Thursday, March 17, 2005

Rain, Kiwis, and What We Missed

Dear Readers! We are still alive. We have been traveling in New Zealand, which is not quite as wired as we'd thought. Or rather, we keep finding wireless networks that, you know, are actually secured and won't let us in. We've stopped briefly at internet cafes, but it's a bit difficult to manage them with a toddler, so we never get much time at it.

Today, though, we're staying in a fabulous "boutique hotel" in Tauranga (Hotel on Devonport, one with high-speed internet access. So we've got hours and hours of internet. The hotel is gorgeous. Last night we stayed in a cheap little hostel in Rotorua, which was great. We met some people from Hawaii traveling with their four-year-old, also in NZ to scope the place out for possible emigration.

It's weird to be so oblivious of the news. We are such internet news addicts, and yet, here we are, over a week into our NZ trip, and this is the first time we've had a chance to really take a look at anything more than the most obvious headlines ("Lebanon shows Bush Doctrine of Spreading Freedom is Success. Liberals Must Now Engage in an Orgy of Humiliated Wrongness.")

So what did we miss?

U.S. military admits more inmate deaths than previously acknowledged. Duh.
Paul Wolfowitz to head World Bank.
Drilling in ANWR
Summers gets "vote of no confidence".
"Mideast Events lifting world's view of Bush"
Karen Hughes now U.S. PR go-to chick.
Also, federal government propaganda spreads further: hundreds of segments released by federal agencies and played by local news stations as-is, without revealing the source of the video clips. Administration insists this is "not propaganda". Oh dear.
Congress has decided that its big concerns are Terry Schiavo and Major League Baseball Steroid Use. Because these are the really important things in the world today.
Pope dying.
CIA insists doesn't torture people; defends interrogation tactics
Fallujah: no city left. Also, we used Napalm. Nice.
Maternal and Child Health has some posts regarding our client, Avian Influenza, Ltd. Be sure to check them out. Bird Flu: it's the new Black Death.

Digby says:
Here's the problem. The other side is waging a battle for total political dominance. They are willing to do anything to achieve it from cheating at elections to government propaganda to spending billions on a travelling political spectacle to entertain the folks. We will not defeat them with pocket protector arguments about the information age (although if anyone were qualified to make such an argument it would be Paul Krugman, the quintessential economist geek.) I suspect the fact that Krugman sees the big picture while Klein is still floating on a cloud of Seinfeldian nostalgia speaks more to the fact that Krugman famously does not hob knob with the in crowd while Klein famously lives for it.


Okay, there's my random roundup of what's happened since we left the States. This hotel provided a complimentary glass of wine, and I am now a bit tipsy, and I still have to figure out what hostel we'll stay in tomorrow night.

-- posted by Max for Amy

4 Comments:

At 11:17 PM, Blogger R J Keefe said...

Your hotel looks great! The hotel's Web site looks great! I now understand why Judith Anderson pronounces the word "rooms" the way she does. (I do?)

When you left, I thought that there was no getting away from the US, so why bother emigrating. But news that you didn't encounter concerns Titanic-like tippings of foreign dollar-holdings. This may not be a moral story, but it is a disaster story, because a serious plunge in the dollar will mean (a) really expensive gas - okay, we all want that anyway, but not overnight - and (b) houses that nobody can sell and (c) houses that nobody can pay the mortgage for because of (a) - too long a commute, and no public transporation. The mess is almost Greek in its perfection.

How's the weather?

 
At 11:33 PM, Blogger R J Keefe said...

And the Katharine Hepburn of geopolitics, George F Kennan, died at 101.

 
At 1:47 AM, Blogger max said...

George Kennan died?!? I was beginning to think he was immortal.

 
At 1:49 AM, Blogger max said...

Really? The currency crisis is here already? I'd thought it would take several more months, though I didn't really have any basis for thinking that.

Aloha, Argentina!

The weather in NZ: it has been a mixed bag. Fortunately, we had lovely weather in Wellington, a charming little city that would have been less charming if wind/rain-blasted.

 

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