Heh. Indeed.
Posted by Thomas Nephew on September 17th, 2007
- Item 3 of the Roy Edroso Plan for More Marriage: Ads featuring former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani: “Marriage works! I’ve had three and I ain’t hurtin’!”
- Who knew Salon has a sportswriter. King Kaufman kind of doubts the New England Patriots “stealing signals” — from defensive coaches waving their arms on the 50 yard line — was all that wrong, or that it had much of an impact on the game: “I don’t think the Jets have a signal, after all, for “let Ellis Hobbs run a kickoff back 108 yards.”
- It turns out Kaufman’s wrong about that; I’ve looked at the Jets playbooks, and the signal looks like this :
- James Wolcott compares Fred Thompson to Mitt Romney: “I will say this, though: Thompson’s somewhat lackadaisacal lope is a smart counterfoil to Mitt Romney’s executive-vampire zeal and glinty opportunism–maybe it takes a real fake to show up a fake fake.”
- In a “read the whole thing if you dare” post, Mister Leonard Pierce (”Sadly, No”) describes exciting goings-on at Victory Caucus, some right-wing bloggers who — OMIGOD — got to meet the President. Bush reportedly expressed envy of a blogger stationed in Iraq, and said the reasons he wasn’t there were “One, I’m too old to be out there, and two, they would notice me.” Pierce:
If only he’d had the opportunity to fight for freedom at some point in the past, when he was younger and less recognizable.
- John Cole explains the significance of Alan “Certifiable” Keyes entering the GOP presidential sweepstakes: “Blogging just got easier.“
=====
NOTES: Kaufman via The Editors of The Poor Man Journal of Political Philosophy.




September 20th, 2007 at 8:51 pm
Oh, man…that Wolcott quote is a thing of beauty.
And I’m psyched about Keyes. In my ideal world, Obama would win the Democratic nomination and Keyes would be the Republican, so we could have a replay of Illinois 2004. That would be the Best Race Ever.