I get on the internet and go to the Washington Post. Beneath four stories on finance and politics I read the caption, “Does God Intend for Women to Work?” It’s an online discussion started by Sally Quinn, but I don’t click. I know it is bait for bottom feeders, carp in polluted ditches eyeing Vienna sausages on rusty hooks. I move on and get redirected to CNBC which I have never watched. (mai mee T.V.) A commentator is “coming live” from some trading floor. He is ranting, “Everyone who has lost their house is a loser! Get it? And now Obama wants taxpayers to help these losers pay their mortgages.” The traders gathered behind him whistle and boo on cue. I delete him mid-sentence and go to the New York Times. I read David Brooks. I never read David Brooks. In his column he calls the people around Obama “Propeller heads.” No wonder I can’t do crossword puzzles. And then almost at the end there is this breathtakingly sloppy sentence: “The greedy idiots may be greedy idiots, but they are our countrymen.” I skim the headlines at Bloomberg. “Thailand May Urge Banks to Lend Money to GM.” The prime minister says he will “nudge” Thailand’s banks to lend. I’d love to see how Thais translate “nudge.” “Mandate” or “blackmail?” On to video clips of Antigua where Texas billionaire Sir Robert Allen Stanford was knighted. People are lined up around the block at Stanford International Banks. Those not lined up, are throwing bricks. Stanford was arrested in Fredericksburg after a brief run from the law. He is heavily involved in international cricket. “Everyone who follows cricket knew he was a scum ball,” says my Kiwi friend Linden who actually watches cricket on T.V. Finally the sun comes up. I go out in the driveway where I do most of the cooking and start making some crusty olive and sage bread.
"ST. JOHN’S, Antigua — When Robert Allen Stanford arrived here in the early 1990s, few locals had ever heard of the Texas financier. Today, he dominates so many aspects of life on this sun-drenched Caribbean island that some have taken to calling it “Stanford Land."
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/21/bu...d.html?_r=1&hp
"ST. JOHN’S, Antigua — When Robert Allen Stanford arrived here in the early 1990s, few locals had ever heard of the Texas financier. Today, he dominates so many aspects of life on this sun-drenched Caribbean island that some have taken to calling it “Stanford Land."
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/21/bu...d.html?_r=1&hp
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