• A bit of renovation happening…

    I just finished moving James‘s weblog from b2 to Movable Type. Yea!

    If you have any problems with his site, let me (or him, but I’m the one who is going to fix it) know.

    Some recent excellent posts from him:

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  • National Review – crypto-homo?

    After the adventures James and I experienced when a National Review columnist decided we weren’t sympathetic enough about dead Catholics, it is amusing to read the Antic Muse’s Oh, Get a Room…

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  • Chris Caccamise @ *sixtyseven / Wburg Third Friday

    caccamise-small-volcano.jpg

    Congratulations to Chris Caccamise and *sixtyseven gallery for a fabulous review by Roberta Smith in Today’s NY Times. It’s a fun show that made me giggle a bit when I walked into the room.

    The other highlight of our tour on Monday of Williamsburg galleries with the “charming French boys” was Chris Doyle’s very strong show of watercolors at Jessica Murray Projects — huge works based on video stills of his life with his partner and daughter.

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    Chris Doyle, Failing to Levitate in the Studio, 2003
    watercolor on paper, 46″x73″

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    Tonight is a good night to head out to Williamsburg. All of the Williamsburg Gallery Association galleries will be open until 9, and many of them will have music, as part of their new “Third Friday” events. Do not miss the opening of Plus Ultra‘s new, larger space, and make sure you go around the corner to check out Dam, Stuhltrager at 38 Marcy Ave. The Plus Ultra show, titled “arts and letters,” features drawings and paintings by Jonathan Ames, Dave Eggers, Susan Minot, and Will Self.

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  • Swedish Fashion

    See, I did do something for Fashion Week. I attended a reception at the Swedish Consulate on Park Avenue for two young designer/artists, Aïa Jüdes and Johanna Hofring. The exhibit, called In the Land of the Midnight Sun, featured clothing by both, with inspirations from Sami and other traditional costumes, plus photography of Sami people by Aïa. I met her at the opening and talked about the work a bit. She made some pretty beautiful ensembles, and where else would one want to actually talk to the models but at an event like this one?

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  • Vive La France

    I can’t quite explain why this bothers me so much, but the latest column by the idiot known as Thomas L. Friedman really bothers me. I am so depressed to live in a country where the NY Times can print a columnist who writes such an intellectually dishonest and meretricious column.

    It’s time we Americans came to terms with something: France is not just our annoying ally. It is not just our jealous rival. France is becoming our enemy.

    If you add up how France behaved in the run-up to the Iraq war (making it impossible for the Security Council to put a real ultimatum to Saddam Hussein that might have avoided a war), and if you look at how France behaved during the war (when its foreign minister, Dominique de Villepin, refused to answer the question of whether he wanted Saddam or America to win in Iraq), and if you watch how France is behaving today (demanding some kind of loopy symbolic transfer of Iraqi sovereignty to some kind of hastily thrown together Iraqi provisional government, with the rest of Iraq’s transition to democracy to be overseen more by a divided U.N. than by America), then there is only one conclusion one can draw: France wants America to fail in Iraq.

    But then France has never been interested in promoting democracy in the modern Arab world, which is why its pose as the new protector of Iraqi representative government — after being so content with Saddam’s one-man rule — is so patently cynical.

    Ah, yes. America has been so anti-Saddam.

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    In the mid-1980s the Reagan administration sent current U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld to meet with Saddam Hussein to improve relations between the U.S. and Iraq.

    It is laughable for the country that overthrew a democratic government in Iran in 1953, which re-installed a male-only oligarchy in Kuwait after the 1991 Gulf War, and which props up the Saudi royal family, to protest much about democracy in the Middle East.

    So Americans expect France to not act in its own interest, or to not tell us when we’re being stupid? They’re evil for not making it easy enough for us to give Saddam Hussein ultimatums? Ultimatums for what? Admitting to weapons that apparently don’t exist?

    James and I spent a lot of the last week hanging out with a couple of young artist/musicians from France. They were very upset when they saw t-shirts for sale in Times Square that said, “Iraq First, Then France.” This country is really scaring me. Is it going to be “us” against the world?

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  • Healthcare? What Healthcare?

    According to a release by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the proportion of employees receiving health care from employers has plummeted in the last decade, from 63 percent coverage a decade ago down to just 45 percent today. [via Nathan Newman]

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  • Gay couple barred entry

    A [Canadian] married gay couple say they were refused entry into the U.S. because an American customs officer wouldn’t accept their clearance forms as a family.

    Kevin Bourassa and Joe Varnell said they ended their trip to Georgia because the customs official at Toronto’s Pearson airport insisted they fill out separate forms as single people.

    Bourassa said he complained to a customs supervisor and was told the couple wouldn’t be allowed to enter the U.S. as a family because the country doesn’t recognize same-sex marriages.

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  • JetBlue

    JetBlue Airways confirmed on Thursday that in September 2002, it provided 5 million passenger itineraries to a defense contractor for proof-of-concept testing of a Pentagon project unrelated to airline security — with help from the Transportation Security Administration.

    The contractor, Torch Concepts, then augmented that data with Social Security numbers and other sensitive personal information, including income level, to develop what looks to be a study of whether passenger-profiling systems such as CAPPS II are feasible.

    DontSpyOnUs is a good web site for coverage of this issue.

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  • DNC Weblog

    The Democratic National Committee (DNC) has a new weblog: Kicking Ass.

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  • Creepy

    Do I have a stalker? Someone has started a blog called bloggy says described as:

    significant excerpts from bloggy from www.bloggy.com (::not affiliated::)

    UPDATED: The page has been cleared of content. Here is the page cached by Google.

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