Author Archives: Tony

The Big Power Cut

Life appears to be pretty much back to normal here in New York after the big power cut (or “outage”) last week. Although it no doubt caused plenty of misery for lots of folks, I have to say I found the whole experience quite interesting and enjoyable (notwithstanding the disbelief at learning that the World’s only superpower relies on such an antiquated power grid!).

It started on Thursday afternoon about 4pm; I was in my office at 62nd & Lex working with my colleagues Emerson & Dustin, when my computer monitor and air conditioner suddenly switched off. We had some contractors in the building at the time, so naturally assumed it was a local phenomenon and went across the street to get coffee. However, our local coffee shop was also dark and uninviting…

As we ventured further and further afield in search of coffee, we gradually realized that the power outage wasn’t limited to our building or a radius of a few blocks, since traffic signals were out as far as the eye could see, and more and more people were clustering out on the pavements (sidewalks). Finally we overhead a news announcer on a parked car’s radio saying that the whole north east of North America was without power!

We returned to the increasingly tense situation back at the office, and after failing to find any beers to save from the now-inoperative refrigerator, a small group (myself, Emerson & Diane) resolved to start walking downtown. We took a fairly leisurely walk down past the Queensborough Bridge on the east side (Diane was looking for a friend), stopping several times to pick up bottles of beer from enterprising bars and bodegas along the way. Although now early evening, it was still a fairly hot day, and with the crowds and the impending sense of the collapse of civic norms, it felt a little like Notting Hill Carnival without the pumping sound systems.

Eventually I parted ways with my co-workers, and headed south to the Brooklyn Bridge, before finding my way back to my house just after dark, using the meagre light from the display on my mobile ‘phone to find more useful emergency lighting (a small torch and a candle) by which to shower and cook a meal of baked beans on bread.

The power finally came on at 8am the following morning, but because the subway was still not running, Mayor Bloomberg declared friday (somewhat perplexingly) a “snow day,” so we all got a free day’s holiday. Result!

Return of the Blog

After several intermittently frustrating weeks of being unable to get Blogger to publish anything new to my website (and with no response to my tech. support requests from either Blogger or Prohosting – on the web, like anywhere else, I guess you get what you pay for), I finally gave up and moved my weblog to Blog*Spot.

Fingers crossed, it seems to be working so far… I’ll just have to learn to live with the ad banner or cough up another $12 a year for my almost entirely pointless website!

9/11 Inconsistencies

My full-length “polemic” web page is still under construction, but I thought I’d post just one of the many possible inconsistencies in the “official” 9/11 story that are now starting to come to light, concerning the fact that many of the supposed hijackers were perhaps not involved at all, and in fact may well still be alive.

Flying school says graduate identified as hijacker is alive in Morocco

The Augusta Chronicle, 10 July 2003

Thanks to Andrew M. for finding this.

Support the creation of an Independent Commission into Bush’s Iraq WMD claims

The following message from Moveon.org:

The President took the nation to war based on his assertion that Iraq
posed an imminent threat to our country. Now the evidence that
backed that assertion is falling apart.

If the Bush administration distorted intelligence or knowingly used
false data to support the call to war, it would be an unprecedented
deception. Even if weapons are now found, it’ll be difficult to
justify pre-war language that indicated that the exact location of the
weapons was known and that they were ready to deploy at a moment’s
notice. With a crisis of credibility brewing abroad and the integrity
of our President and our foreign policy on the line, we need answers
now.

Rep. Henry Waxman has introduced legislation to create an independent
commission to investigate the Bush administration’s distortion of
evidence. Please ask your Representative to pledge his or her support
at:

http://www.moveon.org/wmdpledge/

A President may make no more important decision than whether or not to
take a country to war. If Bush and his officials deceived the American
public to create support for the Iraq war, they need to be held
accountable.

Hot & Hungover in NYC

Woke up to 33°C (92°F) temperature and 60% humidity with a killer hangover that even Berocca couldn’t completely mask today (incidentally, if you haven’t discovered this miracle of dietary supplements, I strongly recommend you pick some up next time you’re in a commonwealth country. And thanks for Jim Michalko for tipping me off to the stuff!).

My next apartment, which is looking as though it’s going to be in the Cobble Hill/Carroll Gardens neighbourhood of Brooklyn, is DEFINITELY going to have an air conditioner.

A dog ate my weapons of mass distraction…

Finally, a significant number of people in the U.S. are starting to ask questions about the possible manipulation and distortion of evidence for the non-existent weapons of mass destruction used as a pretext for the war against Iraq. See this Moveon.org petition, for example.

Still, now that the CIA has appointed a new special advisor, I’m sure it’s only a matter of time before some suitably unpleasant WMD’s are “discovered” (read: planted) in Iraq.

Normal service will be resumed as soon as possible…

I just noticed that some javascript in my Blog template wasn’t working properly, and was causing the debugger to launch every time a mouseover event happened; I kept fixing it, but it kept getting broken again (incompatibility between Dreamweaver’s javascript & Blogger?), so I’ve removed all the mouseover Javascript, and hopefully it’s now fixed…

Tempus Fugits

I’ve aged since my last post; I’m now 35 years old. Friends who witnessed my panic at turning 30 (can that really be 5 years ago!?) will confirm that I’m not aging very gracefully. And as my little brother pointed out, it will only be a few blinks of the eye before I’m staring down the barrel of 40…

On the positive side, I got a nice tax refund from Uncle Sam, and have finally treated myself to the digital camera I always wanted (Canon Powershot S230 Digital Elph), so hopefully I’ll be able to get images up on this cobweb site in a slightly more timely fashion in future…

An Evening with Gore Vidal

I just came back from listening to Gore Vidal, at an event organised by The Nation Institute at the New York Society for Ethical Culture. It was a large auditorium, and it was sold out. Unfortunately either the acoustics or the public address system were lousy, so I could only make out about half of what he said, but that half was very good; sage & witty, without trivialising just how dire the present state of the union is. I won’t try to summarise his thesis, as it’s pretty much encapsulated in his two most recent books, both of which I highly recommend:

(For those seeking more instant gratification, check out this short op-ed piece, Blood for Oil, available online).

I also spoke briefly with the editor of The Nation, Katrina Vanden Heuvel; perhaps impolitely in retrospect, I failed to commend her on her opening remarks and merely asked her to give Gore Vidal a copy of a photograph I took when some friends & I met him briefly in Ravello, Italy in 1993.