Posted on 12/30/2004 8:00:14 AM PST by processing please hold
In this, the granddaddy of all year-end fearless forecasts, you are invited to weigh intriguing possibilities in a dozen fields. For each, pick one, all or none, and dont play it safe; one correct wild guess gives you bragging rights forever. 1. The Oscar for Best Picture goes to: (a) Robert Zemeckis The Polar Express; (b) Michael Manns Collateral; (c) David Mamets Spartan; (d) Clint Eastwoods Million Dollar Baby (to win this choice, a trifecta is needed, with Best Director and Best Actor as well); (e) Michael Moores Fahrenheit 9/11 (from Academy members seeking vengeance).
(Excerpt) Read more at bahraintribune.com ...
William Safire, always a good read.
OK, Safire I unerstand. But why the Bahrain Tribune? And why the front page? There's no reference to Safire's column on that page. Plus, I would think that they wold censor any references that Safire makes to Israel.
My direct link did not come up on the post. It's in the information, but did not appear.
This is my third post. I'm learning.
If the moderator wants to pull this thread, they may.
I just like reading Safire's comments.
People generally link to an article, not to a website with instructions to find it yourself.
I also think it would be interesting (but I am not prepared to do the work myself) to see how this Bahrain newspaper has censored Safire's pro-Israel columns in the past. As a result, you may be missing some of the gems even if you go further back in these websites.
The NY Times server, I think, works much faster in any case. Since Safire writes for the Times (at least until his announced retirement goes into effect) you probably could do better to find his articles there, unless you are in the Gulf.
If I don't respond right away it's because I'm in the sandbox, figuring out my link did not work. You can brow beat me when I get back.
It was an Arab report, nothing more.
I'm by the gulf.....the gulf of Mexico.
I appreciate all the constructive criticism.
I am posting his article from the NY Times website ( http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/29/opinion/29safire.html ).
Since I couldn't find the article on the Bahrain website, would you mind checking to see if it was reprinted in its entirety, particularly question no. 2, choice c)?
Here is the article:
Office Pool, 2005
By WILLIAM SAFIRE
Published: December 29, 2004
In this, the granddaddy of all year-end fearless forecasts, you are invited to weigh intriguing possibilities in a dozen fields. For each, pick one, all or none, and don't play it safe; one correct wild guess gives you bragging rights forever.
1. The Oscar for Best Picture goes to: (a) Robert Zemeckis's "The Polar Express"; (b) Michael Mann's "Collateral"; (c) David Mamet's "Spartan"; (d) Clint Eastwood's "Million Dollar Baby" (to win this choice, a trifecta is needed with Best Director and Best Actor as well); (e) Michael Moore's "Fahrenheit 9/11" (from Academy members seeking vengeance).
2. Political scandals will include: (a) Senator Pat Roberts's cover-up of Senate Intelligence ineptitude in its suppressed U.S.S. Cole report; (b) association of a Kofi Annan family member with the selection of a U.N. oil-for-food official; (c) F.B.I. Director Robert Mueller's two-year campaign of entrapment and harassment of the leading U.S. pro-Israel group; (d) pan-Arabist leaders' conspiracy of silence in the genocide of African Muslims in Darfur.
3. The national intelligence director will be: (a) the Pentagon's Paul Wolfowitz; (b) C.I.A. chief Porter Goss; (c) retired Gen. Tommy Franks; (d) 9/11 interrogator Richard ("Is it not a fact") Ben-Veniste; (e) ex-Democratic Senator Chuck Robb.
4. Iraqis will see the: (a) election of Ayad Allawi and progress on the bumpy road to democracy; (b) comeback of Ahmad Chalabi dreaded by the C.I.A.; (c) insurgency's sudden collapse with the capture of bin Laden and killing of Zarqawi; (d) beginning of the U.S. troop drawdown; (e) judgment of not guilty in Saddam's trial; (f) bloody Shiite-Sunni civil war and Kurds' independence.
5. The sleeper nonfiction best seller will be: (a) "The Tender Bar" by J. P. Moehringer; (b) "Becoming Justice Blackmun" by Linda Greenhouse; (c) Robert O'Harrow Jr.'s "No Place to Hide"; (d) Arch Puddington's biography of "Lane Kirkland, Champion of American Labor"; (e) "The Ethical Brain" by Michael Gazzaniga; (f) "Speaking Freely" by the press defender Floyd Abrams; (g) "Smashed" by Koren Zailckas.
6. The novel surprise will be: (a) Nick Arvin's "Articles of War"; (b) Elizabeth Gaffney's "Metropolis"; (c) Bret Easton Ellis's "Lunar Park"; (d) Julie Baumgold's "The Diamond" (dictated by Napoleon).
7. Senate Democrats will: (a) not dig in their heels over elevating Antonin Scalia to chief justice if Bush appoints a centrist as a new associate justice; (b) by filibustering all strongly conservative nominees, bring on the G.O.P. "nuclear option" of changing Senate rules to require only a simple majority for confirmation; (c) drop the abortion litmus test but otherwise fight all right-wing judges.
8. The Scalia court will decide: (a) to strike down federal sentencing guidelines, producing tumult in criminal justice; (b) to uphold governmental Ten Commandments displays as harmless "ceremonial deism"; (c) to strike a blow for the free flow of booze by ruling that states cannot prevent the shipment of wines produced in one state to consumers in another state.
9. Republicans in Congress will remind President Bush of his lame-duckiness by defeating his proposal for: (a) personal retirement accounts within Social Security; (b) registering illegal immigrants; (c) making his tax cuts permanent; (d) a ticket to Mars.
10. Democrats will reverse their electoral fortunes by: (a) moving right by insisting on budget reduction; (b) moving left by advocating more social spending and higher taxes; (c) staying centered globally as muscular alliance-builders; (d) moving upward by getting religion; (e) moving down South and out Midwest for national candidates.
11. The economy will: (a) boom without inflation as oil sinks to $30/bbl , the Iraq war winds down and the Sharon-Abbas peace deal takes shape; (b) tank as Asia stops lending us money; (c) march up to a 13,000 Dow, as somewhat prematurely predicted in this office pool last year.
12. The medical breakthrough will be: (a) a modified vaccine to treat Alzheimer's; (b) a drug to aid recovery from brain injuries like strokes; (c) a stem-cell (not necessarily embryonic) treatment for heart diseases; (d) nanotechnologies to detect cancer cells early; (e) sequencing the human influenza genome to help prevent epidemics of new strains of Asian flu; (f) a drug that both slows prostate cancer and treats male baldness (a real challenge to ad copywriters).
My picks: 1 (d); 2 (all); 3 (c); 4 (a); 5 (b); 6 (d); 7 (a); 8 (all); 9 (b); 10 (d); 11 (a); 12 (all). Gotta play to have the right to hoot.
http://www.bahraintribune.com/article.asp/
This is it.
Ain't that the truth. Thanks.
Have a heart and just shoot me. My link to my link to my article doesn't work. Please pull this fiasco. I will return to the sandbox...again.
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