This sport (bett)ing life

I tied for 2nd in my NCAA pool, so I get $100. Not bad; if Georgetown had’ve won their game I would’ve made $600. Oh well. I usually finish near the bottom so overall I’m pretty happy. I’m also in 1st in my NHL pool (after a hiccup late last week) and 2nd in my NBA pool.

The Canadiens won tonight, but so did the Leafs. Sigh…you just know it’s going to come down to the final game of the season between Toronto and Montreal, and I’m going to have a heart attack without ever having actually owned our condo. Ragh.

.:.

Shingles all gone now. Still have some marks, and my neck’s still a little sore, but basically I’m at the “now-dead skin falling from my body” phase. Yay!

[tags]ncaa pool, hockey pool, canadiens, leafs, shingles[/tags]

A light at the end of the scabby tunnel

The shingles are almost gone. I still have the marks on my jaw and a few spots on my neck, and I’m still store, but I’m past the contagious stage. I’m out of the cave tomorrow. Never been so happy to get back to work.

.:.

Two piss-takes which make me very happy: the Quill & Quire’s blog analyzes the self-serving blurbs on Rebecca Eckler’s new book, and Alanis Morissette excoriates Fergie in her version of My Humps.

[tags]shingles, rebecca eckler, alanis morissette, fergie[/tags]

"To do less would have added moral shame to humiliation."

Colin sent me a link to this New Yorker article today about Iraqis who joined up with the invading American forces to become translators and civil servants. It’s long, but very interesting.

The Arabic for “collaborator” is aameel—literally, “agent.” Early in the occupation, the Baathists in Ali’s neighborhood, who at first had been cowed by the Americans’ arrival, began a shrewd whispering campaign. They told their neighbors that the Iraqi interpreters who went along on raids were feeding the Americans false information, urging the abuse of Iraqis, stealing houses, and raping women. In the market, a Baathist would point at an Iraqi riding in the back of a Humvee and say, “He’s a traitor, a thug.” Such rumors were repeated often enough that people began to believe them, especially as the promised benefits of the American occupation failed to materialize. Before long, Ali told me, the Baathists “made the reputation of the interpreter very, very low—worse than the Americans’.”

The article laments the American administration’s treatment of these Iraqis, and rightly so, but I thought it ignored the historical parallel of how such people have been viewed by the occupied citizenry in past conflicts. For example, while officials in the Vichy French government may have felt they were doing the best thing for their country by siding with the Nazis, that didn’t stop the French resistance from hating them. Obviously American foreign policy in Iraq is markedly different than Germany’s in 1940, though the average Iraqi might not appreciate the nuance. I just think the article should have gotten some reaction directly from Iraqis opposed to the occupation, to get a balance.

.:.

Ever since Flickr’s map view of images was launched I’ve had fun playing around with it, but it comes in really handy when you’re looking at travel options. Is that town pretty? Let’s see…yup. Very. I think I’ll go there.

[tags]iraqi translators, vichy, flickr[/tags]