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30 of our most Recent Postings:
- Legacy Journal: Current
- Legacy Journal: A Viking Legacy
- Legacy Journal: Friday: Family First
- Legacy Journal: Thursday Two Step: Fire Alarm or Frozen by Fear
- Legacy Journal: Monday, the First Day of Fall
- Legacy Journal: The Sunday Sermon: Economist Moral Hazard
- Legacy Journal:Laidback Saturday
- Legacy Journal: Friday Final
- Legacy Journal: Friday Fish Wrap.
- Legacy Journal: Thursday Time for Truth Telling: 9/11, the Magazine, and the True Myth Makers.
- Legacy Journal: Wednesday Time to Weed out the Word Wars.
- Legacy Journal: Tuesday Tipoff
- Legacy Journal: Sunday Surprises
- Legacy Journal: Saturday Samplings
- Legacy Journal: Friday Fifth: Change, Cultural Divide, B&B, Google Chrome, and Arctic Drilling
- Legacy Journal: Wicked Wednesday
- Legacy Journal:Trifecta: Olympic Games, Democratic Convention, Quad State visit
- Legacy Journal: Olympic Swimming Prep
- Legacy Journal:080808: The China Olympic Games
- Legacy Journal:080808: The China Olympic Games
- Legacy Journal: B&B on the Erie Canal
- Legacy Journal: Summer Swing
- Legacy Journal: Thursday Thoughts: Twitter, Triathlons for Horses, and Obama One on Tour
- Legacy Journal: High Finance, Bad Loans, and Banking Reform
- Legacy Journal: Sunday Chatter x 3: ABC, NBC, and CBS
- Legacy Journal: Monroe County: Politics, the Carousel, and the Onterio Beach
- Legacy Journal: 50th Malin High School Reunion
- Legacy Journal: 2008 mid-point
- Legacy Journal: Walking with Religion---Walking with Nature
- Legacy Journal: Sunday Supplement
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[ Wednesday, September 10, 2008 06:02 ]
Legacy Journal: Wednesday Time to Weed out the Word Wars.
Section:
Commentary
Summary:
“Political language… is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.” --- George Orwell
* If it is Wednesday, it is time to be clear as to your message by weeding out the weasel words and the demeaning metaphors. ”Implied Racism” and “lipstick on pigs” come immediately to mind. Meanwhile, Per Diem Gate is percolating and whose kids attend the fight kind of schools is the stuff of watercooler chatter.
** Tuesday night at WXXI PBS Rochester,NY, featured a repeat of the Frontline production on “Bush’s War” and the second night of a pledge drive. The first team of phone bank volunteers included members from RIT OLLI. WXXI President and CEO, Norm Silverstein was also aboard. There is a connection, in that the CEO of the Bernard Osher Foundation is Mary Bitterman, formerly of KQED, San Francisco.
*** Sarah Palin is now under the lights and on the dissecting table. Apparently, while serving as mayor, she asked The City librarian about her general guidelines use to expend public funds including the purchase of new books. The former librarian is not currently making comments except to confirm that no specific book titles or topics were discussed with her boss. However, the community has a history of public comments about books by and for “ the gay community.
Main:
: Now, now boys and girls, it is time for the campaigns to cut the crap and talk straight. Orwell ( Erik Blair) had it right.
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Footnotes:
Backgrounder: • Basics: • Biography: • Bright Lights: • Calendar: • Wednesday: • Culture Clash: • Deadly Sins: • Fact vs Fiction: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Calendar: • Language: • Rhetoric: • Metaphors: • Speaking Out: • Straight Talk: • Talking Points: • Weasel Words: • suggests: • Well Reasoned: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Tuesday, March 25, 2008 06:16 ]
Legacy Journal: Tuesday Lessions: Maps, Tall Tales, Western Trails
Section:
Almanac
Summary:
“Some politicians can put more words into small ideas than most other folks.” --- A. Lincoln
* Maps: The National Geographic Society, NG the Magazine, and GeoPedia have a Strong feature on Permafrost with a carbon twist.
** Tall Tales, embellished recollections by office seekers are as American as Apple pie.
*** Who was the first American to make the Pacific coast to Atlantic coast overland crossing on all U.S territory?
Main:
: It is claimed that Permafrost locks up more than 800 Gigtons of carbon dioxide.
:: Hillary Clinton now states that she misspoke when she claimed to have been under the threat of snipper fire when she visited Bosnia ten years ago. Her campaign has recently ken on the desperate appearance of a long death march..
::: Recall the year that New Albion moved from Mexican (Californio) to Americano control during the Polk Presidency with persistent prodding by Senator Benton of St. Louis, Missouri. The year was 1846, called the Decision Year by Bernard DeVoto in his 1943 historical narrative of the 750,000 sq. mile addition to the bicoastal continental U.S, and the runup to the Civil War to preserve that Union.
More:
Footnotes:
Biography: • Business and Trade: • Calendar: • Tuesday: • Climate: • Northern Exposure: • Conventional Wisdom: • Deadly Sins: • Earth Sciences:: • Energy: • Oil: • Entitlements: • Environment: • Advocacy: • Exercise and Health: • Features: • Graphic: • Illustration: • GeoEngineering: • HardCore: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Calendar: • Knowledge Gap: • Language: • Spin: • Media Watch: • Moral Authority: • Moral Jeopardy: • News: • Northern Lights: • Oh, Really.: • Political Watch: • Science and Technology: • Physical Sciences: • Tall Tales: • Fabrications: • Truth Telling: • Voice: • All for You: • Warrior: • Wilderness: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Monday, January 07, 2008 09:32 ]
Legacy Journal: Mormonism, Coal, and New Hampshire Polls
Section:
Politics
Summary:
Mitt Romney is drawing media attention in New Hampshire. One New Hampshire newspaper editorial has labelled him a phoney, a nytimes reporter, Noah Feldman, is compelled to ask provocative questions and then call attention to Mormon polygamy and the “ idiocycracy” of clean living by avoiding tobacco, caffeine and alcohol. Does he also consider the lack of gambling and lotteries in Utah (and Hawai) as troublesome as the Judaic kosher food tradition? In addition, Romney is also enviromental “inconvenient”. He calls for a national energy stategy that includes liquid coal, increasing the supply of heating oil by building refinery capacity, and investing in nuclear energy. The voters of New Hampshire are concerned about the winter price and availability of fuel oil, and the future costs of electricity.
Main:
The good news is that the media, including the press, is much more restrained than in the political days of Lincoln and cartoonist Thomas Nast. Journalism is also sophisticated, subtile, and scientific in the arts of advertising, influencing, and choice making
* For example, GMA today reported from New Hampshire on a mind mapping “truth” gizmo that records a graphic image of emotional responses to messages and images of events, products, and people. Is this the new brave world of political “science”?
** One of the world’s most costly construction project will be done by a Canadian firm. It is a gas pipeline from the north to the hub in Calgary, Alberta.
*** Meanwhile, fear mongering, narrow mindedness and group think is alive and well in the free, but not cheap, mass media.
More:
Footnotes:
Biography: • Black and White: • Calendar: • Monday: • Culture Clash: • Data: • Dollars and Cents: • Deadly Sins: • Energy: • Coal: • Natural Gas: • Nuclear Power: • Oil: • Environment: • Hot and Cold: • Media Watch: • Print Journalism: • News: • Latest Laugh: • Personalities: • Politically Potent: • Power Play: • Profiles: • Religion: • Christian: • Judism: • Voice: • Demonization: • Reactions: • Gut Reaction: • Vices: • Hypocracy: • Winter Watch: • X Factor: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Sunday, December 09, 2007 10:39 ]
Legacy Journal: The Sunday Funnies and Surprises
Section:
Business
Summary:
This morning, Maureen Dowd, the catty Op-Ed Columnist at the nytimes opines that Mitt’s No J.F.K.. Apparently, shameless, she borrowed the phrase from Woodward, a recent 0p-Ed Contributor. As previously noted here, he borrowed it from the late LLoyd Bentsen of Texas.
Main:
“ To borrow a cup sugar from a neighbor without permission is stealing. To borrowing someone writing without attribution is plagarism and may get you kicked out of school. To borrow ideas from everyone is called research.” --- a olde mentor and others.
“ Never look back in business, if you do, you’ll lose your nerve.” ---- Robert O. Anderson nytimes obituary
: We note that Dowd did a phone interview with, and quoted fellow writer , Jon Krahauer, author of Under the Banner of Heaven. Both seem to find the 1820 upstate New York roots of Mormonism, the role of Brigham Young in the settling the West and the founding of the Beehive state., the presence of Mormon Temples in places like Washington, D.C., and presidential candidates that do not feel compelled to publicly discuss their undergarments as, well, troubling to some at best and dangerous to the rest of us at worst. Those narrow views are also shared by some towards observant members of the Jewish faith and about the possible role of Boston’s Cardinal Cushing during the early 1960’s American advisory “involvement” in Vietnam --- one of many JFK presidential high risk “courageous” adventures. In the end, MS Dowd, is correct. At age 60, Mitt Romney is not the forever 46 years young JFK of her youth. BTW, LDS, founder, Joseph Smith was killed by a mob at the age of 39 while in jail in a small town in Missouri.
We also note the the First Amendment to the Constitution devotes more space to the establishment and expression clause, than to the freedom of press and speech clause.
:: To many, Robert Anderson was a conservation hero. To others, he was the personification of the Environmental Movement’s worse nightmare. A Los Angeles based oilman and Arco founder, he drilled early and often in New Mexico and Alaska, refined in California, supported Republican candidates, and owned large ranches that ran cattle by the thousands. Five strikes and you take a protester’s pie to the face. Anderson was also an early contributor to the Muir Institute housed at UCDavis. Early on, he was acutely aware of the risk’s involved in the counties growing dependence on foreign sources of oil, and he was an active participant and supporter of the summer think tank gathering at the Aspen Institute in Colorado.
::: Finally, what if the writers went on strike and there was not late night performers? Would Oprah take her show on the road? Would Hillary gaffs go unnoticed? Would comedy, satire, and fiction be found only in print?
Meanwhile, one can expect a blizzard of climate news this next week from Oslo and Bali.
BTW, could it be that some Catholics are cranky with the Mormons because of a MBB BYU victory over the Notre Dame Irish? Maybe it was just a cold cup of coffee at Marriott’s.
More:
Footnotes:
Black and White: • Calendar: • Sunday: • Culture Clash: • Deadly Sins: • Environment: • Movements: • Features: • Permalinks: • Quotes: • Video Link: • Give and Take: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Calendar: • Language: • Rhetoric: • Metaphors: • Media Watch: • Memory Lane: • News: • Ink Blot: • OhMyGod!: • Personalities: • Religion: • Judism: • UCDavis: • Values: • Washington Watch: • Weasel Words: • problematic: • What if...?: • Blowback: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
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