A Day in the Life of a GOP Congressman

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Two by Wes Montgomery

What can you say about Wes Montgomery (born John Leslie Montgomery in 1923) except that he’s a jazz genius who influenced everyone from jazz masters Kenny Burrell to George Benson to rock-blues virtuosos like Jimi Hendrix and Stevie Ray Vaughn and innumerable others in between. Although generally known for his octave style of playing the same two notes, one high and one low, in unison, he also played some great single-note runs, and all with his thumb. (Incidentally, he developed the technique of playing with his thumb as a matter of domestic necessity when he was working a day job as a machinist in Indianapolis, Indiana, and practicing guitar at night — the quieter sound from his thumb didn’t wake his wife up. Eventually Wes’s technique evolved to the point where he used one part of his thumb for softer chordings, and another part for more percussive effects.) Other guitarists like Django Reinhardt had explored octave playing, but Wes refined it into more than just an insert as part of an instrumental solo. Although he didn’t read music well, it’s said he could pick up anything after one hearing, even complicated passages. He died of a heart attack much too soon at the age of 45 in 1968; it’s a shame the general public only knows of him from his covering pop tunes such as “I Think I’m Going Out of My Head” and “Windy,” all which he supposedly did at the behest of his recording company. He was an incredible jazz guitarist who sounded best and most comfortable with a small ensemble, as these two videos attest, and his sound is so unique that Wes Montgomery’s guitar is easily identifiable, even by untrained ears.

 

To read more, here’s Wes Montgomery’s Wikipedia entry and his official website.

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Remember When?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Had this item hanging around for awhile, but the message is still relevant. I think I saw this at Bartcop, but I’m not sure of the original author.

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Today’s Quote: Welcome to the New Great Depression

“Here’s the dirty little secret: Republicans want the economy to fail. They want Obama to fail, and they don’t care who gets hurt in the process. They want these things, because the beast is in the bathtub and they can almost taste its demise.

“The pieces are in place for the Plutocrats final victory … an industry friendly Supreme Court; a Democratic Party that is either in collusion with the plutocrats, or so cowardly as to be neutered; a press that reports outlandish lies and objective facts as if they were equivalent; and a public that is dazed and confused and convinced the government is their enemy.

“But government isn’t the enemy. Laissez faire economic policies are. Every time we’ve tried them, they’ve produced profound income inequalities and the severe economic downturns that inevitably follow.

“With private industry sitting on top of some $2 trillion in profits, exporting jobs, and shutting down plants, only government spending stood between us and an economic Armageddon.

“Now, nothing does.

“So, congratulations, America. You’ve finally gotten big bad gubmint off your back.

“Enjoy the coming Great Depression.”
— John Atcheson, “The Beast Is Starved: Welcome to the Next Great Depression,” Aug. 4, 2011, Common Dreams.org.

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Modern Republican Magazine

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The 2+2 Job Interview

…or, how to get hired in corporate America.

A businessman was interviewing applicants for a corporate position. He devised a simple test to select the most suitable person for the job: he asked each applicant, “What is two plus two?”

The first applicant had an economics degree. He thought for a moment and then said, “This bearish market indicates it could be as low as 2.5 and as high as 5.6, but it depends on what Bernanke says tomorrow and what the EU does with the valuation of the Euro.”

The second interviewee was a former Fox News political pundit. His answer was a confident, “Twenty-two, of course.”

The third job seeker was an ex-Microsoft phone tech. His answer was, “4.0, but you really should upgrade to the new 4.8 version! You can’t even get patches for 4.0 anymore!”

The next person was a former corporate lawyer. She stated that in the case of Malarkey v. Mathematics Professors of America, two and two seemed to be four, but that answer was contingent on any lawsuits that might arise from the inference that that answer was absolute, any subsequent riders that might be attached to the contract, any tort filings or motions currently under review, and any liens that might be imposed on the answer by the IRS. In any event, the lawyer refused to be responsible for her answer while the matter was still being negotiated out of court.

Next was a recently retired Republican politician. He said it depended on whether both twos belonged to a wealthy person or some poor schlub. In the case of a rich man, two plus two equaled “Tax cut”; in the case of the poor wretch, the answer was “Go to hell.”

Then there appeared a former Blue Dog Democrat. He said he would go along with whatever the Republican said while pretending he had a different answer.

An economist from the libertarian Cato Institute then entered. His reply to the question was short and sweet: “Unfettered free market capitalism is always the answer!”

Then a Messiah College graduate came into the office. She responded that two and two was whatever God said it was, unless it was something with which she didn’t agree — then it was socialist and evil.

The next-to-last applicant was a Teabagger. After many minutes of long thought he said, “Could you ask me an easier question?”

The final applicant had previously worked for Enron and Standard and Poor’s. The now rather frustrated businessman asked him, “How much is two and two?”

The applicant got up from his chair, went over to the door and closed it, then came back and sat down. He leaned across the desk and said in a low voice, “How much do you want it to be?”

He got the job.

2011 RS Janes, rewritten from another joke.

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News of the Future: The Two Ricks in 2013

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Compared to What? Les McCann and Eddie Harris

Jazz greats Les McCann and tenor saxman Eddie Harris had an unexpected Billboard hit with this one back in 1969 and it still grooves today, both lyrically and musically. ‘Tryin’ to make it real, compared to what?’ could have been written yesterday. This video is from Berlin TV:

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Gadaffy Duck: Another Deluded Dictator Deposed

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Today’s Quotes: Bierce on Delusion

“All are lunatics, but he who can analyze his delusions is called a philosopher.”
— Ambrose Bierce

“Philosophy: A route of many roads leading from nowhere to nothing.”
— Ambrose Bierce

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