Republican presidential candidates debate

Uh, Mitt? I’m legally required to carry my green card with me in order to be able to produce it upon the request of an officer of the law. But, you’re saying, it’s ‘un-American’ for an officer to request it? Take some responsibility for your own house, dude.

Since when does any reasonable person think that Canada has any desire to become part of a North American amoeba with this country? Oh, right. Nevermind.

As a sociologist, the inability of these people to differentiate between economic systems and state structures is mind boggling. Of course, as any political sociologist will tell you, they’re interrelated in complicated and interesting ways.

Aw, Anderson, why didn’t you hit Ron with the question-dodging hammer?

I’m getting the impression that Mitt didn’t do so well in math when he was in school. I hope he has a secret skill at reciting Blake or some such thing to balance it out.

Thank you, Fred, for pointing out that entitlements are in fact such a rinky dink part of the federal budget that cutting them doesn’t begin to address the problem. Oh wait, that’s not exactly what you’re saying. But it’s the truth.

Three programs? Oil subsidies, illegal wars, and corporate welfare. I could get behind DHS, but OMGLOLZ the IRS! Tee hee.

John, John, John. I kind of used to like you when you were the new Bush alternative. It’s true, Ron, that John doesn’t understand that difference, but it’s also true that you are an isolationist. Sorry. It’s true.

Booyah corn subsidies! My new favorite questioner. Mitt, I’m sorry, but I spent my early life surrounded by fields of inedible corn destined for industrial uses, and I can tell you this: corn subsidies are not about food security.

Anderson! Do your thing.

Let’s reiterate: it’s against the law to employ people who cannot prove their legal ability to work in this country. It is, in fact, the legal responsibility of the employer to determine eligibility before hiring. Period. So, be realistic, yo!

As a person who’s had a handgun pointed at my head–in a college dorm, by an ROTC member–and lost two friends to self-inflicted gun wounds, I lack the ability to take the pulse of this issue. I’ll always be in the no-guns-ever camp, and that’s just the way it’s going to be.

Oh no you didn’t, Mitt. You did not just bring Bill Cosby into your madness.

Number one priority. Huh.

Anderson! Bring them back to the Jesus question.

I can’t think of anything more clear than thou shalt not kill, but somehow the minister manages to be all for the death penalty one minute and all about the literal interpretation of the bible the next? My brain is starting to hurt.

Rudy. Are you trying to be ironic? You’re a smart guy. Surely you understand that reduced snowfall has to do with global warming, which you have likely contributed to by your energy policies.

John. Please stop making me fall off my chair with the giggles. Please stop saying the words ‘winning’ or ‘surge’ or any such, m’kay? Thanks.

Convenient not to mention the people we killed with sanctions leading to lack of food and medicines in various countries.

Mitt. Gah. I am trying to keep this blog PG, but holy mother of the baby Jesus you are making it hard for me.

John! The former John rears his dragon head! You go, my old friend.

But then…John. How can you be so inconsistent? How can you say things that are so clearly reasonable and moral one minute and things that make it sound like you’re mainlining illegal narcotics the next? How can I admire you in these circumstances? You pain me.

Whoa. What did I miss? Did one of these old white dudes just name-drop Reagan like it was going to help them? Yowzah.

Speaking of name-dropping, can I get a ‘go Cheney yourself!’

Do not lie about soldiers to your own ends, people. The majority of enlisted men and women are working class, and not idealogues.

If the middle of an active war is not the time for more soldiers, when is? This is not meant to be a critique of the public, but rather of the candidates. Still, I cannot help but wonder what kind of Republican boos a 42-year Army veteran and thinks to retain any kind of moral or ethical stance? Feh.

Billions of dollars on foreign invasions, dude, not space travel, make for a big deficit. Just tell the truth.

If by ‘moving people off welfare’ you mean ‘busting public service unions and replacing them with low wage workers,’ you did a great job, Rudy!

Time to go watch network TV and leave these guys to their fans.

Republican presidential candidates debate

Icemakers of the Revolution

‘When the puppets cut their strings / there’ll be fireworks for the world to see / when the puppets cut their strings / there’ll be hell to pay in the ghettos of the whole damn world.’ — Icemakers of the Revolution


Diane, Tammy, and Shawny, at a show outside the Union in 1991.

I’ve referenced the Icemakers of the Revolution in passing, but they really deserve their own press. Fuzzy and Stephen were kind enough to collaborate and make available two of their albums in digital format, the first of which contains the aforementioned ‘Upset With The Set-Up.’ It also includes another of my favorites, ‘Panama,’ and the ever-popular (and still timely) ‘Growthrough,’ a protest against the Gulf War (I).

It would be fair to say that the Icemakers were one of my favorite bands. They were a local band when I was in high school, made up of Purdue students of various stripes — undergrad, grad, and alumni. Their sound varied from full on rockin’ out to an a cappella style. I saw them in just about every venue in town that didn’t require you to be 21 (or even 18): inside the Union, outside the Union, behind Von’s, in the Armory, and innumerable times upstairs at the Wesley Foundation. Despite carrying my camera with me nearly everywhere at that time, I only have half a roll of film of them, some 10 photos in all.

The members of the Icemakers were something like angry folk rock gods to those of us who were then 5 or 10 years younger (a span that is meaningless in my adult life). They were smart, funny, biting, and they trusted us to watch their cat when they went out of town. They were also unequivocally anti-war, pro-vegetarian, anti-racist and feminist, the political fathers and mothers of the kids who warm the cockles of my heart when I see them at protests with ‘no war but the class war!’ banners. In our small town, where the most successful college programs depended on big industry and government funding, they were a sign to me and my friends that we didn’t have to grow up and buckle under, that we could be only just beginning.

Being able to continue to see Icemakers shows was one of the few things I envied the people I left behind when I went away to college. I took their cassettes with me, but it wasn’t the same as their live shows. Since then I’ve grown away from folk as a genre, but I still pull the cassettes out from under the bench in the living room every once in a while, dust them off, and rock out.

Icemakers of the Revolution

Democrat presidential candidates debate

Where my Indiana heads at, as my pal Caesar would say? I have to give respect for Senator Lugar. He may be a Republican, but he’s our home republican, and he’s one of the last true moderates. I can, and do, respect him, and I’m glad to see him named as someone another moderate would pick for his team.

The reminder of Elizabeth Edwards is there in John’s bracelet. What an awesome woman. What a powerful reminder that cancer hits all kinds of families in all kinds of ways.

As a lead in to this debate, I watched the news, local NBC and BBC World. Both shows mocked the people suggesting questions almost uniformly, NBC white guy calling them ‘crazy YouTubers’ and the BBC white guy sneering at the Viking hat submission as a ‘typical internet user.’ Again, it’s funny to see the defensiveness of these people. Do they not send email? Does their mother not send them photos of her grandchildren over email? I mean, it’s kind of true — to tweak the phrase a bit — that the internet is for nerds. But just because nerds push the envelope, that hardly makes them typical.

I have to agree with Hillary — who I’ve always liked and respected; isn’t it great (however honest or accurate) for people to be arguing on tv about who is going to be better at fighting for women’s rights. I would say, also, that what they’re talking about is poverty, and in our current capitalist patriarchy, that means talking a lot about women and children.

You go, Rev! Wow, huh. A Reverend who understands the 14th Amendment.

I took the opportunity to get my cucumber tomato salad while a couple of the candidates were blathering about how we would end wars with violence. I’m glad to come back to hear Barack saying that you can’t end this with war. I agree, and am glad to have someone recognize that you can’t end wars by waging more wars.

I’ve never much liked Chris Dodd. I had lunch next to him and his family in the first year we were here, and he’s not much more personable in real life. His brand of not-so-personable really yanks my chain. Maybe, Chris, the people of Iraq are not rushing to ‘start a nation-state’ because (1) they had one before the U.S. illegally invaded and occupied it, and (2) they’re still reeling from the destruction of the relics of the civilizations on which that nation-state was based.

Yes, women should register if men register. It’s funny to hear Hillary say she believes the volunteer military is sufficient, since it depends on those systems of poverty and inequality to fill its rosters. If we create the national systems of quality education, health care, and full employment that Hillary talks about, the attraction of the military will be lost for all but true believers.

Hugo Chávez! What an honor to be lumped with Castro! You lucky devil. Tee hee. What a threatening idea, that the resources of the nation belong to the nation, not to rich people abroad.

Joe, Joe, Joe. Do you think we’ve forgotten the whole plagiarism thing? I guess no one told you that taking credit for work you didn’t do is at the very least a minor transgression.

Bill! The relief to be able to stand up in public and say SCRAP IT!

University of Chicago Lab School, represent! I went there, for kindergarten and first grade. It was there that I was sent home with a message that I had a problem with authority. Go figure.

Woot! Ann Arbor! Note, though, that ‘safer’ didn’t get on that pro-nuclear list.

Joe, Joe, Joe. Do you think that people are going to consider a net worth of 70 to 100 grand as not very much? Minimum wage is around 10k per year; you’d triple that if you lived off your net worth (and I assume you mean liquid assets, and not your house) for the duration of a presidential term of office. Barack has it right.

C-c-c-clinton. Poor Michael. You spit out that name in a way that would make the NRA magazine editors proud.

Good for you, Anderson. And Joe. I was thinking Dennis would have to be my man in the corner to say ‘that gun is only for killing people, it’s unnecessary, and it should be banned.’

Thank you, Anderson. You did good.

Democrat presidential candidates debate

upset the setup

Lately PJ, a friend of mine from college, has been rockin the local scene with DC Upset the Setup gear. Whenever I see the stickers on utility boxes around the city I am reminded both of him and of the music of my youth, ‘Kiss Me, Son of God’ and ‘Upset the Setup’ going through my head on a loop with PJ’s ‘This is DC.’

It’s hard to not have ‘Kiss Me, Son of God’ be the first thought whenever I come to face to face with politics here in our nation’s capitol. I am at heart a luddite, so I lack the equipment I would need to make a digital recording of the song from my cassette tape and convert it to an mp3 that I could give you. However, because it’s the two Johns we’re talking about here, you can still listen to the song, direct from their little corner of the web.

The song that always pops into my head when I see the stickers, ‘Upset the Setup,’ does not appear to live anywhere on the interwebs. Since it’s a 15 year old recording by a local Indiana band, Icemakers of the Revolution, released (as far as I know) only on cassette, that’s not surprising. I can point you to two former band members, Tammy — who married another one of my favorite local musicians and continued a career in music — Stephen — who’s now a professor.

The thing that strikes me the most listening to these old songs is how little things have changed. The Icemakers, along with the other local artists I loved, wrote dozens of songs — and participated in gazillions of actions — protesting the Bush policies and war of the early 90s. I could pick those songs up and plunk them down in new Bush era without having to tweak a single reference: war, unemployment, illiteracy, corporations taking over our food supply…it’s all still relevant. I try to be heartened by the acts of resistance I see around me every day, but they pale at times in the face of the constant and ongoing acts of lunacy.

On those days, it’s stickers on utility boxes that keep me sane.

upset the setup

coffee, fair trade, and me

As much as I rely on it each morning, I recognize that coffee is a luxury item. Ditto with sugar and chocolate, but we’ll get there. After spending time in Europe, I couldn’t go back to coffee dripped through paper. Similarly, if it weren’t for the Greek students introducing me to the wonders of the stovetop espresso pot, I might not have made it through my year in England, land of instant ‘coffee’.

During my first year back, my final year of college, I relied on my little curvy pot (still my favorite after all these years) and pre-ground Lavazza (which is, of course, excellent commercial coffee). Following graduation, I moved to the West Philly neighborhood where I’d been spending much of my time. I became a member of the Mariposa Food Coop there, where what to my wondering eyes did appear but bulk bins of amazingly good coffee beans. Although I still didn’t have my own grinder, I was hooked on the Bolivian beans (Full City Roast), and was delighted to find them again at the People’s Food Coop when I moved to Ann Arbor the following year.

Back then, I didn’t know much about the history of Equal Exchange as a company; before the establishment of third-party certification through TransFair, the ‘Equal Exchange’ name seemed more like a fair trade label and less like a brand name. Mostly, it was difficult to find organic coffee beans at all; consumers were just starting to be educated about the fact that ‘gourmet’ coffee was both better tasting and more expensive because it was grown in its natural shade, and commensurately slower to harvest. Being already addicted to high quality coffee, I was completely happy to pay gourmet coffee prices for beans that were organically grown and fairly traded. Truthfully, it seemed like something too good to be true.

It wasn’t a far stretch for me to extend the food politics of the U.S. that had led me to start eating vegetarian and organic—unsafe and unfair farm labor practices, pesticide overuse, the growth of corporate farming, pollution of land and water resources—to the global politics of the cash crops of coffee, sugar, and cocoa. Giving up meat had required a conscious awareness of what I was eating and what went into producing it; that awareness began with animal farming, but I carried it into a consideration of the origin of my plant-based products as well. Buying these products was never about whether I was getting more vitamin C in an organic orange versus a commercial one; it was about knowing that no one was getting cancer from crop-dusting so that my juice could be a little less expensive. Principles of ethical consumption are such a basic part of how I make food choices that it’s hard for me to relate to people who seemingly don’t care where their food comes from, or aren’t at all concerned about whether what they paid for it matches the ‘true’ costs of producing it.

Returning to coffee: flash forward to ten years later, and I am completely at the mercy of my fairly traded, organic, shade grown coffee bean supplier. I haven’t abandoned drip coffee altogether — we do have a drip coffeepot, acquired during my partner’s first post-doc, for which I faithfully grind the beans fresh each day. We use a reusable gold filter in it, which makes it taste more like presspot coffee: the pot and filter combined were probably the best $30 I ever spent, as we’ve used them nearly every day for nearly a decade now, and they are still going strong (besides having to replace the pot once after an unfortunate encounter with a porcelain sink). On the days when I haven’t cleaned the coffeepot the night before, I do use my old school presspot (replaced last year after an unfortunate encounter with a ceramic dish). And on the day after that, if I’ve been particularly lax about doing the washing up, I go back to the little stovetop pot, and am reminded of how much I like americanos made that way.

I haven’t gotten to the point of using only bottled water to make coffee (most likely because I haven’t gotten to the point of drinking bottled water in my house), but I can’t be budged on which beans we purchase. While I buy almost entirely organic, and am happy to support a variety of processed food companies and local farms in their choices to go organic, I only buy fair trade certified coffee, sugar, and cocoa. It’s precisely because these inessentials are such a big part of my life that it’s so important to me to participate in their consumption in an ethical way. I’m not moved by the claims of retailers or roasters that their beans are fairly traded despite their choice not to become third-party certified. It may or may not be true, but that’s not the issue for me: transparency and accountability are important elements in a community-oriented business practice, and I choose to give my $8 per pound to those companies willing to open themselves up to the external evaluation.

Of course, I know that I’m getting the highest quality product as well, so it’s not like there’s any hardship involved. I’m easy: chalk it up to food snobbery, if that goes down more smoothly than anti-capitalism. I just find it amusing and rewarding that it’s possible to have both in the same cup.

coffee, fair trade, and me