Yes, Jacob Riis Park has a beach, and, well, it’s rather dismal. Hopefully it’s a lot nicer in the summer…

Apparently I am not the last photographer on Earth.

I like drinking fountains, especially defunct ones.

I guess this is not exactly a surprise…

Um, seriously, I think something terrible has happened to the lifeguards… 
January 18th, 2007 at 05:59pm
Posted by Eli
Entry Filed under:
NJ/NYC,
Photoblogging
The good news is that everything that happens is no longer good for Republicans.
The bad news is that everything that happens is good for the DLC.
I don’t mind bipartisanship up to a point; that point being “selling out to the Republicans to such a degree that you end up on the same side.” So far, it looks like the reverse is happening: Dubya and his vanity war have generated so much ill will and mistrust for the Republicans and their policies that most Americans really want the Democrats to take the wheel for a while. Even if they can’t steer us away from the cliff, they can at least kick the leaden Republican foot off of the accelerator.
Thanks to last November’s anti-Bush referendum, many Congressional Republicans are now beginning to recognize this shift, and are jockeying for seats on the anti-Bush, anti-war bandwagon. “Bipartisanship” now means Republicans opposing an unpopular president to save their own skins. This is especially true of those Republicans up for re-election next year – the prospect of facing the voters tends to concentrate the mind.
Where Edsall and his DLC, establishment, “Money Party” cronies come in is to push the narrative that Democrats need to push a mushy, cautious, centrist agenda to lure on-the-fence Republicans over. While this would certainly get a lot of legislation passed, most of it wouldn’t be worth the paper the lobbyists printed it on.
Edsall & Co’s mistake is to underestimate the extent of the shift, and to misread what America voted for last year. I believe they voted for an agenda of change, integrity, accountability, and opposition (CIAO), and will not be satisfied with half-measures. Instead of tacking and triangulating and trying to figure out what Republicans will vote for, Democrats need to push for what their constituents (their citizen constituents) want and need. The Republicans can either get on board with them or try to explain their opposition in 2008 or 2010.
The Democrats haven’t had an opportunity like this in 30 years – I don’t want to see them squander it with needless capitulation.
January 18th, 2007 at 12:15pm
Posted by Eli
Entry Filed under:
Bush,
Democrats,
Favorites,
Media,
Politics,
Republicans,
Wankers
How sad is it that when I read something like this, I find myself trying to figure out what category I’m in, rather than the people around me? I think “Hostile-Aggressive” was the only one I could definitively rule out – I’m more “Hostile-Passive.” I guess I don’t really have to worry about being “Super-Agreeable” either…
There are people that annoy me, but what annoys me doesn’t really fit into any of those categories.
January 18th, 2007 at 07:34am
Posted by Eli
Entry Filed under:
Uncategorized