I've found that one of the most difficult things to write about is yourself. It shouldn't be this way because it reveals a fundamental unfairness. Shouldn't when I write about the President or any public figure take the same caution in word choice and weighing the implications of every connotation? A personal removal from my subject shouldn't justify carelessness in coverage.
Yet as I struggle to describe myself, I feel that if words cannot precisely serve me. Then why is it I find it so easy to use them as weapons or shelter for others?
http://www.CarteBlancheMag.com
My passion is ...
Creativity.
I know too much about ...
Pollution credits.
My parents always told me ...
Stop telling us about pollution credits.
My childhood ambition ...
Build an army of robots to take over Australia. Or Canada.
My favorite memory ...
Might as well ask my least favorite memory because I value every almost every moment.... so far.
Why I write ...
I like to make people laugh or think, but I'm not arrogant enought to think I can change minds.
What I am reading/watching/listening to ...
Politics. Politics. Politics.
My best moment ...
Isn't this the same as favorite memory? ditto.
Bush's tax cut may save the citizen today, but who will save the citizen from it tomorrow? In a time of war, increasing deficits, and a sluggish economy, conservation of capital is nearly impossible, yet the Bush administration has somehow found a miracle recipe to continue dishing out tax cuts on a silver platter, primarily to those with matching spoons. A mathematician might disagree, but some feel this is good economics; namely those benefiting most from the tax cuts. The deficit, a hidden price tag pinned to Bush's tax cuts, equally burdens every American, but the tax cuts do not entit...
More..Zach Wade
Member since: May 2007
Articles Written: 7
Writers Invited: 1