Monday, October 20, 2008

I dont want to lose you

So, dear reader, it has been awhile...

I got busy at work, had to travel, but that's really just an excuse.

This election is overwhelming in so many ways: every day I go to work and every day the story is wilder and weirder and faster than when I went to bed. You could not script this stuff. Truth is, indeed, much, much stranger than fiction. The election was given to us by the News Gods, but now please stop the world because I would like to get off (for a little while, at least).

Then, as if the election isnt enough to keep even a serious case of ADD in check, then comes a global financial meltdown. And Madonna is getting a divorce! The sky really is falling!

I cant keep up. And more importantly, I probably shouldnt. My esteemed employer has some pretty strict rules about what I can talk about in the public sphere and they tend to be quite religious (if you forgive the phrase) about enforcing them. I like my job. I like my health insurance. I like my (ever-dwindling) 401k. So I cant really talk about what I think of this insane election. The meltdown has become pretty politicized as well, so prob should not talk about that either (although I do think the Bailout was a fundamental failure of democracy, but I mean that in a populist, Lou Dobbsian, I-hate-everyone-equally kind of way. So sue me.). With all the really important, really heavy things going on in the world at the moment, I felt a little Marie Antoinette-y writing about a nice restaurant we went to for my bday (Hatfields) or the latest tv (Korto should have won "Project Runway") or my latest fabulous/glamorous holiday (er, none).

Anyway, it has become clear to me that the world is going to continue being weird so that should probably not stand in the way of my totally inane ramblings. So I'm back. Sort of.

Pass the cupcakes.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

And thank god democracy did fail. Because the Main-Street-screw-Wall-Street-what-did-they-ever -do-for-me? was a: fundamentally ignorant and b: incredibly dangerous. Main Street would have found out quick enough what Wall Street did for them when the ATMs ran out of cash, the pay-checks bounced and the only things with any value were tinned goods, refined petroleum products and small arms.

Democracy-shamocracy, I say.