So today I finally broke down and bought foreign body products.
I did this because they are miles cheaper (or, kilometers cheaper?) than American products.
But it means me often have to figure out what things are by pictures, location, ingredients, and smells.
For some reason, I had decided that I was going to move away from the fruity genre. I wanted something warmer. I was thinking - can I buy a cinammon body spray? Wouldn't it be cool to smell like cinammon?
I don't know where this thought came from.
I started my shopping experience with body wash. This I went straight on look alone. It's Duru Moods - it's golden, the gel is all shiny and sparkly, there's golden pearls on the pictures, it says "Luxury" on it, which seems to be a universal word. It's in Romanian, Russian, and Turkish, and smells like - well I don't really know what it smells like, but it smells warm and good, and it was super cheap.
Then came lotion. I actually thought it was shampoo at first. And when I got home, my family told me it was body wash.
What are you going to do?
But it smells like chocolate. I was really taken, for the moment, with the idea of chocolate lotion. I guess chocolate body wash might not be so bad, but it won't last as long. The scent I mean. I wonder if the same brand has a lotion.
This brand is a Israeli brand, by the way, and thus, all the writing is in Hebrew.
Shampoo. This is straight up Russian, and I figured since I was obviously going for the darker scented, food categories, why not try the bottle with a picture of wheat, mint, and a mug of beer? Beer is supposed to be great for your hair right?
Other bottles had eggs and aloe on them. I have heard these things area also good for your hair, but these bottles smelled nowhere as delicious as the beer shampoo smelled. Literally, I was like, huffing the bottle in the middle of the store. (All these products are 100% Russian).
Last but not least, I have recognized that I will eventually run out of my aveeno face lotion, and god knows I can't afford any of the american products. So, I decided to branch out. What would I choose? Another Russian product, named "Olives." Luckily with ingredients in English, I know that this has honey, soy, pumpkin oil, shea, olive oil, lemon acid....
And I know that it's day lotion because I asked. " Scuzaţi-mă vă rog, asta este pentru a zile, şi pentru fata mea?"
All good things, right? Surely these things cannot hurt my fair skin. I'm trying a some tonight.
So I'll let you know how my branching out into foreign products goes. For all 4 products, I spent a whopping 12$ - I spent more on the lady's speed stick, I think, then most the rest of the stuff combined (the Olives tipped the scale).
29 September 2008
I smell like Chocolate
Posted by Rian at 9:53 AM 0 comments
28 September 2008
Mincarea
Food, glorious food. Hot sausage with mustard.
Or not. I don't think I've seen mustard in this country. Ketchup? Loads. Mayonnaise? O lord yes. And sour creme seems to be a condiment here as well.
I've been thinking about food in Moldova (and out of Moldova) and thought I'd share some of these thoughts.
Like, who in Moldova thought of the idea to put mayonnaise on pizza? And how can we end this travesty?
Continuing with this thought, how can ketchup be construed as pizza sauce? It is so patently a different substance. It is also a tradition that should die an unglorious death.
On the other hand, there is flavored ketchups here, including a spicy (uite) ketchup that I really like. It shakes up the banality of eggs and potatoes.
Oh yes, smintina. Otherwise known as sour creme. It goes on everything - in my household, it is a substitute for butter. Actually when you think about it, it probably is better for you then butter, but it always amuses me to see my little host sister smear her bread with a huge dollop of sour creme.
Moving on to compote. Oh, this is one of the best things to happen to me in Moldova. And I'm very sad it's going to end. Compote is like a delicious natural juice - you throw in a bunch of apples, or plums, or whatever (raspberries, strawberries) and you boil the daylights out of it, add a bit of sugar (but in my household, not a lot) and then serve cold. It's the most refreshing, clean thing I've ever drank. I don't know how else to describe it - it's a clean, crisp, delicious taste. And it's about over.
Fruit and Veg season is about over. Alas. Have I mentioned before that Americans have *no earthly clue* as to what good fruit actually tastes like? And vegetables for that matter. I'm eating eggplant here, for chrissake. I hate eggplant. And scarfing down plums by the dozen. Eating a peach here is a near religious experience, like biting into an orb of heaven.
Le sigh.
Speaking of fresh things, I've had my first taste of straight off the tree walnuts - and again, completely different then the stuff we buy in the stores. These nuts are soft, and taste like butter. So delicious and good.
Speaking of delicious and good, since I've been here I've been eating this grainy type of item called greasca. It's not something that I've ever eaten before, but I really like it. Well, after two minutes of searching on internet, turns out I've been eating buckwheat.
Buckwheat groats to be exact. Commonly called Kasza, or Kasha, in the United States.
Well. I was worried that I wouldn't be able to get it in the US. Silly me.
Apparently, Groaty Porridge is a traditional dish on Guy Fawkes Day in England. And guess who's going to be in England on Guy Fawkes Day? Yes, that would be me.
Have I mentioned that I'm going to england? Oh, I know I have. And this is a food posting! But this is ALL about food, my dear.
Because I realized in the middle of a conversation that I'm going to be able to get a Thomas the Baker Curry Vegetable Pasty (pronounced past-e) in about a month. For only 2.50$, I'll have a little pocket of pastry filled heaven.
Of course, London also has every other ethnic dish that one could want. Sushi on escalators. Indian Food on every corner. Haggis.
Well, that one will never happen.
I haven't been this excited about FOOD since... well really I don't think I've ever been this excited about food. It doesn't bode well for my newly slenderized figure.
But really, how much harm can a person do in one week? Hmmmm?
So, how do you like them apples?
Posted by Rian at 2:35 PM 0 comments
Military donations favor Obama over McCain
Didn't McCain say something in the debate about knowing and loving veterans, and wanting to take care of them? Maybe the soldiers don't believe him.... he has been kind of difficult to understand lately.
Troops donate more campaign money to Obama than McCain, despite McCain's military record
WASHINGTON (AP) -- U.S. soldiers have donated more presidential campaign money to Democrat Barack Obama than to Republican John McCain, a reversal of previous campaigns in which military donations tended to favor GOP White House hopefuls, a nonpartisan group reported Thursday.Troops serving abroad have given nearly six times as much money to Obama's presidential campaign as they have to McCain's, the Center for Responsive Politics said.
For Full Article, click title.
I'd heard rumors that soldiers were favoring Obama this year, but the numbers shock me - active soldiers are giving money at a rate 6:1 in favor of a democrat. Remarkable. As in I'm remarking upon it.
Course, when the Disabled American Veterans give McCain a 20 percent approval rating vs an 80 percent rating for Obama, and the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America give Senator McCain a grade of D in comparison to Obama's B-plus, maybe the discrepancy isn't so surprising.
Posted by Rian at 2:28 PM 0 comments
25 September 2008
During Recent History, Democratic Administrations....
Were Better "Republicans" than Republicans were...
Were More Fiscally Responsible than Republicans were....
Grew More Personal Wealth than Republicans Grew....
Created More Jobs than Republican Created......
And Leveled the Playing Field at Greater Levels...
(I'm not saying, I'm just saying....)
Source: The Licsio Reports
Posted by Rian at 5:41 AM 0 comments
$700 Billion for Bailout Plan? It's just a number they pulled out their A**
"It's not based on any particular data point," a Treasury spokeswoman told Forbes.com Tuesday. "We just wanted to choose a really large number."
To read this Forbes article, Go Here
No, this is not a Onion Article disguised as a Forbes article. This would be an article in the Onion disguised as a Forbes article:
McCain’s Economic Plan For Nation: 'Everyone Marry A Beer Heiress'
Posted by Rian at 5:11 AM 0 comments
EPA Won't Remove Rocket Fuel From Drinking Water
WASHINGTON — The Environmental Protection Agency has decided there's no need to rid drinking water of a toxic rocket fuel ingredient that has fouled public water supplies around the country.
EPA reached the conclusion in a draft regulatory document not yet made public but reviewed Monday by The Associated Press.
The ingredient, perchlorate, has been found in at least 395 sites in 35 states at levels high enough to interfere with thyroid function and pose developmental health risks, particularly for babies and fetuses, according to some scientists.
To read the rest of this article, go here
Posted by Rian at 4:59 AM 0 comments
22 September 2008
TV Show Heroes: One Giant Metaphor for Adults Screwing Their Kids
The heroes in this science-fiction drama are a group of young people with special supernatural abilities who seek to save the world from a dark, high-level conspiracy, spawned by the Me Generation that is hellbent on annihilating humanity.
“Heroes” is of course a comic book, a sleek cartoonish battle between good and evil. But the saga also serves as an allegory of generational malaise, a venting of the indignation and self-pity of 20- and 30-somethings reduced by the sins of their fathers to ever-diminishing expectations.
.....
Young people today can’t repay their college loans; they can’t afford apartment rents, let alone mortgages; their Social Security is being sucked up by their elders; and H.I.V. left them out of the sexual revolution: what was once free love is now a viral minefield.
.....
“Heroes” gives its fans cathartic validation: You inherited a screwed-up world, and it’s not your fault.
...
“Save the cheerleader, save the world.” On second thought, maybe just save Social Security.
...Some of the most likeable characters are stuck mopping up their parents’ mistakes. In Season 2, after Peter manages to wrest back the vial containing the world-threatening virus and destroy it, his fellow hero Matt (Greg Grunberg), whose father was also one of the founders of the Company, is less relieved than disgusted. “Your mother, my father, God knows what else they’ve done,” Matt says bitterly. “How much longer are we going to have to clean up their mess?”
It could be a while.
To read full article, go here
Posted by Rian at 12:26 PM 0 comments
18 September 2008
Does this blog sometimes seem like a blog about Google?
September 17, 2008, NYT
Google and General Electric Team Up on Energy Initiatives
By Miguel HelftGoogle and General Electric said Wednesday that they would work together on technology and policy initiatives to promote the development of additional capacity in the electricity grid and of “smart grid” technologies to enable plug-in hybrids and to manage energy more efficiently. The companies said their goal is to make renewable energy more accessible and useful.
...“All this talk about renewable energy will not be realized if we do not build substantial additional transmission capacity,” Mr. Reicher said.
Without additional capacity, Mr. Reicher said, it would not be possible, for example, to get power from a solar plant in the Mojave Desert to Los Angeles, or from a wind farm in the Dakotas to Chicago. Mr. Reicher said that environmental standards, overlapping state and federal regulations and other policy issues are among the biggest impediments to building additional transmission capacity.
...
For Google, the partnership with G.E. is part of larger set of energy initiatives, including direct investments in green technology to help develop renewable energy that is cheaper to produce than coal-generated power. For its part, G.E. has made a large bet on green energy technologies, an initiative the company calls “Ecomagination.”
full article here
Posted by Rian at 9:27 AM 0 comments
17 September 2008
Things Moldova has taught me....
Moldova has taught me how to drink beer.
Moldova has taught me how to drink beer warm.
Moldova has taught me how to drink cognac and brandy.
Moldova has taught me that it's not necessary to drink whiskey when drinking (almost).
Moldova has taught me that simple is better.
Moldova has taught me that simple food is better.
Moldova has taught me to think of butter and jam on bread as gross. Just jam, or just butter please.
Moldova has taught me that sour cream is an acceptable compromise to both jam and butter on bread.
Moldova has taught me that really? Three ingredients is often two too many.
Moldova has taught me that using basil as a spice in some countries is considered faintly sacrilegious.
Moldova has taught me that jello can be savory instead of sweet. You know, if you wanna roll like that.
Moldova has taught me that fried smoked string cheese is one of the most delicious things ever invented.
Moldova has taught me that there is no such thing as being fashionably early.
Moldova has taught me that being on time is a relative concept.
Moldova has taught me that being fashionably late is more in the 45 min to 1 hour range than 15 minutes.
Moldova has taught me that free-flowing air in houses and cars are critically dangerous to your health (explanation at a later date).
Moldova has taught me that it is possible to sleep on extremely uncomfortable sofa beds. Broken sofa beds.
Moldova has taught me that it's possible to live off of 500 g of food per day.
Moldova has taught me that the hora can be sexy.
Moldova has taught me that Americans have no clue as to what fruits and vegetables are supposed to taste like.
Moldova has taught me that being clean is a relative concept.
Moldova has taught me that being dirty is a relative concept.
Moldova has taught me that shoes can never be too clean. Ever.
Moldova has taught me that it can be colder inside your house than it is outside your house.
Moldova has taught me that sometimes it's necessary to take shots of whatsoever is handy (house wine, vodka, cognac) to combat the cold. Because if you think about it, one shot of Alcohol is much cheaper than having your gas on all night.
Moldova has taught me to get a sick pleasure at seeing the Euro fall and the Dollar rise.
Moldova has taught me to appreciate (oh, do I appreciate) the American work ethic. And our timeliness.
Moldova has taught me that subtlety is overrated.
Moldova has taught me to hate my timeliness, as it does not jive well with the culture of the country I am living in.
Moldova has taught me that much of the rest of the world thinks that American's are freak super-speed demons at their work, and need to slow down (incet, rian, incet!)
Moldova has taught me that people still look to America as the land of opportunity.
Moldova has taught me that an entire country can actually watch and wait months to see who another country will elect. (No, seriously, I was told this by a college student who asked me who I liked - Moldova, she said, was "watching and waiting" because the election was "very important to our country.")
Moldova has taught me that often people who live outside our country care more about who gets elected to our highest office than those who reside in it.
Moldova has taught me that McDonald's is a dish best served in a foreign country.
Moldova has taught me that it is possible to pay more for water than you pay for beer. Much, much more.
Moldova has taught me that I shouldn't drink coffee.
Moldova has taught me that obviously Starbucks frappacinos is not really coffee.
Moldova has taught me to miss the craziness of my old job.
Moldova has taught me to miss the pressure of my old job.
And finally, for now, Moldova has taught me that nobody does drama better than a bunch of Americans forced to live together for two years in a small country. The Real World ain't got nothing on this craziness.
Posted by Rian at 2:37 AM 0 comments
Ok
So I recognize that this blog has veered off its original intended topic.
Why aren't I talking about Moldova? Where's my interesting stories of cultural integration?
Well at the moment, I don't really have any. My mind is filled with annoyance at the pushback I'm getting from my organization I'm working for, and a general sense of boredom and ennui.
So what you're reading is what I'm thinking about to keep me sane. (also keeping me sane? inserting pop culture referencing into everything I'm writing for work and Peace Corps and in my emails and seeing who gets them. Alas, not many get them. I'm obviously not cut out to be a Gilmore Girl writer)
And like I wouldn't be obsessing about the election anyway.
More than likely, when February rolls around you're going to hear about the Moldovan election.
I like politics. What can I say? And y'all should realize that I'm actually trying really hard to edit, and tone things down. If you were to get full-throttled political me.... I don't think my sister would ever return to this site.
However, I do recognize that there are some things that I could talk about that I haven't addressed, always pushing off for a later time, and I'll try to talk about some of these things.
But I'm going to be really honest folks, the main thing on my mind now is my upcoming vacations.
London.
Prague.
Egypt.
I'm going to London (with a dash of a side trip to Edinburgh, please) over Halloween and Guy Fawkes Day. Why am I doing this? It is not for either of these holidays, although it is surely a happy coincidence. No, I'm going to watch the American election in real time, an impossible thing to do here unless I watch it on a computer screen on CSPAN or something. All the cable we get here is military cable, and thus a daylate to ensure maximum censorship opportunities.
I will have access to Indian food for a whole, glorious week. And Top Shop.
Maybe I'll take a side trip to the Tower, and get goosebumps yet again in the place where Elizabeth was held as a Princess. She was the equivalent of a modern day graffiti artist, and carved her initials in the stone.
I'll go see Abraham Lincoln's statue in Parliament Sq, a copy of the one residing in Chicago's Lincoln Park, and the Charlie Chaplin Statue in Leicester Square.
Maybe next post I'll tell you about my plans for Prague and Egypt. But these are the things I'm living for at the moment. Obsessing over the election, and obsessing over my vacations. Because I have naught to obsess over, job-wise. Am I feeling slightly stupid because I'm here, spending my time re-watching episodes of the XFiles and Battlestar Galactica and the Office? Yes. Should I be exploring more of Chisinau? Probably. There's not all that much to see. The same pattern repeats. (over and over... and i do hear morning bells).
After this week, I'll have license to travel the country again. Maybe I'll go visit people in their villages. But then again, that means no internet for a whole weekend. Until the election is over, I don't know if I can handle that type of suspense.
On a more somber note - I know the market has gone all wonky - hope everyone is doing okay.
Posted by Rian at 2:02 AM 0 comments
10 September 2008
Guns
This maybe isn't the smartest thing to put in my blog.
I know my grandma will be a little freaked out about it.
A few weeks ago, I talked about how the greatest fear of Chicago kids was getting shot.
I thought maybe this would go further into explaining why:
View Larger Map
The above map details the shootings the occurred during the summer months in Chicago. The pink pins indicate a fatal shooting.
As you can see, this is not a west side problem, or a southside problem.... it is quite obviously a pretty devastating Chicago problem.
In the months of Summer 125 people were shot dead. That is twice the amount of soldiers that were killed in Iraq during the same time period. Actually, it's also about the same number of soldiers killed in Iraq and Afganhistan combined.
The youngest fatality was a 10 year old girl.
247 people were wounded.
Where's the famous lakefront liberal outrage over this?
In the entire city, there were only two districts that did not have a fatal shooting. One of them was the district I live in. (Go, district 20!)
But this is a matter of semantics. I live across the street from district 23, and across the park from a different district. The trees outside my apartment in the last year started to get carved up with Latin King symbols.
Supposedly, bad economic times always increase violence, and murders are up 18% this year.
Not exactly good advertisement for the Olympics.
Posted by Rian at 6:45 AM 0 comments
08 September 2008
America more communist than China?
The nationalization of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac shows that the U.S. is "more communist than China right now" but its brand of socialism is meant only for the rich, investor Jim Rogers, CEO of Rogers Holdings, told CNBC Europe on Monday.
"America is more communist than China is right now. You can see that this is welfare of the rich, it is socialism for the rich… it's just bailing out financial institutions," Rogers said.
Read the rest of this article HERE
Posted by Rian at 3:09 PM 0 comments
04 September 2008
They were against it before they were for it, and for it before they were against it
Posted by Rian at 2:44 PM 0 comments
03 September 2008
Memory loss, thy name is Huckabee
Former presidential candidate Mike Huckabee told NBC/NJ today that the recent wave of potentially-damaging news stories about Sarah Palin – including news that her teenage daughter is pregnant – represents a "sexism that is really, really disgusting and embarrassing," and could ultimately galvanize support for the GOP ticket.
Calling media critiques of Palin "unprecedented" he posited that "they never did this to Chelsea Clinton."Rewind to 1998:
"Why is Chelsea Clinton so ugly? Because her father is Janet Reno."
- John McCain
Posted by Rian at 3:33 PM 1 comments
Whoa (an update on Millenials)
By the presidential election of 2016, Millennials will be one third or more of the citizen-eligible electorate, and roughly 30 percent of actual voters—and this is making no assumptions about possible increased turnout rates among Millennials in the future, which could make their weight among actual voters higher. Moreover, from that point on, the Millennials’ share of the actual voters will rise steadily for several decades as more and more of the generation enter middle age.
Posted by Rian at 1:23 PM 0 comments
02 September 2008
How Big of a Deal is Income Inequality?
by William Bernstein
A Borrowed Post
Retired neurologist William Bernstein is probably known for his investment books The Intelligent Asset Allocator and The Four Pillars of Investing. His two latest books, A Splendid Exchange: How Trade Shaped the World and The Birth of Plenty, deal with the history of world trade and economic growth.
For nearly all of human history, the lot of the average person improved not at all. Then, about two hundred years ago, the material well-being of the planet’s inhabitants began to grow at about 2 percent per year.
Although this may not sound like much, it means that the life of a child is nearly twice as prosperous as that of its parent; over a century, the standard of living increases sevenfold. Today, per capita G.D.P. is higher in Mexico than in the world’s wealthiest nation in 1900, Great Britain.
The paradox of economic growth is that the same mechanisms that create great wealth –secure property rights and rule of law guaranteed by an independent judiciary — also give rise to great inequalities in its distribution. Private property provides a powerful incentive to produce wealth for oneself while simultaneously denying that same wealth to others. Wealth does trickle down to the rest of the population, but often not fast enough to avoid political strife and worse.
The reason for this is simple: if individuals cannot keep enough of what they earn then they will not produce. If, on the other hand, the most productive do keep what they earn, significant inequalities inevitably result.
Further, in a technologically driven world where an individual’s unique talents can be scaled up to an almost infinite degree, inequality increases dramatically.
For example, researchers Thomas Piketty and Emmanuel Saez calculated that between 1972 and 2006, the portion of income earned by the top 10 percent of the population rose by half; for the top 1 percent, meanwhile, it doubled; and it quadrupled for the top 0.1 percent. For the top 0.01 percent, it rose sevenfold. The current disparities are nearly identical to those of early 20th-century American robber-baron capitalism.
Economic libertarians argue that this growing inequality is unimportant: aren’t the poor of 2008 still far better off in terms of real income, health, life expectancy, and material comfort than even the richest citizen in 1900?
The fallacy of this argument is that human beings do not measure their well-being by absolute real income or longevity — but rather in relative terms. To paraphrase H.L. Mencken, a wealthy man is one who earns more than his wife’s brother-in-law.
Further, a growing body of research reveals that the social and medical costs of inequality are high. Here is the tiniest of samplings:
• Among both American states and Canadian provinces, homicide rates closely track income inequality, even after the absolute level of income itself is carefully controlled for. That homicide is not driven by poverty alone is demonstrated by Canada, where, because of aggressive redistributive policies, the poorest provinces have the lowest inequalities and also the lowest number of violent deaths.
• It is becoming increasingly obvious among obesity researchers that the primary underlying factors in this epidemic are social class and income inequality.
It is no accident that the U.S., with the highest income inequality among the world’s developed nations, also has the highest incidence of obesity and its attendant comorbidities: diabetes, hypertension, and vascular disease.
Obesity may also be the reason that the U.S., ostensibly the world’s wealthiest nation, ranks 29th in life expectancy, right behind Jordan and Bosnia. Those who think that these problems are primarily the result of voluntary lifestyle choices should reflect on the difficulty of providing a family of four with fresh fruits and vegetables on a minimum wage salary.
Worse, extreme income and wealth inequality alone may hinder growth. After all “respect for property rights” is really, in most cases, shorthand for “respect by the have-nots for the property rights of the haves.” If those on the bottom rungs do not feel that they are getting a fair shake, the very bedrock of our prosperity crumbles into social and economic apartheid as millions of Americans flee to gated communities, millions more are required to staff the burgeoning private security industry, and yet more millions fill our prisons.
This is likely the reason why supply-side economics fails in the real world. Cross national comparisons in developed nations, for example, show no correlation between tax rates and economic growth. Further, the “golden period” of growth in the years before 1973 occurred in an environment of higher tax rates than in the lower-growth 1980’s and 1990’s.
More ominously, several data sets now connect high national income inequality with low growth. Correlation is not causation, and clearly, much more research is called for.
But these data should give pause to those who are complacent about increasing income and wealth disparities, and who further believe that reducing the top marginal income-tax rates and eliminating the “death tax” leads to economic Valhalla.
Posted by Rian at 9:41 AM 0 comments
01 September 2008
McCain Labors to find a position on Sex Education and Disease Prevention (Happy Labor Day)
In an August 1999 speech that McCain delivered to the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco, he said:
"I'd love to see a point where [Roe v. Wade] is irrelevant, and could be repealed because abortion is no longer necessary. But certainly in the short term, or even the long term, I would not support repeal of Roe v. Wade, which would then force x number of women to [undergo] illegal and dangerous operations."
In the 2006, McCain declared that he does not merely favor overturning Roe, but supports a constitutional amendment that would ban abortion in almost all circumstances. On a "Meet the Press" appearance, he claimed that he has "always been pro-life, unchanging and unwavering."
A year ago McCain was asked a series of questions that drew some... interesting responses.
Would he support taxpayer funding for contraception in Africa to prevent the spread of AIDS?
McCain initially replied that he preferred a program of abstinence education but would provide condoms in places where abstinence "was not being followed," that is, where sex is happening, which is everywhere. r on issues of reproductive rights and health.
Moments later, he attempted to amend his answer. "Let me think about it a little bit ... I don't know if I would use taxpayers' money ... I'm not informed enough on it. Let me find out ... I'm sure I have taken a position on it in the past ... I have to find out my position on it ... I am sure I am opposed to government funding. I am sure I support the president's policy on it."
A reporter followed up by inquiring whether McCain supports sex education that discusses contraception and preventing the spread of AIDS and other disease, or whether he backs President Bush's abstinence-only education program.
McCain replied, "I think I support the president's policy." After another long pause, he replied, "You've stumped me."
The puzzled journalist responded "I mean, I think you'd probably agree it (contraceptives) probably does help stop [AIDS]?"
The Senator replied: "Are we on the Straight Talk Express?"
Then: "I'm not informed enough on it. Let me find out. You know, I'm sure I've taken a position on it in the past. I have to find out what my position was. Brian, would you find out what my position is on contraception -- I'm sure I'm opposed to government spending on it, I'm sure I support the president's policies on it."
It has been noted that there is some irony in a man so very proud of his extremely scurrilous youth to so righteously and sanctimoniously demand that today's generation remain chaste and good. How quickly they forget the temptations of the flesh.
Or maybe not.
Posted by Rian at 12:35 PM 0 comments