“There is overwhelming evidence that money buys happiness,” said Andrew Oswald, an economist with the University of Warwick, in England. The debate, he said, is how strong the effect is.
“There is overwhelming evidence that money buys happiness,” said Andrew Oswald, an economist with the University of Warwick, in England. The debate, he said, is how strong the effect is.
It’s been a very long time since the progressive agenda has been this well positioned to actually get something done — Don’t blow it!
I’m eased by Pelosi’s words on not getting Uber-Liberal on us. I think their conservative Liberal agenda, seemingly more centrist than left, will actually move towards making some important
objectives in the progressive agenda forward.
Back in the Clinton’s first 2-year stretch, being overly ambitious was one of the major faults listed of himself and his party. Over-reaching in the first 100 days/2 years,
even with the amount of seats they had, killed their agenda and the whole thing went down the drain. Nothing got done.
I think that there are actual limits to what can be done in government, and that that is a good thing; One of our system’s most attractive features. Moving quickly is not one of the best characteristics for a system to have when it determines such measures that will permanently, and possibly irreparably, affect a society. In our political system, the government has the very large responsibility of assisting society guide the whole of itself. Moving one part’s agenda faster than the rest is unfair and, most importantly, threatens to disrupt the cohesiveness of the whole.
I’m looking forward to seeing what
actually gets done in the next few years. I’d like to see the following accomplished, and in this order:
Beyond that, I think would be a over-reaching at this time in government. WIth that said, I’m looking forward to these next couple of years, and with special interest towards the election in ‘08.
Let’s hear it for Sacha Baron Cohen’s unbelievably unencumbered Kazakhstani humor.
Sing it with me, you know the words!
A NY Times article on Saturday reported on the latest fad of Maine National Guardsmen: Providing photo replicas of deployed parents to their children.
I find it hard to believe that this helps the situation, but maybe laughter is the best medicine to treat this unique type of heartache.
Here’s the (belated) highlights of my vacation back home to visit family in Vancouver & Victoria, British Columbia, and Friday Harbor, Wa.
The Onion reports,
"Eighty-seven percent of Americans are ‘ill-equipped’ to deal with
solar flares, giant comets, and an all-engulfing Armageddon borne out
of God’s wrath."
Bummer.
That’s right, the Borowitz Report has broke the happy news to its subscribers with this gem of a parody.
So says Monticello Explorer while doubly acknowledging their Webby Award for Cultural Institutions and keeping their acceptance speech within the required five-word maximum. (For a good time, read them all here.)
Some quick favs:
***A must-see website!***
This just in from Thomas Friedman, Person of the Year: "The world is really flat."