Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Maven's Favorite Children's Books

These books are our favorite books and ones I would recommend if you have to get a gift for 2-5 year olds.



Where the Wild Things Are The Little Mouse, the Red Ripe Strawberry and the Big Hungry Bear (Child's Play Library) Click, Clack, Moo: Cows That Type
Where the Wild Things Are

$10.68
The Little Mouse, the Red Ripe Strawberry a...

by Don Wood

$26.99
Click, Clack, Moo: Cows That Type

by Doreen Cronin

$10.05
Giggle, Giggle, Quack Long Night Moon When the Moon is Full: A Lunar Year
Giggle, Giggle, Quack

by Doreen Cronin (Author)

$10.85
Long Night Moon

by Cynthia Rylant

$11.53
When the Moon is Full: A Lunar Year

by Penny Pollock

$12.74
Goodnight Moon (Board Book) The Very Busy Spider (Board Book) The Little Prince
Goodnight Moon (Board Book)

by Margaret Wise Brown

$7.99
The Very Busy Spider (Board Book)

by Eric Carle

$8.99
The Little Prince

$7.50
Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? From Head to Toe Board Book Polar Bear, Polar Bear, What Do You Hear?
Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?

by Bill Martin Jr.

$7.95
From Head to Toe Board Book

$7.99
Polar Bear, Polar Bear, What Do You Hear?

by Bill Martin Jr.

$7.95
Zen Shorts (Caldecott Honor Book) Kindness: A Treasury of Buddhist Wisdom for Children and Parents (The Little Light of Mine Series) I Once Was a Monkey: Stories Buddha Told
Zen Shorts (Caldecott Honor Book)

$10.68
Kindness: A Treasury of Buddhist Wisdom for...

by Sarah Conover

$13.57
I Once Was a Monkey: Stories Buddha Told

$11.56
Song of the Water Boatman and Other Pond Poems (Caldecott Honor Book, BCCB Blue Ribbon Nonfiction Book Award) I Believe in Me: A Book of Affirmations All I See Is Part of Me
Song of the Water Boatman and Other Pond Po...

by Joyce Sidman

$10.88
I Believe in Me: A Book of Affirmations

by Connie Bowen

$14.21
All I See Is Part of Me

by Chara M. Curtis

$10.85
The Family Book It's Okay To Be Different Reading Makes You Feel Good
The Family Book

by Todd Parr

$9.99
It's Okay To Be Different

by Todd Parr

$10.87
Reading Makes You Feel Good

by Todd Parr

$11.99
The Mommy Book Do's and Don'ts The Daddy Book
The Mommy Book

by Todd Parr

$10.87
Do's and Don'ts

by Todd Parr

$6.99
The Daddy Book

by Todd Parr

$10.87
The Feel Good Book The Best Friends Book
The Feel Good Book

by Todd Parr

$9.99
The Best Friends Book

by Todd Parr

M9 Dispatch: Interesting Videos

Thanks to my friend MMMMMMMMM (or M9 because I am a lazy typist and it sounds cool, don't it?) I finally got to see the ads from former Generals and vets against this war.




Monday, May 7, 2007

Movie Maven: Superheroes, Smokers, and Shameless Hype

With Great Power Comes Great Responsibility


Of all the superhero films, I have enjoyed the Spider-man series the most. That is even taking into account the Superman 1 and 2 in the 1970s-80s. Spider-man 1 did a fine

job marrying great special effects with great stories and sympathetic characters. One set up the Spidey origin story, his uncle's death that gives him purpose, and the Green Goblin

who would ultimately get between him and his best friend. Spider-Man 2 bettered the first by having a great villain of Doc Oct, Spidey's struggle with his dreams and his responsibilities, and a simply great fight and rescue scene.


When it came to Spider-Man 3, I had read an article in Entertainment Weekly how this film had been rushed and between casting and writing the script filming it was getting a bit tight.

We went to Spider-man 3 having read much of the reviews that were very, very mixed. The reviews said that this installment was an obvious attempt to cash in on the francise and was just seemed thrown together. We watched the film and afterwards saw what the reviews meant, but found that it wasn't as bad as some of the reviewers made it to be.


It was a very long movie that could have been tightened and edited down more. It really didn't help that the theater we went to had played endless commercials and coming attractions. It was an 11:15AM showing, but we didn't get out 2:00PM.


My hubby, who is a big fan of comic books was very wary of using Venom as one of the villains because it wasn't one of the better ones in the Spiderman universe. If you are going to have a multiple villain fight with Spiderman that should include a little origin for each villain, it is hard to fit a subplot about Spidey's struggle with fame, relationship issues with his girlfriend and best friend, and dealing with the memory of his dead uncle and his need for revenge. It was just too much to try to fit well into a film. I didn't get the dance scene either. The ending was a bit sloppy as well. On the other hand, the effects are great and there are some really good fight scenes. What saves the film and what some reviewers missed is that I still cared about the characters. The core cast are people you care about and the director Sam Raimi is a talented director.



Spider-man 3 will make a lot of money even though it is the weakest installment, and that is okay. That is a testament -- a reward for how good the other two movies were.

All I ask is that if they do Spider-man 4, that they slow down and give us something of the caliber of Spider-man 2. Please.


Nicotine Poisoning


We have also renewed our Netflicks and have checked out various films. There are three movies with cigarettes in their title, only one was good. 200 Cigarettes is set in 1981 in New York City on New Years Eve. A bunch of angst-ridden twenty-somethings are looking for parties to go to or being angst-ridden hoping people will come to their parties. I guess 200 Cigarettes are smoked during the film, but we didn't get that far in before we ejected the disc. There were no characters that we cared about. Like its characters, it was a movie that desperately wanted to be cool.


The Smokers is another film that wanted to be cool. It calls itself another "Heathers", a cult-film in the 1980s. It just wasn't. We watched the entire film to see if it ever reaches "Heathers" status, but it just failed. You just have unpleasant rich girls (who, of course, smoke) and a troubled Scholarship Student who go on an anti-male revenge kick to get the feeling of power. They only give a momentary tease that they will deal with cliques, but they never really

follow through. Unlike "The Smokers", "Heathers" had a wry sense of dark humor with better cinematography. Skip "The Smokers" and rent "Heathers" if you want a film on teen angst, cliques, revenge, and wry comment on how communities deal with teen tragedies.


Thank You For Smoking is a very clever film about lobbyists and the art of spin. The lead character is a lobbyist for the Tobacco Industry, who lunches with lobbyists from the Gun and Alcohol lobbies and with a twinkle in his eye argues persuasively for his clients. Check it out, it is really enjoyable. While not as good as Thank You For Smoking, Fast Food Nation and American Dreamz are moderately interesting satire on American life.


We Have Been Oscar Hyped!


It is a truth for the ages that during awards season, studio marketing people are priming the pump to create buzz for their films. You get proclamations every year that their film is

"The Best Film This Year", "The Best Film of the Decade", and "Best Film EVER". For sole purposes of awards prognostication, it is important to pay attention and guess what hype the members of the Academy will fall for. This is why I try not to see any film before Oscars, because I almost always find the movie lacking in proportion to the amount of hype it gets.

Then I get indignant and refuse to vote for a film to get best picture, because the movie I saw was not an Oscar Worthy film. I temporarily forget that "Oscar Worthy" isn't the best film or best performance, but which marketing department throws the most pixie dust over their film.


As I mentioned before, I lost points this year on the Oscar competition because I watched The Departed before the Oscars. I refused to vote for it for Best Picture even though

I picked it for Best Director (even though I knew that it was Martin Scorsese's year since he was due after a large body of work without an Oscar) because I was disappointed in direct relation to the amount of hype it got. It wasn't that The Departed was bad, it just wasn't the best crafted film that Martin Scorsese ever done. Another problem was casting Leo Dicaprio, who just didn't sell the lead role, which just made the movie lack the weight it needed. This was a problem in another Scorsese film, The Aviator.


The Inconvenient Truth was not a bad movie. It had an important message to deliver. Unfortunately, there was not much new information for us and we thought it was a PowerPoint presentation mixed with a campaign movie for President. It certainly wasn't the best documentary that year. The best documentary I saw last year didn't even get nominated and that was Shut Up and Sing. Jesus Camp was a compelling and scary documentary about how the religious right evangelists are indoctrinating young children to be an army

for God, but I still think "Shut Up and Sing" had a better narrative.


Happy Feet won for best animated feature. While the music was good and the message was laudable, I don't think it was better than Monster House or Cars. Like Inconvenient Truth, this Happy Feet won because of its message.


Little Miss Sunshine was a pleasant film that had its moments of charm and humor, but it really wasn't one of the best films last year. It was better than The Devil Wears Prada which felt like an updated Working Girl from 1988. Meryl Streep will forever be one of the best American Actresses for her work in Sophie's Choice and Out of Africa, but Prada wasn't her Oscar worthy role.


So much hype surrounded Dreamgirls. Jennifer Hudson and Eddie Murphy were shoe-ins for Oscars. Three songs from the movie were nominated along with a host of technical awards

like costume design. Much was made post-Oscar about only Jennifer Hudson winning for best supporting actress and the movie only getting awarded for Sound Mixing. People

cried foul that it got snubbed for Best Picture because it was an all-Black cast. After watching the film, it wasn't a bad film. Bill Condin, who also directed Chicago, did the best he could with a flawed musical with forgettable songs, broad characters, and lack of humor. Given better source material, this would probably be Oscar worthy as Chicago was regardless of the color of the cast.


Children of Men was not a bad movie. It created a very oppressive scary world were there is a world-wide epidemic of infertility. It had a really good use of sound and and had some really suspenseful moments, but it somehow fell short for me in comparison of another futuristic film, V for Vendetta.


So far, Pan's Labyrinth is in my mind the best film for 2006. It is so good on so many levels. I am still interested in watching Last King of Scotland, The Lives of Others, Volver, and maybe just maybe United 93 before I make a final decision.


Saturday, May 5, 2007

Post Freaky Friday



TGIF?

Friday just came and went yesterday. Maybe it was the shock that the Golden Gate Warriors actually beat the Mavs post-season. It has been 16 years, and 13 years of it one of our friends would call us for his annual, "This year the Warriors will make the playoffs!" prediction. We would think, "Oh, that poor, pitiful man...why does he keep doing this to himself? What a masochist!" This should teach us a lesson -- if you keep saying something will happen, year after year, chances are, eventually it may happen.

momandme

My Cinco de Mayo

While I am always a big fan commemorating revolutions, Cinco de Mayo is a sad day for me. Five years ago, my mom passed away. Naturally, this was the saddest days of my life -- just days before Mother's Day. She had suffered for years with Osteoporosis and had developed emphysema after smoking for 57 years (much of that was 2 packs a day).

It started getting bad when she was pulling files out at work and cracked a vertibre. Her mother and my grandmother had broken both of her hips and probably had osteoporosis as well.

It got to the point where she could barely take one puff before having to put out the cigarette and going back on oxygen.

The pain she endured was simply awful and there was no pain medication that didn't make her terribly sick. She had always been skinny, but she looked like an Auschwitz survivor the last couple of years of her life.

She was such a wonderful soul with a great big heart and had this really cute sense of humor. She loved kids and was a wonderful and warm mother. My mother would have adored my son and it breaks my heart that she died before she could meet him. I love her still and miss her terribly. If I am lucky she appears in my dreams -- but it makes me deeply sorrowful when I realize that its only a dream. Be resting in peace, my little sparrow.

Spring Fashion Police

If only it could be Queer Eye for the Straight Guy cast or Mr. Blackwell walking the streets stopping fashion crisis after fashion crisis, but in Tehran it is a crack down on "immodest dress" and western fashion.

Over 300 women were arrested the first day of the crackdown for too tight overcoats or having too much hair showing from their veil. Authorities have already issued warnings to 1,347 women for being inappropriately dressed. Another 59 deemed provocatively attired were briefly detained. 11 European tourists were issued warnings.

I checked out Gulfnews.com and found an interesting debate forming in the article comments -- some quite scary to me -- a modern American woman. This is straight out of the book, "Reading Lolita in Tehran." What gets me that the rationale for this dresscode is because it seems Iranian men don't have the sense to discipline themselves in the face of a stray hair, a sight of an ankle, a shoulder, or calf. I would think they would have more restraint and maturity to be able to mind their own business. If they cannot control themselves, shouldn't it be the men who are cracked down on, not the women?

"Men see models in the streets and ignore their own wives at home. This weakens the pillars of family." - Mohammad Taqi Rahbar, Iranian lawmaker

Some are speculating that the crackdown is a mere distraction to overshadow other government problems and an upcoming rise in gas prices.

Foxes Get Free Reign In The Hen-house by SCOTUS

In a recent Supreme Court decision in Watters v. Wacovia, the Supreme Court upheld that state regulators cannot regulate Banks that they charter, specifically mortgage subsidiary
of banks like Wacovia which are national banks. The decision was 5-3 (Ginsberg writing, Alito, Souter, Breyer, and Kennedy with Justice Thomas taking no part in review) .

"The NBA is thus properly read by OCC to protect from state hindrance a national bank’s engagement in the “business of banking” whether conducted by the bank itself or by an operating subsidiary, empowered to do only what the bank itself could do. See supra, at11–12. The authority to engage in the business of mortgage lending comes from the NBA, §371, as does the authority to conduct business through an operating subsidiary. See §§24 Seventh, 24a(g)(3)(A). That Act vests visitorial oversight in OCC, not state regulators. §484(a). State law (in this case, North Carolina law), all agree, governs incorporation-related issues, such as the formation, dissolution, and internal governance of operating subsidiaries.14 And the laws of the States in which national banks or their affiliates are located govern matters the NBA does not address. See supra, at 6. But state regulators cannot interfere with the “business of banking” by subjecting national banks or their OCC-licensed operating subsidiaries to multiple audits and surveillance under rival oversight regimes."

"Watters’ alternative argument, that 12 CFR §7.4006 violates the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution, is unavailing. As we have previously explained, “[i]f a power is delegated to Congress in the Constitution, the Tenth Amendment expressly disclaims any reservation of that power to the States.” New York v. United States, 505 U. S. 144, 156 (1992) . Regulation of national bank operations is a prerogative of Congress under the Commerce and Necessary and Proper Clauses. See Citizens Bank v. Alafabco, Inc., 539 U. S. 52, 58 (2003) (per curiam). The Tenth Amendment , therefore, is not implicated here."

What Ginsberg is arguing that regulation of the business of banking (conducting transactions, setting up accounts, making loans and mortgages, etc.) is the business of the federal government even if the business is being done by an affiliate or subsidiary of a national bank that is incorporated by a state. The only thing a state can do

That means that your state cannot do anything to protect consumers against predatory or other exotic loans that have lead to increasing cases of defaults. Federal charters of banks are enormously permissive.

"This decision undermines effective state laws and regulatory enforcement mechanisms in place to protect consumers. We are disappointed because states have been extremely active in defending borrowers against abusive lenders, especially in attorney generals' offices. It's possible that the ruling has left some wiggle room on enforcement, based on our first
read. This decision, though, strengthens our resolve for meaningful national anti-predatory lending legislation that covers all lenders throughout the country
." - David Berenbaum, Vice President, National Community Reinvestment Coalition

I am finding myself in this really bizarre position agreeing with Scalia and Roberts in their dissension with Justice Stevens.

"Congress has enacted no legislation immunizing national bank subsidiaries from compliance with nondiscriminatory state laws regulating the business activities of mortgage brokers and lenders. Nor has it authorized an executive agency to preempt such state laws whenever it concludes that they interfere with national bank activities. Notwithstanding the absence of relevant statutory authority, today the Court endorses an agency’s incorrect determination that the laws of a sovereign State must yield to federal power. "

Jesus Not Only Saves, But He Delivers?

I didn't know it, but there are parts of this country where post offices are run by churches that are subcontractors to the USPS with non-Postal Service employees. There are about 5200 such places. These contractors are used in places were official facilities are not possible or appropriate like colleges, grocery stores, pharmacies, and some private residences.

There is one such facility in Manchester, New Hampshire called, The Sincerely Yours Inc. Post Office run by the Full Gospel Interdenominational Church. This facility is at the heart of a recent ruling by a Federal Court that privatized post offices cannot promote religion. A WWII and Korean veteran, Bertram Cooper, who is Jewish, went into The Sincerely Yours in 2003 to find Christian posters, Christian videos playing, and Christian prayer cards were prominent where postal-like activities were taking place. This was the only post office in the downtown area.

Cooper contacted the ACLU because he believed that his First Amendment rights were being violated. Under the First Amendment, there is a right to religion and from religion. The establishment clause prevents the State from establishing or favoring one religion over another.

The religious displays "put the church's beliefs front and center, out for the public to see, endorsing the church's form of Christianity and seeking outsiders to join the church in its mission," wrote U.S. District Court Judge Dominic J. Squatrito. The judge found while the contract between the Church and the Post Office didn't violate the First Amendment, the displays themselves did and the U.S. Postal Service must notify their contractors that they cannot promote religion or display religious materials in their stores.

The church that runs Sincerely Yours may appeal and the U.S. Attorney is reviewing the decision and deciding whether they will appeal. Certain sections of the Department of Justice is also reviewing the ruling.

Quote of the Day

A Humanist Code of Ethics:
Do no harm to the earth, she is your mother.
Being is more important than having.
Never promote yourself at another's expense.
Hold life sacred; treat it with reverence.
Allow each person the digity of his or her labor.
Open your home to the wayfarer.
Be ready to receive your deepest dreams;
sometimes they are the speech of unblighted conscience.
Always make restitutions to the ones you have harmed.
Never think less of yourself than you are.
Never think that you are more than another.
- Arthur Dobrin

Thursday, May 3, 2007

President Pelosi, Please!


Can We Call This Impeachment Thursday?



So I made my call thttp://impeachforpeace.org/impeach_bush_blog/?p=1384o President...err...House Speaker Pelosi to register my support for impeachment of BOTH Cheney and Bush (in THAT order, please). If we can impeach a president for a trivial thing as lying about a consentual extra-marital affair no one cared to hear about in the first place, why not impeach these two incompetant and beligerant actors against our constitution and our security.


Here are Kucinich's documents relating to the impeachment of Dick Cheney for high crimes and misdemenors. Vermont senators voted Friday to call for the impeachment of President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney.


Impeachment sites:

Impeachbush.org

Impeach for Peace


Democrats.com Impeachment page

CNN's Impeachment "reality check"


Quotes of the Day:



"The genius of impeachment lay in the fact that it could punish the man without punishing the office."

Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr.


"When people ask if the United States can afford to place on trial the president, if the system can stand impeachment, my answer is, "Can we stand anything else?"

George McGovern


"Impeachment is not a remedy for private wrongs; it's a method of removing someone whose continued presence in office would cause grave danger to the nation. "

Charles Ruff


"The only conduct that merits the drastic remedy of impeachment is that which subverts our system of government or renders the president unfit or unable to govern. "

Charles Ruff


"[Imeachable conduct is] misconduct by public men, or, in other words, from the abuse or violation of some public trust." - Alexander Hamilton


"All in all, the framers would probably agree that it's better to impeach too often than too seldom. If presidents can't be virtuous, they should at least be nervous."

- Joseph Sobran


Ideas for Protesting The Current Administration



There are emails circulating on A Great American Gas-Out, but this hasn't been verified as a real campaign as yet. I think instead we might want to really hurt the oil companies by pledging to Vacation in the Backyard in the Summer of 07. Instead of taking road trips like the Oil Companies are expecting, just stay at home and spend money at your local tourist traps or hold BBQ's where you talk about organizing politically and getting people registered to vote. 40 Summers ago it was the Summer of Love -- maybe this will be the Summer of Change?



Wednesday, May 2, 2007

Post-May Day Roundup



ABOVE: LE FISHER, "KITE FLYING"



Good Afternoon, Comrades!



Yesterday was May Day, International Workers Day, Ex-American Labor Day which turned into Loyalty Day. We put the American flag out for Loyalty, while humming the Internationale (in mumbled Russian as if I was in the cast of the movie, "Reds" which I love).


There is a reason why we put a picture of Lenin above our child's changing table in his first 2 years of life. Perhaps there is latent rebellion against my dad knowing that we are raising his grandson red. He has no right to complain too much. Even though he has been kidnapped by Fox News, he is only person I know who has voted for a communist -- in 1960 - he wrote in Kruschev for President.


While on a May Day drive to downtown San Rafael, I registered my support as we drove by a pro-immigrant protest to my dad's displeasure. When my dad offered to register his displeasure with them, I told him to settle down.


My view is that I don't see people lining up wanting to pick strawberries or other stoop labor involved in agricultural harvesting. I never hear the opposition offer up stories of Americans who missed out being nannies, janitors and housecleaners, fast food workers, or other manual labor. The only thing I could think of is construction work and truck drivers.


There is some work Americans just don't do and Americans are unwilling to hold corporations accountable for the low wages and no benefits they offer that we the tax payer have to pick up. If we were willing to start a national (if not international) workers rights movement and penalize corporations who do not hire legal residents for a living wage and provide health care, you are going to have illegal workers come over our border no matter how dangerous it would be. Wouldn't you do all that you could do to feed your family?


Quote of the Day

Labor is prior to, and independent of, capital. Capital is only the fruit of labor, and could never have existed if Labor had not first existed. Labor is superior to capital, and deserves much the higher consideration. - Abraham Lincoln



What I Am Reading Right Now



Right now I am reading Assassination Vacation by Sarah Vowell. If you don't know her by her work on This American Life, you may know her as the voice of Shrinking Violet in the Incredibles. Vowell is a self-described "history geek" who has a particular or peculiar facination with presidential assassins and their presidents. From Lincoln to Garfield to McKineley, she visits landmarks well known and obscure to get insights on assassins and their prey. Along the way, she makes me chuckle at her dark humor. Speaking of This American Life, there was a pretty sobering episode called "Habeas Schmabeas" on our shrinking right to Habeas Corpus, which earned them a Peabody Award.



I'd Rather Be Kiting


Personally, I have always disliked windy days. Windy days blow pollen and leaves around. Then, I have discovered the zen of kiting, starting with a cheap Spiderman batwing kite. Once you launch a kite free into the wind, feel the frantic unwinding of string, and the tug and pull of the kite on your spool -- there is a calm adrenolin that flows through your veins. Today, I took out a 3-d Shark kite that is long as I am tall. The wind shook the shark out of my hand and as if it was on its own volition zoomed up into the somewhat cloudy sky in between two trees. It pulled out the entire string and dived and weaved through the air. It fabric body quivered in the gale and tugged at the string. We are still trying to master the dual line trick kite, but it is a little bit tricky for us. Nevertheless, I want to try all different kinds of kites and have a collection of them in the back of our van. It is kind of like when life gives you lemon, you make lemonade, but when life gives you wind, you fly a kite.


i