otherwoman

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Friday, December 30, 2011

Onward and Upward

Posted on 9:22 AM by Unknown
At left: Occupy Greenville has kept our plucky heroine from dissolving into hopelessness during her long period of unemployment this year: THREE CHEERS FOR THE OCCUPY MOVEMENT, which has restored many folks' faith in America.

~*~

I used to wonder why people (usually women) deleted their blogs. No longer. I get it now.

As net-denizens Google various religious-and-Christmas-oriented-posts I have written over the past four-and-a-half years, I feel theologically and emotionally bereft. I was so certain, and now I am not.

Or rather, I am certain that uncertainty is the state of humanity. I no longer unequivocally declare that particular existential points of dogma are true, except to say, this is what I feel right now. This is what I believe is true right now.

And this is, in fact, what we are always saying, we just don't seem to realize that our personal truths collide over time. We re-arrange the biography to make our wildly different, disparate truths make sense. But they simply don't.

This is because we are not the same people we were.

The person that started this blog is me, yet it is another me, a past-me. I do not agree with everything the past-me wrote, in fact, I wince at a good deal of it. I can understand why people feel the need to delete that which makes them embarrassed and makes them wince. And women, specifically, can find this nearly intolerable. On the above-linked thread, Feminist Avatar wrote:
I almost deleted my blog as I was fed up with discussions going on in my online community, which I disagreed with and felt had been done so many times before, with no resolution. And, my gut response was- get out of here- and I think I saw leaving my blog up as leaving a part of myself 'there'; in that conversation, even tho' I wasn't and hadn't posted in ages.

A wiser person than me once said that women were more reluctant to 'let go of the authorial signature' than men (that is to stop owning their words- seeing cultural products as a creation of society and context rather than individuals), because they had only recently won the right to own them in the first place (ie women's right to a public voice is historically new and hard won). Perhaps, as a result, when we need to walk away from particular online communities or just the internet as a time suck, we feel we can't leave something of ourselves there- we can't stop owning our words (even if they may be out of date or not where we are any more). And perhaps, because of that sense of ownership, if we move beyond those ideas or no longer agree with them, we also can't leave them out there, as it is no longer us.
Yes, I understand that, as well as the Buddhist concept of impermanence.

~*~

I nearly titled this post "Can Ron Paul win the Iowa primary?" and then thought the better of it. Nah. But I am once again voting strategically for the good doctor, as I did in the last South Carolina Republican primary four years ago.

I heartily recommend Conor Friedersdorf's piece in The Atlantic, titled Grappling With Ron Paul's Racist Newsletters--currently up to a whopping 633 comments. The money quotes:
Do I think that Paul wrote the offending newsletters? I do not. Their style and racially bigoted philosophy is so starkly different from anything he has publicly espoused during his long career in public life -- and he is so forthright and uncensored in his pronouncements, even when they depart from mainstream or politically correct opinion -- that I'd wager substantially against his authorship if Las Vegas took such bets. Did I mention how bad some of the newsletters are? It's a level of bigotry that would be exceptionally difficult for a longtime public figure to hide.

For that reason, I cannot agree with [The Weekly Standard's Jamie] Kirchick when he concludes that "Ron Paul is not the plain-speaking antiwar activist his supporters believe they are backing -- but rather a member in good standing of some of the oldest and ugliest traditions in American politics."

On the other hand, it doesn't seem credible that Paul was unaware of who wrote the execrable newsletters, and although almost a million dollars per year in revenue is a substantial incentive to look away from despicable content, having done so was at minimum an act of gross negligence and at worst an act of deep corruption. Indeed, Paul himself has acknowledged that he "bears moral responsibility" for the content.

Given its odiousness that is no small thing.
For the record, I certainly agree. I also agree with this quote--although regular readers might recall that as a true believer, I defended both Jeremiah Wright AND Bill Ayers:
For me, the disconnect between the Ron Paul newsletters, which make me sick, and Paul's words and actions in public life, which I often admire, put me in mind of the way I reacted when candidate Barack Obama was found to associate with Jeremiah Wright and Bill Ayers, both of whom had said execrable things. I couldn't defend any of it. But I could never get exercised about the association in exactly the way that writers like Victor Davis Hanson wanted, because it seemed totally implausible that if Obama was elected he would turn out to secretly share the convictions of the Weather Underground, or hope for God to damn America. It always seemed to me that those relationships were the unsavory product of personal ambition. I don't mean to suggest that the two circumstances are entirely analogous, but I do find it hard to believe that if Paul were elected, he'd turn out to be a secret racist, implement policies that targeted minorities, or drum up support by giving speeches with hateful rhetoric.
And then, he makes the points I wish I had been smart enough to make, says the things I wish I had been smart enough to write. YES!:
[Congressman Ron Paul] has a long history of doing what he says when elected, and no more.

"How could you vote for someone who..."

Isn't that a thorny formulation? I'm sometimes drawn to it. And yet. We're all choosing among a deeply compromised pool of candidates, at least when the field is narrowed to folks who poll above 5 percent. Put it this way. How can you vote for someone who wages an undeclared drone war that kills scores of Pakistani children? Or someone who righteously insisted that indefinite detention is an illegitimate transgression against our civilizational values, and proceeded to support that very practice once he was elected? How can you vote for someone who has claimed to be deeply convicted about abortion on both sides of the issue, constantly misrepresents his record, and demagogues important matters of foreign policy at every opportunity? Or someone who suggests a religious minority group should be discriminated against? Or who insists that even given the benefit of hindsight, the Iraq War was a just and prudent one?

And yet many of you, Republicans and Democrats, will do just that -- just as you and I have voted for a long line of past presidents who've deliberately pursued policies of questionable-at-best morality.

In voting for "the lesser of two evils," there is still evil there -- we're just better at ignoring certain kinds in this fallen world. A national security policy that results in the regular deaths of innocent foreigners in order to maybe make us marginally safer from terrorism is one evil we are very good at ignoring.

Prison rape is an evil we're even better at ignoring.

It is a wonderful thing that Americans are usually unable to ignore the evil of outright racism. It hasn't always been so. The change is a triumph. But important as rhetorical issues of race and ethnicity are in America, we're by necessity choosing the lesser of two -- or three or seven -- evils when we pick a candidate. And so it's worth complicating the moral picture with some questions we don't normally consider when we talk about race.

For example: What American policy most hurts people who'd be a minority group in this country? I'd say cluster bombs, missiles and bullets that inadvertently kill them while we try to kill terrorists or convert tribal or sectarian societies into democracies. Or perhaps an even graver harm is done by the subsidies we give to agribusinesses, destroying Third World agricultural markets and opportunity. To think of the damage done over the decades by sugar dumping in Haiti alone! And isn't it uncomfortable to think about how race and nationality is implicated in the priority we assign to folks who suffer from the aforementioned policies? The policies aren't rooted in personal racism, like the lines in racist tracts -- sugar dumping is rooted in an amoral agricultural lobby that wants to enrich itself -- yet it's hard to imagine such policies would persist as uncontroversially if "people like us" were the victims.

In the U.S., the War on Drugs arguably does the most grave damage to poor communities, especially in black and Latino neighborhoods, where the majority of arrests take place, though whites use drugs more often. The greatest threat to an ethnic minority in the United States isn't that doctrinaire libertarians are going to reverse the Civil Rights Act -- it's that Muslim Americans or immigrants are going to be held without trial in the aftermath of a future terrorist attack because we've allowed our and their civil liberties to erode.

Were it 1964, I'd never vote for Paul, precisely because my desire to protect and expand liberty would've placed the highest priority on the passage of the Civil Rights Act. Paul once said in a speech that "the forced integration dictated by the Civil Rights Act of 1964 increased racial tensions while diminishing individual liberty," despite the fact that it clearly enhanced the individual liberty of blacks, the group the state was most implicated in transgressing against.

But it is not 1964. Other injustices better define our times. In 2012, when accused terrorists are held indefinitely without charges or trial, and folks accused of drug possession have their doors broken down by flash-grenade wielding SWAT teams in no-knock raids, Paul would arguably protect the rights of racial, religious or ethnic minority groups better than Obama, regardless of whether Paul is now or ever was a racist, and irrespective of the fact that Obama, as the first black president, has in some ways transformed Americans' thinking on race. (LBJ, who signed the Civil Rights Act, was not know for his personal progressivism on race or women's rights, but he nonetheless backed policies that had powerful consequences for women and minorities).

What I want Paul detractors to confront is that he alone, among viable candidates, favors reforming certain atrocious policies, including policies that explicitly target ethnic and religious minorities. And that, appalling as it is, every candidate in 2012 who has polled above 10 percent is complicit in some heinous policy or action or association. Paul's association with racist newsletters is a serious moral failing, and even so, it doesn't save us from making a fraught moral judgment about whether or not to support his candidacy, even if we're judging by the single metric of protecting racial or ethnic minority groups, because when it comes to America's most racist or racially fraught policies, Paul is arguably on the right side of all of them.
Read it all, and at least a few of the hundreds of brawling comments, well worth your while if you care about the Republican primary and the next election.

~*~

Check out our show tomorrow, where we will be doing a year-end round-up. In upstate South Carolina, join us at 9am on WFIS radio, 1600 AM and/or 94.9 FM on your radio dial. We have online streaming, so drop by.

And winding up with some holiday tackiness/nostalgia. At left: The Great Southern Shopping Center in Columbus, Ohio, my hometown. As you can see by the cars, this photo was probably taken some time in the early-to-mid 60s, and certainly, my fondest Christmas-shopping memories come from this period. (This shopping center was only a short distance from one of my very favorite and beloved Drive-In movie theatres, which I know I have rhapsodized about here before.)

The shopping center featured the SEVEN WONDERS OF THE WORLD in miniature, and we used to walk around them as kids, taking photos and gawking as if they were real. Surely, this was as close as most of us were ever going to get. My absolute favorite was the Taj Mahal, which apparently even had real water for awhile, but mostly I remember dried-up water with dirt and leaves in it. Unfortunately, my dogged net-searches could NOT bring up the Taj Mahal or Eiffel Tower, presented right alongside Woolworth's and hardware stores and everything else. At Christmas time, the tacky Christmas lights and faux-evergreens were draped around the SEVEN WONDERS OF THE WORLD, and we thought it was the greatest thing we had ever seen.

Confession: I still think it was, but I have since learned how uncool it is to say so.

Thanks to Otherstream for the photo of little-Pisa, which brought back a nice Christmas memory.

PS: And if you have never read Truman Capote's amazingly wonderful A CHRISTMAS MEMORY, you should. Too wonderful for words, but get out those kleenex.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in 2012 Election, Barack Obama, Buddhism, Columbus, Conor Friedersdorf, drug war, feminism, Greenville, holidays, literature, nostalgia, OCCUPY, Ohio, politics, racism, Republicans, Ron Paul, South Carolina, Truman Capote | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Choctaw Bingo and other Saturday earworms
    Lots of people prefer the original by John Prine, who wrote it... but I am partial to the version by the Man in Black. Paradise - Johnny Ca...
  • Greenville GOP convention delegates give Santorum their vote
    Let's hope he's the nominee of the party! That should make it easy enough. What startled me was seeing the coverage on Fox News. S...
  • Occupy the Debate!
    At left: Your humble narrator. Last night, the Republican presidential candidates debated at Wofford College in Spartanburg. We were t...
  • First Caturday of Spring
    This is my very BEST photo of Cyril yet, by far! (Yes, Mr Daisy's man-legs are in the photo, but I think that's why Cyril is so mel...
  • Internet Break Two
    At left, Bachelor's buttons on the Swamp Rabbit Trail . Going to the coast! And doesn't that make me sound just SO RICH?! Actual...
  • Move On Up
    I heard My Morning Jacket's cover of "Move on up" last night on this blog's namesake, Uncle Dave's Dead Air . I then...
  • The white South’s last defeat
    ... is the title of an article by Michael Lind on Salon . Some of it really rings true to me, and I thought I would do some quoting and com...
  • Patched back into the world's mixing board
    The battle for the mind of North America will be fought in the video arena: the Videodrome. The television screen is the retina of the mind...
  • No to the Keystone XL Pipeline
    I totally forgot to post photos of our anti-Keystone XL Pipeline demonstration, here in Greenville on Saturday. This might be because it ac...
  • Occupy the Christmas parade!
    We showed up last night at the Christmas Parade in Greenville, with 99% Santa. In his regular incarnation, he is a regular caller to my rad...

Categories

  • 10000 Hour Rule (1)
  • 12 Steps (3)
  • 2008 Election (3)
  • 2010 Election (4)
  • 2012 (6)
  • 2012 Election (70)
  • 30s (1)
  • 3D (1)
  • 40s (2)
  • 50s (7)
  • 60 Minutes (1)
  • 60s (26)
  • 70s (45)
  • 80s (14)
  • 9/11 (3)
  • 90s (6)
  • A Voice for Men (1)
  • Abbie Hoffman (1)
  • Abby Hensel (1)
  • Abigael Evans (1)
  • Abigail LeCompte (2)
  • abortion (10)
  • Abraham Lincoln (1)
  • ADD (1)
  • addiction (9)
  • Adele M. Stan (1)
  • adoption (3)
  • advertising (9)
  • Afghanistan (8)
  • Africa (2)
  • African-Americans (16)
  • ageism (7)
  • aging (23)
  • airplanes (2)
  • Aiyana Stanley-Jones (1)
  • Ajit Randhawa (1)
  • Al Gore (1)
  • Al Jazeera (2)
  • Al Pacino (1)
  • Al Sharpton (1)
  • Alabama (1)
  • Alan Berg (1)
  • Alan Colmes (1)
  • Alan Wilson (1)
  • Alaska (1)
  • Albert Collins (1)
  • Albert King (1)
  • Alberta (1)
  • Albino Skunk Music Festival (2)
  • Alcoholics Anonymous (5)
  • alcoholism (6)
  • Aleister Crowley (1)
  • Alex Saitta (1)
  • Alexa O'Brien (1)
  • Alexander Gardner (1)
  • Alice Cooper (1)
  • Alice in Chains (1)
  • Allen Ginsberg (1)
  • Allen Stalvey (1)
  • Allen West (1)
  • Allison Krause (3)
  • Allison Yang (1)
  • Allman Brothers Band (4)
  • alt-country (8)
  • alternative medicine (2)
  • AlterNet (2)
  • Alyce LaViolette (1)
  • Alyssa Clemens (1)
  • Alyssa Royse (1)
  • Amanda Knox (4)
  • Amanda Marcotte (1)
  • Amazing Race (1)
  • Ambrose Bierce (1)
  • Ambrosia (1)
  • Amelia Pena (1)
  • Amendment One (1)
  • American Bandstand (1)
  • Amish (1)
  • Amnesty International (4)
  • Amy Goodman (1)
  • Amy Klobuchar (1)
  • Amy Wilentz (1)
  • anarchism (3)
  • Anasazi (1)
  • Anderson Cooper (4)
  • Andrea Yates (1)
  • Andrew Breitbart (2)
  • Andrew Gold (1)
  • Andrew Young (2)
  • Andy Borowitz (2)
  • Andy the Doorbum (1)
  • Angola 3 (1)
  • anicca (1)
  • animal rights (5)
  • animals (11)
  • Anissa Jones (1)
  • Anita Perry (3)
  • Anjana Joshi (1)
  • Ann Coulter (4)
  • Ann Romney (3)
  • Ann Rule (1)
  • Anne Francis (1)
  • Anne Frank (1)
  • Anonymous (1)
  • Another Earth (1)
  • Another Voice with Jason and Eric (2)
  • Anthony Dellaventura (1)
  • Anthony Weiner (2)
  • antichrist (1)
  • antidepressants (1)
  • Antonin Scalia (1)
  • Anwar al-Awlaki (1)
  • AOL (1)
  • appearance (3)
  • April Wine (1)
  • Aretha Franklin (2)
  • Arianna Huffington (1)
  • Ariel Castro (3)
  • Arkansas (2)
  • Arnold Schwarzenegger (1)
  • art (14)
  • Art Goodtimes (1)
  • Art in the Park (1)
  • Artisphere (3)
  • Ash Wednesday (2)
  • Asha James (1)
  • Ashes to Ashes (1)
  • Asheville (6)
  • Asheville Comic Con (1)
  • Ashley Judd (1)
  • Ashtoberfest (1)
  • Asperger's Syndrome (1)
  • astrology (1)
  • Asylum gallery (1)
  • atheism (14)
  • Athens (6)
  • Atlanta (7)
  • Atlanta Rhythm Section (2)
  • Australia (1)
  • autism (3)
  • Ayn Rand (6)
  • ayurveda (1)
  • azaleas (2)
  • B-52s (2)
  • B-movies (4)
  • baby boomers (13)
  • Bachman-Turner Overdrive (1)
  • Back Home (1)
  • bad capitalism (21)
  • bad Catholics (3)
  • Badlands (1)
  • Bakari Sellers (2)
  • Baptists (10)
  • Barack Obama (19)
  • Baraki Sellers (1)
  • Barbara Lynn (1)
  • Barbara Steele (1)
  • Barbra Streisand (1)
  • Barry Barnette (1)
  • Barry Manilow (1)
  • Batman (1)
  • BBC (1)
  • BDSM (1)
  • Beatles (3)
  • Becci Robbins (1)
  • Bee Gees (1)
  • Bele Chere (3)
  • bell hooks (1)
  • Ben Hall (1)
  • Ben Manski (1)
  • Ben Masel (4)
  • Ben Szobody (1)
  • Bernie Taupin (1)
  • Bertha Franklin (1)
  • Beth Padgett (1)
  • Bethenny Frankel (1)
  • Betty Ford (2)
  • big band (1)
  • Big Oil (1)
  • bigotry (14)
  • BigPharm (6)
  • bikers (2)
  • Bill Clinton (3)
  • Bill Keller (1)
  • Bill Kreutzmann (2)
  • Bill Wiese (1)
  • biography (1)
  • birds (2)
  • birth control (2)
  • birthday (1)
  • birthers (1)
  • bisexuality (3)
  • Black History Month (6)
  • Black Swan (1)
  • BlackTalk Radio Network (2)
  • Blaxploitation (1)
  • Blessed Mother (2)
  • Blogdonia (33)
  • Blogger (3)
  • Blondie (1)
  • Blue Magic (1)
  • Blue Oyster Cult (1)
  • Blue Ridge Christian Academy (1)
  • Blue Ridge Mountains (2)
  • bluegrass (6)
  • blues (15)
  • Blues Magoos (1)
  • Bob Dylan (2)
  • Bob Fosse (1)
  • Bob Goodlatte (1)
  • Bob Inglis (1)
  • Bob Jones III (3)
  • Bob Jones IV (1)
  • Bob Jones Sr (2)
  • Bob Jones University (22)
  • Bob Marley (2)
  • Bob Weir (4)
  • Bobby Harrell (1)
  • Bobby Hart (1)
  • Bobby Hitt (1)
  • Bobby Montoya (1)
  • Bobby Nash (1)
  • Boeing (2)
  • Bohemian Cafe (3)
  • Bonnie Bramlett (1)
  • books (32)
  • bookstores (2)
  • Boston Marathon (1)
  • botox (1)
  • Bottom Line (1)
  • Boy Scouts (1)
  • Brad Hutto (1)
  • Bradley Manning (6)
  • BRAVO (1)
  • Brent Mydland (1)
  • Brent Nelsen (1)
  • Brett Weldele (1)
  • Brian DePalma (1)
  • Brian Keith (1)
  • Brian Protheroe (1)
  • Brian Scoles (1)
  • Brit Marling (2)
  • Brittany Hensel (1)
  • Brook Benton (1)
  • Bruce Springsteen (2)
  • Bruce Willis (1)
  • Brushfire Stankgrass (1)
  • Bryan Caplan (1)
  • Buddhism (22)
  • Buddy Guy (1)
  • Buddy Roemer (1)
  • bullies (11)
  • Byrds (1)
  • Cabaret (1)
  • Cabin Floor Records (1)
  • Cadillacs (1)
  • Caged Heat (1)
  • California (6)
  • Callista Gingrich (1)
  • Calvin Coolidge (1)
  • Cambodia (3)
  • Camille Lewis (3)
  • Campaign for Southern Equality (2)
  • Canada (4)
  • cancer (6)
  • Candy Montgomery (1)
  • capital punishment (1)
  • Carl Gallups (1)
  • Carlos DeLuna (1)
  • Carlos Olivera (1)
  • carnitine (1)
  • Carrie Prejean (1)
  • cars (9)
  • cartoons (3)
  • Casey Anthony (6)
  • Cat Stevens (1)
  • Catherine Deneuve (1)
  • Catholicism (12)
  • cats (22)
  • Caturday (2)
  • Caylee Anthony (6)
  • CBS (1)
  • Cee Lo Green (1)
  • celebrities (7)
  • Chaco (1)
  • Chancey Lindsey-Peake (1)
  • Charles Murray (1)
  • Charles Phelps (7)
  • Charles Ramsey (1)
  • Charleston (7)
  • Charleston City Paper (1)
  • Charleston Post and Courier (5)
  • Charlie Daniels (1)
  • Charlie Fuqua (1)
  • Charlie Sheen (1)
  • Charlotte (4)
  • Chaz Bono (1)
  • Chelsea Clinton (1)
  • Chemtrails (1)
  • Chet Atkins (1)
  • Chicago (3)
  • Chick-fil-A (2)
  • child abuse (15)
  • childhood (14)
  • children (7)
  • Chimuranga (1)
  • China (4)
  • Chip Felkel (1)
  • Chris Christie (3)
  • Chris Cillizza (1)
  • Chris Combette (1)
  • Chris Hedges (2)
  • Chris Matthews (1)
  • Chris Rock (1)
  • Christi McCoy (1)
  • Christiane Amanpour (1)
  • Christianity (32)
  • Christine Moody (1)
  • Christine O’Donnell (1)
  • Christmas (8)
  • Christopher Jones (1)
  • Christopher Nolan (1)
  • Christopher Peterman (5)
  • Christopher Spicer (1)
  • Christopher Williams (1)
  • Church of Stop Shopping (1)
  • CIA (3)
  • Ciarán Hinds (1)
  • cigarettes (1)
  • Cindy Anthony (1)
  • Citizens United (1)
  • Civil Rights (12)
  • Civil War (2)
  • Claire Danes (1)
  • classic country (6)
  • classic rock (47)
  • classism (15)
  • Clemson (2)
  • Cleveland (2)
  • Cleveland Park (1)
  • Clint Eastwood (1)
  • clothes (3)
  • CNBC (1)
  • CNN (14)
  • Code Pink (1)
  • Coen Brothers (1)
  • Cointelpro (1)
  • Col. Bruce Hampton (1)
  • Cold War (2)
  • Colorado (1)
  • Columbia (15)
  • Columbine (1)
  • Columbus (5)
  • comedy (19)
  • comics (14)
  • compassion (7)
  • computers (3)
  • congress (13)
  • Connecticut (1)
  • Conor Friedersdorf (1)
  • Conrad Murray (1)
  • conservatives (51)
  • Constitution (4)
  • consumerism (1)
  • Country Earl (2)
  • Cousin Bethie (2)
  • Cramps (1)
  • Cream (3)
  • Crew 41 (1)
  • Cristan Williams (1)
  • Crocker (1)
  • Crystal Swim Club (1)
  • CSA (2)
  • CSN (3)
  • cult movies (20)
  • cults (4)
  • culture (13)
  • Curt Knox (1)
  • Curtis Mayfield (3)
  • customer service (3)
  • cute (13)
  • CWA (1)
  • Cynthia McKinney (1)
  • Dables (1)
  • Dakota McMillan (1)
  • Dallas (2)
  • Damien Echols (2)
  • Damon Runyon (1)
  • Dan Cathy (2)
  • Dan Fincke (1)
  • dance (1)
  • Daniel Gilbert (1)
  • Darby Wilcox (1)
  • Dark Knight Rises (1)
  • Darrell Scott (1)
  • Daryl Hutchinson (1)
  • David Bowie (5)
  • David Carr (1)
  • David Cassidy (1)
  • David Cobb (1)
  • David Cronenberg (1)
  • David Crosby (1)
  • David Grisman (1)
  • David Horsey (1)
  • David Kinnaman (1)
  • David Lochbaum (2)
  • David Ossman (1)
  • David Thomas (4)
  • David Wilkins (1)
  • Davy Jones (2)
  • Days of Heaven (1)
  • Dayton (1)
  • DC comics (3)
  • Dead Air Church (14)
  • Deadheads (10)
  • Dean Rice (1)
  • death (9)
  • death penalty (7)
  • Deb Morrow (6)
  • Debbie Harry (1)
  • Debbie Nathan (1)
  • Debbie Wasserman Schultz (1)
  • debt ceiling (1)
  • Deep Green Resistance (2)
  • Del McCoury (1)
  • Delaney Bramlett (1)
  • Delores Freelon (1)
  • Delta Moon (1)
  • Democratic convention (3)
  • Democrats (12)
  • Dennis Hopper (2)
  • Dennis Kucinich (1)
  • Depeche Mode (1)
  • Derek and the Dominoes (1)
  • detox (1)
  • Detroit (3)
  • DHEC (3)
  • Diana Holt (1)
  • Dick Clark (1)
  • Dick Harpootlian (2)
  • Dickey Betts (2)
  • digital divide (1)
  • Dirty Vegas (1)
  • disability (11)
  • disco (3)
  • DIY (3)
  • Do Right BJU (1)
  • Doc Hastings (1)
  • dogs (10)
  • DOMA (1)
  • domestic violence (3)
  • Dominique Strauss-Kahn (1)
  • Don Cornelius (2)
  • Don Godbey (1)
  • Don Piper (1)
  • Donald Byrd and the Blackbyrds (1)
  • Donald Fagen (1)
  • Donald Trump (1)
  • Donna Donella (1)
  • Donna Jean Godchaux (2)
  • Donna Summer (1)
  • Donna Ulissee (1)
  • Doobie Brothers (1)
  • Doonesbury (1)
  • Doris Day (1)
  • Dorothy Edwards (1)
  • Dottie Sandusky (1)
  • Double A (12)
  • Dr Hook and the Medicine Show (1)
  • Drive-ins (3)
  • drug war (7)
  • drums (2)
  • Duane Allman (1)
  • Duke Energy (5)
  • dukkha (2)
  • Dylan Klebold (1)
  • E. J. Dionne (1)
  • Earth Day (1)
  • Earworms (16)
  • Easter (2)
  • Easy Rider (1)
  • economics (20)
  • Edda Mellas (1)
  • education (12)
  • Edward Lee Elmore (1)
  • Edward Norton (1)
  • Edward Snowden (3)
  • Efia Nwangaza (5)
  • Egypt (2)
  • El Salvador (1)
  • Eleanor Kitzman (1)
  • Eleanor Roosevelt (1)
  • Elephant Revival (1)
  • elephants (1)
  • elitism (11)
  • Elizabeth Colbert-Busch (1)
  • Elizabeth Edwards (1)
  • Elizabeth Taylor (6)
  • Ellen DeGeneres (1)
  • Ellen Johnson Sirleaf (1)
  • Ellen Rosenblum (1)
  • Elliott Horn (1)
  • Elton John (2)
  • Elvis Costello (2)
  • Elysium (1)
  • Emanuel Cleaver (1)
  • Emerson Lake and Palmer (1)
  • Eminem (1)
  • Emmylou Harris (1)
  • endtimes (5)
  • environment (15)
  • Eric Clapton (5)
  • Eric Connor (1)
  • Eric Harris (1)
  • Eric Hoffer (1)
  • Eric Kaz (1)
  • Eric Wood (1)
  • Erik Wood (1)
  • Erin Tatum (1)
  • Ernest Willis (2)
  • Ernie Willis (1)
  • Essie Mae Washington-Williams (1)
  • Ethel Merman (1)
  • Eugene Platt (1)
  • Europe (1)
  • Eva Young (1)
  • Evelyn Waugh (1)
  • Everett Dutschke (1)
  • evolution (2)
  • Ezra Klein (2)
  • Facebook (14)
  • Fairness Doctrine (1)
  • Fall for Greenville (1)
  • Falls Park (7)
  • family (12)
  • Family Research Council (1)
  • Fan the Flames (1)
  • Fanaticon (1)
  • fantasy (12)
  • Fareed Zakaria (1)
  • Farmville (2)
  • fascism (5)
  • fat (4)
  • Fat Tuesday (1)
  • FCC (1)
  • FDR (2)
  • feminism (38)
  • Feminist Critics (1)
  • Feministe (1)
  • Firesign Theater (1)
  • fish (2)
  • FITSnews (7)
  • Flannery O'Connor (1)
  • FLDS (1)
  • Florida (9)
  • flowers (7)
  • Floyd Cramer (1)
  • Focus Rock Entertainment (1)
  • food (18)
  • Fountain Inn (3)
  • Four Horsemen (1)
  • Fox News (13)
  • France (3)
  • Francis Ford Coppola (1)
  • Frank Bailey (1)
  • Frank Knapp (1)
  • Frank Pavone (1)
  • Frank Zappa (2)
  • Fred Phelps (2)
  • Fred Thompson (1)
  • Freddie Mac (1)
  • Frederick Kagan (1)
  • free speech (13)
  • Freedom from Religion Foundation (1)
  • Friday Cat Blogging (7)
  • Friends of the Earth (1)
  • friendship (9)
  • FUBAR (5)
  • Fukushima Daiichi (3)
  • fundamentalism (28)
  • funk (5)
  • Furman (2)
  • Gabor Mate (1)
  • Gabrielle Komorowski (1)
  • Gaia herbs (1)
  • Gang of Four (1)
  • Garaj Mahal (2)
  • Garry Trudeau (1)
  • Garry Wills (1)
  • Gary Johnson (2)
  • Gary Pearce (1)
  • gay marriage (18)
  • geeks (8)
  • gender (5)
  • GendErratic (1)
  • Gene Hackman (2)
  • Gene Pitney (1)
  • genealogy (4)
  • General Petraeus (1)
  • gentrification (1)
  • George Harrison (3)
  • George Huguely (1)
  • George Orwell (2)
  • George Takei (2)
  • George W. Bush (2)
  • George Will (1)
  • George Zimmerman (6)
  • Georgia (12)
  • Gerard Depardieu (1)
  • Ghaddafi (1)
  • Ghost Mice (1)
  • ghosts (1)
  • Ghoulardi (2)
  • Ginger Baker (1)
  • Ginger Wilson (1)
  • Girl Scout cookies (1)
  • Girl Scouts (2)
  • glam rock (4)
  • GLBT (31)
  • Glen Campbell (1)
  • Glenn Beck (2)
  • Glenn Greenwald (6)
  • Glenn McConnell (1)
  • global warming (1)
  • globalism (1)
  • Gloria Allred (2)
  • Gloria Steinem (1)
  • GMOs (1)
  • goddesses (3)
  • Godzilla (1)
  • Goldman Sachs (2)
  • golf (1)
  • Good Men Project (1)
  • Google (6)
  • Gore Vidal (1)
  • GPATS (2)
  • Grace Slick (1)
  • Graham Nash (1)
  • grandmotherhood (11)
  • Grateful Dead (14)
  • Green Party (22)
  • Green Shadow Cabinet (2)
  • green spaces (5)
  • Greenville (65)
  • Greenville Antiwar Society (1)
  • Greenville Mall (1)
  • Greenville News (12)
  • Greenville Technical College (2)
  • Greer (1)
  • Greer Opry House (1)
  • Greg Craig (1)
  • Greg Lake (1)
  • Gregg Jocoy (27)
  • Gregory Duncan (1)
  • Gregory Easton (1)
  • Greyhound (1)
  • grief (6)
  • grunge (2)
  • guns (10)
  • Haley Barbour (1)
  • Haley Watch (26)
  • Halloween (3)
  • Hammer horror (1)
  • Handlebar (1)
  • Hank Williams (1)
  • Hanna Rosin (1)
  • Hanoi (1)
  • Hare Krishnas (1)
  • hate crimes (2)
  • Hawaii (1)
  • Hay Fever (band) (1)
  • health (14)
  • Heaven is Real (1)
  • Hello America (1)
  • Hello Kitty (1)
  • Henry Doktorski (1)
  • Henry Hyde (1)
  • Henry Kissinger (1)
  • herbology (2)
  • herbs (6)
  • Heritage Foundation (2)
  • Herman Cain (8)
  • HeroesCon (3)
  • Hidalgo Grain Company (1)
  • High Stakes (1)
  • hiking (7)
  • Hilary Rosen (1)
  • Hillary Clinton (1)
  • Hinduism (2)
  • hip-hop (5)
  • history (32)
  • History Project (2)
  • Ho Chi Minh (1)
  • holidays (10)
  • Hollywood (6)
  • holocaust (1)
  • HOMELAND (1)
  • homelessness (1)
  • homeschooling (1)
  • homophobia (1)
  • Honey Boo Boo (1)
  • Hoodoo (1)
  • Horizon Records (3)
  • horror (14)
  • Houston (1)
  • Howard Berman (1)
  • HP Lovecraft (3)
  • Huffington Post (2)
  • Hugo Schwyzer (1)
  • Human Be-In (1)
  • Hunter Thompson (1)
  • Hurray for the Riff Raff (1)
  • Hurricane Sandy (1)
  • hypocrisy (5)
  • Iain Matthews (1)
  • Ian Curtis (1)
  • IBEW (1)
  • identity theft (1)
  • IFB (4)
  • Iggy Pop (3)
  • illness (11)
  • immigration (10)
  • incest (1)
  • India (5)
  • Indiana (4)
  • Indigenous peoples (3)
  • insects (3)
  • instrumentals (7)
  • Iowa (6)
  • Iraq war (7)
  • IRS (1)
  • Isaac Hayes (1)
  • Ishmael Reed (1)
  • Islam (3)
  • Ismail Merchant (2)
  • Israel (3)
  • Italy (3)
  • Jack Bruce (1)
  • Jack Layton (1)
  • Jack Logan (1)
  • Jack Nicholson (1)
  • Jack Quinn (1)
  • Jack Ruby (2)
  • Jackie Gleason (1)
  • Jacob Zupon (1)
  • Jake Tapper (1)
  • Jake Xingu (1)
  • James Bond (1)
  • James Dean (1)
  • James Hutton (1)
  • James Ivory (1)
  • James Koutz (1)
  • James Leininger (1)
  • James Lipton (1)
  • James McMurtry (1)
  • James Rhodes (3)
  • James Rosen (1)
  • Jameson Kessler (1)
  • Jane Fonda (2)
  • Janet Loeffler (1)
  • Janis Joplin (2)
  • Japan (8)
  • Jasmine Beach-Ferrara (1)
  • Jason Dickey (1)
  • Jason Willis (1)
  • jazz (2)
  • JC Penneys (1)
  • Jean Quan (1)
  • Jeanne van den Hurk (2)
  • Jeff Goldblum (2)
  • Jeff Sharlet (1)
  • Jeff Siner (1)
  • Jeff Sumerel (1)
  • Jefferson Airplane (1)
  • Jefferson Starship (1)
  • Jeffrey Collins (1)
  • Jeffrey Hoffman (1)
  • Jeffrey Miller (3)
  • Jemima Aslana (1)
  • Jennifer Aniston (2)
  • Jennifer Marchant (1)
  • Jenny Arnold (1)
  • Jeremy Lee Moody (1)
  • Jerry Babe Smith (1)
  • Jerry Falwell (1)
  • Jerry Garcia (9)
  • Jerry Peace (1)
  • Jerry Sandusky (1)
  • Jessica Nathanson (1)
  • Jesuits (1)
  • Jett Travolta (1)
  • JG Ballard (6)
  • Jil Littlejohn (1)
  • Jill Andrews (1)
  • Jill Stein (5)
  • Jim Burns (1)
  • Jim Clyburn (1)
  • Jim Croce (1)
  • Jim DeMint (10)
  • Jim Morrison (1)
  • Jim Shelton (1)
  • Jimi Hendrix (1)
  • Jimmy Breslin (1)
  • Jimmy Carter (3)
  • Jimmy Kimmel (1)
  • Jimmy Page (1)
  • Jimmy Webb (1)
  • Joan Baez (1)
  • Joan Kelly (1)
  • Jodi Arias (1)
  • Jody Reynolds (1)
  • Joe Bageant (2)
  • Joe Dill (1)
  • Joe Johns (1)
  • Joe McGinniss (2)
  • Joe Strummer (3)
  • Joe Wilson (2)
  • Joe-Bob Briggs (1)
  • Joel Achenbach (1)
  • Joel Ann Chandler (3)
  • Joel Grey (1)
  • Joel Osteen (1)
  • Joel Umanzor (1)
  • John Boehner (1)
  • John Conyers (1)
  • John Crangle (1)
  • John Derbyshire (1)
  • John Edwards (2)
  • John Ensign (1)
  • John F. Kennedy (2)
  • John Ford (1)
  • John Hinderaker (1)
  • John King (1)
  • John Lee Hooker (1)
  • John Lennon (1)
  • John List (1)
  • John Mayall (1)
  • John McCain (2)
  • John McLaughlin (1)
  • John O'Connor (1)
  • John Paul Stevens (1)
  • John Pitre (1)
  • John Prine (1)
  • John Rainey (1)
  • John Scalzi (1)
  • John Turturro (1)
  • John Wayne (1)
  • Johnny Cash (1)
  • Johnny Whitaker (1)
  • Johnny Winter (1)
  • Jonah Goldberg (1)
  • Jonathan Demme (1)
  • Jonathan Eames (1)
  • Joni LeCompte (1)
  • Joni Mitchell (2)
  • Jordan Davis (1)
  • Jose Baez (1)
  • Joseph Bartosch (1)
  • Joseph Ellis (1)
  • Joseph Martin (1)
  • Joshua Boot (1)
  • Joss Whedon (1)
  • Journey (1)
  • Journey to the Unknown (1)
  • Joy Division (1)
  • Joy Hartsell (1)
  • Judaism (2)
  • Julia Serano (1)
  • Julian Assange (2)
  • Julian Dibbell (1)
  • Juliet Mills (1)
  • Justin Whitmire (1)
  • Kane DeGeorgis (1)
  • Kansas (2)
  • Karen Black (1)
  • Karen Floyd (1)
  • Karen Santorum (2)
  • Karl Bremer (1)
  • Karl Marx (1)
  • Katalyst (1)
  • Kate Pierson (1)
  • Kate Schulte (2)
  • Katherine Ann Poole (1)
  • Katon Dawson (1)
  • Keith Godchaux (2)
  • Keith Richards (1)
  • Kelly Boan (1)
  • Ken Ard (2)
  • Ken Avidor (1)
  • Ken May (1)
  • Ken Riley (1)
  • Kenneth Aden (1)
  • Kenneth Chamberlain (1)
  • Kent State (3)
  • Kentucky (1)
  • Kevin Alexander Gray (1)
  • Kevin Bryant (1)
  • Keystone XL Pipeline (3)
  • KFC (1)
  • Kimberly Kagan (1)
  • King Crimson (1)
  • Kitty Glendower (1)
  • kkk (2)
  • Knox White (1)
  • Koch Brothers (1)
  • kombucha (1)
  • Kraftwerk (1)
  • Kris Kristofferson (1)
  • Krishna (2)
  • kudzu (1)
  • Kurt Cobain (1)
  • Kurt Vonnegut (2)
  • L. Ron Hubbard (1)
  • Lake Jocasee (1)
  • Lake Keowee (2)
  • Lake Street Dive (1)
  • Lalji Patel (1)
  • Lama Zopa Rinpoche (1)
  • Lamar Smith (1)
  • Lamb's Bread (1)
  • Larrie Butler (1)
  • Larry Marchant (1)
  • Larry Sabato (1)
  • Las Vegas (1)
  • Latinos (2)
  • Laura Olson (1)
  • Laurel and Hardy (1)
  • Law and Disorder (1)
  • LAW AND ORDER (2)
  • law enforcement (25)
  • LCWR (1)
  • Led Zeppelin (2)
  • Lee Anthony (1)
  • Lee Harvey Oswald (2)
  • Left of the Dial (1)
  • Legend Valley (1)
  • Leighton Jordan (1)
  • Leola Robinson-Simpson (1)
  • Leon Howard (1)
  • Leonard Pitts (1)
  • Les Elgart (1)
  • Levon Helm (2)
  • Lexington Medical Center (1)
  • Leymah Gbowee (1)
  • Libby Titus (1)
  • Liberace (1)
  • libertarianism (1)
  • Liberty Bridge (3)
  • Liberty University (1)
  • libraries (1)
  • Libya (2)
  • Lightnin Hopkins (1)
  • Lillian Koller (1)
  • Linda Manz (1)
  • Linda Ronstadt (1)
  • Lindsey Graham (4)
  • linguistics (1)
  • Link Wray (1)
  • Linky Stone Park (1)
  • Lisa Vogel (1)
  • Lisa Williams (1)
  • literature (5)
  • Liz Smith Anderson (1)
  • Liza Minelli (1)
  • Logan Smith (1)
  • London (1)
  • Longchenpa (1)
  • Lottie Gibson (1)
  • Lou Rawls (1)
  • Lou Reed (3)
  • Loudon Wainwright (1)
  • LSD (7)
  • luck (1)
  • Lucy Kaplansky (1)
  • Luke Bryan (1)
  • Lyn Riddle (1)
  • Lynda Barry (1)
  • Lyndon Johnson (2)
  • Lynne Stewart (1)
  • M.E.H. (1)
  • M.I.A. (1)
  • Mac Arnold and Plate Full O' Blues (1)
  • Macbeth (1)
  • Mad Men (3)
  • Madonna (1)
  • Maggie Gallagher (1)
  • Mahavishnu Orchestra (1)
  • Maine (1)
  • Malcolm Gladwell (1)
  • Malcolm X (2)
  • Mallory Parker (1)
  • Mandy Powers Norrell (1)
  • Marc Lepine (1)
  • March against Monsanto (2)
  • Marcus Bachmann (1)
  • Marcy Kaptur (1)
  • Mardi Gras (2)
  • Margalit Fox (1)
  • Margaret Atwood (1)
  • Margaret Flowers (2)
  • Margaret Jamison (1)
  • Margot Kidder (1)
  • Marianne Gingrich (1)
  • marijuana (7)
  • Mark MacPhail (1)
  • Mark Sanford (3)
  • Mark Twain (1)
  • marriage (5)
  • Marshall Tucker Band (1)
  • Martin Luther King Jr. (2)
  • Martin Scorsese (3)
  • Martin Sheen (1)
  • Marvel (4)
  • Marvin Gaye (1)
  • Mary Harris Jones (1)
  • Mary Huff (1)
  • Mary Jane's Farm (1)
  • Mary Olsen (2)
  • Mary Surratt (1)
  • Maryville (1)
  • Massachusetts (1)
  • Mast General Store (1)
  • Matt Myers (1)
  • Matt Taibbi (1)
  • Matthew Nielson (1)
  • Matthews Southern Comfort (1)
  • Mauldin (2)
  • Mauldin Open-Air Market (3)
  • Maureen Dowd (1)
  • Mavericks (1)
  • Max Frost and the Troopers (1)
  • McAlister Square (4)
  • media (53)
  • Medicaid (6)
  • medicare (2)
  • medicine (4)
  • Medicines from the Earth (1)
  • meditation (3)
  • Medium Cool (1)
  • Megan McArdle (1)
  • Melba Moore (1)
  • Melungeon (1)
  • memes (5)
  • Men's Rights Advocates (4)
  • menopause (1)
  • Meredith Kercher (2)
  • Merle Haggard (1)
  • Merry Christmas from the Family (1)
  • Merry Pranksters (1)
  • Mexico (1)
  • Michael Dunn (1)
  • Michael Haley (1)
  • Michael Keaton (1)
  • Michael Lind (1)
  • Michael Moore (1)
  • Michael Reynolds (1)
  • Michael Stipe (1)
  • Michael Ulmer (1)
  • Michael Vander Does (1)
  • Michele Bachmann (13)
  • Michelin (1)
  • Michelle Malkin (1)
  • Michelle Obama (1)
  • Michigan Womyn's Music Festival (1)
  • Mickey Hart (2)
  • Mike Biediger (1)
  • Mike Bloomfield (2)
  • Mike Fair (1)
  • Mike Huckabee (4)
  • mimes (1)
  • Mimi Farina (1)
  • Minnesota (2)
  • minorities (6)
  • misogyny (14)
  • Mississippi (4)
  • Mitch Daniels (1)
  • Mitt Romney (29)
  • Molly Haskell (1)
  • Monday Music (17)
  • Money House Blessing (1)
  • Monkees (3)
  • monkeys (1)
  • Monsanto (3)
  • monsters (1)
  • Monterey Pop Festival (1)
  • Monty Python (1)
  • Moondog (1)
  • Mormons (6)
  • Mother Jones magazine (1)
  • Mother Theresa (1)
  • motherhood (14)
  • Motown (1)
  • MoveOn (1)
  • movies (36)
  • MSNBC (1)
  • Mubarak (2)
  • murder (22)
  • music (71)
  • Music Choice (1)
  • musicals (5)
  • My Morning Jacket (1)
  • Naiyana Patel (1)
  • nannies (1)
  • NASA (2)
  • Nat Adderley (1)
  • Natalie Portman (1)
  • Natalie Wood (1)
  • Nathan Deal (2)
  • National Museum of the Pacific War (1)
  • Native Americans (2)
  • nazis (1)
  • NCADP (1)
  • Neem (1)
  • neighborhoods (2)
  • Neil Postman (1)
  • Neil Young (6)
  • Nene Leakes (1)
  • neocons (1)
  • Netroots Nation (1)
  • Nevada (1)
  • New Age (6)
  • New Hampshire (3)
  • New Jersey (3)
  • New River (1)
  • New York (10)
  • New York Dolls (2)
  • New York Times (8)
  • New Yorker (1)
  • Newsweek (2)
  • Newt Gingrich (20)
  • Nietzsche (1)
  • Nikki Haley (39)
  • NIRS (2)
  • Nixon (3)
  • Noam Chomsky (2)
  • Nobel (2)
  • Norma McCorvey (1)
  • Norman Spinrad (1)
  • NORML (1)
  • North Carolina (16)
  • North Mississippi Allstars (1)
  • nostalgia (21)
  • NPR (2)
  • NRA (2)
  • NRC (4)
  • NSA (1)
  • nuclear power (8)
  • numerology (1)
  • Oakland (2)
  • obits (25)
  • OCCUPY (60)
  • Occupy the Microphone (20)
  • OccupyMARINES (1)
  • Oconee Nuclear Station (4)
  • Odds and Sods (9)
  • Ohio (20)
  • Ohio Players (3)
  • old hippie stories (3)
  • older women (3)
  • Oliver Hardy (1)
  • Oliver Stone (1)
  • Operation Rescue (1)
  • Opus Dei (1)
  • Oregon (2)
  • Orgone (1)
  • Orson Welles (2)
  • Osborne Brothers (1)
  • Oscar Grant (1)
  • Our Lady of Guadalupe (1)
  • Owls (1)
  • Owsley (2)
  • paganism (1)
  • Pakistan (1)
  • Pamela Colman Smith (1)
  • Parma Place (1)
  • Parmy Olsen (1)
  • Patrick Haddon (1)
  • Patrick Meighan (1)
  • Patrick Simmons (1)
  • Patriot Act (1)
  • Patriot Guard (1)
  • Patti Smith (2)
  • Paul Bowers (1)
  • Paul Butterfield Blues Band (1)
  • Paul Elam (1)
  • Paul Haggis (1)
  • Paul Kantner (1)
  • Paul Kevin Curtis (1)
  • Paul Krugman (3)
  • Paul Mauriat (1)
  • Paul Ryan (5)
  • Paula Cooper (1)
  • PBS (3)
  • peace (10)
  • Peace Center (2)
  • Pearl Jam (1)
  • Penn State (1)
  • Pennsylvania (1)
  • Perry Eichor (1)
  • Perry Mason (1)
  • Peter Bergman (1)
  • Peter Fonda (1)
  • pets (2)
  • peyote (1)
  • Peyton Place (1)
  • Phil Austin (1)
  • Phil Lesh (4)
  • Phil Proctor (1)
  • Philip K Dick (2)
  • philosophy (2)
  • Phyllis Diller (1)
  • Phyllis Schlafly (1)
  • Physicians for a National Health Program (1)
  • Pickens (2)
  • Pink Floyd (1)
  • Pittsburgh (1)
  • Plain(s) Feminist (1)
  • Poland (1)
  • Political Animals (1)
  • political prisoners (5)
  • politics (98)
  • polygamy (1)
  • Pope Benedict XVI (2)
  • Pope Francis (1)
  • Poppy Family (1)
  • populism (1)
  • poverty (2)
  • Preston Oates (1)
  • prisoners (3)
  • progressives (22)
  • Prokofiev (1)
  • Prometheus Radio Project (1)
  • Prop 8 (3)
  • Prosperity Gospel (1)
  • protests (57)
  • psychedelic (6)
  • psychic healing (1)
  • psychology (10)
  • PTSD (1)
  • Puerto Rico (1)
  • punk (18)
  • Purlie (1)
  • Pylon (1)
  • quizzes (3)
  • race (16)
  • Rachel Jeantel (1)
  • racism (30)
  • Radha Mitchell (1)
  • radio (23)
  • Radio Room (1)
  • Raffaele Sollecito (1)
  • Ragged Orchids (1)
  • Rainbow Family (3)
  • Rally for a Moral Budget (3)
  • Ralph Poynter (1)
  • Rand Paul (1)
  • Randall Bramblett (1)
  • Randy California (1)
  • Randy Page (1)
  • Rapture (2)
  • Rastafari (4)
  • Ratstorm (1)
  • raw foods (2)
  • Ray Bradbury (1)
  • Raymond Bonner (1)
  • Raymond Burr (1)
  • Real Housewives of Atlanta (1)
  • Real Housewives of New Jersey (1)
  • Real Housewives of NYC (1)
  • Real Housewives of Orange County (1)
  • Reality TV (6)
  • Rebecca Watson (1)
  • Rebecca West (2)
  • recreation (7)
  • recycling (2)
  • Red Rose Books (1)
  • Red Tide (1)
  • rednecks (7)
  • RedState Gathering (1)
  • Reedy River (7)
  • reggae (3)
  • religion (26)
  • REM (4)
  • Renaissance Faire (1)
  • Renee Dudley (4)
  • Renee Montagne (1)
  • Renegade Evolution (2)
  • Republican Convention (2)
  • Republicans (67)
  • Requiem for a Dream (1)
  • restaurants (2)
  • Retro Rock (1)
  • Rev. David Kennedy (2)
  • Reverend Ike (1)
  • rhythm and blues (12)
  • Richard Dawkins (1)
  • Richard Gere (1)
  • Richard Linklater (1)
  • Richard Matheson (1)
  • Richard Perkins (1)
  • Rick Minerd (1)
  • Rick Perry (10)
  • Rick Santorum (10)
  • Rider Waite (1)
  • Rielle Hunter (2)
  • right wingnuts (16)
  • RightOnline (1)
  • Risa Bear (1)
  • Ritalin (1)
  • Rob Godfrey (1)
  • Robert Behre (1)
  • Robert DeNiro (2)
  • Robert Earl Keen (1)
  • Robert Fripp (1)
  • Robert George (1)
  • Robert Hunter (4)
  • Robert Johnson (1)
  • Robert Kittle (1)
  • Robert Scheer (1)
  • Robert Venditti (1)
  • Rock Against Racism (4)
  • rockabilly (3)
  • Rocky Anderson (1)
  • Rod Serling (1)
  • Rod Stewart (1)
  • Rodgers and Hammerstein (1)
  • Roe v Wade (2)
  • Roger Canaff (1)
  • Roger Ebert (3)
  • Roger McGuinn (2)
  • Roger Rivard (1)
  • Roger Wicker (1)
  • Rolling Stone (1)
  • Rolling Stones (2)
  • Roman Polanski (2)
  • Ron Barnett (1)
  • Ron Palillo (1)
  • Ron Paul (18)
  • Ronald Reagan (6)
  • Roy Davis (1)
  • Ruby Dee (1)
  • Rudolph Bell (1)
  • rural (1)
  • Rush Limbaugh (2)
  • Russia (1)
  • Saints (3)
  • Sally Ride (1)
  • Sam Cooke (1)
  • Samhain (1)
  • Samuel L Jackson (1)
  • San Francisco (4)
  • Sandra Fluke (1)
  • Sandra Scheuer (3)
  • Sandy Hook (3)
  • Sanjay Gupta (1)
  • Santana (1)
  • Sarah Palin (6)
  • SC hate crime legislation (1)
  • Scientology (4)
  • SciFi (13)
  • Scooby Doo (1)
  • Scott Case (1)
  • Scott McKenzie (1)
  • Scott Olsen (1)
  • Scott Robertson (1)
  • Scott Walker (1)
  • SCOTUS (5)
  • SCpronet (1)
  • Sean Collier (1)
  • Sean Hannity (1)
  • Sean Kennedy (1)
  • Selma (1)
  • Senate (4)
  • Sex Pistols (2)
  • sexism (15)
  • sexuality (2)
  • Shae McDonovan (1)
  • Shaft (1)
  • Shannon Hoover Band (2)
  • Shantideva (3)
  • Sharon Bialek (1)
  • Shawn McCraney (1)
  • Sheila Jackson (1)
  • Shel Silverstein (1)
  • Shiva Rea (1)
  • shopping malls (1)
  • Sigourney Weaver (1)
  • Sikhism (1)
  • Simpsonville (2)
  • Sinclair Lewis (1)
  • Sissy Spacek (1)
  • skepticism (2)
  • skin cancer (1)
  • Slacker (1)
  • Slade (2)
  • sleaze (14)
  • Sly and the Family Stone (1)
  • Smurfs (1)
  • snakes (1)
  • socialism (1)
  • Solidarity (1)
  • Solstice (1)
  • Sonic Youth (1)
  • SOPA (2)
  • soul music (18)
  • Sounds True (1)
  • Sour Grapes (1)
  • South Carolina (116)
  • South Dakota (1)
  • South Park (1)
  • Southern Culture on the Skids (4)
  • Spartanburg (11)
  • Spartanburg Music and Arts Fest (1)
  • speciesism (1)
  • Spencer Dryden (1)
  • spiders (1)
  • Spike Lee (1)
  • Spirit (1)
  • spirituality (13)
  • SPLC (1)
  • sports (6)
  • SpringSkunk Music Fest (1)
  • Sree Sreenivasan (1)
  • St Francis (1)
  • St Gertrude (1)
  • St Patrick's Day (1)
  • St Stephen (1)
  • Stan Laurel (1)
  • Stan Lee (1)
  • Stand Your Ground (4)
  • Stanley Hazen (1)
  • Stanley Kubrick (1)
  • Star Trek (1)
  • Steely Dan (8)
  • Stephen Jones (2)
  • Stephen King (2)
  • Stephen Sondheim (1)
  • Stephen Stills (2)
  • Sterling Spann (1)
  • Steve Conliff (2)
  • Steve King (1)
  • Steve Miller Band (1)
  • Steven Pinker (2)
  • Sting (2)
  • Stone (1)
  • Stone Temple Pilots (1)
  • Stooges (1)
  • Stray Cats (1)
  • strikes (1)
  • Strom Thurmond (3)
  • Stuart Rojstaczer (1)
  • Stuff Fundies Like (2)
  • Stylistics (1)
  • suburbs (1)
  • Sun Ming Sheu (1)
  • Sundance Film Festival (1)
  • Superfly (1)
  • superstition (2)
  • supplements (4)
  • Surrogates (1)
  • Susan Jacoby (1)
  • Susan Smith (1)
  • Susan Sontag (2)
  • Susan Yassenoff (1)
  • Swami Bhaktipada (2)
  • Swamp Rabbit Trail (9)
  • Swati Patel (1)
  • Sweet (1)
  • Switzerland (1)
  • Sybil (1)
  • Sylvain Sylvain (1)
  • Syprian Harvey (1)
  • Taiwan (1)
  • talk radio (57)
  • Talking Heads (1)
  • TalkShoe (1)
  • Tam O'Shaughnessy (1)
  • Tami Winfrey Harris (1)
  • Tammy Bagwell (1)
  • Tariq Ali (1)
  • tarot (14)
  • tattoos (1)
  • Tavis Smiley (1)
  • Tawakkul Karman (1)
  • taxes (4)
  • Tea Party Movement (37)
  • techno (1)
  • Ted Christian (2)
  • Ted Kennedy (1)
  • Ted Nugent (2)
  • teenage idols (7)
  • Tennessee (4)
  • Terrence Malick (1)
  • Terri McKee (2)
  • terrorism (7)
  • Terry O'Quinn (1)
  • Texas (18)
  • Thailand (1)
  • Thanksgiving (3)
  • The Band (1)
  • The Big Lebowski (1)
  • The Clash (4)
  • The Dates (1)
  • The Dirty South (33)
  • The Doors (3)
  • The Flashbacks (1)
  • The Gawker (1)
  • The Honeycutters (1)
  • The Honeymooners (1)
  • The Jam (1)
  • The Kinks (2)
  • the male dilemma (13)
  • The Steel Drivers (1)
  • The Twilight Zone (2)
  • The View (1)
  • The Who (2)
  • They Might Be Giants (1)
  • Thomas Hatcher (2)
  • Thomas Klebold (1)
  • Tim King (1)
  • Tim Pawlenty (1)
  • Tim Pearson (1)
  • Tim Scott (2)
  • TIME (2)
  • Timmy Thomas (1)
  • Tina Anderson (5)
  • Tina Turner (1)
  • Toad the Wet Sprocket (1)
  • tobacco (1)
  • Todd Akin (2)
  • Todd Rundgren (1)
  • Todd Rutherford (1)
  • Tom Clements (1)
  • Tom Cruise (2)
  • Tom Davies (1)
  • Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers (1)
  • Tom Robinson (1)
  • Tom T. Hall (1)
  • Tommy Boyce (1)
  • Tommy Elrod (1)
  • Toni Basil (1)
  • Tony Joe White (1)
  • Toubab Krewe (1)
  • Tower of Power (1)
  • toys (1)
  • Traci Fant (8)
  • trains (2)
  • Trainspotting (1)
  • TransCanada (1)
  • transgender (10)
  • Trayvon Martin (7)
  • Trey Gowdy (7)
  • Trey Walker (2)
  • trolling (2)
  • Troy Anthony Davis (2)
  • Trublklet (1)
  • Truman Capote (1)
  • TS Eliot (1)
  • Tumblr (7)
  • Turner Classic Movies (1)
  • TV (35)
  • Twitter (10)
  • Tylenol (1)
  • Tyra Banks (1)
  • Tzima (1)
  • UFOs (1)
  • UFW (1)
  • UK (5)
  • Ulster (1)
  • Uncle Dave's Dead Air (4)
  • unions (10)
  • Unitarian Universalists (3)
  • universal health care (11)
  • Upasika Kee Nanayon (1)
  • Urban Farm (1)
  • US military (17)
  • USA Network (1)
  • vampires (1)
  • veganism (7)
  • vegetarianism (6)
  • Verizon (2)
  • Vermin Supreme (1)
  • Vernon Hugh Bowman (1)
  • veterans (8)
  • Veterans Day (2)
  • Vicky Gibson (1)
  • Victoria Brownworth (1)
  • Victoria Osteen (1)
  • Videodrome (1)
  • Vietnam (5)
  • Village Voice (3)
  • Vince Gill (1)
  • Vince Welnick (1)
  • violence against women (15)
  • Virginia (1)
  • Voices Against Violence (2)
  • Volkswagen (1)
  • Volunteer Jam (1)
  • Voodoo (1)
  • voting (1)
  • Wade Fulmer (1)
  • Walkupy (2)
  • Wall street (13)
  • Walter Becker (1)
  • Wanda Johnson (1)
  • War (1)
  • War (band) (1)
  • Warren Buffett (1)
  • Warren Farrell (1)
  • Warren Jeffs (1)
  • waterfalls (1)
  • Wayne Harris (1)
  • Weapon Y/Z (1)
  • Wendy Carlos (1)
  • West End (1)
  • West Memphis Three (2)
  • West Virginia (5)
  • Westboro Baptist Church (1)
  • WFIS (26)
  • White Horse Prophecy (1)
  • WHNS (1)
  • Wicca (2)
  • Widespread Panic (2)
  • Wikileaks (3)
  • Wild in the Streets (1)
  • Wild Women (1)
  • Wilhelm Reich (2)
  • Will Folks (7)
  • William Burroughs (1)
  • William F. Buckley (1)
  • William Gibson (1)
  • William Hickman (1)
  • William Mapother (1)
  • William Schroeder (3)
  • Willie Earle (4)
  • Windle Turley (1)
  • Winn Freeman (1)
  • Wisconsin (6)
  • WLXT (1)
  • WMUU (1)
  • WNCW (6)
  • Wofford College (1)
  • WOLI (4)
  • WOLT (7)
  • Womanist Musings (2)
  • Woodstock (1)
  • Woody Allen (3)
  • Wordless Wednesdays (25)
  • worldbeat (1)
  • WPCI (4)
  • WSPA (4)
  • WWII (2)
  • WXMP (1)
  • WYFF (1)
  • yard sales (1)
  • Yeardley Love (1)
  • Yippies (9)
  • Yo La Tengo (1)
  • you know who you are (8)
  • young women (5)
  • YouTube (6)
  • Yuri Melich (1)
  • Zager and Evans (1)
  • Zen of Retail (6)
  • Zenaida Fernandez-Gonzalez (1)
  • zombies (1)

Blog Archive

  • ►  2013 (84)
    • ►  September (4)
    • ►  August (5)
    • ►  July (8)
    • ►  June (10)
    • ►  May (11)
    • ►  April (12)
    • ►  March (13)
    • ►  February (12)
    • ►  January (9)
  • ►  2012 (201)
    • ►  December (25)
    • ►  November (8)
    • ►  October (16)
    • ►  September (15)
    • ►  August (15)
    • ►  July (10)
    • ►  June (16)
    • ►  May (13)
    • ►  April (21)
    • ►  March (21)
    • ►  February (20)
    • ►  January (21)
  • ▼  2011 (215)
    • ▼  December (18)
      • Have a great New Year!
      • Onward and Upward
      • Merry Christmas from the Family
      • Wordless Wednesday: Greer Opry House
      • Two Father Christmases
      • Alyssa Clemens explains it all for you
      • So true
      • Haley Watch: Nikki wastes another $1M, needs tuto...
      • Bright lights, dark room
      • Greenville News brainwashed by Bob Jones University
      • Fun Friday Links
      • The Real Daisy
      • Santa Claws
      • Everybody's having fun
      • Rev Charles Phelps resigns from Bob Jones Universi...
      • Occupy the Christmas parade!
      • News flash: People on TV live better than we do
      • Moment of Panic
    • ►  November (23)
    • ►  October (23)
    • ►  September (19)
    • ►  August (22)
    • ►  July (11)
    • ►  June (22)
    • ►  May (15)
    • ►  April (21)
    • ►  March (17)
    • ►  February (16)
    • ►  January (8)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile