Friday, November 21, 2008

Proof positive that nobody much likes Bush any more

(...as if you didn't already know that...)



Bush at a photo-op for the G20 summit, shaking hands with no-one, having no-one offering to shake his hand - looking for all the world like the mot unpopular kid in school (or, as CNN says, "the one with the cooties").

Almost makes you feel sorry for the guy...

NOT!

It's the karma, George - it'll get you every time - and I have a feeling yours is only just beginning.

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Thursday, November 20, 2008

All blogged out

I think I'm all blogged out right now. I haven't written a post for over a week. Eek! Must be something to do with my marathon effort throughout October and early November.

I'll get back into it soon enough, I'm sure. I'll have to, there's so much to talk about - not least is the fact that I'm going to DC for Obama's inauguration!

Go me!

Well actually - that should be Go me and 4 million other people

Holy shit! That's the entire population of New Zealand! In the Mall!

Good job I like crowds! Oh wait - I don't.

Ahahahahahahahahaha

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Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Keith Olbermann's Special Comment on Proposition 8



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Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Obama's election - things that moved me

President Barack Obama's election has meant so many things to so many people, and what I find most interesting is our individual reaction - how each of us feel on a personal level. Here are some of the stories that have moved me over the past few days.

This story made me cry:

The butler sees a new White House (Los Angeles Times, November 7):

President Truman called him Gene. President Ford liked to talk golf with him. He saw eight presidential administrations come and go, often working six days a week.

"I never missed a day of work," Allen said.

He was there while racial history was made: Brown vs. Board of Education, the Little Rock school crisis, the 1963 March on Washington, the cities burning, the civil rights bills, the assassinations.

When he started at the White House in 1952, he couldn't even use the public restrooms when he ventured back to his native Virginia. "We had never had anything," Allen, 89, recalled of black America at the time. "I was always hoping things would get better."


This set of images made me gasp at the perfection of it all (Manassas, VA rally):

Oooh that kid has an Obama sign. Wish I had one...

Hey dude! You wanna borrow my Obama sign?

Yaaay! Now I'm waving the Obama sign in the air! This is cool!

Victory to Obama! Hey - you wanna come and play at my house after the rally? Quick - get your dad to ask my dad if it's OK...

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Sunday, November 09, 2008

Would you like to be a Follower of my blog?

Pretty please...

From my SiteMeter stats I know I get a decent number of hits for such a little blog on the far side of the world. I know about half my visitors come from the US. I hope my American political blogging has been of interest to you over the past couple of years.

Rest assured I won't be stopping any time soon - although now we have our very own President Obama I might be able to fit in some more personal blog posts once in a while as well! I haven't written about Clay Aiken, my teevy boyfriend, nearly often enough recently - and I know there's a heck of a lot of you that read those posts too!

As you can see, I've just added the Followers widget to my sidebar, and so far I have a rather sad total of one follower. Thanks LadyinRed! I *heart* you!

Blogger says:

Do you have a favorite blog and want to let the author and readers know that you are a fan? Well now you can do that and more with the Blogger Following feature! You can even keep track of the blogs you follow via your Reading List on the Blogger dashboard.

More info about Following
.

It's easy to become a Follower of this or any other Blogger blog. On this blog all you have to do is locate the Followers widget at the top of the sidebar, and click on the "Follow this blog" link. You'll get a popup window which will give you the option of following publicly or anonymously.

Whether you subscribe publicly or anonymously, being a Follower of my blog means that:
  • You will be subscribed to updates for my blog which will appear in your Reading List on your Dashboard

  • You will also get a subscription to my blog in your Google Reader account.

If you follow publicly, your profile image and a link to your Blogger profile will also appear in my Followers widget.

If you follow my blog anonymously, your profile image and link to your profile will NOT be displayed in my Followers widget.

More info about public and anonymous Following.

Once you've decided whether you'd like to be a public or anonymous follower, click the orange "Follow" button which will appear in the popup. It is that simple, you are now a follower of my blog!

I'd love it if you decided to become a follower of WebWeaver's World. At the moment I feel the same way I did when I first joined Facebook and I had only two friends - and they were my cats...

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Vote Green!

Green Party sticker - 'I only date boys who vote Green'. Haha yeah I know I'm a little late posting this Vote Green! message now :)

I was busy!

I spent yesterday afternoon scrutineering at a polling station on behalf of the Green Party. It was fun! I tried to smile nicely at as many people as I could, just in case they hadn't made up their minds yet and the sight of my nice green rosette and happy grin might encourage them to vote our way. I'm kinda joking here, but on the other hand, I'm kinda not.

In the evening I went over to Lou and Jason's place for our now-traditional election night get-together. It wasn't quite as happy an occasion as it has been for the past few years, but I have to say that the results didn't really come as much of a surprise.

Except for Helen retiring, of course. I hadn't expected that. You'll be missed, Helen! I think you've done a (mostly) excellent job over the past nine years and I'll be sorry to see you go.

I had high hopes for a decent Green Party vote, as the polls had us up to around 10% in the closing days, so I was rather disappointed with the 6.4% that we ended up getting. I'd been quite amazed by the number of friends who spoke to me on Friday and confided that they'd decided to vote Green - way more than I had expected - so I was feeling quite confident about the result (for us, anyway).

One of the arguments I had used in discussions with friends who were in the process of making up their minds was this:

Let's assume that you are of a left-wing persuasion. Let's also assume that you have reviewed the policy positions of both Labour and the Greens, and find significant areas of agreement between the policies of each party and your own beliefs. Who should you vote for?

Putting aside any detailed ideological fit/differences for the sake of this argument, let's look at your vote in purely practical and strategic terms.

If your vote enables the Greens to reach the 5% mark in the Party vote, they will automatically win six seats in Parliament. If you don't vote Green and they get only 4.9%, they will get no seats.

If the Greens win no seats, those six seats will be distributed amongst the larger parties, in proportion to their vote. This means that, depending on the overall National/Labour share of the party vote this year, National would end up getting three or four of those seats, and Labour would get two or three of them.

In terms of a Labour/Green alliance you therefore get more bang for your buck by voting Green because of the 5% threshold rule. A Labour/Green alliance would get the Labour seats + six Green seats in the first scenario, and the Labour seats + two or three distributed seats in the second scenario (with National getting the other three or four).

The added benefit that Labour would get from your vote (if you voted Labour rather than Green) would not be as great as the benefit the Greens would get if you voted for them - because of the leap from zero to six seats once the 5% threshold is reached.

Make sense?

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Friday, November 07, 2008

President Obama cartoons

I just love these. A collection of 26 30 newspaper cartoons marking the election of Barack Obama as President of the United States. Click on any cartoon to see a large version:

A caption reading 'Most powerful person in the free world...' points towards a man who is smiling and waving, and wearing a 'Voter' sticker.

President Obama cartoon: Obama stands with his arms folder, grinning from ear to ear. The caption above him reads 'Yes we did'.

President Obama cartoon: A view across America. In the sky, next to a ticked box, the caption reads 'That he be judged not by the color of his skin but by the content of his character'.

President Obama cartoon: Obama stands within the gates looking towards the White House, bag over his shoulder sporting the Obama 'O'. The caption in the sky written in old-fashioned script reads 'We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.' At the bottom of the page is written the words 'Ratified November 4, 2008'.

President Obama cartoon: A bottle of Old Mac liquor lies empty on the sidewalk as a drunken elephant stumbles away down the street, bouncing off a lamppost as he goes.

President Obama cartoon: The Lincoln Memorial statue gives two thumbs up to the tiny figure of Barack Obama standing in front of it.

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Thursday, November 06, 2008

Obama, the World's President - newspaper front page headlines from around the globe

Courtesy of Newseum (and a few other places), here are 97 of President Barack Obama's first newspaper front page headlines from around the world. Click on any image to see a larger version:

Argentina:
Clarin, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Australia:
mX, Brisbane, Australia.

Austria:
Kurier, Vienna, Austria.

Belgium:
De Morgen, Brussels, Belgium.

Le Soir, Belgium.

Brazil:
Diario do Comercio, Recife, Brazil.

O Globo, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil.

Diario de Pernambuco, Recife, Brazil.

Canada:
Calgary Herald, Calgary, Canada.

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