scattered shots
Jan. 26th, 2007 01:10 amIt's rather cold out, so today I wore my grandfather's old coat. It's a genuine raccoon fur full-length coat, and it's about 90 years old. It's very heavy, and is the warmest garment I have ever worn--warmer even than my cloak. (Were I to wear them together, I would probably develop Dave's Syndrome. :)
I have been spending a lot of imaginative energy on D&D of late, in particular the Midnight setting. (In brief, imagine something like Middle Earth 100 years after Sauron won, and you are part of the last resistance movement.) D&D, as a game system, is built around heroic fantasy, and not realism, hence 1 guy with a sword can beat 20 others with swords, and I do enjoy it, but mingling it with the constraints of a tragic setting has really captured my fancy. It helps that we decided to turn Suave's campaign into a share world. Thus, I ran a two-part story about a mysterious island (I have to pat myself on the back for better than normal planning), and next (alias TBA) will run a story in which we will be unit commanders for an isolated dwarven enclave with an army of orcs bearing down on us for a winter seige. Where it will go from there, I don't know, but I'm excited about weaving stories back and forth, and maybe having cross-overs between games.
Had lovely meals/chats last week with Morlock and Syd and later with Allen Steele, asking him for advice on getting published. The most pressing advice was to write every day, which I haven't been, at all, what with thinking about Midnight, and about the game I'm running on the Cloth. Still, good chat, and I shall start writing again tomorrow.
Oh, and last Saturday, M and I went to a friend's house in Vermont where we joined a group for a reading of Richard III. Compulsive narcissist that I am, I was allowed to read the part of Dick III himself, and I did well, for the most part. (I stumbled over a few scenes I didn't remember, but I think I managed the famous opening and ending lines as actual speech, as opposed to declamations.) M read Lady Anne (amongst others) and our friends SV and CSD were there, too. (SV was a fun Buckingham to play against.) One thing that struck me on re-reading the play was how so many of the characters bemoaned their fates, and so few of them recognized that they had it coming, because they were mostly treacherous, murdering assholes.
I heard some of the State of the Union address, and read most the text. It's nice that Bush is beginning to recognize some of the real priorities facing the world (like global climate change and a collapsing health care system) and that he's at least somewhat aware of how badly the war he started for no good reason has become a major disaster, but he's still a liar,a weasel, and a shameless incompetent. His horrible example continue to make the Democrats look much better than they deserve to look. Where are the conservatives like my dad, people who, even when they are terribly wrong or complete dicks, nevertheless concern themselves with sensible, grown-up concerns like not spending more than we have, making sure that whatever policy we pursue will at least accomplish its stated goal, and not starting another fight when you haven't finished the first? It seems increasingly that the only "conservative" voices out there are people like Rush Limbaugh, who admitted in an NPR interview today that what really drives his radio show is greed--bigger audience = higher advertising rates. Jefferson and Washington are forever tainted by their ownership of slaves, but even today, they look good in comparison because they were driven by more than avarice. (Though they were both in it for the money, too.)
I have been spending a lot of imaginative energy on D&D of late, in particular the Midnight setting. (In brief, imagine something like Middle Earth 100 years after Sauron won, and you are part of the last resistance movement.) D&D, as a game system, is built around heroic fantasy, and not realism, hence 1 guy with a sword can beat 20 others with swords, and I do enjoy it, but mingling it with the constraints of a tragic setting has really captured my fancy. It helps that we decided to turn Suave's campaign into a share world. Thus, I ran a two-part story about a mysterious island (I have to pat myself on the back for better than normal planning), and next (alias TBA) will run a story in which we will be unit commanders for an isolated dwarven enclave with an army of orcs bearing down on us for a winter seige. Where it will go from there, I don't know, but I'm excited about weaving stories back and forth, and maybe having cross-overs between games.
Had lovely meals/chats last week with Morlock and Syd and later with Allen Steele, asking him for advice on getting published. The most pressing advice was to write every day, which I haven't been, at all, what with thinking about Midnight, and about the game I'm running on the Cloth. Still, good chat, and I shall start writing again tomorrow.
Oh, and last Saturday, M and I went to a friend's house in Vermont where we joined a group for a reading of Richard III. Compulsive narcissist that I am, I was allowed to read the part of Dick III himself, and I did well, for the most part. (I stumbled over a few scenes I didn't remember, but I think I managed the famous opening and ending lines as actual speech, as opposed to declamations.) M read Lady Anne (amongst others) and our friends SV and CSD were there, too. (SV was a fun Buckingham to play against.) One thing that struck me on re-reading the play was how so many of the characters bemoaned their fates, and so few of them recognized that they had it coming, because they were mostly treacherous, murdering assholes.
I heard some of the State of the Union address, and read most the text. It's nice that Bush is beginning to recognize some of the real priorities facing the world (like global climate change and a collapsing health care system) and that he's at least somewhat aware of how badly the war he started for no good reason has become a major disaster, but he's still a liar,a weasel, and a shameless incompetent. His horrible example continue to make the Democrats look much better than they deserve to look. Where are the conservatives like my dad, people who, even when they are terribly wrong or complete dicks, nevertheless concern themselves with sensible, grown-up concerns like not spending more than we have, making sure that whatever policy we pursue will at least accomplish its stated goal, and not starting another fight when you haven't finished the first? It seems increasingly that the only "conservative" voices out there are people like Rush Limbaugh, who admitted in an NPR interview today that what really drives his radio show is greed--bigger audience = higher advertising rates. Jefferson and Washington are forever tainted by their ownership of slaves, but even today, they look good in comparison because they were driven by more than avarice. (Though they were both in it for the money, too.)
no subject
Date: 2007-01-26 01:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-01-28 03:32 am (UTC)I think Dan Rostenkowski did something similar a few years ago.
no subject
Date: 2007-03-20 07:41 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-03-20 08:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-03-20 08:43 pm (UTC)I am unfortunately not local, which means I only interact with
no subject
Date: 2007-03-20 09:30 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-03-20 10:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-01-26 02:10 pm (UTC)Two things that amused me about the state of the union:
no subject
Date: 2007-01-27 06:56 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-01-28 03:29 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-03-20 08:00 pm (UTC)Washington did speak of the evils of slavery, in private. He apparently grew more and more anti-slavery as he got older, especially after he came into contact with the Marquis de Lafayette. No one is sure why he didn't talk about it more in public, though some people think he was afraid the issue would split the nation.
Apparently, he didn't manumit his slaves after he came to dislike slavery because he was afraid they'd be left to fend for themselves, though he did stop buying slaves.
aLso, I was wrong-his will said his slaves would be freed on his wife's death, but she freed them before that.
I don't like Nixon at all. Creating the EPA is, in my mind, of a piece with the treachery that marked the man's life, since it went against the philosophy of government he supposedly believed in.
On the scales of his life, Washington comes out overall, in my opinion, pretty well, even with his flaws. Nixon, on the other hand...it's hard to find anything but flaws about that wretched tyrant.
no subject
Date: 2007-03-21 04:51 am (UTC)Mrs. Washington did, indeed, free the slaves early. However, as someone else at UMass pointed out to me, that may simply have been prudence. After all, the terms of her husband's will were known to the slaves, and provided them with a powerful motive to murder her.