Raygun is too liberal for today’s GOP

Best line of the day | NewMexiKen

“Congress consistently brings the government to the edge of default before facing its responsibility. This brinkmanship threatens the holders of government bonds and those who rely on Social Security and veterans benefits. Interest rates would skyrocket, instability would occur in financial markets, and the federal deficit would soar. The United States has a special responsibility to itself and the world to meet its obligations.”

President Ronald Reagan
September 26, 1987

[hat tip to Best line of the day | NewMexiKen]

Terminator 4: Salvation (2009, 3+, maybe 4- stars)

Terminator Salvation PosterI finally saw Terminator Salvation (T4) with my buddy, Walkingraven. T4 is fast-paced and contributes to the arc and mythos. I like the motorcycle terminators, although, once again, everyone’s vision of a post-apocalypse looks just like Road Warrior. (Might be time to watch that one again.) I disliked the pointless hydro-bots, although they were well-done, and the goofy Iron Giant used to take prisoners (why?). The appearance of the *new* T-800, “unlike anything we’ve seen before,” was my favorite contribution to the timeline and a great moment. This is the first Terminator set entirely after Judgment Day, but, importantly, before the future from the first Terminator.

I took special pleasure in seeing New Mexico scenery, including the Taos gorge and its famous bridge, and, especially, the Albuquerque bosque, clearly recognizable with the jetty-jacks. When the bosque burns, I felt momentarily distressed.

But, I have gripes. This John Connor, as played by Christian Bale (a fantastic Batman), is such a hard-ass superhero. Think of the sly teenaged Connor in T2, grown into the drifter-loser of T3. Sure, years have passed, but this Connor could mop the floor with a Marine drill sergeant. I loved the smooth action of Connor running toward a pit, as someone secures a rope, and leaping into space in freefall. Still, this Connor is just too-growling for me.

When did the Resistance become such a military operation? I’m not saying the military wouldn’t take over in such a situation, just that my vision of the Resistance was a bit more rag-tag. These survivors have jets. Consider that T3 ends with John Connor establishing contact with groups of survivors from all over. Years later, in T4, he’s just a soldier. Yes, there was a passing reference to his reputation, and he is still in direct contact with survivors, in contradiction to chain of command. He does take over (no spoiler), I just thought he already had. Of course, past tense with future events shows the challenge of making things fit.

Claire Danes played the future Mrs. John Connor in T3. (Not that any ministers survived to marry them.) I didn’t expect to see her in T4, but the different wife did take some processing. How did they decide 2018 was the time to have a baby? If it was surprising that the leader of the Resistance would go to Skynet headquarters on his own, it seemed as foolish that his very pregnant wife would run to his rescue.

Kudos to Moon Bloodgood for continuing the tradition of strong female warriors in the T-line and for having a damn fine name. Jadagrace was perfect in her role as Newt to Connor’s Ripley. (Tricky reference.)

During the film and for hours after, I was troubled by the teenaged Kyle Reese. He seemed too young. However, T4 is in 2018, seven years after Judgment Day, so Reese could be between 13 and 18 (based on the Sarah Connor Chronicles). Eleven more years will pass before the Year of Darkness, 2029, the future of the first film. Eleven years to shape Reese and his relationship with Connor. Still, this took some pondering and research – he seemed too young.

Interestingly, the best character in the film is Marcus Wright, played by Sam Worthington, for whom 2009 was very good; he was also the lead in Avatar. Wright had real passion, strength and humanity; he was genuinely interesting throughout. He saved the film for me.

If you enjoy any part of the Terminator epic, consider seeing The Sarah Connor Chronicles. That TV series is at times too grim and dour, but, hey, the Apocalypse is coming.

mjh’s blog — Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2 stars)

“[T]he idea that if families are tightening their belts, the government should do the same, is as deeply intuitive as it is deeply wrong.” Paul Krugman

I wasn’t surprised the Albuquerque Journal gave so much space to Mike Frese, “Corrales resident”, to repeat the hoary nonsense about the national debt as a ‘family problem.’ Family is the metaphor for conservatives – especially, Christian conservatives – because father knows best. Feel free to read Frese’s column in its long-drawn-out, ham-handed entirety, if you need your invalid metaphors spelled out in detail.

Be sure to read Winthrop Quigley’s entire column – as usual, he explains things quite clearly.

ABQJournal Online » Flirting With Federal Debt Disaster

By Winthrop Quigley / Journal Staff Writer on Tue, Jul 19, 2011

It is possible some of these politicians really don’t understand what we’re dealing with. Every time one of them compares federal finances with household finances – arguing we should tear up the credit card and balance the checkbook and live within our means, just like families do – the intellectual dead end has been reached.

The federal government is nothing like the family household. It is a very large, poorly run business with a micromanaging board of directors (Congress) and a weak CEO (the president).

The business is failing. Refusing to raise the debt ceiling is the equivalent of pre-bailout General Motors reneging on its commitments to pay its steel suppliers and fund its employees’ retirement plans. …

If the prospect of suddenly unemployed federal workers in every state and unpaid military personnel under fire in Afghanistan doesn’t impress Congress, perhaps this will: In September 2008, the Lehman Brothers’ bankruptcy filing cratered the global economy because suddenly no one knew if the institutions making up the world’s financial systems could or would honor their obligations.

Lehman Bros. had $639 billion in assets, about as much as it takes to run the government for slightly more than two months. It had debts of $619 billion. The failure of a firm that was in the black to the tune of $20 billion nearly destroyed the global financial system. You don’t want to see what happens if Uncle Sam becomes the next Lehman Bros.

ABQJournal Online » Flirting With Federal Debt Disaster

 

[hat tip to Line of the day | NewMexiKen for the Krugman quote]

Our Twentieth Wedding Anniversary

To celebrate our 20th anniversary, we stayed in a B&B in Taos, on the ski road, just past Arroyo Seco. We hiked twice up near the Ski Valley. We dined at pet-friendly patios. Luke was the hit of Sabroso’s; a large group wanted to “friend” him on Facebook. It was a lovely time.

Hard to believe it has been 20 years. We’re hoping for 27 more.

From 20th Anniversary

Four Quick Videos Blurbs

I’ve fallen behind and I can’t catch up. Oh, wait, I can. Here are the four most recent movies I’ve seen in the last month.

The Nines PosterThe Nines (2007, 4 stars)

Great performances, especially by Ryan Reynolds. If you doubt he can act – or if you like him – he’s the reason to see this. Takes some patience and attention. It’s a little heavy and existential / intellectual, but not just a film school exercise.

I was surprised to learn recently that I probably first saw Reynolds on TV in Two Guys, a Girl, and a Pizza Place (TV). Even more surprising, Nathan Fillion was in that show. Fillion was in the beloved Firefly (TV, highest recommendation).

Mystery Team PosterMystery Team (2009, 3+ stars)

We watched this specifically for Donald Glover, a stand-out in the brilliant ensemble of Community (TV, highly recommended), and a former writer on 30Rock (TV, highly recommended). Turns out everyone involved is part of a troupe that has been making lots of short films for the Web. This was better than any of the shorts we saw. Almost retro in its mostly gently humor. The arrested development of the trio of boy detectives is almost creepy at times, but they are so in-character it is mostly charming.

The Last Lovecraft: Relic of Cthulhu PosterThe Last Lovecraft: Relic of Cthulhu (2009, 3- stars)

It’s hard to recommend this movie, but it has its moments and it’s pretty short. I think the three main characters are the reason to watch this. They’re weird nerds. And the t-shirt a demon wears is pretty awesome. Kinda on a par with Buffy the Vampire Slayer (TV), though not as witty (few can write dialog like Joss Whedon, who also wrote the aforementioned Firefly).

The Book of Eli PosterThe Book of Eli (2010, 2 stars)

I saw a promo for this months before it came out. I was thrilled at that time, less so with the film. Denzel Washington plays a hard-ass survivor in this post-Apocalyptic tale. However, Road Warrior did this much better 30 years earlier. There’s even a scene that seems a tribute, if not lifted from Road Warrior. I won’t spoil part of the ending, but I bet you won’t be surprised which book is in the title.

There is one fantastic scene early-on involving hunting for food. The fight scenes are quick but bloody – I stopped watching for a day or two after a near-rape.

Washington is stoic and humble and invincible (almost). Mila Kunis was pretty good. I used to look forward to any movie with Gary Oldman as the villain, but this was his stock bad-guy, whose motivations were absurd. Happy to see Malcolm McDowell in a late scene.

I’ve also been watching Eureka (cable series, OK or a little better) and re-watching Legend of the Seeker (my guilty pleasure).

"It does not require a majority to prevail, but rather an irate, tireless minority keen to set brush fires in people's minds." — Sam Adams