Posted by: Rattling the Kettle | March 28, 2008

THIS BLOG HAS MOVED

THIS WEBSITE HAS MOVED AND WILL NO LONGER BE UPDATED - PLEASE RE-DIRECT YOUR BROWSER TO HTTP://RATTLINGTHEKETTLE.COM.

IF YOU ARE RECEIVING THIS POST IN A FEED READER, PLEASE VISIT THE NEW WEBSITE AND SUBSCRIBE TO THE NEW FEED.

Posted by: Rattling the Kettle | March 19, 2008

Rattling the Kettle 2.0

After a two-week break, the blog is back, except no longer hosted here at wordpress.com

Please visit me over at the all-new, mostly the same, Rattling the Kettle 2.0 (beta).

Posted by: Rattling the Kettle | March 19, 2008

Important: adjust your feed settings

If you’re seeing this post in a feed reader, please change your settings, as this RSS feed will no longer update.  Going forward, the feed address for this blog is:

http://rattlingthekettle.com/feed/atom/

Posted by: Rattling the Kettle | March 8, 2008

…as far as I know

I just don’t understand why people don’t like Hillary Clinton.

Posted by: Rattling the Kettle | March 8, 2008

Talk, but No Peace

Today’s New York Times features an editorial that makes my blood boil. I’m not sure what’s worse about this piece: its internal inconsistency, or its application of a moral equivalence between Israel’s defensive operations against Hamas and Palestinian acts of terror against Israeli civilians. Either way, it merits breaking down:

There are a few certainties when it comes to the Middle East. One is that Hamas militants will do anything to sabotage Israeli-Palestinian peace efforts.

So far, so good. It’s very true: Hamas will do anything to sabotage peace efforts. It’s their standard operating procedure: every time progress seems to be within reach, Hamas steps up the violence. This is because Hamas is, and always has been, steadfastly against a two-state solution to the conflict. That is, Hamas’s stated goal is to drive all the Jews into the sea, to “liberate all of hisoric Palestine”, to have just one state, and no Jews. An independent Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza is not enough for Hamas. They want Tel Aviv, too.

Another is that Israel will retaliate against serious assaults on its people.

Translation: Israel’s defense of its citizens is an obstacle to peace. Fuck you very much. Let’s be very clear: the highest purpose of a government is to protect its civilian population from harm.

And a third is that without measurable improvements in the lives of both Israelis and Palestinians, a few spectacular acts of terrorism can derail even the best-intentioned peace talks.

Are they seriously saying that with measurable improvements in the lives of Israelis and Palestinians, a few spectacular acts of terrorism would no longer act to derail peace talks? This is pretty hard to swallow, even when you ignore the glorification of terrorism implied by the choice of the word “spectacular” (as opposed to, say, “heinous”).

It’s hard to imagine what particular improvements in the lives of Israelis would allow Israelis to shrug off brutal murders like those in Jerusalem earlier this week. What the Times doesn’t seem to realize is that the only “meaningful improvement” Israel really wants is the cessation of these acts of terrorism. Cure the disease, not the symptoms.

On the Palestinian side of the coin, the Times’ statement makes even less sense. Palestinians don’t need improvements in their lives in order to accept terrorism: witness the celebrations in Gaza when news spread the innocent civilians were gunned down in cold blood.

Perhaps the Times is saying that improvements in the Palestinians’ lives would stop these acts of terror from happening in the first place. This is a popular concept - that terror stems from poor living conditions. It is also, however, a very foolish concept, one the Times’ editorial staff itself must not really believe — because, as they themselves wrote earlier, the terrorists “will do anything to sabotage” peace. Hamas and its leaders don’t care about improvements in their daily lives, things that normal, decent people want, like good schools and affordable, high-quality health care; they only want to see the Jews dead and gone.

If there is any hope of salvaging the effort, the United States, Europe and Arab states must move quickly to arrange a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas and give serious thought to a new strategy for dealing with Gaza.

Translation: even though Hamas will do anything to sabotage the peace process, Israel should directly engage Hamas in the peace process.

This begs the question: why talk peace with someone when it’s already acknowledged that this someone has no intention of ever making peace, under any circumstances?

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Posted by: Rattling the Kettle | March 6, 2008

F*ck Me!

I guess I won’t be going shopping at Bristol Farms this week.

I know when I’m not welcome.

[back to my nap now; working on switching webhosts; bigger and better blog to follow.]

Posted by: Rattling the Kettle | March 3, 2008

This Blog Will Be Taking a Brief Nap

I’ll be switching blog hosts over the next few weeks, and hopefully revamping the look and feel of the site as well.  As a result, rattlingthekettle.com will probably be down for a short while.  The blog will continue to exist during this time at its original home, daveblog.wordpress.com.

See you on the other side…

Posted by: Rattling the Kettle | March 2, 2008

Scenes from the ballfield

Since E is up at the telescope all weekend, searching for quasars and whatnot, I had to take Ronen with me to baseball practice today.  Opening day is next week, and I still haven’t collected the league fees from several players, so staying home wasn’t an option.

He was surprisingly cooperative, although he was clearly upset when the team jogged out to their positions to take ground balls, and he had to stay on the bench (”no, it’s mine turn!”).  I finally convinced him to sit down and watch by offering him his almond butter and apricot preserves sandwich (on multigrain bread — with flax! — that’s how much better than you I am).

With him fixated on his lunch, I was able to take a turn at the plate as the rest of the team started its live game simulation.  As I ran down to first base, Ronen called after me from the bench:

“Dah-DEE!  You forgot your BAT!”

The pitcher bent over in laughter.

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Posted by: Rattling the Kettle | February 29, 2008

Gnashed their terrible teef!

There is a soundtrack to my life these days, and it was written by Maurice Sendak.

Ronen has loved Where the Wild Things Are ever since we started reading it to him, well over a year ago now. He was thrilled when I followed a tip from Jim’s (f/k/a/ Dutch) page o’ links to cool youtube videos for kids to an animated version of the story. It wasn’t long before he had the entire book committed to memory.

His fascination with Wild Things ebbed over time, as we read him other books at bedtime — highlights of which include various tongue-twisting Shel Silverstein poems and heart-warming stories out of a lovely Shirley Hughes anthology we received as a gift from a Scottish friend.

In the past few weeks, however, the Wild Things fascination has returned; bloomed, in fact, into a full-blown obsession.  It’s all he wants to hear before bedtime, every night, and at naptime on the weekends.  He demands repeat viewings of the “Wild Thing Video” before school, after school, before dinner, before bath, and at any other possible opportunity.  We read it to him in Hebrew (thanks, Ron!) and English, one after the other.  Although we have not taught him any Hebrew, he has nearly memorized that version as well.  When we’re not reading the book or watching the video, he’s reciting it to himself, perhaps while putting together a puzzle on the living room floor.

E is away this weekend, three nights of observing at the Palomar telescope.  Vegas has set the over/under line for the “How Many Times Will Dave Say Let the Wild Rumpus Start Between Friday Evening and Monday Morning” proposition bet at 37.

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Posted by: Rattling the Kettle | February 28, 2008

Not Subtle

But fairly accurate.

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