Christian Schneider

Author, Columnist

Month: August 2008 (page 2 of 2)

Obama – An ’80s Icon

Undoubtedly, there will be much amateurish trash floating around the internet during the presidential campaign.  However, this video is actually pretty good – and it is not only safe for work, but turning up your volume is encouraged:

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Will Sniff You For Food

High gas prices pinching your wallet?  Slow economy got you down?  Well, you have no idea how bad it can really get – just ask your dog.

According to the Rock County Humane Society, a slow economy is tough on pets, since people start dumping them on the side of the road when times get tough.  From the Beloit Daily News:

Economic challenges hard on pets

Last month, someone dumped a mother cat and 24 kittens in a ditch in Newark Township.

Two litters of kittens were less than a week old, another two litters were 3 to 5 weeks old and kittens in the last litter were about 9 weeks old. A Rock County Sheriff\’s Deputy brought the kittens to the Rock County Humane Society, but only the mother and three of the older kittens were able to be saved. The rest died because they were in bad shape due to flees [sic] and dehydration.

\”God only knows how long they had been in the ditch,\” said Rock County Humane Society Executive Director Chris Kometski. \”That was 25 cats dumped in a ditch.\”

Kometski said the humane society has noticed a \”remarkable\” increase in the number of animals being abandoned or brought to the shelter because people are losing their housing or can\’t afford to take care of their pets any longer. The increase has been happening since last fall, Kometski said.

In an anonymous letter to the Beloit Daily News, a resident of Avon Township told the paper more and more people are dumping their pets along country roads in the township. The resident had personally taken in three abandoned dogs and had tried to catch a kitten.

Look, I know the Humane Society has every right to use whatever angle they feel necessary to find more homes for the kitties – but come on.  So the U.S. economy grows at 1.9%, instead of 3%, and suddenly everybody\’s dumping their \”expensive\” cats on the side of the road?

What happens when gas prices spike later in the year?  Are you going to see an epidemic of wives driving up to Minocqua to drop their husbands off on the side of a dirt road somewhere?  Seriously – once gas hits $4.25 a gallon, that\’s entirely likely.  (Ask my wife, and she\’d probably suggest $3.00 a gallon as the threshold.)

Of course, it would have been nice for the article to have one opinion that was mildly skeptical of these claims – instead, the short Beloit Daily News piece managed to cram in 18 quotes from the Humane Society representative.  It\’s essentially just a transcript of the reporter\’s phone conversation with Chris Kometski.

But remember – when hard economic times hit, just think of the puppies.  Don\’t be surprised on your next rip up north if you see a couple basset hound hobos with \”Will Poop for Food\” signs on the side of the road.

Catching Olympic Fever (Or At Least a Rash)

It has been years since I\’ve paid any attention to the Olympics. In fact, since the 1996 games in Atlanta, I\’ve pretty much been openly antagonistic towards the Olympics, and tried to avoid them at all cost.

But this year, I\’ve decided to buy in. Maybe it\’s because I just read David Maraniss\’ excellent book on the 1960 Rome Olympics. Perhaps I need a diversion from the Brett Favre hostage negotiations. Maybe it\’s because I have a secret desire to gaze at Michael Phelps\’ abs. Who knows.

Speaking of Phelps, I was discussing his medal chase with a female friend of mine, and she expressed her undying love for him. I mentioned the fact that he happens to be somewhat ugly, and she indelicately shot back with the following: \”If he can swim, you know what else he can do.\” Is this a common perception by women of swimmers? If this is actually the case, expect a lot more guys to show up at the bank wearing Speedos. (And much more confusion about whether this is some kind of \”stick up.\”)

Also, I think America owes me a debt of gratitude – I am currently holding all of Phelps\’ fat for him. When he gets back to the states, he gets it all back. Right now, it currently resides in my abdomen, on loan.

It was actually just a few minutes ago that the US mounted their miraculous comeback against the braggadocious French in the men\’s freestyle relay. When we won, I let out a yelp of excitement for winning the gold – something I couldn\’t have imagined just three days ago. (In defense of the French, it is hard swimming while wearing a beret and smoking.)

I do, however, have a complaint about the swimming. When they show the female swimmers, it\’s too hard to tell whether they\’re hot or not when they wear the swim caps and goggles. In the absence of any American in the specific heat, is there really any better criteria on which to choose for whom to root? I propose making them wear swim caps that has hair on them that matches what their real hair looks like.

Actually, one of the best parts of the Olympics is watching them with my daughter, and showing her all the sports that women can compete in. She seemed pretty enthralled with women\’s volleyball, which is perfect, since she\’s probably going to be pretty tall (so far, she\’s in the 90th percentile in height for a four-year old.) However, my wife took it a little too far when she suggested women\’s beach volleyball as an option. Not in my lifetime, as long as they continue to wear the nearly invisible bikinis as uniforms. In fact, I did plenty of research on the topic, watching a good 3 hours of women\’s beach volleyball. (And I noticed George W. Bush spent a lot of time knocking the volleyball around himself. His approval rating just skyrocketed to 4%.)

Speaking of presidents, I read that John McCain spent $6 million and Barack Obama $5 million on TV ads during the Olympics. Can\’t they just call it a truce, leave us alone, and let us watch the games in peace?

I love the Home Depot commercials that brag about how many Olympians work at their stores. That\’s just wonderful – maybe when they start giving out medals for \”helping me find a bolt that fits this screw,\” then maybe I\’d be able to get some service around this damn place.

So far, aside from the fatal stabbing, I think China has acquitted itself well. How many medals their teams will will is still an open question. I do guarantee this, however – if they ever held a Pet Olympics, China would have hands-down the fastest dogs.

As a final note, I absolutely detest the predicament steroids has put us viewers in. Take Dara Torres, for instance – she\’s 41 years old, just had a kid, and now she\’s breaking swimming world records. Trust me – I\’ve seen a child emerge from a woman first hand. If another human being ever emerged from my loins, it would take me a decade to be able to balance my checkbook, much less become an Olympic swimmer. So Dara Torres is either the most amazing story we\’ll see during any recent Olympics, or she\’s the most detestable human being alive. And there\’s really no middle ground. And it\’s just sad.

(Incidentally, during an NBC story on Torres, she mentioned that her new baby inspired her to get back in the pool. In fact, she had to get back to making a living, seeing as how John Edwards was late with his support checks.)

In Case You Missed It

Last week, I showed up on Charlie Sykes\’ TV show again. We discuss minimum markup, why government won\’t let me drink, and Trenni Kusnierek.

Watch it here.

And yes, I am aware that my hair remains one of the great mysteries of our time. It looks okay in the mirror beforehand – not sure what happens to it on the way to the set.

Clear the Schedule Tonight

Tonight, the incomparable Eef Barzelay will be performing at Cafe Montmartre here in Madison. Show starts at 9, but there\’s an opener. You should totally go.

I know I\’ve posted this before, but here\’s a song Eef performed at Indie Coffee here in Madison a couple years ago:

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I know nobody likes having someone push their music on them, but I sincerely believe you will be enchanted. And I know your tastes pretty well.

Jeff Suppan Loves Your Eggs

You may recall the election of 2006, when the issue of stem cell research was at the forefront of political campaigns across the county. At the time, Missouri had a constitutional amendment before the voters that protected embryonic stem cell research – the advertising in favor of which featured Michael J. Fox.

The opposition to the stem cell bill included some Missouri-based celebrities, including current Brewer (and noted God enthusiast) Jeff Suppan:

It\’s fitting that Suppan takes his faith in the Lord so seriously – since I manage to use God\’s name in various creative ways while he\’s pitching.

And So It Ends

In 1776, General George Washington began pulling out of New York after the American army suffered a string of humiliating defeats at the hands of the British, and he had a decision to make. Does he leave the City of New York standing for the British to enjoy, or does he burn the place down, so they can\’t occupy it? Before fully retreating, he got a letter from Congress ordering him to leave the city standing. As he would later write to his brother, \”Had I been left to the dictates of my own judgment, New York should have been laid in ashes.\”

Brett Favre has been traded to the New York Jets. And I have to say – I\’m with Washington.

And so it goes. Historians will now remember the humid evening of August 7th, 2008 as the night Brett Favre chose to play for a 4-12 Jets team, virtually guaranteeing an ignominious end to his career. I\’ve written plenty about this nonsense, and there\’s no need to rehash it all here. I just wish I had Doc Brown\’s Delorean so I could climb in, fire up the flux capacitor, and skip having to watch the embarrassment of Favre trying to throw to Jerricho Cotchery and Laveranues Coles. (Although Bubba Franks is on the Jets\’ preseason roster – maybe they can exhume Dorsey Levens and Antonio Freeman for old time\’s sake.)

The biggest winner in Favre\’s move to New York is clearly the drugstore closest to Sports Illustrated writer Peter King\’s house, as he will now be buying a lot of lotion for Brett\’s daily rubdowns.

So as I write this as ESPN is on in the background, it appears they are parading every douchebag, bloodsucking reporter they have out, one by one, explaining how it is Fox Sports scooped them on a story they had 32 people covering. So far, we\’ve seen Sal Paolantonio, Rachel Nichols, Chris Mortensen, and noted \”being washed up\” expert Trent Dilfer chiming in.

Incidentally, all day ESPN kept playing up the interview Rachel Nichols got from Favre outside his plane before he took off from Green Bay this morning. Honest to God – why do we even have a Department of Homeland Security if Rachel Nichols can chase down a plane on a runway?

As a final thought, just remember – the Packers still have the best QB in the NFC North. And absolutely nothing has changed with regard to the Packers\’ roster from March of this year – except that Brett Favre will be playing in another city. No tears were shed when Reggie came back with the Carolina Panthers, and none should be in this case.

America Wins War on Poverty

Sparking a nationwide party whose scale hasn\’t been seen since Victory in Europe Day in 1945, Americans from coast to coast today celebrated the successful end of the United States\’ 44-year War on Poverty.

Democrat President Lyndon B. Johnson announced his declaration of war on want in his State of the Union Speech on January 8th, 1964. LBJ\’s \”Great Society\” anti-poverty programs expanded upon the legacy of Franklin D. Roosevelt. While FDR\’s \”New Deal\” programs were really just a slap-fight against poverty, it took LBJ\’s bold action to escalate the battle to full-scale warfare.

Heartless conservatives initially derided the War on Poverty and decried its expense. They absurdly suggested that no amount of taxpayer dollars would ever truly end poverty as long as some individuals chose to drop out of school, abuse drugs, join gangs and give birth to children out of wedlock. Those reactionaries who predicted War on Poverty welfare policies would institutionalize a culture of government dependency are eating crow today.

History will not be kind to the conservatives\’ now-discredited assertions that the only real way for an individual to climb out of poverty was through education, gainful employment, marriage and thrift.

\”The Democrats said we could end poverty as long as we spent enough of my money for enough time on government programs,\” said taxpayer Alice Anderson. \”By golly, they were right! Nobody is poor anymore.\”

As it so often has been in its history, the United States was behind the curve on defeating poverty. Wealth redistribution and forced collectivization in places like the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and communist China ended poverty in these countries decades ago.

On the campaign trail today, Democrat Presidential candidate Barack Obama marked the historic event. Mr. Obama chastised Republicans who had long sought a timetable for America\’s withdrawal from the War on Poverty.

\”The Democrats saw poverty could be eliminated, but only if we spent trillions upon trillions of taxpayer dollars over 44 years on government handouts,\” said Mr. Obama. \”We saw poverty was the enemy and we knew war was the only answer and we promised to fight. And Democrats would never just up and quit in the middle of a war!\”

\”Hope. Change.\” added Mr. Obama.

The smashing success of the now-ended War on Poverty has given hope that similar wars may be waged and won. The tax hikes and strict government regulations that make up plans for the Democrats\’ War on Climate Change are expected to be just as effective in the fight against global warming.

Time For a New Jersey

Fun fact: I only own two NFL jerseys: Michael Vick and Brett Favre. And honestly, I\’m not sure which one I\’d be more embarrassed to wear in public. (On the bright side, in a couple of days my Favre jersey will officially become a \”throwback,\” and be worth triple what it is now.)

So the search is on for a new jersey, but I\’m not really sure who my second favorite Packer actually is. The problem is, most of the guys that I like the most (Woodson, Driver) are old – so if you go out and buy their jersey now, you\’re really not maximizing your dollar. Seriously – a Charles Woodson jersey should come with a 2009 expiration date.

All the other guys are too young and inexperienced to warrant a jersey purchase. Ryan Grant? Nah. Aaron Rodgers? You\’d be better off waiting a couple years and buying a Brohm jersey.

The one guy that kind of falls right in the middle is Greg Jennings. Young, productive, just hitting his stride, and (as far as we know) doesn\’t fight dogs. So unless I can be convinced otherwise, Jennings might be the winner. The downside, of course, is that if you wear a jersey of a player 10 years younger than you, it kind of looks like a cry for help.

The other direction to go would be just to get a jersey of some random ex-Packer that makes people chuckle when they see it. You still occasionally see people at games with a Jurkovic or Lamont Hollinquest Jersey. And, of course, those guys are unlikely to sully the name on their jersey – mostly because their names will never be uttered in public again.

Then again, I could just go out of the box and get a Clinton Portis jersey. I like his wacky disguises.

Oh, and as a postscript to the whole Favre thing, I have to mark this momentous occasion – very rarely do I disagree with Rick Esenberg on anything, but on the whole Favre issue, he is absolutely dead wrong. And given the poll numbers my employer just cranked out, it looks like most of Wisconsin is with me.

As my friend Mike put it in an e-mail:

Prima donna ingrate. If TO were pulling this stuff, Green Bay fans, Michael Hunt, Tom Oates, and all the radio guys would be screaming about what a piece of trash he was. But because it\’s Saint Favre, the rules are different.
Favre\’s been lying and leaking and scheming to wreck the Packers for 8 weeks.
If he cares so damn much about not wanting to be a distraction, he should go home and sit on his tractor.

Bloggers and Think Tanks = TLA

A few months ago, I wrote a piece for the State Policy Network Magazine that discussed the symbiotic relationship between bloggers and think tanks. Here it is:

Bloggers and Think Tanks: A Dream Team

By Christian Schneider
Published on Tuesday, April 01, 2008
ARTICLES

Imagine the nation\’s best college football coach, standing at his chalkboard, diagramming plays. He has spent hours staring, bleary-eyed, at videotapes of his next opponent. He has missed meals with his family in order to spend obscene amounts of time diagramming plays that will secure victory in this week\’s game.

Then, imagine that coach has no team.

With all the work he puts in researching his next opponent, a coach needs his players to carry out the game plan. Otherwise, regardless of how brilliant his research is, he\’s talking to an empty room.

Across America, free market think tanks are starting to figure out how to put together \”teams\” to implement their game plans. These teams are made up primarily of the \”citizen media,\” i.e., bloggers. When free-market think tanks begin to involve bloggers in their dissemination of ideas, it provides the institutes with a large, influential web of voices that can highlight issues that may not receive coverage in the mainstream media.

Read More…

My Proudest Parenting Moment

Okay, real quick story from this weekend that demonstrates what a stellar parent I am:

On Saturday, my wife took my 4-year old daughter to the grocery store. But when they get there, my daughter starts throwing a fit and refuses to go in the store. Why, you may ask?

Because the store was \”Cub.\” And my daughter kept telling my wife that she hates the Cubs.

Honest to God true story. That is a young woman that is on the right path.

Brewin\’ Up a Common Goal

I have a column today in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel discussing the prospective healing powers of the Brewers for the City of Milwaukee.

Interestingly, I wrote the editorial a week ago, with the Brewers coming off a streak where they won 9 of 10 games. Everyone knows that the team imploded during the Cubs series last week, losing four straight. This was partly why I took the Brewers\’ losses so hard – if they went on a disastrous losing streak, it would render my column moot and make me look like a moron. (I still might be a moron, but it\’s not because of the column.) In fact, during the week, it looked like the only unifying effect the Brew Crew would have is that people of all races would be out with torches, burning Miller Park to the ground. Fortunately, a couple road wins against the Braves have turned the ship around a little.

Anyway, you can read the column here.

"Harry Was Very Excited"

For those of you who don\’t recognize what a gold mine local Wisconsin newspapers are for entertainment, I give you this: A photo essay of a local resident enjoying a day at a Wisconsin Badger cookout…

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All in all, a big day for Harry Baller. I mean, come on – someone at the paper had to know, right?

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