ChrisWeigant.com

Program Note

[ Posted Sunday, January 10th, 2010 – 01:28 UTC ]

UPDATE: [15:30 Pacific]

OK, everything is uploaded, so all old links should be working. Site seems stable for now. There are still bugs and things not working exactly right, but I'm still working on them, so hopefully they'll get better.

If you regularly comment here, you may have to either delete all "chrisweigant.com" cookies, or totally reload the page (or even quit and relaunch your browser) before you start getting the new site. Try logging in, and you should see a new login page. If you don't, you're still in the old site somehow.

[End update... more later...]

 

Well, we're up and running. Kind of.

The core code of the site has been upgraded at this point, but nothing has been adequately tested. So today (Sunday, Jan. 10, 2010), the site will have a lot of quirks. As the day progresses, bugs will be fixed, and things will start working again.

One thing you should be aware of is that your old "cookies" will not work anymore. What this means to you is that you may experience problems logging in to the site, or viewing it.

You should re-load this page and will have to change any "automatic" login settings, and manually log in before they will work again.

Again, we apologize for the inconvenience, and promise that throughout the day, the site will look better and better, so reload it often to see our progress!

Friday Talking Points [106] -- Election Season Begins

[ Posted Friday, January 8th, 2010 – 17:01 UTC ]

Before we begin our weekly talking points, we must sadly offer our condolences to Vice President Joe Biden, whose mother just passed away. No matter what side of the political divide you come from, or what you think of our Vice President, losing your mother is something everyone can sympathize with, so we offer our thoughts to the Biden family in this sad time for them.

Of course, in Washington, the craziness goes on as usual, forcing us once again to pay attention to various bits of lunacy. Topping the list of lunatics this week was a man arrested for jogging naked near the White House. Now, I've got to admit, although "streaking" is a fad we all wish would make a comeback, you've got to hand it to this guy for pulling such a stunt in January in Washington, rather than waiting until at least the cherry blossoms had peeked out. Jogging around The Ellipse naked in January? Brrr!

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From The Archives -- [2009] New Year's Resolutions For Democrats

[ Posted Thursday, January 7th, 2010 – 16:17 UTC ]

[Note: Since we spent much of the week either looking back at 2009 or looking forward to what 2010 has in store, I thought my New Year's column from the beginning of 2009 was worth looking at again, to see how my suggestions for New Year's resoultions from last year stacked up against reality.

This column originally ran January 2, 2009, which was a Friday. Meaning for the first time ever (I believe) we're running a special Thursday Talking Points... or something. The column originally had "Friday Talking Points [59]" in the title, which I replaced, for clarity's sake, with "[2009]" above.

One last thing, if you missed it, earlier today I posted a Program Note which spells out what to expect from this site this weekend. We will be upgrading the site during the weekend, which means service may be interrupted at times. The Program Note is in the form of "Frequently Asked Questions" to let you know what to expect.]

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Program Note

[ Posted Thursday, January 7th, 2010 – 16:01 UTC ]

First off, I'd like to thank all my readers for their continued patience. If all goes well, today will be the final "re-run" column in a long time. Because this weekend is going to be Upgrade Weekend here at ChrisWeigant.com. So allow me to present an Upgrade Weekend FAQ for you here.

What will this mean to you? The site may be down for extended periods this weekend. We may be unavailable from roughly Saturday afternoon until whenever we get everything working. That's kind of a vague estimate, I realize. Target is to get everything done by Sunday evening, at the absolute latest. But since this is our first upgrade ever, it is impossible to estimate the downtime better than that, sorry. If everything blows up, then at some point we will restore the whole site from backups, and regroup and try again later, so worst-case scenario (hopefully) is that Monday you'll see exactly the same site you saw Friday.

What will this mean for the site? The biggest changes won't even be visible. What we are doing is upgrading the core software which runs the site (WordPress) to a newer version that is more stable and has much better security. This involved upgrading all of the custom files which actually display the site as well, but if everything works perfectly then the site will look almost exactly the same as it did before. There are a few exceptions. The first is that the Login page and the "User Settings" page will both look different to you, as a site user. These pages come straight from WordPress itself, and they have a new look and feel to them, but are pretty easy to learn how to use. Your password will not change, if all goes well, so logging in should still work the same. Feel free to change it yourself, if you'd like (for good site security, you should change your password every so often, and make it as complicated as you can easily remember).

Isn't there anything new? Why, yes. Yes, indeedy! I'm glad you asked. The biggest new feature to the site will be (finally) giving the ObamaPollWatch.com and FridayTalkingPoints.com pages their own look-and-feel. These pages will have new headers, new sidebars, and new features, most of which were not even possible with the old WordPress software. So, when you check the site Monday, don't forget to check out the ObamaPollWatch.com and FridayTalkingPoints.com areas.

Will there be any future changes? Yes, but I can't swear when they will happen. What we are doing (especially with the OPW.com and TFP.com pages) is building a framework that we can add features to later. Right now, getting the framework up and running and bug-free is the main objective. So some of the features on these new pages will be rather basic, at first. But later, we hope to expand and improve these over time.

What should I do if I notice something that isn't working right? Send me an email. Drop me a note for any reason -- something's broken, something doesn't look or work right, or any other problems you notice. Also, let me know if there's something about the site that bugs you or you'd like to see improved in the future, as we're looking at ways to change things for the better.

Thanks again for all the patience and understanding. It's taken three or four weeks to get to the point where we're ready to begin the upgrade, but we're finally at the point of starting the process this weekend. Actually, if truth be told, we were pretty ready last weekend, but since the OPW column ran Monday, we thought it'd be a better idea to bump it back a week, since that is one of the highest-traffic columns of the month. Speaking of traffic, I'd like to end by thanking everyone for their support of the site, as even though we ran a lot of re-runs last month, it was our biggest traffic month ever, with over 100,000 page views. This wouldn't have been possible without you, so I thank you all for your continued support.

Because this Program Note was so long, we will run today's "from the archives" column as a separate post.

 

-- Chris Weigant

 

Obama's Second-Year Potential

[ Posted Wednesday, January 6th, 2010 – 17:20 UTC ]

President Barack Obama has the potential of having a pretty good second year in office. Conventional inside-the-Beltway wisdom is that "nothing much gets done in a congressional election year," but this ignores the fact that life itself does not halt for electioneering, but rather keeps right on happening. And there are quite a few positive things either explicitly scheduled for 2010, or at least very likely to happen. This doesn't automatically mean the president is guaranteed to have a great year, but it certainly sets the scene for Obama managing to have a fairly good year.

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Tea Partiers Call For National Boycott. Or Strike, Maybe.

[ Posted Tuesday, January 5th, 2010 – 16:37 UTC ]

The national Tea Party movement is planning something to mark the first anniversary of Barack Obama's inauguration. Or, to be more accurate, they're planning "nothing" -- they're planning on staying home. With a vengeance.

The Contra Costa Times recently reported on this phenomenon, and the article is remarkable when you read between its lines. Now, perhaps this is just because the Times is a regional paper (the East Bay of San Francisco Bay) and not a national one, or perhaps the article was longer and was edited down for space or something. Because the most striking thing, to me, about the article is the degree of disagreement in the Tea Party movement.

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Dec. '09 Obama Poll Watch -- Below Fifty, But Stabilizing

[ Posted Monday, January 4th, 2010 – 14:59 UTC ]

December was a busy month for Barack Obama, with many conflicting events pulling his poll numbers in different directions for differing reasons. And although December marked the first time Obama's monthly average sank below the fifty-percent threshold, this dip mostly happened before the month actually began, and Obama stayed remarkably stable after the dip was absorbed.

Now, I do realize that we're all getting sick of looking back at 2009, and although I really would much prefer to be writing about looking forward to 2010, we simply must provide a final glance rearwards before moving on to prognosticating the future. Because it is time once again for Obama Poll Watch -- our monthly look back at Obama's approval ratings for the previous month!

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My 2009 "McLaughlin Awards" [Part 2]

[ Posted Friday, January 1st, 2010 – 18:47 UTC ]

Welcome back to my annual outright theft of The McLaughlin Group's awards categories for the past year in politics. What's that? We're sorry, but out lawyers insist we instead use the phrase "my annual legally-allowable constitutionally-protected parody" instead. So sorry. For those of you who missed it, Part 1 of this column ran last week, on Christmas.

Which brings up a point. One of the categories today is "Worst Idea," and I have to say on a very personal level that "writing these columns on Christmas and New Year's Day" was my worst idea of the year. Thankfully, this calendar coincidence won't happen again for a number of years, because it is too much work for what is supposed to be a holiday!

Hung-over grumblings aside, though, let's get to it.

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A Teachable Moment -- The Official Banished Words List

[ Posted Thursday, December 31st, 2009 – 15:02 UTC ]

Ku ka punohu ula i ka moana;
Hele ke ehu-kai, uhi i ka aina;
Olapa ka uila, noho i Kahiki;
Uina, nakolo,
Uwá ka pihe,
Lau a kánaka ka hula.
E Laka, e!

-- Traditional Hawaiian "Oli" or "Tiring Song"

In years past, I've opened these year-end articles with a quote from Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's epic "Song of Hiawatha," in honor of Lake Superior State University (which, by all rights, should really be named Gitchee Gumee State University), the intrepid folks who tirelessly publish each year's official "Banished Words List."

But this year, in the spirit of our Hawaiian president, I decided to go with a different native-American-influenced theme. The above is from the hula ceremony, and is introduced (on the web page where I found it) with the following:

The girls of the olapa, their work in the tiring-room completed, lift their voices in a spirited song, and with a lively motion pass out into the hall to bloom before the waiting assembly in the halau in all the glory of their natural charms and adornments:

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We Need More Parties

[ Posted Wednesday, December 30th, 2009 – 16:39 UTC ]

While that may seem a rather redundant headline the day before a world-wide party is scheduled, it was actually less provocative than my original concept of selling the theme that America needs more than two viable political parties, which was: "Party! Party! Party! Party!" But then I noticed I had already used one exclamation point in a headline this week; so I realized if I ran my original choice, I would be jeopardizing my standing among the Professional Journalists And Wannabes Who Play One On The Web Guild (the beloved PJAWWPOOTWG, pronounced like... um... well, it's best not to try to pronounce the acronym until you've got at least three stiff drinks under your belt). Where was I? Oh, right, party headlines.

While my generation was the first to use the word "party" as a verb (known technically as "verbalizing" it... no, wait, that can't be right... "verbizing" it perhaps?), we were not the first to heartily endorse the concept. When I was growing up, friends of my parents had a sign in their den, over the built-in bar: "I support the two-party system. One party a week is not enough!" Showing that, while the language may indeed change, the party instinct is as old as mankind. Or at least as old as my childhood neighbors (who seemed pretty old to me at the time).

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