Awful

I wrote this over at Michael’s place:

If you look at the Louisiana Constitution it does state:

The military shall be subordinate to the civil power.

This does allow for directed the legitimate use of the military by civil officials and, while what you say about unarmed people is entirely correct – who cares if they have seven DVD players – there is also this (from CNN):

Before Thursday night fell, police were stopping anyone they saw on the street and warning them that they were not safe from armed bands of young men who were attacking people and attempting to rape women.

That is not looting. That is organized violent opposition. How can you deal with an evacuation, dealing with fires and exploding chemical train cars, removing the dead if you also have people sniping at you. What happens if it does not dissipate of its own accord? An organized civilly directed use of military force in an urban setting may be required.

What an awful prospect.

Having officials threaten use of a standing army against the population may well responate with Americans more than elsewhere given what gave rise to their nation. That is why state constitutions speak against military rule under any circumstances. There may, however, have to be some use of the military by civic officials which may not be as random as suggested in this perhaps rash statement by the Governor:

She said Thursday night that 300 soldiers from the Arkansas National Guard had arrived — “fresh back from Iraq. These are some of the 40,000 extra troops that I have demanded,” Blanco said. “They have M-16s, and they’re locked and loaded … I have one message for these hoodlums: These troops know how to shoot and kill, and they are more than willing to do so if necessary, and I expect they will.”

For the military to engage rather than just take up the good cause of assisting in a disaster, there would have to be a plan which they would accept operating under. The sort of planning I think John does. For one soldier to fire, however, just takes a sniping idiot. And they seem to exist.

I think the Flea is right, though. I think in Canada the lads in green would have been in a wee bit earlier. But it would have been both as assistance and less about deterrence perhaps – but we are a different country with different expectations and comfort levels. In the end it is all so hard to compare and judge which is what makes it awful.

John Peel Day

I like this idea. To celebrate the memory of the massively influential BBC radio host John Peel, who died last year, people are encouraged to put on their own gig of some sort:

The very first John Peel Day will take place on Thursday October 13th. The day will be a celebration of John’s life and massive contribution to music and broadcasting with as many venues as possible staging gigs across the UK under the banner of Peel Day.

Maybe Gordon and the Salty Hams will reform for John Peel Day. That and a drum and cymbal parade around the living room surely are in order.

Update: On a somewhat unrelated note, if you have broadband, check out Hayseed Dixie on BBC Player. That is why the internet was created.

Lech!

lech1Lech. In Poland you would know that there were two Lechs – some sort of mythical hero founder of the country as well as a ciggie smoking ship builder who led the freeing of the nation, won the Nobel and then made them cringe a little with his rough manners when they made him President. A little confusingly for the 1991 backpacker, it is also a brand of beer.

I like Lech. They were sitting on the Lenin Shipyards’s walls when I was in high school convinced others, Ronnie and Leonyd, were going to find a way to glaze us all. It it were not for Lech, along with the only Pope I will ever know just as “the Pope”, I would not have ended up in Poland, married who I married and had the life that has followed. Lech’s political movement, Solidarity, was officially recognized by the government 25 years ago today. Here’s a pre-posted scene from the 1991 parade for the first national day of celebration of the freeing of Poland. It’s all about good flags:

lech2

My Hits Of 1981

Twenty four years since high school ended and undergrad began. I sometimes wonder that, with the passing of time, that moment in my life is as distant as 1957 was to it. Ancient history I would have said then.

Anyway, someone has created a internet meme-thingie about the songs in the top 100 you really liked by showing them in bold and Michael picked it up for 1987 and John for (I think) 1976. In response, here are my notes from top ten of 1981:

1. “Bette Davis Eyes”, Kim Carnes – awful

2. “Endless Love”, Diana Ross and Lionel Richie – awful

3. “Lady”, Kenny Rogers – really awful

4. “(Just Like) Starting Over”, John Lennon

I had the 45 and gave it to a Beatles fan a couple of years ago. John Lennon’s death greatly affected me and my pals in the middle of our grade 12. It also spawned the ditto band show “Beatlemania” that people watched in Canadian rinks.

5. “Jessie’s Girl”, Rick Springfield

I actually liked this one. But, then again, I watched General Hospital after school. Synth, rocky guitar and the saucy lyric.

6. “Celebration”, Kool and The Gang

really awful and made worse when the committee girls at school played it about 12 times during what was billed as a “new wave dance”.

7. “Kiss On My List”, Daryl Hall and John Oates

I really only came to appreciate them as something I could stand around 1983.

8. “I Love A Rainy Night”, Eddie Rabbitt

Yee. Haa. Yet I recall driving around Truro singing the song on a summer evening between the end of one school and the start of another.

9. “9 To 5”, Dolly Parton – beyond redemption. Cow pie.

10. “Keep On Loving You”, REO Speedwagon

The soundtrack of my life…errr…I meant this really sucked if only for encouraging Richard (“Dickie”) Marks in the years that followed.

Click here for my entire top 100 list for 1981 if you really need to.