Thursday, August 31, 2017

 

Political Mayhem Thursday: What do we learn from Harvey?


I'll be honest: I'm still all in a lather about the Arpiao pardon. In fact I had another piece about it yesterday, this time in Sojourners (you can read that here).

I know that is not the most important story right now; the flooding in Texas is by far the more tragic and impactful development.  Harvey took a term and slammed Port Arthur and environs, creating a whole new arc of damage and despair.  The cost will be in the billions. The harm to people will be incalculable in terms of disruption, stress, and impoverishment.  

What will we learn from this storm? Will it change the way we approach insurance, development, and land use?  

Here are a few thoughts about questions that will come up:

1) Federal flood insurance is a difficult subject. It plays a role in encouraging development near coastlines, which probably is a net negative to some people. It also is expensive, even while it is subsidized by taxpayers (as it has been and will be).  Should the government be in this business? If so, how should it be managed?

2) Houston is famous for avoiding zoning. There are few rules, and it shows when you drive around. One result has been a lot of pavement, and that played a role in water being retained in some of those areas where flooding occurred. Should some zoning be imposed as the city rebuilds?

3) And what of FEMA and other emergency services? Can we do that better?


Wednesday, August 30, 2017

 

Next for Texas: The Legal and Financial Disaster


The storm and the flooding were terrible. So is what is going to happen next. Consider the following:

-- Only about one out of every five homeowners affected by Harvey have flood insurance.
-- Up to 500,000 cars have been destroyed
-- The financial loss is going to overwhelming; some are calling it the most expensive weather event in American history. 

So, an awful lot of people are going to have lost their car, their house, or both. There are four possible outcomes for those people and their recovery and rehabilitation or replacement of key property:

1) Their insurers will pay for it.
2) The government will pay for it.
3) They will pay for it.
4) No one will pay for it.

Let's consider each in turn.

1) The insurers will pay for it.

For some people, this will be true. They are among the 20% of homeowners in that area who have flood insurance. For everyone else, though, it will be a difficult time. And Texas just passed a new law that favors insurers over claimants.

2) The government will pay for it.

For some people-- or, more likely, businesses-- the government will bail them out, despite their failure to carry insurance. Of course, that is going to be a huge financial hit for the government. And, if we know anything about the Texas and federal government right now, the aid will go mostly to the wealthy and not so much to the working class and the poor.  

3) They will pay for it.

Some people have the money to fix their home and buy a car. Which is better than not being able to do that, but still an unexpected and dramatic financial hit for many of them. The money will come out of retirement funds and savings for college.  And, of course, this also leaves out the working class and the poor.

4) No one will pay for it.

This is the likely outcome for many people. They will never find or repair their car, and be unable to buy a new one. If they own a home, it is ruined and they can't afford to fix it. If they are renting, their possessions are gone.  There will be a new and desperate underclass created, stripped of the little that they had.

And none of this is good.


Tuesday, August 29, 2017

 

Tragedy in Texas



It has been heartbreaking to watch the damage done by Hurricane Harvey in Texas. It isn't over yet, either-- there is a chance that the storm might take another run at the shoreline after passing back over the Gulf of Mexico.  It seems malicious!

It is especially had to see the damage to Port Aransas, where I have had some great times with Henry Wright and others over the years. But it is too early to know how much damage has been done, in part or in whole.  I think this will be a story that will play out over years, much like Katrina.


Monday, August 28, 2017

 

School supplies (and a generation gap)

CTL pointed out a problem with my original haiku...

Haiku exposes
A generation gap?
I ate "glue," not "paste."

The Medievalist was right on, too:

A new protractor,
Great, now I have a new one,
What's a protractor?

And Christine raised a mystery I always wondered about:

Fourth grade supply list
states 4 "Duo-tang" folders
whatever those are...

Sunday, August 27, 2017

 

Sunday Reflection: Righteous anger

So... President Trump pardoned former Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio on Friday. I have a piece about that in today's Waco paper. It begins like this:

When he defended statues of Confederate heroes, President Trump promoted symbols of racism as they existed more than 150 years ago, embedded in the institution of slavery. By pardoning former Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio on Friday, Trump defended racism as it exists today, embedded in the mechanism of criminal law.

One of my heroes and teachers, though, may have put the emotion of it better than anyone else. Nkechi Taifa wrote this on Friday night:

Trump Pardoned Arpaio – What we gonna do???

Excuse my language, but I am pissed. Not because Trump pardoned Arpaio — the Executive has an unfettered constitutional right to grant clemency to whoever s/he wishes. I am outraged because we as a progressive community are too often stymied by what the conservative and law enforcement communities think about our thoughts and actions and, as a result, are afraid to go bold. Trump went bold. He cut right through the red tape and pardoned his bigoted buddy.

The handwriting was on the wall toward the end of the Obama administration. The Executive was urged, time and again, to go bold. Instead, although well-meaning, the progressive administration adopted a process on top of an already flawed process. It followed the long-standing but problematic rule of law of deferring to the same agency that prosecuted and imprisoned those now appealing for release. It would likely be the last opportunity for at least four years for people like William Underwood, Michelle West, Leonard Peltier, Mutulu Shakur, Alice Johnson and John Knock to have any hope of release from lengthy incarceration. But the progressive administration was stymied by criteria, by prosecutorial veto, by blind adherence to process and procedure, by red tape, and by the time-honored rule of law.

And now, in one fell swoop and under cover of darkness with an impending hurricane, we witness the bold pardon of the scandalous former sheriff of Maricopa County, Arizona. Trump followed no process; indeed sentencing had not even occurred. The gall and audacity of the President. But clemency is his constitutional right, unfettered by process, procedure or public opinion.

When are we as a progressive community going to realize that it doesn’t matter whether we carefully follow the rules (as we did during the Obama-era clemency initiative); or thumb our nose at process (what we should have done) – we are going to be criticized, ostracized and condemned by our adversaries. It always is “damned if you do; damned if you don’t.” Thus we as a progressive community must at all times unabashedly and boldly step up to the plate for justice. In the words of the great anti-slavery orator Henry Highland Garnett, “Let Our Motto be Resistance, Resistance Resistance!” 


 There is, I think, such a thing as righteous anger. Nkechi expresses exactly that.


Saturday, August 26, 2017

 

IPLawGuy & Vampires

So, for the last few years IPLawGuy has been way into French pop music, and he sends me videos and sound clips about every other day. "Check THIS out!!!!!!" is a typical subject line.

A lot of it is pretty good, actually. The thing is that I can't help but think that it pretty much sounds like vampire music. For example, consider the thing he sent me yesterday ("This should cheer you up after the Arfpowio [sic] pardon!!!!!").  It is Vincent Delerm performing "Les Filles de 1973 Ont Trente Ans."


Friday, August 25, 2017

 

Haiku Friday: School supplies


I love this time of year. Loooooooove it! And one of the things I love about it is getting school supplies. It just seems right. 

So, let's haiku about that this year. Pens, pencils, backpacks, glue, protractors, law books, whatever. Just do it. Here, I will go first:

Mom said "non-toxic" meant
It was safe to eat. So, yeah,
I ate all the paste.

Now it is your turn! Just used the 5/7/5 syllable formula and have some fun!


Thursday, August 24, 2017

 

Political Mayhem Thursday: Beneath the Surface


Donald Trump wants you to think about him all the time. He wants you to obsess over his comments, listen to his speeches, and check your phone every half-hour to see if he has done something else memorable in the past thirty minutes. And we do it (at least I know that I do). He's played me like a sucker.  

If you think of anything really noteworthy-- good or bad-- the truth is that it usually was beneath the surface for a long time. That Olympic skier who lit up the world actually was training and winning races for years, unnoticed by nearly everyone. The 9/11 bombers were in the country, learning to fly, plotting, until their deed was done and we all noticed.

I suspect that what will undo Donald Trump is not the flash and offense and yelling at the surface, all for the benefit of the cameras and a billion eager cell phones.  It is what is beneath the surface, where people work unnoticed preparing for a moment they will choose. And what is happening down there right now?

-- Most importantly, Robert Mueller and his team are digging and reading and connecting dots. I hear conservative pundits complaining that it is all a sham, that no evidence proves Trump is connected to Russia.  Well, yeah. That's how investigation is supposed to work. You don't have a press conference with every break in a case. You gather your turtles and stack them up and indict people when it is time.

-- Also, people are being alienated. Not his base, but other people in power in DC, who have tolerated him. They know enough to understand that it is better to wait until the right moment rather than tweet out every angry thought.  

-- Finally, the rest of the world, and its leaders, watch quietly. Some are our allies. They will do what they need to do without us. Others are our enemies, and they are more dangerous. They will not announce that they are forging bonds against us, taking our business, and compromising our intelligence. They, unlike Trump, know the value of quiet.


Wednesday, August 23, 2017

 

Well, hello new year!


For me, the new year starts with the fall semester. It has been that way for nearly all of my life, save for a few years before I started school and a handful in adulthood. It's blissful, really, to have the change of the season mean a new reality.

As a kid, it was the adventure of a new teacher and a new room. What would she be like? Would we get our own cubbies? Who would be in my class?

It's not that different as a teacher; just different questions: who will take my class? Will I have a good classroom? Who will pop in with a question as I tidy up my office?

Rhythm is a good thing. Sometimes it is solid notes on the beat, and other times it is triplets, but I love that part of this world we get to live in.

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

 

John Bonham explained

Enough of talking about people who don't know what they are doing. Let's talk a little about competence and virtuosity.

When I was a kid, there were still elders around who dismissed rock music as noise (now, it is mostly older folks who even listen to rock, of course).  I liked it, though, and I loved Led Zeppelin. 

John Bonham, their drummer, died in 1980 (just like John Lennon).  It was, in its own way, the end of an era. The video below explains in simple terms what made him so good-- it's worth a look!



Monday, August 21, 2017

 

Haiku on power and news

So much to love...

Like this one from CTL:

Not the wisdom to
Leave silver spoon undisturbed
By repugnant foot.

And Craig's:

Mirror mirror on
The wall, who is the grandest
Of them all? Don T!

And, with typical subtlety, Gavin:

"See, I told you so!"
His side said in November
His foes scream it now.

Sunday, August 20, 2017

 

Over the past few weeks, I have been become something I often criticize others for: obsessed with politics.

It's important, yes. That's because political decisions affect lives and define our national culture and identity.  Political issues have rarely, if ever, been as ugly and urgent as they are now. There is a deep threat to our society and core values in the actions of this president. But, it is wrong to imagine that politics are most important all of the time.

Up at the Island a few weeks ago, I had an evening that was really wonderful. I read a book on the porch. I helped make dinner. I sat and laughed with people I dearly love. The sun faded outside. My mom had made a blueberry pie, and we ate it with joy.  

Politics rarely gives us that: Joy. I think when President Obama was elected many of us felt that (and probably others felt that way this past year), but it is rare and fleeting. 

Gratitude is a spiritual value, regardless of your faith. For me, that is part of surviving a world that features this dark swirling vortex that can so easily pull me in.  


Saturday, August 19, 2017

 

In case you missed it (I did)...



I'm pretty much certain the target of this is do-nothing liberals (and Nazis).

Friday, August 18, 2017

 

Haiku Friday: Trump

Nope, we have never done this. So, we might as well.

Here, I will go first:

Yeah, it was funny
Until it wasn't. I guess
Politics matter.

Now it is your turn! Just use the 5/7/5 syllable pattern, and have some fun...

Thursday, August 17, 2017

 

Political Mayhem Thursday: Three problems beneath the radar


As the Trump presidency turns from a dumpster fire into a dumpster fire  on an out-of-control train about to plunge into a lake of gasoline, it's hard to stay focused on anything for very long. One disaster is overtaken by the next with each news cycle, it seems. His remarks on Tuesday about the events in Charlottesville were breathtakingly awful. But, beneath all that, I want to talk about three problems that may have the most lasting impact.

1) The United States has had mediocre leaders in the past. Now, though, we are functionally leaderless. Donald Trump is so unliked, so disrespected, and so angry himself that he does not successfully perform even the rudimentary functions of a national leader.  The problem with that is that the United States does have enemies. And those enemies must recognize that America is incredibly vulnerable right now. We are perhaps at our lowest political readiness for a challenge in my lifetime. 

2) No one with talent and a conscience would go to work for this administration. It's not like he started with great talent, either. Now, as people leave (and they will) very few people with ability are going to step up to serve this president. Look what happened to decorated General John Kelly! There he was on Tuesday, gobsmacked by what an awful person he works for.  Even if you support the president (a shrinking pool), who wants to be that guy? And so, through a series of morally upright individual decisions, we will have a White House led by a despised, angry man who is served by a fourth-tier group of bureaucrats, sycophants, and family members. 

3)  Christianity is taking a hit. When people see ministers supporting the President at every turn, they don't necessarily distinguish between them and the rest of us, who are appalled. A generation of young people who are not exposed to church or to faith will carry this sad image with them, and it will be an amulet against religion.


Wednesday, August 16, 2017

 

Charlottesville

Yesterday, President Trump said that some of the White Supremacists at the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville are "very fine" people. Really:

REPORTER: The neo-Nazis started this thing. They showed up in Charlottesville.
TRUMP: Excuse me, they didn't put themselves down as neo-Nazis, and you had some very bad people in that group. But you also had people that were very fine people on both sides. You had people in that group – excuse me, excuse me. I saw the same pictures as you did. You had people in that group that were there to protest the taking down, of to them, a very, very important statue and the renaming of a park from Robert E. Lee to another name.

He also said this:

“The night before people innocently protesting very quietly the taking down of the statue of Robert E. Lee,” Trump said, in reference to the group of white supremacists who spent the evening carrying torches, shouting Nazi slogans, and delivering Nazi salutes. “You had a group on one side that was bad, and you had a group on the other side that was also very violent. And nobody wants to say that, but I’ll say it right now. You had a group on the other side that came charging in — without a permit — and they were very, very violent.”

Here is an intriguing view of those "very fine people":



Trump acts like he is focusing on actions-- but he isn't, given that one side killed a woman and hurt many others. Worse, he is ignoring the difference in ideology: one side represents ideologies that this nation has decried and combated for centuries. That matters.

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

 

My favorite scene from my favorite show



As some of you know, my favorite TV show ever is "Freaks and Geeks," the short-lived (one season-- 1999-2000) creation of Judd Apatow and Paul Feig that launched the careers of Seth Rogan, James Franco, Jason Siegel and others. Part of my affection is probably derived from the fact that the show is about going to high school in a Detroit suburb in 1980, which is exactly what I did.

But it is also a great show, even now. Yesterday, the New York Times surprised me by running a piece in the Arts section describing in detail my favorite scene in that show:

A little setup: Bill Haverchuck (Martin Starr) is having a terrible time of it. He's a latchkey kid. He’s horrible in phys-ed class. And he learns, in this episode, that his mom is seriously dating his gym teacher, whom he hates.

First, the music. “I’m One” by the Who, from the 1973 album “Quadrophenia.” It builds from mournfulness (“I’m a loser / No chance to win”) to a defiant chorus. And it's a great example of how “Freaks and Geeks” chose its soundtracks. The episode is set in 1981, but it avoids on-the-nose ’80s-song choices. Paul Feig, the show’s creator, once told me that the thing about the early ’80s in the Midwest was that they were really still the ’70s....


Bill turns on the tube just as Dinah Shore introduces the stand-up comic Garry Shandling. The “Freaks and Geeks” producer Judd Apatow — who once said this was the most personal scene he had ever made — had been a “comedy geek” as a kid and later worked with Shandling on “The Larry Sanders Show.”...
 
One thing I love about “Freaks and Geeks” is that it understands how much pop culture means to teenagers — whether they’re comedy geeks or sci-fi geeks or heavy-metal geeks or Dungeons and Dragons geeks. Pop culture is not just about entertainment; it’s also about identity and community, finding your people.

This scene may be the purest expression of that. It takes you from melancholy to sheer delight in 90 seconds.

 

Monday, August 14, 2017

 

Summer reading

We haiku-ed about summer reading this week, and no one brought up the sad reality-- that mostly we are reading horrifying news updates. Remember when 2016 seemed like the worst year ever? Ha!

Anyways, Desiree set me straight:

Called out on Razor!
No more Wives, guilty pleasure.
Springsteen's book it is!

Gavin was honest:

Many half-read books
Litter the floor near my chair
The summer sun called.

And the Medievalist went Brit:

I read Sherlock Holmes,
A Study in Scarlet is great!
Moriarty sucks!

While IPLawGuy (who is quite a reader) gave us this:

Mary Beard Rome Book
Fascinating history
Relevant today

Churchill Volume III
Last Lion-By Manchester
England was lucky

The Nest-NYC
Striving selfish New Yorkers
No one Likeable.

Sunday, August 13, 2017

 

Sunday Reflection: Is it really so hard to be against racial hatred?



White supremacists rallied in Charlottesville this weekend, and it was terrible.  They chanted neo-Nazi slogans, spread racial and anti-Semitic hatred, and there was violence-- including one of them plowing through a group of counter-demonstrators with his car.

In response, this is part of what Donald Trump had to say:

We condemn in the strongest possible terms this egregious display of hatred, bigotry and violence on many sides, on many sides. It's been going on for a long time in our country. Not Donald Trump, not Barack Obama, this has been going on for a long, long time. It has no place in America. What is vital now is a swift restoration of law and order and the protection of innocent lives. No citizen should ever fear for their safety and security in our society. And no child should ever be afraid to go outside and play or be with their parents and have a good time. 

"Many sides?" What was he talking about? And where was the part where he condemned the white supremacists?

As, really, a baseline of contemporary morality, I would think a willingness to condemn white supremacists in a clear and straightforward way is beginner-level stuff.

And our president is not able to do that.

Saturday, August 12, 2017

 

A few thoughts on the search of Paul Manafort's home

Some people in DC have expressed outrage that Robert Mueller's investigators executed a search warrant at the home of Paul Manafort, Donald Trump's former campaign manager.

Really? Is the theory that in a criminal investigation we are supposed to just ask for documents or other evidence, and trust that the target of the investigation will fork them over? Maybe we should do that in drug cases, too-- we could just ask politely for the narcotics and any records relating to them, and assume that they have been produced.



Friday, August 11, 2017

 

Haiku Friday: Summer reading


Over at the Green Momster yesterday, Desiree described her summer reading. It turns out she spent the whole time reading "Hollywood Wives" by Jackie Collins. Just kidding-- she actually read "A Hole in the Wind" by David Goodrich, which is about biking and stuff.

At any rate, I know that a lot of you have been reading; in fact, IPLawGuy has worked his way through a lot of the Wimpy Kid books, and sends them to me when he is done.

Let's haiku about that this week! Here, I will go first:

Last week, read "Donna
Parker Goes to Hollywood."
Yelled "Don't pick Bruce!"

Now it is your turn... just use the 5/7/5 syllable formula, and have some fun!

Thursday, August 10, 2017

 

Political Mayhem Thursday: Ben Carson in Cairo

 

Ever since reading about it in Huck Finn, I have been a little obsessed with Cairo, Illinois, a town at the very bottom of Illinois, much closer to Mississippi that to Chicago. As a river town at the critical juncture of the Ohio and Mississippi rivers, it played a significant role in American history. Lately, though, it has been fading away.  A British paper laments that it is being reclaimed by nature, and another report asserts that it suffered death by racism. Both seem true.

I drove through Cairo several years ago and was mesmerized. I'm used to decay; I was living in Detroit at the time and about to move to a fading Waco. Both Detroit and Waco reversed course, though; Cairo has not. From a peak population of over 15,000, it is down to about 2400 people and lacks even a grocery store or gas station. Of those remaining residents, about one-sixth live in two decrepit public housing projects.

And that's what brings us to Ben Carson, the former presidential candidate and current secretary of Housing and Urban Development. 

HUD announced earlier this year that it was going to demolish the two housing projects and not rebuild them. Because there is little housing left, residents will have to go elsewhere to live. 

Carson visited Cairo this week-- an admirable thing, given the grim situation. He seemed moved by the experience, and said he would do what he could. But if they are not going to build housing-- and HUD has said it is out of that business-- it seems unlikely the problem will be solved.

Also, President Trump said we would attack North Korea if they made any more threats. Hours later, North Korea threatened to attack our base in Guam. So... that, too.  Sigh.


Wednesday, August 09, 2017

 

Does anyone else kinda miss The Mooch?


The five days that Anthony Scaramucci was White House Communications Director were pretty eventful. His wife divorced him, he got Reince Preibus fired, Sean Spicer quit, he gave a spirited interview to the New Yorker,  and so much else.

It was kind of messy. But... he seemed to just blurt everything out, and that was pretty refreshing from a Communications Director. Yeah, he was profane about it, but DJ Tice is right that it would be hypocritical to get all upset about that and laugh along when Al Franken uses similar language (and I do).  

In the end, Scarmucci's downfall was giving out too much information-- relatively accurate information, I suspect-- rather than obfuscating or hiding facts. I kinda miss those few days of too much truth.


Tuesday, August 08, 2017

 

I'm back! And I'm mad...


So I have returned from my annual sojourn to remote Osler Island refreshed and ready for a new school year. And yes, I have gotten rid of the French-- I'm not sure how they 'jacked the blog. I certainly did not sell it for a cheeseburger as they claimed.

And... I'm mad. To explain why, let me borrow from an excellent piece by Nathan J. Robinson over at Current Affairs (you can and should read the whole thing here): 

Former prisoners do not get much more “rehabilitated” than Reginald Dwayne Betts. In the time since his release in 2005, Betts has published two acclaimed books of poetry and a memoir, earned a college degree with a 4.0, earned an MFA, started a family, held a Radcliffe Fellowship at Harvard, earned a law degree from Yale, received an NAACP Image Award, given talks at schools, prisons, and conferences around the country, been accepted to a PhD program, worked for the New Haven Public Defender’s Office, and passed the Connecticut Bar Exam.

Yet on Thursday, Betts was told by the State of Connecticut that he may not have the requisite “character and fitness” to practice law. Having passed the bar​ exam​, Betts received a letter indicating that the state’s Bar Examining Committee “has not recommended you for admission to the bar at this time.” The Committee referred Betts to Article VI of its regulations, which provide that “for the protection of the public and the system of justice… a record manifesting a significant deficiency in the honesty, trustworthiness, diligence or reliability of an applicant may constitute a basis for denial of admission.” Betts’ felony conviction, from when he was 16 years old nearly 20 years ago, continued to haunt him. The endless list of accomplishments had not been enough. Nothing, apparently, could ever be.

I've known Dwayne Betts for a while, and talk about it some in my last book. In the Spring of 2016, he came and gave a reading at St. Thomas, and it was wonderful.  

At some point, we have to allow for redemption. If not him, then who would ever be worthy?


Monday, August 07, 2017

 

Donc, le haïku était trop difficile?


Apparemment, le haiku est une forme trop difficile pour les Américains. Peut-être la semaine prochaine, nous aurons un concours plus adapté à vos talents, comme les gâteaux à manger, ou les farting, ou le rire d'un gros homme tombe.

Au moins Jill Scoggins a essayé! C'était son effort:


Tu plaisantes! Haiku est
assez difficile dans ma langue
maternelle, Osler!

Sunday, August 06, 2017

 

Réflexion du dimanche: la décadence de la croyance religieuse

Oui, nous savons que les grands Américains aiment prier avec leurs mains sur Donald Trump, et pour injurier les musulmans et les lesbiennes. Vous ravisons que le pape montre sa faveur sur le Phanique de Philadelphie, et douchez les églises avec de l'argent.

Pourtant, l'idée de Dieu ne devrait-elle pas être sacrée aussi, les affichages publics marqués par l'humilité et l'honneur?




Saturday, August 05, 2017

 

Discours politique le samedi!


Le ministre français du Travail, Muriel Pénicaud, a été accusé d'avoir gagné plus d'un million d'euros grâce à un programme de redondance qu'elle a surveillé en travaillant pour le géant des produits laitiers Danone. Les accusations apparaissent alors que le Parlement débat les efforts visant à nettoyer l'éthique politique et à réformer le droit du travail.

Qu'est-ce qui devrait être fait? La violation de l'éthique est sérieuse, et son bénéfice était assez important. Certes, aux États-Unis, ce genre de chose est facilement résolu par le gouvernement en faisant ce que les Russes vous disent de faire, mais en France, les choses ne sont pas si facilement résolues.


Friday, August 04, 2017

 

Haiku vendredi: Relations sexuelles!


Il existe une langue internationale - les relations sexuelles! Et la forme de poésie française traditionnelle du haiku est le moyen idéal pour discuter de ce sujet important.

Ici, nous allons d'abord:

Humidité et touche
Des ingrédients simples, pourtant
Tellement de plaisir!

 


Thursday, August 03, 2017

 

Maintenant, vous pouvez profiter d'une bonne musique



L'année dernière, lors d'un voyage aux États-Unis, nous avons constaté que les Américains ont écouté une seule chanson, par un homme nommé Rick Astley. C'était une chanson très terrible!

Si vous êtes intéressé par une autre chanson à écouter, nous vous recommandons cette merveilleuse mélodie de la meilleure chanson française Indila. Prendre plaisir!

Wednesday, August 02, 2017

 

Adrien Dipanda!


Bonjour, les gros gras américains! Nous apprécions beaucoup votre site web. Aujourd'hui, nous aimerions discuter d'un véritable athlète, pas comme vos joueurs de football et des lanceurs de baseball toxicomanes dépendants de la méthamphétamine.

En France, les sports mettent l'accent sur la grâce et la force, pas le crachat et le racisme. Nos héros illustrent la valeur d'une grande société. Par exemple, considérez le joueur de l'équipe nationale Adrien Dipanda. Il n'est pas seulement un héros pour tous les Français, mais un champion de toute l'Europe! Et pourtant, il s'occupe des enfants, de ceux qui produisent de l'art et de tous ceux qui aiment la musique et le théâtre. Ses coéquipiers se tournent vers lui pour le leadership, bien sûr, mais aussi ceux qui recherchent du succès dans le sport du handball.

Viva Adrien Dipanda! Viva Saint-Raphael Var HB!

Tuesday, August 01, 2017

 

Bonjour, des Amis américains en surpoids!


C'est bon de te revoir! Encore une fois, nous avons repris la Razor. Cette fois, nous l'avons acheté chez Osler. En fait, c'était plus un troc: nous lui avons donné un grand sandwich au bœuf, quatre sortes de fromage, de bacon et de jambon. Il aime vraiment le fromage.

Au cours des prochaines années, nous vous apporterons de la culture et des nouvelles au-delà de ce que vous recevez de vos «Fox News» et des animaux de bande dessinée. C'est un monde riche et large!

À l'avenir, le lundi, le mercredi et le vendredi seront consacrés au sexe et à la musique, et les mardis réviseront les choses que vous voudrez au lieu d'un «chien de maïs». Nous sommes ouverts aux suggestions pour les autres jours de la semaine!

 


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