. The guy who won? The guy who sold me The Subterraneans! Still though, this is a slightly nicer copy and is three years older (fourth edition, 1960). Even with the picture a bit fuzzy it is hard to believe that this is a 48-year old paperback. Is it worth up to $30? Had I not missed out on bidding I could have gotten the other copy for $11, including shipping. That is the frustrating bit - on eBay more often than not auctions get "bidded up" by armies of resellers. These people test maximum bid limits on honest people to bid up their auctions - I lost an auction on a similar copy of On The Road to a guy who got screwed like this to the tune of $64. Buyers with names such as f***e, a***r, t***a, etc. kept ratcheting up the auction to trigger this guy's maximum bid at the last minute. On other occasions I've seen someone flat out bid up on an auction within seconds from $4.50 to $20 - why would somebody increase the price they have to pay for the book? If you ask me, this kind of activity is borderline criminal and at the very least is completely unethical. Really, when the sellers cry about eBay's rules I laugh. Where else can people be readily ripped off and the company facilitating it all has no rules to protect buyers from predatory tactics like I've described?
So now somebody with a similarly anonymous name has bid on this copy I'm watching.... and I wait.
I've posted about this before - this is where (e:paul) would find the old link and leave it here but I'm not that industrious.
For years now, I've been looking for a very specific copy of Jack Kerouac's On The Road. I've owned and read several copies previously and I suppose you could say that to me this is more than just a book. My interest in Beat literature has evolved from voracious reading to voracious reading with an additional wish to collect paperback copies with original cover art. Some examples -
I just bought The Subterraneans from another guy on eBay a month ago. Now I wish I would have waited... or maybe I'll buy this one and donate my copy to a local library or a friend.
This is a copy currently up for bid. THIS IS WHAT I'M LOOKING FOR. Cruelly (at least in my view) I just missed out on a copy like this a half-hour ago, for a third of the price. The guy who won? The guy who sold me The Subterraneans! Still though, this is a slightly nicer copy and is three years older (fourth edition, 1960). Even with the picture a bit fuzzy it is hard to believe that this is a 48-year old paperback. Is it worth up to $30? Had I not missed out on bidding I could have gotten the other copy for $11, including shipping. That is the frustrating bit - on eBay more often than not auctions get "bidded up" by armies of resellers. These people test maximum bid limits on honest people to bid up their auctions - I lost an auction on a similar copy of On The Road to a guy who got screwed like this to the tune of $64. Buyers with names such as f***e, a***r, t***a, etc. kept ratcheting up the auction to trigger this guy's maximum bid at the last minute. On other occasions I've seen someone flat out bid up on an auction within seconds from $4.50 to $20 - why would somebody increase the price they have to pay for the book? If you ask me, this kind of activity is borderline criminal and at the very least is completely unethical. Really, when the sellers cry about eBay's rules I laugh. Where else can people be readily ripped off and the company facilitating it all has no rules to protect buyers from predatory tactics like I've described?
So now somebody with a similarly anonymous name has bid on this copy I'm watching.... and I wait.
tinypliny - 07/24/08 11:56
Whoa. $30? Seriously?
I should probably not be encouraging a distinct tendency to packratting, but if you ever travel to Delhi (The Old Walled City, in particular), find the second-hand book market on Bahadur Shah Zafar Marg and Netaji Subash Marg, Daryaganj on a Sunday. You will be in Jack Kerouac heaven. It is a stone's throw away from my hospital/med school. Had I known I would make an acquaintance with a rabid Kerouac packratter in 2008, I would have bought the whole pack - several times over at a price that might blow you away. Rs. 5 for each -> that's like 13 cents each.
If you anticipate travelling across the pond anytime soon, you should wait this out and get it for cheap later. :)
Oh, and I think the names on ebay are purposefully anonymized so people can't target their vitriol at others who have outbid them. You can see what you are anonymized as if you logout and go to the items you have bid on. If you used your real name, you would be j****(your last name's first alphabet) -> atleast that's how mine turns up.
Whoa. $30? Seriously?
I should probably not be encouraging a distinct tendency to packratting, but if you ever travel to Delhi (The Old Walled City, in particular), find the second-hand book market on Bahadur Shah Zafar Marg and Netaji Subash Marg, Daryaganj on a Sunday. You will be in Jack Kerouac heaven. It is a stone's throw away from my hospital/med school. Had I known I would make an acquaintance with a rabid Kerouac packratter in 2008, I would have bought the whole pack - several times over at a price that might blow you away. Rs. 5 for each -> that's like 13 cents each.
If you anticipate travelling across the pond anytime soon, you should wait this out and get it for cheap later. :)
Oh, and I think the names on ebay are purposefully anonymized so people can't target their vitriol at others who have outbid them. You can see what you are anonymized as if you logout and go to the items you have bid on. If you used your real name, you would be j****(your last name's first alphabet) -> atleast that's how mine turns up.
07/14/2008 15:15 #45014
Quick News1. Regarding the big banks that are imploding due to bad assets - the stuff off of the balance sheet might be more interesting than what is on the balance sheet.
It will be interesting to see what happens if in fact the riskiest stuff wasn't on the balance sheet.
2. John McCain states that the figure he tries to model himself after is Theodore Roosevelt. While I wouldn't exactly call it a direct comparison, he might be the closest guy around. Teddy Roosevelt was far more intellectual than McCain is - Roosevelt had a brilliant, brilliant mind. He was a true Renaissance man and if you ask me is the single most interesting president we've ever had, with the possible exception of George Washington. Actually I'd skip the article about McCain and go straight to Theodore Roosevelt's Wiki page - it is much more interesting.
It will be interesting to see what happens if in fact the riskiest stuff wasn't on the balance sheet.
2. John McCain states that the figure he tries to model himself after is Theodore Roosevelt. While I wouldn't exactly call it a direct comparison, he might be the closest guy around. Teddy Roosevelt was far more intellectual than McCain is - Roosevelt had a brilliant, brilliant mind. He was a true Renaissance man and if you ask me is the single most interesting president we've ever had, with the possible exception of George Washington. Actually I'd skip the article about McCain and go straight to Theodore Roosevelt's Wiki page - it is much more interesting.
07/01/2008 11:49 #44837
Coquille St. Stench w/ baby bok choyAfter searing some scallops at home last night in celebration of (e:jason)'s bonus our apartment smelled like seafood. This morning, the apartment still smelled like seafood - the air circulation is extremely poor and so I've left fans on and windows open in the kitchen to air it out. I can't get the smell out of my nose as I type this - I think somehow the seafood searing smoke got into my shorts, which I happily wore again (THE HORRAH!). Actually, today I think it is a horror given the circumstances!
mrmike - 07/02/08 08:45
Thought something smelled fishy when I was at fowlers last night
Thought something smelled fishy when I was at fowlers last night
06/25/2008 18:53 #44785
Security Cameras, yet again.This is a bit of a damning report on how the security cameras in cities such as ours have been expanding but actually help very little.
tinypliny - 06/26/08 23:27
Tangential comment (but then which comment of mine was diametrical anyway?):
I think these cameras won't work in Delhi but for a totally different reason.
They would get stolen and hacked overnight. Hahaha :)
I wonder what the perspective of a person involved in real crime might be...
We are all just people who think we are arriving at the right conclusions via statistics.
Tangential comment (but then which comment of mine was diametrical anyway?):
I think these cameras won't work in Delhi but for a totally different reason.
They would get stolen and hacked overnight. Hahaha :)
I wonder what the perspective of a person involved in real crime might be...
We are all just people who think we are arriving at the right conclusions via statistics.
The Times is just beside itslef that British politicians have never and never will possess an ounce of charisma.
unless the ten point lead that the pollsters (my Republican department chair included) will predict for Obama on Labor day can be overcome by a ten point bump in racism then McCain is fucked...all hail the messiah!
Snark worthy of the American Spectator...