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Submitted by earball on Thu, 10/12/2006 - 9:09pm.
...Ramadan can come to you. Hear an audio visit to Majid Al-Nur (aka the Olympia Islamic Center) that aired on KAOS last week. Courtesy of your friends at Spin The Globe, the show that helps you to live locally and groove globally.
» http://www.earball.net/spintheglobe/audio/Masjid-al-Nur-ramadan-visit.mp3 Listen tomorrow (Friday) morning for more great music and an interview with Marta Topferova, who will be performing at SPSCC Saturday night. more at Spin The Globe
Submitted by The Fire Inside on Thu, 10/12/2006 - 2:20pm.
Anyone watch South Park last night? A repeat will be airing tonight, but it was pretty funny. Tore into 9/11 conspiracy theorists (myself being among them, though not to the degree that they were poking fun at). Last week's World of Warcraft episode was pretty funny, too. I've never played WOW (or even seen it played), but I've heard a lot about it and from everything that I've heard, the episode portrayed the - um - symptoms accurately. It almost made me want to find someone who has the game on their PC and play it. I saw the prequel to the remake of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre last Friday. It kept my interest, but it's really not that different from the remake a few years back. Nothing I would rush to theaters and see again. 300, however, I'll be one of the first in line to see. I loved Sin City and, judging by the trailer, this is going to blow it away. I'm hoping it jumps ahead of Gladitor and Troy on my "Men with Swords" list. Alpha Dog should be pretty well made, also. I heard about it a year or so ago but nothing since. I thought maybe it was a dead project but evidently it just took a bit for it to finally hit theaters. Also Sarah, I don't know if I mentioned it on here or not but I finally got around to watching Brick. Great movie. I loved how it was basically an organized mob story set against a high school backdrop. Just saw this on the Drudge Report. After listening to Pat Buchanan on Bill Mahr's show last week, I can't help but wonder how bad the border situation is going to get before something is done. I'm not quite sure what that "something" has to be, but it's going to have to be something. Personally, I think it should be a combination of better law enforcement and military resources assigned to the border coupled with an easier and more efficient process for becoming a citizen. I think so long as a person does not have a criminal record in their home country (unless one can demonstrate that the record should be ignored, such as being given a temporary grace period in which employment can be built and no criminal offenses in the United States during that period) they should be extended every opportunity to come into this country. I think that's a reasonable, sound policy.
Submitted by Crenshaw Sepulveda on Thu, 10/12/2006 - 8:01am.
[bumped to the front page by Rick] It seems to me that the voices claiming that downtown Olympia is such a terrible place are very similar to the voices that got us into this war in Iraq. The lead up to the war had the administration trotting out for public display any voice that would claim that Iraq had these weapons of mass destruction and they were pointed at Podunk, Iowa. So we got the war, killed plenty of people. Of course there were no weapons of mass destruction. So we now have all these voices saying how terrible downtown Olympia is. Between politicians, business people, writers to the comments section of the Olympian, and reporters for the Olympian. All these voices that say downtown Olympia is awful. But really, downtown Olympia is terrific. Most of the people that I know that see it for the first time love it. They love it even more after continued exposure. So we have this disconnect. What people are trying to portray downtown Olympia as and the real truth about downtown Olympia, and that is that it is a very successsful downtown with a distinct personality and unique mix of mostly locally owned businesses. Our downtown is populated with a diverse mixture of people that add to the life of downtown. So if it is not the weapons of mass destruction, or in this case the horribly unsafe conditions of downtown, it must be that the people that are making the claims are actually going for regime change. The short story is that big business does not like little business. Big business would give us Applebys, Red Lobster, and the Gap downtown. They would give us sterile shopping districts that would be vacated after closing time. Big business would give us the illusion of safety without actually providing safety. I'll say that again, they would give us the illusion of safety without providing actual safety. Huh? Remove the panhandlers, remove the young street people, remove the interesting characters that populate the downtown area and you would have the illusion of safety. No panhandlers, no bums, no mentally ill people wandering around and all will proclaim that downtown is safe. I hope by now that you know better than that. What we will have is a void in our town after hours, the void will be filled by those that really pose a safety threat to the downtown. Where street life doesn't exist you have the increased potential for trouble. Couple that with the sterility of the businesses that would take the place of our local businesses and you have an environment that is so without humanity that it would drive the most pious to a life of crime. What we have in downtown is what will make it better. We are well aware that there are people in downtown that need help. Unlike most downtowns I believe that our downtown can do this in the most humane and meaningful way. I say that because I believe that even the poorest of our community are worthy of inclusion in our community. I believe that they may be capable of making the most profound of contributions to our community. Make no mistake, what is going on is not unlike the run up to the Iraq war. They are saying one thing, but you know what they really want, and that is regime change. Yes we have a war on our hands. It is a war against the poor. It is a war against the small business person that makes our town unique. There is a war because downtown Olympia stands for what big business doesn't. Couple that with the fact that downtown Olympia sits on some very desirable and valuable real estate and you can hear the war machines cranking up.
Submitted by Anonymous on Thu, 10/12/2006 - 12:52am.
The first in a very long series documenting the anti- loitering bias found in the Olympian.
» Part 1: Downtown Has Charms If You Are Brave Enough |
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