Shallow Nation

Chronicling trends in entertainment, pop culture, politics, the arts, and the uncategorized et cetera.

Thus, the New York Times questions John McCain’s presidential eligibility.

Mr. McCain’s likely nomination as the Republican candidate for president and the happenstance of his birth in the Panama Canal Zone in 1936 are reviving a musty debate that has surfaced periodically since the founders first set quill to parchment and declared that only a “natural-born citizen” can hold the nation’s highest office.

[…]

Mr. McCain was born on a military installation in the Canal Zone, where his mother and father, a Navy officer, were stationed. His campaign advisers say they are comfortable that Mr. McCain meets the requirement and note that the question was researched for his first presidential bid in 1999 and reviewed again this time around.

But given mounting interest, the campaign recently asked Theodore B. Olson, a former solicitor general now advising Mr. McCain, to prepare a detailed legal analysis. “I don’t have much doubt about it,” said Mr. Olson, who added, though, that he still needed to finish his research.

We at Shallow Nation are not constitutional scholars, but we think this is rather ironic:

Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina and one of Mr. McCain’s closest allies, said it would be incomprehensible to him if the son of a military member born in a military station could not run for president.

“He was posted there on orders from the United States government,” Mr. Graham said of Mr. McCain’s father. “If that becomes a problem, we need to tell every military family that your kid can’t be president if they take an overseas assignment.”

After all, it is not as if his parents were on vacation. Which might in some future Presidential race bring up another question: what would the Founding Fathers have to say about a premature birth of a would-be American citizen whose mother happened to be vacationing in a foreign land?

Well, we are not constitutional scholars and we can’t offer much to resolve the John McCain birthplace controversy but we did seize the opportunity to find this charming 1934 documentary on the construction of the Panama Canal.


Video: Tribute to Buddy Miles (1947-2008)

Brilliant, innovative drummer Buddy Miles has died at age 60. Watch some of his memorable live performances here.

Buddy Miles, the rock and R&B drummer who worked with Jimi Hendrix, Carlos Santana and was best known for the song “Them Changes,” died Tuesday at his home in Austin, Texas, according to a report on Miles’ website. He was 60.

Among the first artists to fuse psychedelic rock with soul, blues and jazz, Miles got his start performing with his father George’s jazz band the BeBops at the age of 12 in and around their hometown of Omaha, Neb. He played with a number of performers and toured with Ruby & the Romantics, the Ink Spots and Wilson Pickett. It was after a gig in Brooklyn, N.Y., where guitarist Michael Bloomfield, who had just left the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, inquired if Miles would be interested in forming a new band. The band became the Electric Flag, which issued only one album with Bloomfield and Miles.

After the break up of the Electric Flag, Miles created the first edition of Buddy Miles Express and recorded “Expressway to Your Skull,” with Hendrix producing. The two alternated in returning favors: Miles played on Hendrix’s “Electric Ladyland”; Hendrix produced Miles’ “Electric Church”; and the two created Band of Gypsys after Hendrix broke up his trio, the Jimi Hendrix Experience.

Read more.

Buddy Miles with Carlos Santana, live performance in Japan.



Buddy Miles and Carlos Santana performing “Them Changes”


Buddy Miles and Randy Hansen performing “I Don’t Live Today”


Incomparable Author and Icon, William F. Buckley Jr., Dies at 82

William F. Buckley Jr., whose intellect and eloquence and lifetime of achievements made our shallow nation less shallow, has died.

William F. Buckley

William F. Buckley Jr., who marshaled polysyllabic exuberance, famously arched eyebrows and a refined, perspicacious mind to elevate conservatism to the center of American political discourse, died Wednesday at his home in Stamford, Conn.

Mr Buckley, 82, suffered from diabetes and emphysema, his son Christopher said, although the exact cause of death was not immediately known. He was found at his desk in the study of his home, his son said. “He might have been working on a column,” Mr. Buckley said.

Mr. Buckley’s winningly capricious personality, replete with ten-dollar words and a darting tongue writers loved to compare with an anteater’s, hosted one of television’s longest-running programs, “Firing Line,” and founded and shepherded the influential conservative magazine, National Review.

He also found time to write more than 45 books, ranging from sailing odysseys to spy novels to celebrations of his own dashing daily life, and edit five more.

The more than 4.5 million words of his 5,600 biweekly newspaper columns, “On the Right,” would fill 45 more medium-sized books.

Mr. Buckley’s greatest achievement was making conservatism — not just electoral Republicanism, but conservatism as a system of ideas — respectable in liberal post-World War II America. He mobilized the young enthusiasts who helped nominate Barry Goldwater in 1964, and saw his dreams fulfilled when Reagan and the Bushes captured the Oval Office.

To Mr. Buckley’s enormous delight, Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., the historian, termed him “the scourge of liberalism.”

In remarks at National Review’s 30th anniversary in 1985, President Reagan joked that he picked up his first issue of the magazine in a plain brown wrapper and still anxiously awaited his biweekly edition — “without the wrapper.”

“You didn’t just part the Red Sea — you rolled it back, dried it up and left exposed, for all the world to see, the naked desert that is statism,” Mr. Reagan said.

“And then, as if that weren’t enough,” the president continued, “you gave the world something different, something in its weariness it desperately needed, the sound of laughter and the sight of the rich, green uplands of freedom.”

The obituary continues. Read more on Michelle Malkin and Jules Crittenden.

William F. Buckley with President George W. Bush in 2005

William F. Buckley, Jr. with President George W. Bush in October 2005 at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building in Washington, to honor the 50th anniversary of National Review magazine.

William F. Buckley, Jr. interviewed by Charlie Rose in 2004.

William F. Buckley, Jr. debating Noam Chomsky in 1965.