ONCE
THE PRESIDENT ADOPTS THEIR IDEAS, REPUBLICANS OPPOSE THEM
“This
President is not just supporting Republican-friendly policies,” says
Rachel Maddow, “he’s supporting actual Republicans’ actual
policies. And the Republicans are voting no, against their own
ideas.” The first five minutes show and tell the
story.
Our
government is broken when one party will not accept anything – even its
own ideas – that the President proposes.
A
powerful five minutes.
JOHN
McCAIN IS A DISAPPOINTMENT
Leaving
aside all we learn about him in Game
Change, how about the Senator’s flip this week on repealing
Don’t Ask/Don’t Tell? In 2006, he said he’d defer to
the military brass; if they ever came to him and said it should be repealed,
well, at that point he’d seriously consider it. But when this week
the Secretary of Defense and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
testified before him that it was time to allow gays and lesbians to
serve openly – an opinion buttressed the next day by former Joint Chiefs
Chairman Colin Powell – McCain decided that they should defer to his
judgment instead.
SEMI-TASSE
Stephanie
Hill:
“Greek vs. Latin. ‘Hemi’ (in which the ‘e’
is pronounced like a long ‘a’) is a shortened version of the Greek
word for half. Semi is Latin. Sphere is Latin taken from
Greek. (What about ‘demisphere?’)
Daniel: “Semi – half,
from Latin . . . hemi – half, from Greek . . . demi – divided in
half, from Latin. Thus, demitasse – a half cup of coffee . . .
semiquaver – an 1/8th note in music . . . demisemiquaver – a 16th
note. Okay, I didn't really know this answer but Google is all
knowing.”
Richard
Theriault:
“Semi is Latin, hemi is Greek – just like homo and iso, both
meaning “same.” Though there we seem to distinguish between
homo as same KIND and iso as same SIZE. Most geometric names are Greek
roots, as in dodecahedron, a 12-faced solid (as opposed to dodecagon, a
12-sided plane figure). Just a convention of language, in that prefixes
for multiples and fractions have Greek roots. Mostly. Kilo/milli; mega/micro;
tera/nano, etc. But it falls apart at lower values. We seem to
stick to Latin for up to 100 and then shift to Greek. Hey, it’s
English. Nobody said it has to make sense!”
OF
INTEREST TO NESPRESSO
USERS ONLY
Oh, my.
Need I say more? (Okay, I’ll say a little more. If a
pound of premium coffee costs $8 and you get 50 small roll-your-own Nespresso
cups from it, then that’s 16 cents each versus 55 cents for the Nespresso
pods. Three cups a day – decaf! demitasse! – and you save
$400 a year. Not nothing. Although obviously, if money mattered to
you, you wouldn’t have bought this
expensive coffee maker in the first place.)