Philadelphia firefighters are facing the closing of eight companies due to budget cuts. More at Philly Future.
Category Archives: Philly
Big Philly Future Changes – Including New URLs for RSS
I’ve redesigned Philly Future and am bringing new features online to further its mission to highlight the best of Philly weblogs.
Two of the biggest new features are its new three column layout and using WordPress.org for its own posts.
Update your RSS aggregators! The new URL for Philly Future’s feed is http://www.phillyfuture.org/wp-rss.php.
Philadelphia Drops To Sixth Largest City
They may say it’s a technicality (our region has grown tremendously, while the city itself depopulates), but it still smarts.
He Was From Philadelphia
Nick Berg, from our area, is someone who only wanted to help in Iraq (Philly.com). He disappeared. No one noticed except for family and friends until the video was released of his murder (Salon). By watching the video, you do exactly what the terrorists want you to do. I ask you to pay respects to the Berg family.
If you need something more fuel your anger at these bastards, then you’re someone with very short memory and are a heartless idiot. There is nothing educational here. There is nothing that needs a new light shown on it. This video was produced by terrorists for our consumption. Bottom line. Then again, if you are confused as to who the real enemy is (al-Qaeda) – then watch it. I don’t see how you can be by this point. I just don’t.
What you can do is get informed.
Things you should know:
Chris Rock on Liberals And Conservatives
Did you see Chris Rock’s latest? While it’s just about impossible to match his previous comedy special back from 1996, he comes very, very close. A quote I’d like to share with you:
The whole country’s got a fucked up mentality. We all got a gang mentality. Republicans are fucking idiots. Democrats are fucking idiots. Conservatives are idiots and liberals are idiots.
Anyone who makes up their mind before they hear the issue is a fucking fool. Everybody, nah, nah, nah, everybody is so busy wanting to be down with a gang! I’m a conservative! I’m a liberal! I’m a conservative! It’s bullshit!
Be a fucking person. Listen. Let it swirl around your head. Then form your opinion.
No normal decent person is one thing. OK!?! I got some shit I’m conservative about, I got some shit I’m liberal about. Crime – I’m conservative. Prostitution – I’m liberal.
You may be too politically correct to listen to the wisdom in this. Or you may care more about the group you have associated yourself with then to admit that most people are not either-or. More then likely you have bought what they are selling to you – that in your group, you belong. And that everyone outside of your group is “the enemy”.
I am not just a Democrat….
I am an American!
The reasons why Bush must go have nothing to do with conservatism (which he does not practice) or being a Republican (which many Republicans will refute). It has everything to do with him not serving the best interests of the people of the United States of America – or the world.
I realize that Chris Rock used the phrase “I’m an American” as part of a riff on the specter of racism. I’m using the phrase in the way I feel it is ment – not as an exclusionary term – but as an inclusionary one.
Garret gets it right, as he typically does, by asking the not so obvious question – what if Watergate happened today? Nothing. Nothing at all. As Chris Rock would say, we’re too busy paying attention to Paris Hilton.
More On Williamsburg
Upon arriving in Williamsburg, we visited to Visitor?s Center to get our bearings and to purchase two Freedom Passes. A Freedom Pass provides admission to the tours, museums, and buses for a year. At just under $60 a piece, they were a great deal. Before leaving, we saw the movie “The Story of a Patriot”. While very old it gave us a great feel for the conflict some felt over the decision to revolt against England.
For the first of our two trips into town, we took the bus to the Capitol, on the far end of Duke of Gloucester Street. First we took a tour of Bassett Hall, former residence of the Rockerfellers. The Rockerfeller family played a huge role in getting Williamsburg restored, and they donated their home in the 1980s to the town. This stop was mostly for Richelle, I gotta admit, but I was surprised at how intimate the place felt. Comfy. The tour guide made sure to tell us how this was the Rockerfellers favorite house. Here they could be like normal folk. Talking to neighbors and walking to church.
Next stop was the gunsmith where there were craftsmen making weaponry as they would two hundred years ago.
A short walk from there was the Capitol. The building?s architecture was specifically designed to accommodate the Royal (the Governor?s Council), and the people?s (the House of Burgesses) branches of government, with a meeting area, between them. When that relationship broke down, when Boston was being threatened, it is here that Patrick Henry (“give me liberty or give me death”), Thomas Jefferson, and others were moved to encourage all to the fight. Did you know that if you were a Catholic, or a Jew, a Black or Woman, you couldn?t serve in the House of Burgesses? In fact, you had to be a White, Protestant, land owner.
Our last historic stop of the day was the Public Gaol – the jail. We learned how jailers lived and had a chance to see a few cells.
For a late lunch we hit Shields tavern. For under $50 we had a very romantic, and filling lunch. The pot roast was great. I mean great!
We finished off our day seeing the Fife and Drums team do a demonstration and then a march down The Palace Green. A big highlight for me. They were powerful. As they marched, I couldn?t help but feel a strange sense of history as everyone in attendance instinctively followed behind them.
More tomorrow…
I’m Back From Vacation
I surprised Richelle with a week’s vacation to Colonial Williamsburg for her 30th birthday. We haven?t taken a week vacation since our honeymoon, five years ago, and we were due for some time away from it all. Williamsburg fit the bill. I don’t think it could have turned out nicer.
The historic area was a short walk away from where we were staying, the Williamsburg Hospitality House. We had one of their standard rooms, and except for the lack of a high-speed data port, which was a good thing, it was just about perfect for its affordable price. The place had an old world feel to it, which lent itself to the experience. We had three days of bad weather, so the room was definitely “lived in” by the time we left. The Hospitality House did not let us down. We’ll probably be back next time.
I haven?t been to the historical sites in Philadelphia for a while (we’re planning to soon), but the time here made me jealous. The organization behind Colonial Williamsburg truly has built a living museum. No cars are permitted into historical area, which was the first thing that struck me, but upon walking onto its main thoroughfare, Duke of Gloucester Street, it made perfect sense. We saw visiting families sitting on benches, relaxing from their exploring, kids from various school groups goofing off or just hanging out, students from the College of William and Mary jogging or playing ball on the Palace Green, while others were waiting in line for a lunch at one its historical taverns. It was alive. A real public space. And I think that was partially due to the lack of cars.
Richelle came up with an excellent plan to divide up our exploration. There is a bus that runs on the outskirts of the historic area that we used to ride to the far ends of town, and then leisurely walked back towards our hotel, taking in various tours and sights. Leisurely is the word. How strange it was not to be bombarded with the sights and sounds of modern life! I think I had some kind of internet withdrawal at first, but then came to appreciate just how natural paced everything seemed to be. Even with the thousands of people that were there with us, on those same streets, it felt intimate and warm.
I’ll post more tomorrow….
Yesterday Thousands Took A Stand Against Violence
…The March to Save the Children, a gathering of people from different races, ages, and walks of life, began at Cecil B. Moore Park at 20th Street and Lehigh Avenue and ended in a rally outside Faheem’s school, T.M. Peirce Elementary, at 23d and Cambria Streets.
LaTasha K. Blackston, 26, of North Philadelphia, pushed 14-month-old daughter Treasure’s stroller through the thick crowd.
“I’m here to give my daughter hope,” Blackston said.
Blackston grew up in North Philadelphia and dreamed of raising her own children there. Now she wants to leave. She has seen rough times before, and she’s seeing them again.
“I was going to a funeral every week from July to October 1996,” she said. “Then it got better. Then it got worse again.”
The march was supposed to have been silent.
But as marchers walked the deadly streets of North Philadelphia, many found that they could no longer hold their tongues.
“Don’t be silent! Stop the violence! Save our children!” they yelled.
Read the rest in the Philadelphia Inquirer.
On The Delaware River, Citizens Bank, and Slings And Arrows
Slactivist exposes some little known information: They are planning to dump nerve gas waste into the Delaware River! There has to be some other option. I have not read about this anywhere else.
Uncle Horn Head reviews the Phillies new home: Citizen’s Bank Field.
Atrios announces some changes in his political advertising support in response to the Kos blowup. Mitras says this is why he blogs anonymously. Alex, on the other hand, was so furious that he e-mailed the Mr. Hoeffel campaign to inform them of Kos’s insenitivity. My take: no one can get more insensitive to the lives lost in Iraq then Bush joking about the hunt for WMDs. What Kos did was insensitive and stupid. Like many weblog posts, they can be done in the heat of the moment and in haste. Bush planned that joke routine before hand. Just my opinion. I could be wrong.
36 Hours In Philadelphia
The NYTimes gives some great ideas for a short stay in Philly.