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Medlem: ggchickapee

Bibliotek2,104 bøgerse bibliotek

Anmeldelser89 anmeldelserse anmeldelser

Skyertag-sky, forfatter-sky

Tagsfiction (1,088), novel (951), TBR (802), finished (582), American (391), James's (375), history (292), America (282), 1001 (254) — se alle tags

GrupperBloggers, Booze!, Christianity, Nabokov!, Needlearts, Oregonians, Political Conservatives, ReJoyce, The Drones Club (all things P.G. Wodehouse), The Prizes

YndlingsforfattereKingsley Amis, Saul Bellow, Lee Child, M. F. K. Fisher, Jim Harrison, Steven F. Hayward, John Lescroart, Ian McEwan, Vladimir Nabokov, Anthony Powell, Annie Proulx, Philip Roth, Evelyn Waugh, P.G. Wodehouse (Fælles favoritter)

Om mig My husband and I recently moved back to Portland after five years in San Francisco. We live with one nice cat, one crazy cat who spends 23 hours a day in the box springs, lots of books, and hubby's jazz cd collection. I practice law part time, and spend the rest of my time exploring, making lists, puttering at my desk, making dinner, and reading books.

I am a compulsive "list" reader. Having just finished the Modern Library's Top 100 Novels of the 20th Century (yahoo!), I'm still actively working on National Book Award winners, Booker Prize winners, and Pulitzer Prize (fiction) winners, Book Critics Circle winners, and One Book by Every Winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature. I am also lackadaisically working on the Modern Library's Top 100 Non-Fiction Books of the 20th Century, Pulitzer Prize (history) winners, and National Review's list of most influential (non-fiction) books of the 20th Century. Arguably, I burn up valuable reading time playing with my lists. I know this.

Om mit bibliotek My LT library includes all the books I live with.

Any book tagged "James's" belongs to my husband and it is unlikely that I have read it or ever will -- unless it is also tagged "TBR" in which case I intend to get to it someday.

I confess to being a little loosey goosey with my star ratings. I should figure out my standards and stick to them. But for now, my stars should be taken with a grain of salt. Generally, 5 stars means it is an all-time favorite; 4 stars means I liked it and would recommend it; 3 stars means it was worth reading, but I wouldn't really recommend it; 2 stars means I didn't like it; and 1 star means I thought it was really bad. I've recently found myself giving 3 1/2 stars to several books. In my system, this means I would recommend it to certain readers, compared to a 4 star rating that means I would recommend it to anyone.

Hjemmesidehttp://rosecityreader.blogspot.com/

Også på43Things

Medlemskab LibraryThing Early Reviewers

StedPortland, Oregon

Kontotypeoffentlig, livstid

ForbindelserForbindelser

URLer http://www.librarything.com/profile/ggchickapee (profil)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/ggchickapee (bibliotek)

Medlem sidenJul 28, 2006

Beskeder fra andre LibraryThing'ere

(Skriv besked.)

Thank you for the welcome to Political Conservatives. I have always been a conservative, starting in the Eisenhower era when I was first introduced to National Review by a college classmate.

These are challenging times for conservatives, not only in terms of political chances, but also in the realm of ideas. If you check out my library, you will see many books on Islam, military history, and terrorism. After a initial burst of activity, I have not been as active as before on LT, and I have only posted a few messages in the Political Conservatives group.

Oh, I have been to Portland, on my way to visit my nephew in Battleground.
Thank you for the welcome. As a fiscal conservative, social liberal, and somewhat of a constitutionalist, I often have no idea where I stand. The major problem is a party platform (no matter which one) written to please a certain few while leaving out many. This is where my libertarian leanings kick in. I started out by selling cans of Goldwater, campaigned for Hillary, now they are both gone. I am thinking about starting a campaign to have McCain choose Susan Collins of Maine as VP.

Really appreciate your welcome as I was exasperated with the thread "The Feminist Disease" and ready to split and run. I tend to be analytical in my approach. I guess that's why I'm such a fan of Senator Collins.

I haven't had a chance to look at your library, it's good sized, but intend to. Mine has a bit of everything as I rarely read a book I don't enjoy for one reason or another.
Actually, the comments on my blog are moderated which is why it didn't show up immediately. I have to authorize the posting (which I did today). I really do recommend the older BBC adaptation of Mansfield Park and it's available on DVD at a fairly reasonable price. It consists of 6 or eight episodes so you get at least a full day or week's worth of viewing.

I do enjoy the Julia Fleming-Spencer mysteries that you reference. I don't think I've reviewed any on my blog as yet.

I will go visit your blog now and get to know you a little bit more as well!

Jill
Thank you for the welcome. The way to keep coffee grounds at the bottom of the coffee pot when serving (assuming you've boiled the coffee as done in times past) is to pour out a saucer of coffee and let cool. Then pour the cool saucer of coffee back into the pot. The cool liquid will sink to the bottom taking with it the suspended coffee grounds. Serve.

I haven't tried it but maybe I will someday.
Thanks for the welcome. I don't know if I'd label myself a conservative, but I enjoy the back-and-forth.
Thanks for the welcome to the PCG. It's interesting and I have enjoyed it.
Thanks for the welcome to the Political Conservatives group. I find it interesting reading.

As far as audiobooks go, I do not own an Ipod, I just stick to cassettes and CDs at this point. I do not work outside the home, so I just sit at my computer and listen as I am playing or web surfing.
Wow how fascinating! You sound very accomplished :-)
It is very different in Australia. It seems that in America you spent alot more time in school! We graduate from high school at 18 and then go on to university where we start a generic law degree which covers all aspects of law over 5 years. The 5th year allows you to gain a practicing certificate. However, you cannot study law without studying another degree at the same time (to be completed within the 5 years)i will therefore be graduating in 5 years with a communications degree and a law degree. Does that make sense?
Thanks ggchickapee :-)
You are the first to write a comment on my profile! I thought perhaps my library was too humble at this stage to be noticed. I was extremely happy to see a group devoted to the discussion of political conservatism and was especially pleased to see women involved in discussions.
I see that you practice law part-time, if you don't mind me asking, what do you specialise in?
Thanks for the comment - yeah, the Amazon thing is a bit of oddness. Not that I don't love the site to death (my debit card knows it all too well!), but the whole sub-culture of top reviewers is something itching for an in-depth sociological study.

=)

Steph
Just preordered Nothing to Lose from Amazon and thought of you.
Besotted
Thanks for the note on Anthony Powell- I sort of went into morning when I finished Dance to the Music of time- I had been reading one of them every other month or so for a LONG time.

Just looked at the Modern Library 100 Best Fiction again and realize that I haven't read any new ones in quite a while. I think I like the Radcliffe List more! Started reading the Modern Library list because my father was doing it too- I think he may have finished the list.

I have a sister who lives in Joseph, Oregon, by the way- Beautiful!

Best, Michael
Hello "g". ;-)

Here's the "Teutonic" version. I'm German through and through and prefer order to chaos, but honestly, skip around. He had an early, middle and late period but there's plenty of bleed in all three and the one Huck & Tom bit of sequel juvenalia, TOM SAWYER ABROAD doesn't have much in the way of character development.

A crude person who I will not name but who's initials match up to my own right down the line would liken this reading method to "always starting with the toe sucking, no matter the results" - so it's a good thing he's not here.

****************************************...

Here's the uber-teutonic version...

This list is only good and reliable up to to 1965. A fair amount of trunk material including a metric ton of correspondence and early journalism has surfaced since then. ***DO NOT*** read the 1916 version of THE MYSTERIOUS STRANGER. That is a corrupt version assembled by Albert Bigelow Paine from 3 different partially completed manuscripts and heavily edited (censored) by Paine. Read one of the two or three (it's complicated) more recent California Press editions.

- Barney Dannelke

(1867) Advice for Little Girls (fiction)
(1867) The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County (fiction)
(1868) General Washington's Negro Body-Servant (fiction)
(1868) My Late Senatorial Secretaryship (fiction)
(1869) The Innocents Abroad (non-fiction travel)
(1870-71) Memoranda (monthly column for The Galaxy magazine)
(1871) Mark Twain's (Burlesque) Autobiography and First Romance (fiction)
(1872) Roughing It (non-fiction)
(1873) The Gilded Age: A Tale of Today (fiction, made into a play)
(1875) Sketches New and Old (fictional stories)
(1876) Old Times on the Mississippi (non-fiction)
(1876) The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (fiction)

(1876) A Murder, a Mystery, and a Marriage (fiction); (1945, private edition), (2001, Atlantic Monthly).[55]

(1877) A True Story and the Recent Carnival of Crime (stories)
(1877) The Invalid's Story (Fiction)
(1878) Punch, Brothers, Punch! and other Sketches (fictional stories)
(1880) A Tramp Abroad (travel)
(1880) 1601: Conversation, as it was by the Social Fireside (fiction)
(1882) The Prince and the Pauper (fiction)
(1883) Life on the Mississippi (non-fiction)
(1884) Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (fiction)
(1889) A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court (fiction)
(1892) The American Claimant (fiction)
(1892) Merry Tales (fictional stories)
(1892) Those Extraordinary Twins (fiction)
(1893) The £1,000,000 Bank Note and Other New Stories (fictional stories)
(1894) Tom Sawyer Abroad (fiction)
(1894) The Tragedy of Pudd'nhead Wilson (fiction)
(1896) Tom Sawyer, Detective (fiction)
(1896) Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc (fiction)
(1897) How to Tell a Story and other Essays (non-fictional essays)
(1897) Following the Equator (non-fiction travel)
(1898) Is He Dead? (play)
(1900) The Man That Corrupted Hadleyburg (fiction)
(1900) A Salutation Speech From the Nineteenth Century to the Twentieth (essay)
(1901) The Battle Hymn of the Republic, Updated (satire)
(1901) Edmund Burke on Croker and Tammany (political satire)
(1901) To the Person Sitting in Darkness (essay)
(1902) A Double Barrelled Detective Story (fiction)
(1904) A Dog's Tale (fiction)
(1904) Extracts from Adam's Diary (fiction)
(1905) King Leopold's Soliloquy (political satire)
(1905) The War Prayer (fiction)
(1906) The $30,000 Bequest and Other Stories (fiction)
(1906) What Is Man? (essay)
(1906) Eve's Diary (fiction)
(1907) Christian Science (non-fiction critique)
(1907) A Horse's Tale (fiction)
(1907) Is Shakespeare Dead? (non-fiction)
(1909) Captain Stormfield's Visit to Heaven (fiction)
(1909) Letters from the Earth (fiction, published posthumously)
(1910) Queen Victoria's Jubilee (non-fiction)
(1912) My Platonic Sweetheart (dream journal, possibly non-fiction) [posthumous]
(1916) The Mysterious Stranger (published posthumously)
(1924) Mark Twain's Autobiography (non-fiction, published posthumously)
(1935) Mark Twain's Notebook (published posthumously)
(1962) Letters from the Earth (posthumous, edited by Bernard DeVoto)
(1969) No. 44, The Mysterious Stranger (fiction, published posthumously)
Hello (mumbles...I'm never sure how to address one when there is only a handle),

A "strict" chronological reading is difficult because of so many special cases - and not recommended since there is no reward to that approach. He was a cross-genre writer (and inventor of genres) on a scale few others approach.

He began as a journalist and was writing "squibs" as a teenager working for his brother Orion. Much of his newspaper writing was re-worked and folded into his books as both fictional and non-fictional elements. Just to give one example, when Twain wrote "The Innocents Abroad" (an account of one of the 1st European "grand tours" and the beginning of a particular type of travel genre) these were serialized - in more than one newspaper and at variable lengths depending on the needs of the paper - and then Twain re-wrote and reassembled the newspaper articles as the book THE INNOCENTS ABROAD. He "softened" some of the articles - but not all - to more broadly appeal to "Eastern" sensibilities (and avoid at least one libel suit) and did some other monkeying around. About 100 years later one of the University Presses (Iowa or California, I forget) released a book with all of the original articles in the original publication order (somewhat different from the book ordering) with annotations comparing the articles to the "variant" chapters of the travel book. So, really, given that with Twain there is A WHOLE LOT of this, how deep do you want to go?

The BEST complete affordable modern edition is the set of 20-some volumes (they're two floors away as I type this) done by Oxford in the 1980's and edited by Shelley Fisher-Fishkin, who is probably the best living Twain scholar at the moment. These were done in chronological order by publication date ranging from JUMPING FROG, the 1st edition of which was so loathed by Twain that he had the plates destroyed, to SPEECHES, which was published posthumously but is considered part of the canon.

You can read them that way if you like... but there are a couple you'd be well served to skip like THOSE EXTRAORDINARY TWINS and JOAN OF ARC. Just sayin'.

The only Twain I have in my store at the moment are to obvious and to beat for your consideration. I would track down a set of the Oxford's. I put my set together one at a time. The last one I found was SPEECHES, which I got an Amazon for $6.00 plus postage. It came with a sticker that said autographed and I thougt, "I don't bloody think so" - and then I turned to the introduction, which is all about Twain on the speaking platform and there was the autograph - Hal Holbrook. I grin just typing it.

ROUGHING IT, INNOCENTS ABROAD, HUCK FINN, PUDD'n'Head Wilson and LETTERS FROM THE EARTH (1966) are the "required reading" course, IMHO.

Regards - Barney Dannelke
Thank you for the welcome. It is nice to find someplace where I don't have to stop thinking just to partcipate. As for Reacher, I do like his style. He is also one of the few authors my mother and I both like, which is really nice. Hope to talk soon, but alot of the time I do just lurk. Again, thanks for the welcome.
Sten
Great picture - you look quite happy there.
I am fascinated by your interest in lists. I have read all the Pulitzer fiction winners, and all of the Modern Library panel's list of the 100 best works of fiction in English in the 20th century except Finnegan's Wake (I looked at the first page of it on line and said my life was too short to wade thru that). I am sporadically trying to do all the Booker winners, and Pulitzer winners in other categories, tho reading some of the old Pulitzer history winners, for instance, seems maybe not worthwhile. I am thinking of titles like the 1929 History winner The Organization and administrtion of the Union Army. I feel there has been better stuff done on the subject since, so should I read it just because it won in 1929? And some of the winners are a pain to read: for instance, I read the 1983 history Pulitzer winner and was bored positively spitless. I have read 40 of the History Pulitzer winners, which shows how incomplete I am on that category. I hae all my life kept track of what I read, and since 1944 of when I finished a book, and have post-reading notes on all the books I have read since 1969. National Book Award fiction winners--I have read 47 and could probably read them all if I set out to do so.
I have read To Kill A Mockingbird which is a lovely book.When I am on LibraryThing I am reminded of all the books I still want to read. There are some on your list I have intended to get to and never have ...but I will.
My method is more the "chicken with head cut off method". I do try to pick some from the 1001 books to read before you are allowed to die. I am thinking I might want to die after a couple hundred years.
I just recently got interested in the Pulitzer list. Some of the other lists just didn't interest me.
Of course I read a lot of this and that which has made my way to the TBR shelves. Only a few weeks ago, I had 1/2 a shelf of TBR, now I am up to three shelves.
I am trying to get copies of the first two Pulitzers, I think I will attempt them in order, but not re-read the ones I already have.
No, I don't live in Bend, but I was just there with friends less than two weeks ago (we spent that recent 102 degree day climbing in the much cooler mountains west of Bend). And then we visited your city-- Portland-- for a few days. We ate good food (at Higgins and other places), went to Powell's (of course), visited the Japanese and Chinese gardens, etc.

Long story to say that I live in Klamath Falls, but I did grow up visiting Bend every summer, and my extended family still gathers there often enough.

Welcome back to Oregon! (I've enjoyed perusing your library.)
Thanks for the welcome. The Skeptical Environmentalist is a good read. Bjorn Lomborg is a rare voice of reason in the global warming debate, and follows the evidence where it leads (rather than massaging it to fit his agenda). He sees plenty of things that can be done to improve the world, and advocates putting money where it will do the most good.
Just finished your recommendation of The Assistant. Thanks so much. What a wonderful novel, and what an ending!
Thanks for the welcome. I'm not what you'd call conservative, but I'm equally not a liberal. I'm just me. I do appreciate the civility of your welcome -- the bickering of the past, what, 15 years? - is just boring at this point, especially bickering over received ideas that came from people who wear pancake makeup in a professional capacity.

So, here's to non-sectarian discussion of a sectarian nature. Does that even make sense?
Hi There from a former Eugenian. Thanks for welcoming me, but here's the thing. I'm not a political conservative, more of a slightly-to-the-left centrist, so I withdrew from the group, preferring to not be an interloper. Unfortunately, the American Politics site doesn't appear to be very active.

The entire political spectrum appears to be represented on C-Span and Book TV. In recent weeks I watched Brian Lamb interviewing R. Emmett Tyrell, Jr., founder of The American Spectator and author of "The Clinton Crackup" in which he demonstrates his profound hatred of the Clintons and his obvious bitter resentment of their continuing popularity and accumulated wealth. Yesterday I watched Phil Kent discussing reasons why he wrote "Foundations Of Betrayal" (the Rockefeller Foundation has funded "radical" environmental groups, etc.).

Chalmers Johnson's "Nemesis: The Last Days Of The American Republic" and "Fiasco: The American Military Adventure In Iraq" by Thomas Ricks are two books that I would highly recommend because of their well-reasoned portrayals of American foreign policy blunders. Both authors have been interviewed on Book TV.

I post only books from my home library on LibraryThing, so my "reading history" is quite incomplete, given that our local library is an excellent resource.

Cheers! Carol
In case you didn't see it in the Booze group:

"There is nothing quite so stimulating as a strong dry martini cocktail."
-- T. S. Eliot

from Creators by Paul Johnson
Proud to be your understudy. However, I'm pessimistic about the robust economy continuing after '09. I'm afraid the Dems are poised to capture the White House, which will mean: higher taxes, more regulation, more restrictions on trade and weaker economic growth. Hope I am wrong.
Thanks for the recommendation to try La Seranita -- it was fabulous!
Thanks for the note about "Finnegans Wake." The weekly readings were my greatest success as party host. They were nonpareil. I really do recommend getting a half dozen or more people together, each with their copy of the book, and reading aloud.

Have someone prepare for the sung portions, though.
I just read your book recommendation in the Christianity group and I plan to look up that author to find her book. I am our church librarian and I'm always trying to find books to challenge minds, even if they don't like it sometimes. :) I have some elderly ladies that only want Harlequin style "Christian" romances. ;) Your description of the author reminded me of one of my favorite authors, Francine Rivers, who also had been a popular writer, then became a Christian, and now is possibly an even more popular author. Have you read her? I recommend The Last Sin Eater and Redeeming Love if you haven't. Another good one is Leota's Garden.
Thank you for the welcome!

My Catholic sensibilites however are offended!

Why must I be either "a jerk or a comedian" it's not an either or thing you know, I could be both!

And chicks do dig me, at least my wife and two girls do!

Thanks again for the nice hello'

Joe
Hi there ggchickapee!
Thank you for the "welcome" to the Political Conservatives group. The topics look fascinating! It's nice to discover like-minded conservatives within the LT universe. So often, book lovers are automatically assumed to be raging liberals.
By the way, I see you too are a member of "Booze!". Wonderful! We conservative lushes need to stick together.... if only to trade cocktail secrets!
:-)
Best wishes,
Trish
(a.k.a. emmathrice)
Thanks for the welcome--I'm truly not conservative at all, although I am militant about Catholic doctrine--I've only voted for one Republican in my whole life. I know it doesn't make sense, but I'm the one who tries to convince the Democrats to see certain issues correctly. On top of that, I'm a native of Little Rock and have both my degrees from the University of Arkansas--when Bill and Hilary got married, I was two blocks away. It was quite a day! I have something of a different view on the whole Bill and Hill thing, since I've seen it from the beginning, worked in Bill's very first campaign (he lost), and then worked very closely with Hillary on some projects when Bill was governor, and had many, many friends affected by Kenneth Starr. So I have extremely mixed feelings about them and the next President--but I am also militant about W. I cannot think of anything kind to say about him, and it's Lent, so I'll shut up. But I do have a widget on my desktop that is counting down the time until he is no longer president.

So I'm basically in the wrong group, but I want to be in it because of my very conservative stance on several issues. Does that make sense?
As a long-time lurker, and beneficiary of your open posting policy, it seemed the proper thing to do. :) With my odd patchwork of opinion and uncertainty, I'm less comfortable claiming to BE a political conservative than I am delighted to belong to and join in the Political Conservatives Group. It's an excellent and interesting gathering, which I've greatly enjoyed. Leaving it open only adds to the benefits (even if there are occasional dust-ups :) ).

Many thanks for the group, and what one might term your hospitality!
Welcome to Books Compared. I'm so glad you joined! Your English teacher's old rules don't apply here - feel free to share whatever random reflections occur to you after considering two books that inspire you, whether positively or negatively. I'll be eager to read your posting.
Thanks for the book tip, and though I have heard of and seen displayed Hayward's anti-Jimmy Carter book, I haven't read it and it's a real low priority read for me, though I perhaps will eventually read it as Jimmy just will not go away, and with his new religion in the works it may come in helpful to have that little extra info. I'm not much into ad hominems and would rather focus on the substance of Carter's advocacy (for that is what it is), however, sometimes certain propensities or patterns do demonstrate conflict of interest and/or lack of credibility, etc. For ex, Carter has some racist incidents in his past, yet now he is portraying himself as pro-Africa, fighter for the oppressed Black Americans (going on Tavis Smiley, specifically mentioning Black Baptists as among those to be appealed to in his new religion, etc), an so on, yet he diminishes the attrocities of South African apartheid as well as the Rwandan genocide when he says that Israel's treatment of Palestinians is "worse" than those. Also he's starting this new Baptist religion because he's criticizing the Southern Baptists for one thing for being racist, yet Carter only got out of the Southern Baptists (after a 65-year membership) AFTER they apologized for their pro-slavery past, and the Southern Baptists are said to be the most racially integrated denomination now.

I would like to think the Jimmy Carter and his Arab-financed Carter Center would be irrelevant, but seeing as how Bill Clinton, spouse of a presidential candidate, is his new Immmoral Majority religion partner, and Carter is of the Democratic Party now in ascendancy and in need of a ready-made Middle East plan, and Carter's got global contacts, that Hayward book may well be necessary. Amazing that Carter book supporters include Louis Farrakhan and Islamic Jihad, yet somehow the average joe doesn't get it that he isn't a neutral honest broker but an advocate. Thanks again - ER
Thanks! As for the vegan desserts...well I guess that fingers me as an atypical conservative...if the interest in hardcore punk rock didn't already give that away!

I suppose that being in academia has pushed me towards self-description as a conservative even though I'd like to think that my views are more nuanced than the "conservative v. liberal" dichotomy.

Anyhow, many recipies for baked goods don't require much modification. All you need usually is commercial egg replacer and you're good to go. Of course,I'm no star in the kitchen, but there are a few serious vegan bakeries out there that can seemingly work miracles.
Thanks for your comment and for starting the "political conservatives" group. Once I start using the site more, I hope to be quicker with responding to comments!

I love Nickel Mountain... and pretty much anything that John Gardner ever wrote. He was a great force in the literature of modern traditionalism. I also highly recommend his books Grendel and On Moral Fiction as well as the novels recently reissued (!) by New Directions: October Light and The Sunlight Dialogues.
I had licked my wounds long enough and I think the hair finally grew back on my balls. ;) Remind me again why I can't seem to resist convos about religion and politics?
Thank you so much for the welcome! It's so nice to find some like-minded readers after spending my day in a library with co-workers who are only a little less liberal than most university professors! I'm the token conservative at our library and though I don't do any of the actual book buying, I make a point of requesting the purchase of specific politically conservative books - and those are still outnumbered at least 20 to 1 - so I'm very interested in what other conservatives are reading!
Sorry for taking so long to reply. The reason the young Roth thinks he is responsible for killing Mrs Wishnau(?) is that when talking to his Aunt she gets the idea that Seldon (her son) is his best friend, and so Aunt Evelyn arranges for them to be sent to Kansas with the Roth's. They then end up being sent out west, while the Philip gets to stay in Newark when his father resigns.
I have to say I'm glad that we will finally have a female (and Italian!) Speaker, but Pelosi is just not it!! 8-(

I am also quite glad the the Dems. grabbed the House (I think that I might be the only one after looking at threads in our group). I'm starting to think that Congress was becoming a rubber-stamp for Bush. It is a shame to think that these rubber-stampers (few as they are) are getting some really great guys (and gals) kicked out of the House just because of their affliation. In CT, Nancy Johnson, a 24 year incumbent really got a good wallopping, and rightfully so. Unfortunatly, our best (or should I say my favorite) GOP incumbent of 6 years, Rob Simmons, is in a deadlock behind 150 votes amid a recount because of the stereotype. It is really sad that our country is voting based on party affilliation instead of the issues each candidate represents.

Oh well... Only 2 years until the real test.
Go Guliani!!!!! 8-)
Thanks for the kind words!

As for a global warming site--I'd recommend TCSDaily.com without hesitation.

Check out the article on the front page entitled Eden Without Us?

Just so you can get to know me better, I thought it would be a good idea to let you know where I stand on a few of the issues.

I toe the conservative line most of the time, but there are circumstances where I'll be more comfortable with a libertarian position--global warming is one of those issues.

While not an issue I'm really knowledgeable on, my position on global warming is that it's one of those issues I think is way overrated as I think people don't really have that much of an effect on the weather.

I say this only because these changes in temperature are cyclical and take several lifetimes to manifest themselves--I'll bet we'll be hearing about global freezing in a few hundred years.

Just to be clear, I'm all for making our environment cleaner and our energy production and consumption more efficient, but not at the expense of the headaches of bureaucratic regulations and overly invasive laws that do nothing to address the problems and waste money, time, and cause all sorts of hidden opportunity costs.

I hope that this helps give you an idea as to what I'll say and I'm looking forward to participating in the group.
Thanks for the invite. Coming from the homestate of Gay Marraige by court fiat, Massachusetts, I struggle everyday with my existence in this "mindset of liberalism" pervalent here.
I am a self employed companion animal Veterinarian, who did not need to be mugged to develop my conservative leanings. I simply needed to observe my surrounding, the floundering of the many who subsist on the public dole, and the observed lack in most to change their lot in this life.
I am an American first and am PROUD of our President, Mr. Bush.
GOD Bless America, and may He bless ALL who choose to be. TY
All the way from the South, thank you for the warm welcome! :) I surprise most people by having conservative leanings as I am 25, a fine artist and author, and work with a bunch of liberal graphic designers... But who ever really knows? *raises a glass* Here's to many great conversations and getting to know each other!
Thanks for the welcome! I live about an hour south of Eugene, though I spend a fair amount of time in Portland. My family and I used to vacation in Oregon. This went on for a decade, until we finally gave in and moved up from California.
My father - also an outspoken conservative - attended law school in the Bay area and frequently entertains me with his anecdotes; I suppose that I should offer you the best of luck. Of course, things may have changed since then (OK, so maybe they haven't...).
Coffee, wine, or Martininiiiis are on me, whenever you get here.
"Feminine and competent". Yes, that works. By the way, this is relevant to a theory I have been entertaining for a couple of years, observing the advance of women into the higher levels of power: Consider the top ten or twenty thousand positions in government and business and civic institutions. Historically, they have been almost entirely male, and even now, are largely male. I think this will change dramatically in the next century. More and more, the right to compete for these places is being opened to women. And although on average, women are (I believe) less aggressive and competitive than men, and although on average, women have babies which severely limits their ability to compete in the early stages of their careers, these considerations do not apply to exceptional women -- the "tail" of the distribution. So the very top places may be open to women in a way that, as a practical matter, the middle level positions are not, or are not so much. Now consider that women, if they want, can easily manipulate most men. I will say no more about this, it's obvious. Conclusion? Within a few decades, we may see the top of the pyramid dominated by women, with what consequences, I cannot say.
A very nice picture, by the way! I drink too much and have built up quite a tolerance--except for martinis. Two will loosen my inhibitions (I start flirting shamelessly with liberals) and three will often put me under the table. The only time I ever "blacked out" was after three martinis. I couldn’t remember how I got home. Cheers!

P.S. Gin or Vodka?
Thank you for your welcome to the political conservatives list. Re: membership in both the "liberal" and "conservative" group. My personality is not split; I am quite sure who I am and where I stand (a small d democrat -- liberty and justice for all). I suppose that on many of the issues of the day, that puts me in the "liberal/proressive" camp, and I am fairly sure much more of my library will be shared by that group.

But in my view the categories that popularly divide the political landscape are all but incoherent and are used by the pundits and politicians for their own purposes to the detriment of political discourse in general. I am particularly disturbed by the sense in which so-called conservatives and liberals almost seem to inhabit separate realities -- reading only the things that confirm their views and steadfastly ignoring or demonizing those who disagree with them. I am not naive enough to believe we can (or should even try) to resolve all political differences. But I do think it would be nice to try and live in the same world. Hence, I try to read a bit more broadly, and joined both groups simply to learn what books are being read across the spectrum.
Thanks for the welcome. Whether I shall participate in the near future remains to be seen, as I've become terminally distracted while going through my bookshelves, and there are many thousands left to go. Trouble is, I start to catalogue something, then end up reading in it for half an hour.

The nice thing about being asked to join the Political Conservatives group first thing (someone there is quite eagle-eyed) is that membership will serve to frighten off other, and potentially tedious and/or hysterical, groups.

Best wishes to all.
A pickup truck with a "W" sticker, in San Francisco??? As a conservative of course I admire courage, but there is a point where it overlaps with foolhardiness.

Doug
Thanks, but judging from your reviews and posts, I do not see evidence of ADD yet. (Well, unless you write really really fast.) I would love to see more reviews though. :) I’m glad my discussion of the “conservative” label didn’t make me sound “more nuanced than thou.” On the labeling issue, it is amusing to see that your group has been much more active than Classically Liberal. I had thought that’s where the Hayek action would be, but those guys seem to have reached an equilibrium, so to speak, after a few pints. :) (I mean no disrespect to thecardiffgiant, and once I get up the courage to join ONE MORE group, I shall probably join his group as well.) Cheers!
Thank you for inviting me to join Booze! I accept with pleasure. Though, I confess to being a bit curious (and perhaps slightly paranoid) about what made me fit the invite criteria. Was it my disjointed and sometimes incoherent writing style?

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