With 150 votes and 436 comments, "Iran installing new centrifuges" was among our top stories of the week. As earthlingerer saw it, the Iranians had nothing to apologize for: "If I were Iran, with nukes on either side of me, and the 'world police' kicking in my neighbors' doors, shooting everyone in the face, and then stealing all their valuables, you can bet I'd be looking to create some 'back up.'" M. Simon gave this argument a tongue-in-cheek endorsement: "How will they be able to keep hanging 16 yr old gays if the USA deposes their government? We need to keep our hands off their culture." That last comment led to a mini-detour about gay rights in Iran--surely still in their infancy--as well as a little-known factoid from wasntme: "Iran has the world's most active sex-change hospital. All one needs are recommendations from two doctors. For four thousand dollars a pop, a man becomes a woman and vice versa." But as the conversation veered back toward Iran's growing nuclear muscle, Dicax Maximus held out little hope for negotiations with Ahmadinejad: "Talking to a sovereign nation is one thing, talking to a nutter who wants to remove another sovereign nation from the map is another." Bkumm, meanwhile, argued that Iran's anti-Israel rhetoric was mostly posturing: "Iran has no desire (despite their repeated outcries to the contrary) to see Israel off the face of the map. Why would they? Iran's influence is stronger and more far-reaching with Israel intact."
The death of screen idol and gun enthusiast Charlton Heston at age 84 touched off some predictable disagreements at Propeller. HOUSEMD saluted Heston's acting skills and marital longevity: "Great actor, great man. One in a million from the Hollywood crowd that stayed married more than 24 hours." Poulenc took more of a wet blanket approach: "RIP, but please! Bad (OK, mediocre) actor--and a gun-hugger. Let's not let nostalgia for the movies of our collective youth cloud our sense of who the man actually was." This prompted some point-blank exchanges all around. Said 4mogger: "You are entitled to your opinion. And I am entitled to call you a slackjawed liberal. Thanks again to Heston and all of those like him that serve the cause of freedom every day." He was seconded by avoth: "Are people who, for whatever reason, badmouth the dead (especially among those who hold the deceased in high esteem) worth our attention?" Meanwhile, bluenote1522 delivered a mixed verdict, taking Heston's acting with a grain of salt but admiring his old-school class: "My wife loved this guy. I always liked him but thought his acting rather robotic. Admired his commitment to family as well. We have lost a bit of Hollywood with his passing. Old Hollywood, that is--I wouldn't give you a plugged nickel for today's Hollywood." Added GloryB: "RIP, Moses and Ben-Hur."
"Fed Officials Worried About Recession" got 185 votes and 69 comments. Some members, like not2needy, sounded a note of panic: "Black Tuesday! Looks like that's where we are headed again. I wasn't around during the Depression, but my mother told me many things about it. I don't want to go there!" GHOSTWHOWALKS had little in the way of encouraging words: "The Fed is doing all it can to insure a complete collapse of the dollar, and [is] being helped by the White House and Congress." It was markmawn2 who injected a little levity into the discussion: "Wow, this is all hype according to my local real estate associations. All good news will bounce back this spring, and house prices will once again be on the rise, and there will be pretty pink ponies for everyone. Ain't no bubble here." What was striking, in fact, was that almost nobody dismissed the economic jitters as Chicken Little behavior. True, amazed urged us to ride out the storm: "Hey, folks! Recessions happen--cyclically and regularly. We are due. No doubt recessions suck, but you just have to hang on through them and hope you come out okay on the other side." Still, the tone was pretty apocalyptic throughout much of the thread. Quite literally, in the case of cushi: "I read the Bible almost every day, and I understand what's coming down the pike! It's truly praying time now, because we're in for a very, very bumpy ride!" Ladies and gentlemen, the captain has turned on the Fasten Seatbelts sign. Please return to your seats immediately.
Which story generated the lengthiest conversation this week? That would be "Rev. Jeremiah Wright, a True Patriot," with 167 votes and 623 comments. As OnionHead pointed out: "This is one article no one in the GOP will read." But the thread also included a bombshell from tanglang--he voted for Gore in 2000!--as well as some background info on that electoral pratfall: "It was not until shortly after the election and my 21st birthday that I sobered up and decided to become a productive member of society as opposed to the pothead liberal dropout that I had been for so long." A story about Condoleezza Rice as a potential vice-presidential candidate also got a big response, with 114 votes and 198 comments. For walden3, the idea of Rice as vice-president was a complete travesty: "What has she done right? Nothing, and that is the only and best reason that Republicans need to give her a promotion." BB64 rose to her defense at once: "Spend time reading her papers, listen to her speak, see the things she and her family lived through. It's shocking someone with her skills and intellect would waste time working for the government. As a people, we're lucky to have her on our side." Elsewhere, the community spoke up about prison closures, textbooks, global warming, and (sssh) performance problems at Propeller. And this story, about buildings made entirely of ice, bagged more votes than any other: 196. Chill out, folks, and we'll catch up on Monday.
Tags: week in review, WeekInReview, wir
At NewsQuake!, the Netscape staff blogs about breaking news of every stripe. Looking for context, commentary, and lively reportage? You’ve come to the right place.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Peter Chen — 12:24PM on Apr 14th 2008
1. Sigh!!!! I had discussed the blessing and ***** that sciences had bought us. In this case (nuclear bombs) it is a definite ***** although I do not yet know if Iran is really going for nuclear bombs or just energy generations. But US has to take the lead in this end to nuclear proliferation. You cannot keep a stockpile of nuclear bombs enough to kill the world population a few times over plus continue to develop new nuclear bomb technologies (not sure if I am accurate on these) and tell others not to make nuclear bombs. The world don't want double standard.
But I am the type who can see all sides. I can visualize the anxieties of US giving up on this nuclear business and sometime in the future having to face with world unfriendly parties with nuclear capabilities. And yet what use are nuclear bombs if all, including non-nuclear nations suffers from a nuclear war, including the party that starts it.
Now the above is the relevant part. Now come the less relevant. I got to this post via a link that says Netscape in AOL when I opened my Netscape browser, so it is not entirely irrelevant. I search for a place to post question on what is the status of Netscape now that AOL has withdrawn support. I had expected to see a website related to Netscape browser when I clicked on that "Netscape" link in AOL homepage, not another news website.
Peter (Blog*Star)
http://blogger-tricks.blogspot.com/ (Blogger Tips and Tricks)