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Category Archives "Notes"

The week’s tweets

July 25, 2010 By Chris Corrigan Notes

  • Music flows through me; never true to say I play it. It plays me. #
  • Awoke with the taste of saltwater on my lips. Yesterday's ocean was a long cool embrace in the fluid of our origin. #
  • What makes the air so empty that raven calls echo for miles? How do I become like that? #
  • Smell of sweetgrass on the air this morning. #
  • A Stellers Jay calling 6 feet from your face makes an excellent alarm clock. GOOD MORNING! #
  • What a lovely moon. I'm looking at it through the back of a northwest wind that sent swells pounding Bowen Bay this afternoon. Relaxed calm. #

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The week’s tweets

July 18, 2010 By Chris Corrigan Notes

  • May the most beautiful team win today. Go Spain! #
  • Well played to both teams. My pick won but my heart goes out to my many Dutch friends. What a game. #
  • Windy night gusty morning. Watching big cumulus clouds rapidly forming as the sea air pushes over the land. Real life time lapse. #
  • Vancouver Whitecaps keeper Jay Nolly deals with a pitch invader on Wed. Hoolganism gets its tiny start in Vancouver: http://bit.ly/bqzGqj #
  • Men who work with power are clinging to the poles, discussing how to safely reconnect my neighbor to the grid. If only politics was so noble #
  • Thinest new moon…Venus blazing…the ocean the colour of pale roses. Calm, still and clear. #
  • Three circling bald eagles put a quick end to the dawn chorus this morning. #
  • The ravens soaring on dusty thermals carry the dry heat of the day in their sharp croaking voices. #
  • Ugh. New Spurs kits don't do it for me. What is that away collar? http://bit.ly/bceWJl #coys #
  • High sea fog or low cloud. The newly minted Salish Sea is berobed in grey this morning. #
  • Seems that every warm day is cool in the shade this summer. Some things can only be felt on the skin. #

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The week’s tweets

July 11, 2010 By Chris Corrigan Notes One Comment

  • Languid crepuscular morning. The sky is barely stirring. Ravens scream for summer. #
  • Spent an hour pitting cherries, up to my wrists in juice, midwifing little seeds. #
  • Train yourself only to see relationships. This zephyr, that flock of juncos, the thick cool air of morning. All connected. #
  • Dedicate yourself to something if only to find out what you need to clear in yourself so you can be fully present with the world. #
  • Well done Netherlands! #
  • Perfect Bowen summer evening. Good friends BBQ salmon, a swim in the sea and sleeping outside in the warn still air. Ahhhhhh… #
  • Cleansed all night by cool katabatic winds flowing off our mountain. Smudged by the breezeshed. Diamond clear morning, rarest of dawns. #
  • RT @thomasart: At work today in the Reverie Research Department at the Institute for Sunny Days on the Back Deck. #
  • The day as it was here on Bowen: http://bit.ly/blypuq #
  • RT @wendyfarmer: Cajoling passion & responsibility without conferring adequate authority is a set up. <– Excellent! #
  • It is so hot. Into Vancouver to watch the Whitecaps play tonight. #
  • you tube redirecting to wikipedia? wtf? #
  • The sun has beat the air and sea to a flat calm liquid. Everything feels as if it is swimming. Even the chickadees are panting. #

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The death of smart conservatism

October 14, 2008 By Chris Corrigan Notes 14 Comments

Reading Christopher Buckley’s endorsement of Barak Obama reminded me that there was a certain kind of conservatism that used to appeal to me, before the culture wars made it possible for conservatives, formerly the most francophilic of all, to even hate France.

It seems as if the prevailing image of conservatism in America at the moment is the loud and brash Fox News/Little Green Footballs/Rush Limbaugh hate mongering.   It is a fear based conservatism, appealing to masses of terrified voters who are convinced that their way of life is threatened by Muslims and Mexicans.   They are embodied in the screaming anti-ethos of Bill O’Reilly and Sean Hannity, and they have come to roost in the person of Sarah Palin, chosen to do the bidding of “the base:” a large demographic of middle class, middle American Christian fundamentalists with a taste for blood and war and a short leash on their tempers.

The rise of this populist mob mentality had it’s basis in the attack dog years of the Clinton Presidency when only sleeze would dethrone the adminstration that had balanced the budget and provided a great business climate, thereby out Republicaning the Republicans themselves.   It has come of age in the twin contexts of popular media (blogging and YouTube and Facebook) and fear based war mongering.   And what it has done is to have displaced the intelligent, thoughtful and witty conservatives of another time.

When the loud mouths rail against the arugula eating elites of the east coast, it seems to be wholly without the irony of the fact that until recently those arugula eating elites were almost entirely conservatives.   You would be hard pressed in the old days to find upstanding working class families that made arugula a part of their regular salad mix.   But class is a funny thing in America: Democrats and Republicans court the elites for their money and power but the working classes for their authenticity and sheer numbers.

I grew up in a pretty conservative part of Toronto, the son of a big city elite business family on my dad’s side and a working class farm to suburb family on my mother’s side.   Both families held conservative beliefs, and both were largely supporters of the Progressive Conservative Party in Canada, seeing populism as a tad unseemly, and providing rational arguments in their defense of things like free markets, apartheid and traditional family values.   As I was never in their camp, we had heated arguments about these things, but they never descended to name calling, and we always seemed to remain civil in our political differences.

Moreover we enjoyed the same culture, being fond of classical music, theatre and poetry.   I watched more independant cinema and listened to more jazz, but we substantially shared the urban middle class cultural landscape without grief.   We disagreed on society, economics and politics, but we saw eye to eye on plenty of other things.

And so I come to Buckley’s column and note with some alarm that things have shifted for the worse in the United States.   When Christoper Buckley (and David Frum and Christopher Hitchens) have endorsed a Democrat, it means that the Republicans have gone so far right that they are verging on popular fascism.   Hearing some of the comments from the mobs of supporters at McCain/Palin rallies certainly bears that out.   Voters are angry, not at the economy or the loss of their manufacturing sector or the nine trillion dollar debt their government has racked up, but for the way “the scialists are taking over.”   The moral compass is broken.

The level of rhetorical screed in the United States coming from the Republicans is alarming, beacuse it is tapping a mob mentality and verging on violent difference making.   It posits the election of Barack Obama as the end of America and provides a narrative in the culture that makes it frighteningly possible that outright violence will erupt.   McCain and Palin have taken to lowering this emotional tone in their campaign just to provide some plausibility for a denial of responsibility if anything should happen.   How did it come to this?

Republicans have abandonned the intellectual centre of their party, and have set loose the rabid margins.   In doing so, they have lost the capacity they need to reinvent the intellectual backbone of their party.   It seems clear at this point that they will be out of power for a while, and they face a choice to reinvent American conservatism from a considered and reasonable bassis or to let the attack dogs run loose and fire negative volleys at the Democrats in power for the next four years or more.

Republicans need to overcome the anger, and get back to the real business of providing an alternative political vision for America because so far only one guy is doing that, and he’s about to make history as America’s first black President.

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Reading in the margins

August 3, 2008 By Chris Corrigan Notes One Comment

For those of you that read my blog in an RSS feed – thank you.   AND, you won’t have noticed that I have added a link roll on the sidebar of my blog, which captures some of the things that I am finding interesting at the moment.   These are articles, videos, music and other assorted miscellania that may or may not end up here as a blog post.

If you would like to subscribe to that link feed, here is the link.   Of course it’s all done through del.icio.us which has just gone through an impressive redesign.

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