Thursday, September 30, 2004 

This Flip-Floppin Waffler

While I haven't been feeling too good about our chances lately, I'm now commencing the backlash against the backlash against the backlash. We've got to get this guy out of the White House. Hypocritical bastard.

Feel free to repost this and send to your relatives in Florida, New Mexico, Pennsylvania... you know, where voting matters.

The following is from CBS.com:

"We found the weapons of mass destruction. We found biological laboratories."(May 29, 2003)

"I recognize we didn't find the stockpiles [of weapons] we all thought were there." (Sept. 9, 2004)
President Bush

Bush's Top Ten Flip-Flops

NEW YORK, Sept. 28, 2004

The charge of "flip-flopping" has resounded throughout the presidential race, with the Bush campaign repeatedly accusing Sen. John Kerry of changing his mind on the issues. The Kerry campaign, in turn, has declared that Mr. Bush is the one doing the flip-flopping.

Here, the president's most notable flip-flops.

Weapons of Mass Destruction
Announcing the invasion of Iraq on March 19, 2003, Mr. Bush said, “Intelligence gathered by this and other governments leaves no doubt that the Iraq regime continues to possess and conceal some of the most lethal weapons ever devised.”
Two months into the war, on May 29, 2003, Mr. Bush said weapons of mass destruction had been found.
“We found the weapons of mass destruction. We found biological laboratories,” Mr. Bush told Polish television. “For those who say we haven't found the banned manufacturing devices or banned weapons, they're wrong, we found them."
On Sept. 9, 2004, in Pennsylvania, Mr. Bush said: “I recognize we didn't find the stockpiles [of weapons] we all thought were there.”

Nation Building and the War in Iraq
During the 2000 campaign, George W. Bush argued against nation building and foreign military entanglements. In the second presidential debate, he said: "I'm not so sure the role of the United States is to go around the world and say, 'This is the way it's got to be.'"
The United States is currently involved in nation building in Iraq on a scale unseen since the years immediately following World War II.
During the 2000 election, Mr. Bush called for U.S. troops to be withdrawn from the NATO peacekeeping mission in the Balkans. His administration now cites such missions as an example of how America must "stay the course."

Iraq and the Sept. 11 Attacks
In a press conference in September 2002, six months before the invasion of Iraq, President Bush said, “you can't distinguish between al Qaeda and Saddam when you talk about the war on terror... they're both equally as bad, and equally as evil, and equally as destructive.”
In September of 2004, Mr. Bush said: “We've had no evidence that Saddam Hussein was involved with September 11th." Though he added that “there's no question that Saddam Hussein had al Qaeda ties,” the statement seemingly belied earlier assertions that Saddam and al Qaeda were “equally bad.”
The Sept. 11 commission found there was no evidence Saddam was linked to the 9/11 attacks, which killed nearly 3,000 people.

The Sept. 11 Commission
President Bush initially opposed the creation of an independent commission to investigate the Sept. 11 attacks. In May 2002, he said, “Since it deals with such sensitive information, in my judgment, it's best for the ongoing war against terror that the investigation be done in the intelligence committee.”
Bowing to pressure from victims' families, Mr. Bush reversed his position. The following September, he backed an independent investigation.

Free Trade
During the 2000 presidential election, Mr. Bush championed free trade. Then, eyeing campaign concerns that allowed him to win West Virginia, he imposed 30 percent tariffs on foreign steel products from Europe and other nations in March 2002.
Twenty-one months later, Mr. Bush changed his mind and rescinded the steel tariffs. Choosing to stand on social issues instead of tariffs in steel country – Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia – the Bush campaign decided it could afford to upset the steel industry rather than further estrange old alliances.

Homeland Security Department
President Bush initially opposed creating a new Department of Homeland Security. He wanted Tom Ridge, now the secretary of Homeland Security, to remain an adviser.
Mr. Bush reversed himself and backed the largest expansion of the federal government since the creation of the Defense Department in 1949.

Same-Sex Marriage
During the 2000 campaign, Mr. Bush said he was against federal intervention regarding the issue of same-sex marriage. In an interview with CNN's Larry King, he said, states "can do what they want to do" on the issue. Vice President Cheney took the same stance.
Four year later, this past February, Mr. Bush announced his support for an amendment to the Constitution that defines marriage as being exclusively between men and women. The amendment would forbid states from doing "what they want to do" on same-sex marriage.
Citing recent decisions by “activist judges” in states like Massachusetts, Mr. Bush defended his reversal. Critics point out that well before the 2000 presidential race, a judge in Hawaii ruled in December 1996 that there was no compelling reason for withholding marriage from same-sex couples.

Winning the War on Terror
"I don't think you can win it," Mr. Bush said of the war on terror in August. In an interview on NBC's "Today" show, he said, “I think you can create conditions so that . . . those who use terror as a tool are less acceptable in parts of the world."
Before the month closed, Mr. Bush reversed himself at the American Legion national convention in Nashville. He said: "We meet today in a time of war for our country, a war we did not start yet one that we will win." He later added, “we are winning, and we will win."

Campaign Finance Reform
President Bush was initially against the McCain-Feingold campaign finance reform bill. He opposed any soft-money limits on individuals to national parties.
But Mr. Bush later signed McCain-Feingold into law. The law, named for Senate sponsors John McCain, R-Ariz., and Russell Feingold, D-Wis., barred both national parties from collecting soft money from individuals.
During the 2000 race, Mr. Bush showed support for the so-called 527 groups’ right to air advertising.
In March 2000, he told CBS News' "Face the Nation," "There have been ads, independent expenditures, that are saying bad things about me. I don't particularly care when they do, but that's what freedom of speech is all about.”
In late August of this year, in an effort to distance himself from controversial anti-Kerry ads by the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, Mr. Bush reversed his position, announcing he would join McCain in legal action to stop these "shadowy" organizations.
Though it would close the Swift Boat group's funding, court action would also silence well-funded liberal 527 organizations like MoveOn.org and America Coming Together.

Gas Prices
Mr. Bush was critical of Al Gore in the 2000 campaign for being part of “the administration that's been in charge” while the “price of gasoline has gone steadily upward.” In December 1999, in the first Republican primary debate, Mr. Bush said President Clinton “must jawbone OPEC members to lower prices.”
As gas topped a record level of $50 a barrel this week, Mr. Bush has shown no propensity to personally pressure, or “jawbone,” Mideast oil producers to increase output.
A spokesman for the president reportedly said in March that Mr. Bush will not personally lobby oil cartel leaders to change their minds.

Wednesday, September 29, 2004 

Polls Are Bullshit

"Bush Leads Kerry by 8 Percentage Points in Pew Poll" "A poll taken by the Washington Post newspaper and the American ABC network finds 51 percent of people planning to vote for Bush, with just 44 percent supporting Kerry."

Polls are bullshit for the following reasons:

1. They don't poll black males almost at all.
2. Old people LOVE to talk to random strangers on the phone.
3. People with half a brain don't give a shit about talking to strangers on the phone.
4. There are these new things called cell phones that aren't listed in the phone book. I, and a lot of other people I know, don't have land lines.
5. The margin of error. In a poll with a +/-4 margin of error, a 48 percent to 40 percent poll is really statistically insignificant.
6. That's all they talk about on the cable news channels, nevermind the issues.
7. Gallup, Zogby and Pew are all Nazis.*
8. THIS JUST IN: American voters are stupid. Here are the results of another poll, one in which people were asked which candidate supports various issues.

Friday, September 24, 2004 

Tigger Army



My friend Fred Hell used to be the drummer in a band called Tiger Army. He was given the heave-ho, or decided to leave, depending on what source you believe. Apparently somebody's pretty upset about it, because they spent A LOT of fucking time making a mock Tiger Army Web site: www.tiggerarmy.com.

Thursday, September 23, 2004 

This is what my roommate thinks of me.

 

Brian By Big Nurse

Yes, Matt Herges has caused me some heartache.


Angry Brian No. 1 by Big Nurse.

 

Self-Portrait Number One

In my continuing effort to rip off Big Nurse, I present my own Photoshop self-portrait:

Wednesday, September 22, 2004 

Hatorade



Few things piss me off more in the world than X-Factor Gatorade. I've been a rampant supporter of Orange Gatorade for about 10 years now. It is the greatest thing ever to help ease your hangover on a Sunday afternoon. However, it's becoming increasingly harder to find. Why? Because all they fucking sell now is X-Factor Gatorade with fucked up flavors like banana-kiwi and strawberry-roast beef.
Fucking stop it. The letter X should be banned in all uses except porn.

 

I guess I should write some stuff

The neverending process of getting our new Web site up is nearing completion, a couple weeks away I believe. Then I can start posting photo galleries outside of here and you can load my amazing blog more quickly. Big Nurse Awww Damn has started a war with Jimmy Buffett fans. Awesome.
I still think John Kerry is going to lose, but my Giants are kicking ass. I went to the game last night, and hopefully will be heading out to one more in the next few days before the season ends.
The Valencia Street Fair was off the hooks, as you can see from the pics below. Our ad sales director, Liz Ross, put the entire thing together on her own, which is a phenomenal feat indeed. To thank her, buy an ad in the next issue of Mesh by e-mailing her at liz @ meshsf dot com. (I guess computers can grab e-mails and start sending you spam. I've been getting dozens of e-mails from people in Nigeria wanting me to help them recover millions of dollars. There should really be no spaces.)
The new issue is out now, go pick it up or subscribe by writing to us at info @ meshsf dot com.
Jyeah.

Tuesday, September 21, 2004 

Valencia Street Fair Pics

Friday, September 17, 2004 

Henry Lewis v. Greg Rojas Pics

Henry Lewis of Everlasting Tattoo and Greg Rojas of One Shot Tattoo showed off some of their fine art last night at the Hold Fast Gallery. Greg puts his spin on classic tattoo styles in his artwork. Henry's work seems almost religious; some of the pieces reminded me of Christian triptychs. Well, of course his subjects are a bit different... like Fat Ass Birds, which is the greatest name for a piece of artwork ever.


This is the tattoo Henry put on me last week.


This is a detail from one of Henry's pieces last night.










Fat Ass Birds by Henry Lewis.


Henry Lewis (left) & Greg Rojas




This dog was extremely happy to be witnessing such fine art.


Henry rolling bones.






Fashion.





Thursday, September 16, 2004 

Hippies

This dirty hippy at the Hush Hush thought it was cool to push women around. Unfortunately, I didn't see him do it. I've been considering publishing his picture here, so you can see what a dirty fucking hippy he is. Dirty hippies are no longer welcome at Mesh parties.

 

Lewis vs. Rojas

Henry Lewis is an amazing artist who just gave me a bitchin' new Loteria card tattoo (El Corazon). He's having an opening tonight from 7PM - 10PM at the Hold Fast gallery. Y'all should make it down there. 14th Street @ Guerrero (415.352.7479). Also showing work is Greg Rojas.

Wednesday, September 15, 2004 

Mesh Release Party

For those of you who didn't make it to the Hush Hush last night for our issue release party, damn you missed out. There were $1 drinks, girl fights, models, dancers getting their freak on... Even the kid with the Babylon 5 t-shirt got a handjob. - Dave Attell


Ladies dancin'... all night long.


Hella packed.


I like to call this one "White People Dancing."


This is a re-creation of the girl fight.


DJ Vin'Sol on the ones and twos.


The Reverend Shelby Cobra combing his mustache as the lovely Mandy looks on.


Mesh photographer Amanda Lopez with Hamburger Eyes' Ray Potes.


A-Lo with Mesh models Raquel and Vanessa.


These girls were lovin' it.


The world-famous Isaac McKay Randozzi.


ScenePoint's Austin, he's such a party king, the lights go crazy.


I think these are ravers.


Ladies dancin'.


Ladies dancin'.

Tuesday, September 14, 2004 

A's Fans are Crazy



Last year I went to an A's-Rangers game with my brother-in-law. At some point in the game this fan threw his cell phone at Rangers outfielder Carl Everett, hitting him in the head. It's not known to me if this jarred Everett back onto planet earth. Everett has caused quite a stir with some of his comments, including, "Dinosaurs never existed, they are a media fabrication" and, regarding the moonlanding, "Were you on the moon with him? He may have just gone to the desert and walked on some dried-out dirt." But, I mean, I got to agree with him on that.
Last night we were watching an A's-Rangers game on TV and some more crazy shit happened. Some fan, in a black hat and grey sweatshirt was heckling the relievers. I don't-but would love to-know what he said, but it got Rangers reliever Doug Brocail so mad that he started screaming back at the fan and had to be held back from hopping into the stands. A lone security guard was trying to hold back half the Rangers team from going after this guy when rookie pitcher Frank Francisco decided he needed to pick up a folding chair and throw it into the stands. He missed the heckler, who ducked, and nailed this lady in the face, breaking her nose. The game was delayed for 19 minutes while the teams talked about forfeiting the game. The A's PA announcer, Roy Steele, who pretty much sounds like the voice of God, started talking and was pissed!
His voice came booming in, "If any fan comes onto the field, you will forfeit the game for your HOME TEAM! STAY IN YOUR SEATS!"
During this commotion, it was reported that Francisco was arrested. Oaktown hardcore.

Friday, September 10, 2004 

Kitchen Sink Having a Rent Party



Kitchen Sink is an excellent (and incredibly thick) Bay Area magazine that pretty much rules it. You should not only read it, but go to their rent party as well:

RENT PARTY
Saturday, September 11
French Fry Factory
278 4th St., Oakland
9pm/$5
w/ Da Hawnay Troof
Warbler
Chen Santa Maria
I Explode You
DJ Megaweapon

 

Hell Week

We finished up the magazine on Tuesday. Monday night I was convinced I was going to die, literally. Tuesday, felt like crap. Wednesday had a sore throat and felt like crap. Thursday went to work finally, felt like crap. Scott brought the magazines down yesterday, carried them heavy ass fuckers inside. Delivered them around the City with Mike Scupham Caso. Stopped in the Richmond to check out Mr. Cliff Greenwod at the Blue Danube.

So Issue 6 is on the streets now, we're working on our new Web site as we speak, but we'll be putting up the articles on here in the meantime. Go pick it up and come to the Hush Hush on Tuesday, September 14th for our mini-release party. Cheap drinks and good DJs. $2-$3 cover.

Rad.

Thursday, September 02, 2004 

War Party - Support Pirate Radio

Thi is what I'm doing tonight:

This Thursday Sept. 2nd is the West-Add Radio 93.7fm benefit show!

Bands: Mixed Signals & The Invisibles

DJ's: Marco (DRBC/Suicide) Jenny (Fake / Finger) Rick-a-Mortis (Dark Sparkle / Red Square)

ALL AGES / FULL BAR WITH ID / $5 BUCKS

155 Fell St Between Van Ness & Gough

Fucking shit up with the best Indie Rock/Electronic/New Wave & More!

Western Addition Radio is a completly Volunteer Run Pirate Station Supporting Independent Music so Tune In Your Dial to 93.7fm!!

To Visit our Website & Listen Online!
www.WestAddRadio.com

 

The White Show

Katrina and I headed out to The White Show last night at Mikorp's studio on 17th and Treat (which someone told me is a good place to find hookers). The place was packed and featured art from Mesh friends John Stewart and Aye Jay Morano, as well as these folks: Amanda Marsalis, Steve MacDonald, Michael Martin, Shepard Fairey, Nice Collective, Craig Melchiano, Bryce Kanights, Ari Marcopoulos, Travis Millard, Davin Watne, Ryuta Nakajima, Aya Kawaguchi, Ethan Turpin, Nick Haggard, Jason Madara, BigBrothersoftheEastBay and Jimmy Soat. They also had free PBR and Red Bull all night long. Ahhh yeah.

The uber-talented Will Yakulic, and Desi were in the house:


As was the super-fucking-intense John Trippe of Fecal Face:


People looked at art (cop photos from RNC by Tim Clinton):


And discussed it as well (is that an incognito Amanda Lopez?):


Sometimes they just walked by it (photo of smoker by Michael Martin):


Or, like John Stewart and Michael Martin, posed in front of their own art:


Aye Jay's gangsta shit:


This one's called "Fuck Milk" (by Nick Haggard):


Michael Martin had the same camera as us!:


People smoking:


Art on records:


There were a shitload of people there, this picture doesn't do it justice:


This dude is getting some Pabst:


And if you know the name of the artist who did the records, let me know so's I can put it up.

Wednesday, September 01, 2004 

The White Show -- Tonight!

First there white man, who came to the New World and ruined everything, then there was the White Album, that made the Beatles "artists" and now, for your enjoyment, comes the White Show. Our friends John Stewart and Aye Jay Morano are in it, along with Shepard Fairey and some other great artisits. Here's the details:

@ MIKORP Studios
Wednesday September 1st • 8:00 til 11:00PM
400 Treat Ave. Suite F 94110 (17th and Treat, Behind Harrison)

A special one night show considering all things white. A diverse group of artists showcase their own particular take on the color that ironically is defined by the lack of any color.

Artists include:
Amanda Marsalis, Steve MacDonald, Michael Martin, Shepard Fairey, John Stewart, Nice Collective, Craig Melchiano, Bryce Kanights, Ari Marcopoulos, Travis Millard, Davin Watne, Ryuta Nakajima, Aya Kawaguchi, Ethan Turpin, Nick Haggard, Jason Madara, Aye Jay Morano, BigBrothersoftheEastBay, Jimmy Soat, And Many More.

Sounds by three turntable sets. Drinks by Pabst and Red Bull.

For more information: www.mikorp.com

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