Andris Nelsons brings new electricity to Boston Symphony

Who would have thought that so much of Boston would be abuzz about the new music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra?  The arrival of director (designate until September) Andris Nelsons at the BSO's Tanglewood Music Center (TMC), the world's leading summer classical musical festival, in Lenox, MA this past weekend has generated enough electricity to …

Continue reading Andris Nelsons brings new electricity to Boston Symphony

The mice will play

When the cat's away, the mice will play.  In terms of congressional financing, the cat is public disclosure.  Given the do-nothing Congress' indifference to its abysmal public image, I probably shouldn't be shocked that the House has just quietly watered down its rules for reporting trips taken by legislators that are paid for by private groups. Since …

Continue reading The mice will play

Books to escape from Benghazi, Boko Haram, Boehner, biz cycle etc, pt. 2

For real escape through summer reading,  there's no substitute for fiction.  Here are a few books worth sharing. My top read this past year was The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt.  A 13-year-old boy in Manhattan survives a terrorist bomb in the Metropolitan Museum of Art.  His mother is killed.  They had been visiting her favorite painting, a goldfinch …

Continue reading Books to escape from Benghazi, Boko Haram, Boehner, biz cycle etc, pt. 2

Books to escape from Benghazi, Boko Haram, Boehner, biz cycle etc, pt. 1

Every summer I offer up some of the books I've read in the past year and happily invite readers' recommendations to me.  I'm always on the prowl for a good read. This summer's book review will be in two parts.  First, the non-fiction. If you're looking for light summer reading, do not try to read …

Continue reading Books to escape from Benghazi, Boko Haram, Boehner, biz cycle etc, pt. 1

Ann Coulter on soccer: a real head case

Ann Coulter must have been hit on the head by a soccer ball, and it was no planned header. Her recent column , a screed against the sport and America's growing interest in it, seems unhinged. She asserts that this is a sign of our nation's moral decay, that the only reason we are interested …

Continue reading Ann Coulter on soccer: a real head case

Snake eyes for Coakley on casino referendum

Question for gubernatorial candidate Martha Coakley: if you knew that the legitimacy of the casino repeal referendum would end up at the Supreme Judicial Court regardless of how you decided on its constitutionality and you're supposedly fine with its being on the November ballot, why did you come down on the side of corporate interests rather than …

Continue reading Snake eyes for Coakley on casino referendum

Ryan resonates on IRS emails

I rarely agree with (Wisconsin GOP Congressman) Paul Ryan, but in this recent kerfuffle over "lost" IRS emails, he struck a responsive chord. Speaking to Internal Revenue Service Commissioner  John Koskinen at a House Oversight Committee hearing,    Ryan said "you can reach into the lives of hardworking American taxpayers and, with a letter, an phone call …

Continue reading Ryan resonates on IRS emails

Warnings for seniors and horses

Yes, yes, it's important to see the big picture. But sometimes viewing life from 30,000 feet is not actually better. Two stories in today's Boston Globe show how grand urban plans or budget metrics can sacrifice a touch of humanity. First, in the interest of saving money, the Social Security Administration has been closing field offices, …

Continue reading Warnings for seniors and horses

Iraq: Hell no, we shouldn’t go

President Obama said Friday the United States will not be sending American troops back into Iraq. That was firmer than his earlier comment that every possible response to the sectarian war was on the table.  The difference is a important.  Insanity, we are told, is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results. Earlier that day, Fourth …

Continue reading Iraq: Hell no, we shouldn’t go

Eric Cantor’s House of Cards falls

I always thought that House Majority Leader Eric Cantor was the brat, the youngish sharp-elbowed, supercilious, conservative Congressman assumed to be John Boehner's heir apparent as Speaker of the House. Bookish. Dogmatic. So determined was he to be the ideological antidote to a liberal Obama administration, he was a driving force behind the Republican congressional strategy to …

Continue reading Eric Cantor’s House of Cards falls