Thursday, December 30, 2004

Show Tonight and NYE plans...

Leann has skipped out of the country for a few days, so I'll be doing both Brokedown Palace and The Loose Logic Set tonight. Seeing as how she covered both her show and my show last week, it seems only fair to share and share alike, right? Anyway, I have a sweet one for you on this pre-NYE. Grateful Dead NYE 1991 from the Oakland Coliseum. I will be playing the full show tonight, and breaking in from time to time for station ID only. After this show, I'll be re-broadcasting a 1967 interview with Jerry Garcia from the Acid Test Reels. That should take us to the 1 am hour when I'll play a couple of tunes to fill the time till 2 am.

Listen in and enjoy, if you like the Greatful Dead show I play and would like a copy, just send me an e-mail at sappism@hotmail.com with your snail mail address and I'll get it in the mail to you.

Tomorrow night Topaz is playing in Austin for NYE. I'm heading to that show. Take a listen, they're pretty good. Don't know what their taping policy is, but I'm bringing along my equipment, you know, just in case.

I'll have the setlist up early tomorrow morning, so I'll save my new years greetings till then.

Friday, December 24, 2004

Merry Christmas!

I know, it's just Christmas Eve, but Christmas will be here tomorrow, and I won't be able to get to the computer till tomorrow night at the earliest.

"Why," you ask? Well, my Christmas is a whirlwind of tradition that starts around 6:30 tonight and runs straight through 10 tomorrow night. It's a wonderful amalgam of presents, family, overeating, and lack of sleep we can point to as some of the best family moments in the Sappington household.

So tonight, we start with a get together with my Dad's side of the family. We eat all kinds of snack food that my Mom has slaved over for the last couple of days. We also watch that movie about the kid that wants a Red Ryder BB gun. I always have to walk out during the scene when Randy, the younger brother, eats like a piggy. I've never liked that part, but the part where Ralphie beats the hell out of Scutt Farkas is pretty cool. During the movie, usually around the time that Ralphie turn in his theme on what he wants for Christmas, we start opening presents. This usually lasts until about midnight or so. We clean up and get to bed around 1 or 1:30 in the morning.

Christmas morning starts early, usually anywhere between 4:30 to 6:30 in the morning. TOO EARLY! If there was anything I could change about our family's Christmas traditions, this would be it. Man wasn't meant to wake up that early, modern man doubly so! Anyway, we wake up, see what "Santa" left. I can't speak for Santa at other people's houses, but he's highly organized at our place. Everyone has a general area where their stuff is. So we look at it, ooh and ahh, and then the race is on. We all race over to my Grandfather's house for breakfast. It was fun when I was like 10 or so, but man, I just want to sleep...you'll see my justification later. So we get over there, once everyone else is there we start with opening presents, then eat a good ol', genuine, first rate, never been beat, country breakfast. I try not to eat that much because there's a lot of eating to do today.

Around 10 or so, we head out from my Grandfather's house and head back home. I would take a look at what I got, but quite frankly, I'd rather sleep. There's not much time for that though because we've got lunch at 1pm. So we get up, head to lunch and lounge around and talk while the kids play with all the toys that require batteries or at least play with the boxes that said toys came in, and I beg to go back to the house to sleep.

Around 5 or so, we head back to my Grandfather's for dinner. See, we're over there twice in the same day. Seems like we shouldn't be killing ourselves to get over there so early, but we do it because it's family, it's tradition, it's just the way it's always been done. We get done there around 8 in the evening. Get home and finally get to breathe long enough to look at all the new stuff.

Anyway, Merry Christmas, Happy New Year, and Happy whatever other Holidays you want to squeeze in.

Tuesday, December 21, 2004

Do I sound like this on the air?

Here's a Strong Bad E-mail about radio...I hate to think that I sound like any of these people, but I might sound like the college radio guy sometimes.

Oh well, I'm working on it.

Friday, December 17, 2004

Some are created more equal than others...

A recent survey conducted by Cornell University showed that 51% of Americans believe that we should limit the civil liberties of Muslim-Americans!?

Did you just see what I saw? It's ok to restrict someone's civil liberties because they practice a different religion? If all these wackos from the religious right were persecuted the same way they're recommending that Muslim Americans be persecuted, do you think we'd hear something about it? Oh you bet your gold-plated crucifix you would...wait, no, you wouldn't bet if you're in the religious right, but you get the idea.

Get ready, ACLU. I have a feeling that if you folks aren't busy now, that you'll be swamped soon enough.

$85,000,000 of our tax dollars in the drink.

An 85 million dollar plan to keep us safe from terrorists with box cutters by using interceptor missile crashed and burned in the North Pacific Ocean earlier this week.

This "Missile Defense Shield" program is a reprise of the glorious Reagan boondoggle, "Star Wars".

Could you imagine what you could do with 85 million dollars? I can. I know that my research would be funded till the end of time. Eighty-five million dollars could go a long, long way to building solar and wind farms to supplement our energy needs. It could go to job training, homeland security that would guarantee that our ports are safe, and education (remember all those chidren that are left behind?).

Instead, our government thinks it wise to drop 85 million dollars into the Pacific in the form of a missile.

Way to go, dumbass.

"I don't want to be a daddy, because daddies die."

900

That's the number of children in the United States that have lost a parent thanks to this war. Nine-hundred children without mom or dad to help with homework, riding a bike, little league, and Vacation Bible School. Nine-hundred kids that are going to have to face a financial struggle because their parents aren't there to provide income for a home.

These moral highgrounders really piss me off! Oh it's bad to take a frightened child to a Planned Parenthood clinic to discuss all their possible options (which may or may not include abortion), but it's perfectly ok to gun down innocents in foreign countries, in action orphening their children. It's ok to call for the death penalty for punishment.

Death begats death
Life begats life

Doncha just love it when Neocons turn on eachother?

After Rumsfeld's embarrassing perfomance in Kuwait, politicians have restated their demand that Rumsfeld be dropped from the Bush cabinet. Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME), and, get this, Sen. Trent Lott (R-MS)!

In addition to these heavy hitters, Bill Kristol, editor of the Neo-Conservative weekly news magazine, The Weekly Standard, and chief Neo-Con has cast some doubt on Rumsfeld's record.

The Defense Secretary We Have
By William Kristol
Wednesday, December 15, 2004; Page A33
"As you know, you go to war with the Army you have. They're not the Army you might want or wish to have at a later time."
-- Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, in a town hall meeting with soldiers at Camp Buehring in Kuwait, Dec. 8.

Actually, we have a pretty terrific Army. It's performed a lot better in this war than the secretary of defense has. President Bush has nonetheless decided to stick for now with the defense secretary we have, perhaps because he doesn't want to make a change until after the Jan. 30 Iraqi elections. But surely Don Rumsfeld is not the defense secretary Bush should want to have for the remainder of his second term.

Contrast the magnificent performance of our soldiers with the arrogant buck-passing of Rumsfeld. Begin with the rest of his answer to Spec. Thomas Wilson of the Tennessee Army National Guard:

"Since the Iraq conflict began, the Army has been pressing ahead to produce the armor necessary at a rate that they believe -- it's a greatly expanded rate from what existed previously, but a rate that they believe is the rate that is all that can be accomplished at this moment. I can assure you that General Schoomaker and the leadership in the Army and certainly General Whitcomb are sensitive to the fact that not every vehicle has the degree of armor that would be desirable for it to have, but that they're working at it at a good clip."

So the Army is in charge. "They" are working at it. Rumsfeld? He happens to hang out in the same building: "I've talked a great deal about this with a team of people who've been working on it hard at the Pentagon. . . . And that is what the Army has been working on." Not "that is what we have been working on." Rather, "that is what the Army has been working on." The buck stops with the Army.

At least the topic of those conversations in the Pentagon isn't boring. Indeed, Rumsfeld assured the troops who have been cobbling together their own armor, "It's interesting." In fact, "if you think about it, you can have all the armor in the world on a tank and a tank can be blown up. And you can have an up-armored humvee and it can be blown up." Good point. Why have armor at all? Incidentally, can you imagine if John Kerry had made such a statement a couple of months ago? It would have been (rightly) a topic of scorn and derision among my fellow conservatives, and not just among conservatives.

Perhaps Rumsfeld simply had a bad day. But then, what about his statement earlier last week, when asked about troop levels? "The big debate about the number of troops is one of those things that's really out of my control." Really? Well, "the number of troops we had for the invasion was the number of troops that General Franks and General Abizaid wanted."

Leave aside the fact that the issue is not "the number of troops we had for the invasion" but rather the number of troops we have had for postwar stabilization. Leave aside the fact that Gen. Tommy Franks had projected that he would need a quarter-million troops on the ground for that task -- and that his civilian superiors had mistakenly promised him that tens of thousands of international troops would be available. Leave aside the fact that Rumsfeld has only grudgingly and belatedly been willing to adjust even a little bit to realities on the ground since April 2003. And leave aside the fact that if our generals have been under pressure not to request more troops in Iraq for fear of stretching the military too thin, this is a consequence of Rumsfeld's refusal to increase the size of the military after Sept. 11.

In any case, decisions on troop levels in the American system of government are not made by any general or set of generals but by the civilian leadership of the war effort. Rumsfeld acknowledged this last week, after a fashion: "I mean, everyone likes to assign responsibility to the top person and I guess that's fine." Except he fails to take responsibility.

All defense secretaries in wartime have, needless to say, made misjudgments. Some have stubbornly persisted in their misjudgments. But have any so breezily dodged responsibility and so glibly passed the buck?

In Sunday's New York Times, John F. Burns quoted from the weekly letter to the families of his troops by Lt. Col. Mark A. Smith, an Indiana state trooper who now commands the 2nd Battalion, 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit, stationed just south of Baghdad:

"Ask yourself, how in a land of extremes, during times of insanity, constantly barraged by violence, and living in conditions comparable to the stone ages, your marines can maintain their positive attitude, their high spirit, and their abundance of compassion?" Col. Smith's answer: "They defend a nation unique in all of history: One of principle, not personality; one of the rule of law, not landed gentry; one where rights matter, not privilege or religion or color or creed. . . . They are United States Marines, representing all that is best in soldierly virtues."

These soldiers deserve a better defense secretary than the one we have.

The writer is editor of the Weekly Standard.

__________________

Perhaps FOX will put out a new special: When Neocons Attack!


Setlist for 12/16-17/04

Couple of program notes before I get to the setlist. First, I will be hosting the Sunday Morning Sidewalk this week. I know it's going to be rough to wake up at 10 am on Sunday after this weekend's partying potential, but if you're able to, please do. I'll do a hip job on Christmas music between the KEOS Christmas music library and my own stuff.

Secondly, I won't be doing the Loose Logic Set next week (12/23). I will be home enjoying the holidays with my family. Leann, kind host of our sister show: Brokedown Palace, will be hosting the Loose Logic Set next week. I will be back the next week (12/30) to do the show.

Now, on to the setlist.

Artist - Song (Interview) - Album (Show)

Jerry Garcia - What is a hippie? - Acid Test Reels
Galactic - The Beast - Ruckus
Moe. - Linus & Lucy>Mexico - 10/02/02 B.B. King's Blues Club, New York City
Keller Williams - Scarlet Begonias>Fire on the Mountain>Linus & Lucy>Fire on the Mountain - 3/20/98 Olympia, WA
Umphrey's McGee - Miss Tinkle's Overture - Anchor Drops
Mofro - Santa Claus, True Love, and Freedom - 2/6/04 Atlanta, GA
Phish - Chalkdust Torture - 5/29/93 Laguna Seca Daze
Michael Franti & Spearhead - Bomb The World - Bonnaroo 2003
John Bell - Silent Night - 12/20/03 Warren Haynes Christmas Jam, Ashville, NC
Neil Young & Crazy Horse - Cortez The Killer - 2/28/04 Alberquerque, NM
Gov't Mule - Sco-Mule - The Deepest End
Red Hot Chili Peppers - Walkabout - One Hot Minute
Galactic - Doublewide>Mario Groove - Bonnaroo 2003
REM - The Outsiders - Around The Sun
Allman Brothers Band - In Memory of Elizabeth Reed - 7/3/70 Atlanta Pop Festival
John Travolta & Samuel L. Jackson - Royale With Cheese - Pulp Fiction Soundtrack
Phish - Timber Ho! - 11/18/96 Memphis, TN
Particle - The Elevator - 9/17/04 Austin City Limits Festival
Dave Matthews & Tim Reynolds - Christmas Song - Live at Luther College
Grateful Dead - We Bid You Goodnight - Nightfall of Diamonds

See you on Sunday, and then again on 12/30. Be nice to Leann.

Sunday, December 12, 2004

Simpsons Quote Tonight

This little nugget of wisdom from Marge: "I like t-shirts with funny little jokes on them like, 'support our troops'."

Now while this sounds totally un-patriotic, it is a commentary of these mordern times. Take for instance these magnetic yellow ribbons that are taking ultra-jingoistic America by storm. Do they care? I mean, really care? If they did, then they'd ask if the money is truly going to the troops. They'd ask why there is war profiteering in which their relatives are fighting.

All the sudden, yellow ribbons are just symbols, and as George Carlin said, "I leave symbols to the symbol minded."

Friday, December 10, 2004

Setlist for 12/9-10/04

Another day older and another setlist. I was thirsty for the entire show and there was no water in the studio! Needless to say that when I got home, I knocked down a big glass of water.

I was wide awake and ready to post the setlist last night, but my home internet service was down. It was still down this morning when I left, so today, the setlist post comes to you high atop the Texas A&M Psychology Building in my office in 421 Psychology.

Artist - Song (Interview) - Album(Show)

Jerry Garcia - What is a hippie? - Acid Test Reels
Galactic - The Beast - Ruckus
Umphrey's McGee - JaJunk Pt. 1>13 Days>JaJunk Pt. 2 - Anchor Drops
Afroskull - Layers - Afroskull's website
Dave Matthews & Tim Reynolds - Christmas Song - Live At Luther College
Particle - Make It Real - Bonnaroo 2003
Gov't Mule - Little Toy Brain - Deja Voodoo
Paul Bullock - Mellow Hippie - Promo CD
Phish - Julius - West Palm Beach, FL 11/2/96
Grateful Dead - China Cat Sunflower>I Know You Rider - Dusseldorf, Germany 4/24/72
Allman Brothers Band - You Don't Love Me - Live From Fillmore East 3/11-12/71
Robert Randolph & The Family Band - 3 Stroke (Good Time!) - Red Rocks, CO 7/6/02
Funky Meters - Here Comes The Meterman>Soul Island - Warren Haynes Christmas Jam, Ashville, NC 12/20/03
REM - Imitation of Life - Reveal
The Codetalkers - Million Dollars - Magnolia Fest, Live Oak, FL 10/22/04
Free Bass Cartel - Directions - Promo CD (Thanks John Straub)
Counting Crows - Rain King - Across a Wire - Live in NYC
Nirvana - Where Did You Sleep Last Night - Unplugged in NYC
Grateful Dead - We Bid You Goodnight - Nightfall of Diamonds

I'll see ya on the radio next week.

Wednesday, December 08, 2004

"It's essentially a matter of physics" What!?

So Rummy, after stating that he would be a point of stability in the Bush cabinent, went to Kuwait to speak to the troops. Little did he suspect that he would have his ass handed to him by some no-name Specialist in the US Army. Spc. Thomas Wilson asked Mr. Rumsfeld, "Why do we soldiers have to dig through local landfills for pieces of scrap metal and compromised ballistic glass to up-armor our vehicles?"

To which, Rummy replied, "you have to go to war with the army you have." WHAT? Did I read that right? Did he just insult the troops? What a slap in the face! It was just like saying, "I wish we had an army of mutant cyborgs with superpowers, but we don't so we have to go to war with the army we have."

Then he followed that nugget of joy up with, "[The vehicles] have been brought from all over the world, from wherever they're not needed...It's essentially a matter of physics, not a matter of money.'' Again, I ask you what qualifies this freak to be Secretary of Defense? The Physics? No, no, no! Physics is reponsible for the apple falling from the tree and bonging you on the head. Physics is responsible for moving the wheels on those vehicles. Physics is NOT resposible for keeping the appropriate equipment to the troops, war profiteers are.

Now don't give me that gibberish about how democrats voted against funding for the war. They voted for funding which would repeal the tax breaks for the upper 1%. You know that, so stop trying to tell me that democrats and liberals don't love this country or the troops. While we're on it, does anyone know how much of the profits for those magnetic yellow ribbons go to the troops? If even one penny of the profits goes into the proprieter's pocket, then it's war profiteering and should be summarily discouraged. If the USO was selling them, then by God I'd buy one and put it on my car because I know where that cash is going, directly back to the troops!

While we're at it, there are oodles of Hummers on the roads of the US that could be over in Iraq. That's my challenge to all these people who insist on driving these gas guzzlers for show! If you care SO much about the troops, then ship that bad boy over to Iraq. You've got the cash, so be sure to buy the armor and send it over to them as well.


The Fourteen Points of Facism

Ok, I realize that I use the terms facist and facism to describe the current administration every once in a while, but I got to thinking, does anyone know what facism really is? I mean, sure we have examples of facism in history (Franco's Spain, Mussolini's Italy, and Hitler's Germany), but not all facist states require some kind of ethnic clensing such as the Holocaust.

Check this out, take a look at what's been going on in the US in the past 3 or 4 years, and then ask yourself if we live in a facist state.

Monday, December 06, 2004

You're all a bunch of potheads!

Ok, now that I have your attention, this article from Scientific American suggests that we have naturally occuring cannaboids, the class of chemicals in marijuana responsible for getting you stoned, in our bodies. Just the same way we have natually occuring opoids, and every other kind of hormone, neurotransmitter, or any other mind/body altering substance necessary to sustain proper function.

This raises some very interesting questions. First, if supplements of opoids (i.e. painkillers), hormones (i.e. estrogen in hormone replacement therapy for women), and even neurotransmitters (i.e. Selective Seratonin Re-uptake Inhibitors (SSRIs) such as Prozac) are allowed on the market for safe use, then why aren't supplements for the natural canniboids in our systems readily available at least at the doctor's prescription discretion level.

Second, when hemp-based cloth has been proven time and again to be a stronger, more durable fabric than cotton-based cloth, why do we continue to insist that hemp not be grown for commercial purposes such as clothing or rope?

...and the questions can go on ad nauseum. It's readily apparent that we must follow former President Clinton's example and have some lines drawn by people of a red state of mind and have some barriers shattered by those of a blue state of mind. So in other words, if you want to advertize zoloft, paxil, and prozac on the television, then don't, in the same breath, demonize marijuana because it comes from the ground rather than from a high tech lab. Remember, it was Vioxx that came from the lab...and it was cocaine that came from the land. Both have medicinal potential, but both are deadly. Of course, you know the solution is to legalize it all and tax the hell out of it, but that'd cut against the grain of conservative America. Ironiclly, it's conservative America that takes the greatest advantage of the social programs laid out by liberal America.

I find it very interesting that God dropped us off on the planet with all we need tucked neatly away in this skin we find ourselves in, but should we ever falter, should we ever dispair, God has left our cure, just growing here and there. After all, if you do buy the creation story wholeheartedly, then you have to admit that when God created the plant life on the earth that he created poppies filled with opium and marijuana full of THC. Now why would a rightous and awesome God leave drugs all scattered around the planet for people and animals to haphazardly graze upon? I mean, if you believe it all, then God was encouraging us to partake of the land whether it be eating corn on the cob or eating a magic mushroom.

Anyway, this article is a good read, check it out.

Sunday, December 05, 2004

What they're teachin' in Sunday School nowadays...sheesh!

I would like to take this Sunday afternoon to take back my faith from these Christo-Facists who have found it conveinient to piggyback their money-grubbing ideology onto the social conservative values of the midwest and southeastern United States. What these corporate mephistophilians have done is absolutely deplorable. Instead of uniting people in the common cause of peace and goodwill, we have been split into factions.

According the President Bush, we're in a crusade against terrorism. To the people we are taking the fight to, the word crusade has the same connotations that the word Holocaust has to Jews, or the meaning the words Ethnic Clensing have for Sudanese in the Darfour region, or Serbs used to have. Again, I say, at long last, "have you no sense of decency sir!?"



Christo-Facists 2004 Posted by Hello

Don't be disillusioned by this jingoistic attempt to make Christianity the state religion. Our nation is a one where freedom of religion and the understood separation of church and state has made us one of the most faith-filled countries in the world. It is our diversity of faiths that make us a great nation! Please don't lose sight of that.


Take home messege: Absolute Fundementalism Corrupts Absolutely Posted by Hello

Friday, December 03, 2004

Sears ROCKS!, kinda.

I didn't think I'd say it, but I'm actually going to applaud the actions of a corporation! Sears pays its reservists the difference in their pay at the store and their reservists' pay. That could potentially be like an extra 30 thousand or so on average. Not only that, but they also get to keep full benefits! Health insurance continues on. Everything.

And the Grinch's heart grew 3 sizes that day...except...

Sears is only offering this deal to Full-Time employees (those working at 40 hours a week). Those who were working part time (which make up the majority of the reservists that also work for Sears). Grrrr...there's always something, isn't there?

December 2-3 Setlist

Last night was the first show since Thanksgiving, and although it might not have shown through the airwaves, I felt it. I forgot my intro music, so had to go with the alternate intro music. Then I forgot my headphones so I had to borrow Leann's for the night (Thanks Leann!).

Besides that, I thought it was a smooth show. The first hour, as will be the case for the next two Thursdays before Christmas, I'll be playing exerpts from the 6-disc collection called the Warren Haynes Cristmas Jam 2003.

On to the setlist...

Artist - Song (Interview) - Album (Show)

Michael Franti & Spearhead - Listener Supported - San Francisco, CA 11/5/03
Keller Williams - New Xmas Song - Warren Haynes Christmas Jam Ashville, NC 12/20/03
Kevin Kinney, Edwin McCain, Warren Haynes, Artimus Pyle, & Andy Hess - Straight To Hell - Ashville, NC 12/20/03
Sonny Landreth Band (w/ Warren Haynes) - Blues Attack - Ashville, NC 12/20/03
John Bell, Warren Haynes, Dave Schools, & Todd Nance - Travelin' Light - Ashville, NC 12/20/03
Funky Meters - Just Kissed My Baby - Ashville, NC 12/20/03
Sam Bush & John Cowan - Sailin' Shoes - Ashville, NC 12/20/03
Gregg Allman & Friends (w/ Artimus Pyle & Luther Dickenson) - One Way Out - Ashville, NC 12/20/03
Gov't Mule - Slackjaw Jezebel - Deja Voodoo
REM - Boy In The Well - Around The Sun
The Other Ones - St. Stephen>The Eleven - The Strange Remain
Col. Bruce Hampton & The Codetalkers (w/ Jimmy Herring) - Isles of Langerhan - Magnolia Fest, Live Oak, FL 10/22/04
Particle - The Banker - Launchpad
Phish - Weekapaugh Groove - Limestone, ME 8/15-16/98
Chris Robinson & New Earth Mud - Mother of Stone - Bonnaroo 2004
Mofro - Six Ways From Sunday - Atlanta, GA 2/6/04
Grateful Dead - Tennessee Jed - Dusseldorf, Germany 4/24/72
Gil Scott-Heron - Winter in America - The Best of Gil Scott-Heron, Live!
Nirvana - Lake of Fire - Unplugged in NY
Neil Young & Crazy Horse - Falling From Above - Greendale
Grateful Dead - We Bid You Goodnight - Nightfall of Diamonds

See ya next week on the radio...