Pre-primary humor

Pre-primary humor


(1803-1882)
Love’s Philosophy
The fountains mingle with the river,
And the rivers with the ocean;
The winds of heaven mix forever,
With a sweet emotion;
Nothing in the world is single;
All things by a law divine
In one another’s being mingle;–
Why not I with thine?See! the mountains kiss high heaven,
And the waves clasp one another;
No sister flower would be forgiven,
If it disdained it’s brother;
And the sunlight clasps the earth,
And the moonbeams kiss the sea;–
What are all these kissings worth,
If thou kiss not me?
I’m pretty mad at the Rev. Jeremiah Wright right now but, unlike a certain evil vice president that we know, Wright served his country
My 10-year-old wants to see this and, although it’s rated PG-13, I’m not only gonna let him, I’ll go with him if he’ll have me (I think he prefers to go with his friends).
The Washington Post wrote it up today:
Nerve Of Steel: To Pull Off the Making of ‘Iron Man’ Took Some Transformative Powers By John Anderson, Washington Post Staff Writer, Thursday, May 1, 2008
NEW YORK–Not all superheroes are created equal. Some have X-ray vision. Some are born to great wealth. Some are deemed worthy of two major Hollywood features in less than five years (the Hulk). And others are, well, Iron Man. He’s not Superman, he’s not Batman, he’s not even Spider-Man . . . “or Hulk or X-Men or Fantastic Four,” admits director Jon Favreau. “You could really go down the list till you get to Iron Man.”
Somewhere in the vicinity of the Mighty Thor, maybe?
“Yeah, that’s in the ballpark.”
And yet . . . and yet . . . “Iron Man,” Favreau’s armor-plated action-adventure epic (which arrives in theaters Friday), is perhaps the most anticipated feature of the ever-earlier summer movie season, a roboticized tent pole with more handicaps than a stakes race at Pimlico. The hero is obscure, the star is too old, the studio’s game plan is brand new and the director is anti-special effects (“anti-CGI, definitely”). Still, the sense is that the movie’s already a blockbuster, that success is a fait accompli.
“We’re in a kind of pre-victory lap,” jokes actor Robert Downey Jr., whose casting as “Iron Man’s” inventor/weapons manufacturer Tony Stark lit up the Internet when first announced. It is, on the surface, a long-shot casting call. But it’s also Downey’s insouciant charm and dry wit that will be the not-so-secret ingredients of any “Iron Man” windfall.
Dan Froomkin’s “White House Watch” in the Washington Post has always been a must read for me. Today’s piece show one of the reasons why:
Five Years After ‘Mission Accomplished’
Much has happened in the five years since President Bush flew aboard the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier in “Top Gun” style, stood under a banner proclaiming “Mission Accomplished” and proudly declared: “Major combat operations in Iraq have ended.”
Five years ago, 139 American troops had died in Iraq. Now that number is 4,064. Five years ago, 542 American troops had been wounded in Iraq. Now that number is 29,395.
Five years ago, the national debt was $6.5 trillion. Now it’s $9.3 trillion. Five years ago, your average gallon of gas cost $1.44. Now it costs $3.57. Five years ago, Bush’s job-approval rating was at 70 percent. Now it’s at 28.
Five years ago, Bush’s appearance on the carrier was widely hailed as a brilliant PR move, imbuing the president with the aura of a conquering hero. Now, it’s possibly the single most potent image of Bush’s hubris.
One thing that’s not so different: Five years ago, there were about 150,000 American troops in Iraq. Now there are slightly more.
(Jae C. Hong/Associated Press) Sen. Barack Obama campaigning in Indiana on Thursday.
Is this enough to make a difference: Joe Andrew, a superdelegate who was the Democratic National Committee chairman under President Bill Clinton, announced Thursday that he had switched his allegiance from Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton to Senator Barack Obama in the race for the presidential nomination.
Alan Shore of Boston Legal
This is from a couple of days ago: