A new disc for the car

I had some time for a change to hit the CD burner and put this latest personal compilation together (it’s called “Avast ye musical mateys” and its cover features a picture of my nephew with pirate face paiting from the South Brunswick Lions Club circus):

  1. Steve Earle w/Emmylou Harris — “I Remember You”
  2. Lucinda Williams — “Sweet Side” (live version from Live @ the Fillmore)
  3. Outkast — “Idlewild Blue (Don’tchu Worry ‘Bout Me’)”
  4. Mary J. Blige wU2 — “One”
  5. Beyonce — “Ring the Alarm”
  6. The Pussycat Dolls — “Buttons”
  7. John Mayer — “Waiting for the World to Change”
  8. Alexi Murdoch — “Orange Sky”
  9. Snow Patrol — “Chasing Cars”
  10. Blue October — “Hate Me”
  11. Iggy Pop — “The Passenger”
  12. The Velvet Underground — “Rock ‘n’ Roll”
  13. The Beatles — “Good Day Sunshine”
  14. OK Go — “Here It Goes Again”
  15. Audioslave — “Original Fire”
  16. Steve Earle — “The Revolution Starts Now”
  17. Lucinda Williams — “Joy” (from Live @ the Fillmore)
  18. Bruce Springsteen — O Mary Don’t You Weep

That’s the latest disc. Send me suggestions for others by responding to this post by clicking comments below.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick

The Times: ‘President Bush’s reality’

The New York Times, in an editorial today, reminds us that President Bush lives in his own little dream world:

Mr. Bush has been marking the fifth anniversary of Sept. 11 with a series of speeches about terrorism that culminated with his televised address last night. He has described a world where Iraq is a young but hopeful democracy with a “unity government” that represents its diverse population. Al Qaeda-trained terrorists who are terrified by “the sight of an old man pulling the election lever” are trying to stop the march of progress. The United States and its friends are holding firm in a battle that will decide whether freedom or terror will rule the 21st century.

If that were actual reality, the president’s call to “put aside our differences and work together to meet the test that history has given us” would be inspiring, instead of frustrating and depressing.

The realites are harsher: A world at war, a world in fear, a world of growing economic inequality and anger and violence. Call me a cynic (I prefer skeptic), but things are not looking so good and the president is not making them any better.

Rather than using our vast military might to make things better, we act as the spark for much of the fire that burn.

Hard to feel hopeful.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick