lauraanne_gilman: (Default)
On my way home now (I love wi-fi enabled transport) and facing another two weeks of serious work to catch up. But it was worth it. My thanks to Nea and Mo, who were wonderful hosts.

And, because it's been wondered elsewhere why so many of us turn to President Obama -- not with blind idolation, as some assume, but with a clear-eyed and somewhat battered sense of hope and respect?

He is my president. cut to spare those tired of politics already )

EtA: also?

WASHINGTON (AP) — One of President Barack Obama's first acts is to order federal agencies to halt all pending regulations until his administration can review them.

The order went out Tuesday afternoon, shortly after Obama was inaugurated president, in a memorandum signed by new White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel. The notice of the action was contained in the first press release sent out by Obama's White House, and it came from deputy press secretary Bill Burton.




and, alas, the perils of wi-fi -- I just got a work e-mail. Back to't....
lauraanne_gilman: (crunchy)
Last night, while introducing M. to Jeff Dunham, we came up with the name for his next special: "Cause it's Wrong, but Funny."

On a less amusing note, apparently there are people out in the blogosphere are screaming censorship because a prayer was cut from the broadcast of the We Are One celebration by HBO.

I have three thoughts on that

1. "censorship" applies ONLY to government actions. A commercial decision to edit a broadcast is not censorship. Please, already, learn your damned vocabulary before you use it.

2. The prayer was given before the celebration officially started, and included in the broadcast was the Gay Men's Choir, with full camera views and all, so it's less discrimination against gays and more discrimination against religion, ne?

3. As a follow-up the #2 thought, those claiming the removal of a gay bishop's prayer being discriminatory etc might want to stop and think about those of us who feel discriminated against every time a priest, a bishop, a minister, etc - no matter what their gender preference -- is invited to give a prayer over something. Yeah, we (non-Christians) are a minority. Does that mean we should be ignored or discounted?

(I was going to ask about the atheists and agnostics, but that would be writing the Other, and that's another blogfest I'm not getting into because I just wrote an entire series about hatred and discrimination and fear, and how we're ALL The Other to someone else. IMO and IMB*, Learning the Other is more productive to literature and society than fetishizing or fearing it. Your mileage possibly varies.)

and now, I have a book to finish revising. Yes.



*in my books

October 2024

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