Year: 2005

8 months already…

Wow. I can’t believe Sarah is already 8 months old. She’s definitely mobile now, and is on the verge of becoming an efficient crawler. She’s talking (in a special language that seems to be mostly made up of “ba”, “ga”, and “da”–which is fine with me because it includes “dada” a lot) and she totally sings. She is also the… Read more →

A couple of quick book links

If I convinced you to check out Stephan Zielinski‘s book Bad Magic with my review, or if you came to the book yourself by some other route, you will probably be interested in the interview with him that just popped up at the Agony Column (in both MP3 and That Vile Format). If you haven’t read the book the interview… Read more →

A few links on language and lexicons

Sometimes things seem to pop up in nice thematic clusters. For instance, I saw an interesting article on Cajun English at PBS (link via Brad Parker) that I found very interesting. Despite being subjected to abuse and stigmatization for many years, Cajun English speakers abound. Why would this be? Why would a dialect which was considered a mark of ignorance… Read more →

Hump Of Hate: Church & State

What could possibly be worse than the alignment of highly conservative political factions with fundamentalist Christianity? Xemu knows the answer to that question. As an aside, also from my Hump of Hate, even ignoring who this award was given to, doesn’t this sentence from the article encapsulate so much that is hate-worthy about North American society? Members of the group… Read more →

Hump Of Hate: Texas Textbooks

So, I’ve talked a lot about textbooks, primarily about the religously-motivated alterations of their content; most recently it was the homophobic alterations of Texas texts. Now I read in a post at Ambiguous.org that because a number of Southern states buy their texts as a bloc, lead by Texas, that the national publishers are self-censoring their content so that it… Read more →

Hump of Hate: Fascism Anyone?

A while back, Laurence Britt published an article in Free Inquiry magazine entitled “Fascism Anyone?”. In the article Britt looked at a number of fascist regimes (Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, Franco’s Spain, Salazar’s Portugal, Papadopoulos’s Greece, Pinochet’s Chile, and Suharto’s Indonesia) and finds fourteen common characteristics of all of them. The “14 characteristics of fascism” from the article have spread… Read more →

U.S. Currency wonkery

Nouriel Roubini of the Stern School of Business at NYU, and Brad Setser at University College, Oxford, have co-authored a paper on the possible unraveling of the Bretton Woods 2 system, and the consequent hard landing scenario for US currency. A PDF copy of the report is online, and makes interesting reading, if you think currency issues are interesting. Both… Read more →

Hump Of Hate: Canadian Immigration Policies

One of my fave leftie Canadian magazines, THIS, has a piece this month on how the Canadian government is essentially screwing over Hungarian Roma who are trying to get refugee status–and doing it primarily so Hungary can pretend that there is no internal problem for the Roma. (Not that Hungary is the only country that the Roma could legitimately claim… Read more →

Where have I been?

It’s been a very busy week here at Le Château De La Folie. Nothing that would make a good story, though: lots of extra hours of work for me (and indeed, there are developments at work that I am not best pleased with; nothing serious, just annoying), and lots of parent stuff that needed doing around the house. Oh, and… Read more →

Once again I give you Steve Grant…

This week’s Permanent Damage asks the questions I’ve been wondering about: why aren’t (and haven’t) the Democrats acting like they stand for something? Scroll down in this week’s column until you reach the With Democrats Like These header: Since losing the election and seats in both the Senate and the House, the Democrats have been on the defensive, facing a… Read more →

Eostre Traditions

We have a new Easter (or Eostre if you prefer) tradition in the McLaren household. Since we’re mostly areligious (i.e. I’m a die hard athiest and Trish is agnostic) the traditions have nothing to do with chocolate jesus or egg-laying bunnies or anything. Our new tradition for this weekend is Sunday Brunch with the traditional Easter French Toast accompanied by… Read more →

Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Canada
This work by Chris McLaren is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Canada.