Category Archives: Total trivia

Time for a break

This happened a few minutes ago.

I’m rushing around trying to do 10 things and running late on all of them when Nature Calls, and I run into the Men’s room and say "Hi" to the two cleaning ladies in there, step around their cleaning cart on my way to the urinal, start to reach for my zipper a couple of steps out so as to avoid delay, and it hits me:

"Cleaning ladies?"

I pull hand away from zipper just in time, turn on my heel and start babbling apologies on my way back to the door, "Oh, I am so sorry I wasn’t thinking I’m just running around doing so many things that I don’t know what I’m doing and …"

But I’ve hardly taken a step back when I see they’ve both thrown their hands up, and they’re saying, "Oh go ahead take your time we were just leaving we’re going out…" And they fly out the door ahead of me, leaving their cart behind.

Wow. That was really embarrassing. I’ve never been that absent-minded before. It was a new depth.

I’m going to have to slow down, and start considering what I’m doing. And starting next week, I will.

Predictions? What? You think this is a game?

As I so piously state, time and time again, for me it’s not about who will win an election, but about who should win, and we’re just trying to foster constructive conversations about the choices, yadda, yadda, blah, blah.

I mean it; I really do. But there are those who take it all less seriously, and insist upon trivializing the whole process to the level of a reality TV show or some such by making predictions about outcomes. As if anybody could know. And eventually, they wear me down and I make my own prognostications.
This time I’m going to do it a little earlier, since I was gigged by this e-mail today:

Time to put your
guesses to paper (or electronic paper anyway) and eternal scrutiny in guessing
the outcome of the upcoming elections…. In each
case please give the winner’s name. For governor only please also give a
percentage of the vote the winner will receive. Let’s play the feud!

1. Governor (and
percentage of the vote):
2. Lieutenant
governor
3.
Treasurer
4. Education
superintendent
5. Comptroller
general
6. Secretary of
state
7. Adjutant
general
8. Agriculture
commissioner
 
Tie
breakers:
1. The final
breakdown of the U.S. House of Representatives: (e.g. 220 Ds, 215
Rs)

2. The final
breakdown of the U.S. Senate (e.g. 50 Ds, 49 Rs, 1 Ind)

OK, so here are mine:

1. Sanford (57 percent)
2. Bauer
3. Patterson
4. Floyd
5. Theodore
6. Hammond
7. Spears
8. Weathers
Needless to say, I hope I’m wrong on the first four.

The two tie-breaker questions seem ridiculous to me. The number of variables make them as unpredictable as the shifting of the desert sands; I can’t tell you what the dunes will look like in the end. But here goes:

1. 222 Ds, 213 Rs
2. 49 Ds, 50 Rs, and my man Joe!

What do y’all think? I won’t be surprised — or embarrassed — if y’all all do better than I. This is not my thing.

Put Your Strasse in Your Tasse

Sorry about the bad use of German, but I’m not as good as Emile at slogans. I got this internal e-mail from a fellow employee at The State today:

Guys —
    I apologize for the global, but if you need some inexpensive Christmas gifts, my daughter’s school (collective groan) is selling Columbia’s Iron Brew Coffee, which was voted by Food and Wine magazine as the #7 roaster in the country, and the #1 roaster in South Carolina.
    The price is $8.50 for a 12-ounce bag of ground coffee — due at time of order. Plain or a variety of flavors, including French vanilla, holiday spice and Southern pecan. I need to turn in the order by Nov. 13.
     No more emails, I promise. Just drop by my desk if you’re interested.

Anyway, it made me think of Emile’s campaign (and congrats to Emile, by the way, for getting the Charleston paper’s endorsement), and I tried to think of how he might promote drinking local coffee — or at least, locally marketed coffee. I realize it’s not quite the same, but I found myself reaching for inspiration anyway.

I didn’t arrive. "Put your (blank) in your cup?" "…your mug? … your demitasse?

Hey, forgive me for the digression, but any message that’s headlined "Need some coffee?" grabs my attention and won’t let go.

Nothing like getting older

So I get home from work after a long, long day, and there are two new messages on the machine.

The first is the Red Cross, wanting my blood. OK, maybe. Last time I went they turned me away because I was on antibiotics for a sinus infection. I quit taking the antibiotics last week. But my sinuses are hurting again. So do I still have an infection? And if I do, should I just give blood anyway, and not mention it? My sinuses tend to get this way whether I’m on the meds or not. I’m not even positive it’s an infection. When you get to be my age, something usually feels lousy. I delay a decision. See how I feel tomorrow.

Then I listen to the second message, or the beginning of it:

If you’re age 50 to 85, please listen to this message. Finally, affordable burial assistance is available…

I hit the "delete."

You see, this is why I could never go into sales. I just don’t have the knack that these professionals do for making the prospective customer feel good about the product.

Happy upcoming birthday to me.

Workin’ on my Memphis blues

Signs2
I
was sitting in a tiny coffee house on the corner of Poplar and Perkins Extended in Memphis when the drugs failed to kick in.

Second cup, no buzz yet, although my leg is jiggling a bit. This High Point Coffee just doesn’t have something that Starbucks has. (As Mike Myers would say in a thick brogue, "an addictive chemical that makes you crrrave it fortnightly," or in my case, daily.)

But the shop itself has something Starbucks does not have — free broadband wireless. Nice little joint. Friendly. I’ve been here three times, and I’ve seen one of the guys who was in here earlier all three times. In fact, I’ve heard him tell people at nearby tables about his recent trip to Jekyll Island three times as well. That’s OK; I’ve tuned him out after the first time — when he answered someone who asked whether that was in the Outer Banks by saying, "well, maybe, I think I heard somebody refer to it as that," at which point I had to butt in and tell them where the Outer Banks were.

Second time, I got into a discussion with a guy named Roosevelt who works at FedEx (you know, like Tom Hanks in "Castaway;" Hollywood thinks everybody in Memphis works for ol’ Fred), vacations at Myrtle Beach, and is orginally from Cherry Point. We talked about our kids and college. He is also a blues musician on the side (the other thing Hollywood thinks everybody in Memphis does, and not without cause). He promised to visit the blog, so if you’re there, Hi. Don’t forget to leave a comment.

It’s been very, very hot here all week, although we did get a slight break last night. I think it touched three digits the one day I played golf. We had a good time, even though I just barely stayed in two digits, so never mind the score. I’ve got my racket, but no tennis. Living in Columbia, I sort of snorted when I got here and they complained about how hot it’s been. I’m not snorting now.

Speaking of hot, the local and state primaries were Thursday, and … I just caught one of those phrases that puts me off track; some girl over at another table just said, …"that’s 2 a.m. in Ireland…" Sometimes life, for those of us with ADD, is like one of those avant-garde recordings such as Revolution No. 9, with snatches of conversation coming from God knows where that make no sense out of context. I looked up to see who was speaking, and there are these two similar-looking girls (from this angle, anyway — sisters, perhaps) over against the window. Walking past them, outside, inexplicably walking the wrong way up the drive-through lane, is a beautiful young woman with short black hair, wearing shades, looks like a model, turning right to look directly at me, although I know all she sees is the bright-sun reflection of Poplar Avenue. She’s just there for a second when she disappears around the corner. Approaching the door is a largish guy in a Nirvana T-shirt, curly, thinning hair freshly slept-in at 2 p.m., carrying a stack of pamphlets or newsletters. He dutifully deposits them on the counter (Memflix, a six-page movie review sheet, mostly writtenMemflix by one Jesse W. Morrison), then steps over to the two girls talking about Ireland. And they all leave. Everybody here seems to know each other, but the folks behind the counter don’t know the Memflix guy. They’ve noticed the flyers before, but didn’t know where they came from. We briefly discuss movies. I’m the only customer now. I get another cup so I can keep blogging. The Memflix guy just reappeared, walking the same path as the model, slurping on a smoothie and carrying a placard of some kind in his other hand, and also disappears around the corner.

Oh, yeah… Thursday they had the biggest ballot in history here in Memphis. Some places in the state, it was the first time with electronic machines, and there were delays. Right here in East Memphis, my sister-in-law-in-law (my wife’s brother’s wife) took two-and-a-half hours to vote. Of course, at the school where she voted, some genius had decided to hold registration the same day. A madhouse.

Results? Well, Harold Ford’s kid won the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate. I understand he’s made a pretty good name for himself in Washington, much more of a reasonable moderate sort of guy than you would expect a Ford to be. I don’t know him, but I knew his Daddy, long ago. At a dinner one night in 1978 with him, Jim Sasser and Jake Butcher, I learned a lot about how the Ford machine works. Harold had been to the dentist that afternoon, and the painkillers with the couple of drinks he had made his tongue pretty loose, and he was very eager to persuade Butcher he was going to deliver Memphis to him — the 9th District part, anyway. Sasser and Butcher were nervous and tried to shush him in my presence, but he waved it off, and said, "This is off the record, right?" I shrugged noncomittally and said, "I’m just eating here." I was traveling with the Butcher campaign, and I had to eat somewhere. It was all very interesting, but not incriminating. I don’t think I could have provided any testimony that would have kept him from beating that federal rap later.

Steve Cohen, a name it seems I’ve heard forever (his Daddy, as I recall, used to run the state mental hospital at Bolivar) picked up the Democratic nomination for young Harold’s seat. That was a nasty, multiple-candidate race that under South Carolina rules would have meant a runoff. There were accusations of anti-Semitic tactics used against Cohen a la Max Heller. But Cohen made it through, and is now the first white Democratic nominee for this seat in 32 years. Harold pere won the seat from my father-in-law’s former business partner, Republican Dan Kuykendall, in 1974. I remember hearing him speak over at Memphis State when my wife and I were students there, and being impressed — more impressed than I would later be by his performance.

See how Tennessee is just as pervaded by interlocking personal relationships as South Carolina (where our favorite question to ask candidates is, "Who’s your Daddy?" — a question to which we already knew the answer with two of the four GOP candidates for state Treasurer this year, and one Gov Lite candidate)? I would tell you about the Republican candidates for the Senate and congressional seats, but I don’t know their Daddys, so what could I tell you by S.C. standards?

That 1978 dinner with the nervous politicos took place at the Pete & Sam’s out by the airport, which is long gone now. (Butcher paid, which ticked me off, and I had to grab one of his aides’ arms and force a bill into his hand to reimburse him. I definitely didn’t want to be indebted to that schmoe, even if free meals hadn’t been against my paper’s rules.)

PetesamsThe original Pete & Sam’s is still there on Park, by the way, thank God. The highlight of my week was a family dinner there Monday night. It’s the realest Italian restaurant in the world. Unlike the ill-fated airport location, and another failed effort way out East, this one still doesn’t have liquor by the drink. You can order beer, but you have to bring your own wine or whatever. Fortunately, one of my brothers-in-law is a rep for a distributor, so we never go lacking in that department.

I even got Mr. Sam (Pete passed away long ago, I believe) to pose at the register in front of some of his signed celebrity photos (everybody from Elvis to Ed McMahon). See below. He also posed with my father-in-law, whom he has long known and always speaks to with great respect and solicitude. His wife visited our table, too. It’s that kind of joint — dark, homey, with a to-hell-with-decor atmosphere. Not exactly the sort of place you’d see in "Goodfellas" — more like the kind of place that the more-honest relatives of the wise guys would choose to eat at. Extremely real. Tourists can talk about the Rendezvous or Corky’s, and they’re very fine, but I’ll take Pete & Sam’s as my first choice whenever I’m in Memphis.

My father-in-law paid this time, and I had no objections.

Mrsam

Has Spratt displaced Franklin?

Sprattbill
T
raveling again. And on about the umpteenth time I passed this billboard this summer, I finally stopped and grabbed the image, so that I could ask:

Is it just me, or does the guy on this bill look just like South Carolina’s own John Spratt? Take away the mustache, of course. See it?

I knew he was the ranking Democrat on the House Budget Committee, but I didn’t know he had the kind of pull it takes to replace ol’ Ben on the C-note.

They still haven’t nabbed me

Banksy1
Y
ou know, it’s been a long time since this article ran on March 24, 2005, and I’ve stopped waiting for the knock of the Museum Police on my door. Maybe those snobs up in New York think no one in South Carolina has the wit or talent for this class of pranksterism (right, like the British are so cultured). If so, that’s a blessing, because their prejudice has protected me from suspicion.

Unwarranted suspicion, I might add, since the evidence against me — entirely coincidental, superficial, and misleading as it is — is quite striking. I was stunned when I saw the article.

In case you can’t read it, I’ll give you a taste below. Frankly, I was a bit surprised that the link still worked for me. I had saved it back when I was thinking about starting a blog. I didn’t start it for another six weeks or so, and by then I had pushed it to the background. Anyway, I hope no one will mind my reproducing the photos, the provenance of which seems doubtful in any case. If I getBanksy2 objections through official channels, I’ll take it down. It’s just that if you don’t seen the pictures, you miss the point of this post — to the extent that it has one. If you can call up the link, look below the bogus portrait of an 18th-century British officer with a spray-paint can, and click on the link for the slide show.

Oh, yes — the excerpt:

(O)ver the last two weeks, a shadowy British graffiti artist who calls himself Banksy has carried his own humorous artworks into four New York institutions – the Museum of Modern Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Brooklyn Museum and the American Museum of Natural History – and attached them with some sort of adhesive to the walls, alongside other paintings and exhibits. Similar stunts at the Louvre and the Tate museum have earned the artist – who will not reveal his real name – a following in Europe, where he has had successful gallery shows and sold thousands of books of his artwork. But his graffiti has also landed him in legal trouble.
    Elyse Topalian, a spokeswoman for the Met, said that museum officials believed that a painting found there – a small, gold-framed portrait of a woman wearing a gas mask – was hung surreptitiously on March 13. Guards noticed it and removed it from a wall near other paintings in the American wing, she said. Ms. Topalian added that no damage had been done to the wall or to other artworks.
    The museum does not look kindly on such unauthorized additions to its walls. “I think it’s fair to say that it would take more than a piece of Scotch tape to get a work of art into the Met,” Ms. Topalian said.
    Sally Williams, a spokeswoman for the Brooklyn Museum, said a painting – in this case, of a red-coated colonial-era military officer holding a spray-paint can, with antiwar graffiti in the background – was discovered and removed on March 16. The painting was hung between two others from the museum’s permanent collection in the American Identities galleries on the fifth floor. She said that the painting was now sitting in the museum’s conservation lab and that its fate was uncertain….

By the way, if you can’t get to that link, you can almost certainly get to this one — which apparently was a source for the NYT piece.

Fortunately, not many people have seen me as I looked in the winter of 1980, shortly before the caucuses, when I was up in Iowa covering the scramble among Republicans for a jumpstart on their party’s presidential nomination.

It was a crowded field, but I was mainly concerned with Sen. Howard Baker. He was my excuse for being there, since I worked for a Tennessee newspaper.

Anyway, the photo below of my meeting Sen. Baker in the Des Moines airport has not been widely circulated. To my knowledge, it has never been published in print or online.

And that’s probably a lucky thing for me.

Baker

What IS this thing?

Critter_hires
S
peaking of lizards — and we were speaking of "Lizards" in the comments on a previous post — does anybody know what this is?

It was found in a bathroom in my house recently. I wondered why one of my kids called me in the middle of a meeting to tell me about it — until I got home and saw it.

That plastic container it was in is about 10 or 12 inches square. This thing was somewhere between a gecko and an iguana. Note the coins in the picture. I had hoped to catch an image of him (or her) next to the coins for size perspective as soon as it climbed out of the container. But as you can see below, it was off and under the car 10 feet away before I could get off another shot.

The opinion has been expressed that it is a salamander. I have no idea. I do know that it appeared to have gills, which does suggest an amphibian rather than a reptile.

Who knows the answer?

Critter2

Comic relief on an issue that could use some

At the end of this long week, I’m wearying of serious issues. As you can probably tell.

And illegal immigration is deadly serious, judging by the passions it seems to stir among individuals other than myself.

But it seems that even the most passionate on all sides should be able to laugh at  this take on it. If not, blame my brother. He sent it to me. I don’t know where he got it.

I’m sorry if anyone finds it offensive in its use of stereotype. I assure you it reflect no prejudices on my part. Some of my best friends are presidents who are easy to ridicule. So there.

So you want to be a wonk star?

I do have a couple of substantive things I want to say about the couple of hours I spent over at the Legislature yesterday, but I’ve been really busy since then, and I’ve got to go to a work-related dinner now. So while a colleague who won’t be here tomorrow reads the early draft of my Sunday column, I’ll just share this:

If you want to feel like a celebrity without all that hard work and talent that, say, James Brown put into it, spend an hour commenting on election night on public television, and then walk the lobby of a legislative body the next day.

That’s the one place where you’re likely to find the highest possible concentration of people who will have watched you and dug what you were trying to say. (Don’t try this at the mall, for instance.)

As you mill through the crowd, you get various versions of "Saw you last night, you did good." Which is all celebrity-types really need for satisfaction.

But some people actually noted things I had said. That’s like — in a way; a very limited way — being John Lennon and having people quote your lyrics to you (which in his case was particularly helpful, because he couldn’t remember them himself).

OK, I admit it. I just wrote this for the headline.

Do I have influence, or what?

At first, I thought there was a direct correlation between candidates whom I had pictured as "healing" my digital recorder and those who won their primary contests Tuesday. Such as this guy

Ravenel_blog1_1

… and this guy:

Hammond_blog_1

But then, I saw I had done the same thing with this guy, and he didn’t win…

Woodblog_1

… although I’m not sure whether that counts, since he had dropped out. Then, I figured out the winning formula…

It turns out that if I had posted your picture in the "Write your own caption" category, you won. Except for ol’ Zeb.

You want predictions? OK

FYI, I’m posting this as of 7 p.m., even though the stupid timer thing on the blog will probably say it’s three hours earlier.

I am neither as humble as Sunny (so I won’t hold back) nor as "confident" as Laurin (so I won’t do percentages), but here’s what I think is probably happening in the primaries today.

I’m doing this to underline, for those who still don’t understand after I’ve explained it a gazillion times, that endorsements are about who ought to win, not who will win. I’m never very optimistic about primaries, parties being what they are. Our candidates in general elections fare much better.

Here goes, stream of consciousness:

Beyond that, no predictions. Of course, I’m praying (unless it’s blasphemous to ask the Lord to get involved directly in politics) that Bob Staton, Bill Cotty and Ken Clark win. And I’m hoping that Joe Neal, Joe McEachern and Anton Gunn win. Those are all hard to read, but I feel pretty good about Cotty. If he loses to that crowd that’s trying to take over, South Carolina is in a lot of trouble.

Pay no attention to this

Bob McAlister is engaging in the sort of silly, irresponsible journalism that should be left to us professionals.

Some people will just do anything to get people to look at their blogs.

Pay no attention to the man behind the post.

Or maybe, before you turn away, you’ll want to look at this, in which the former chief of staff to Carroll Campbell engages in a bit of GOP whistling past the graveyard.

Just kidding. Bob’s post is at least based in fact. I could have sworn I heard Democrats on NPR this morning spinning this as their having done well. It seems the Republican "survived an unusually strong challenge" in "a relative squeaker."

"This will send a message across the country… that will send us to victory in November," said loser Francine Busby (shown celebrating below). Or something like that. I was half asleep. You go listen.

Hmmm.

Busby

The Kingpin moves in

In response to my last rant about the governor refusing to debate, one of my readers referred to his opponent as "Doc Ock."

Well, the governor may not be afraid of Doc Ock, but if you ask me, the whole gang of them — Doc Ock,Kingpin_1 Spider-Man and the Green Goblin — ought to be very afraid that The Kingpin is trying to muscle in on this very same territory. He’ll stop at nothing, and he’s just about as strong as Spidey.

He says he only interested in casinos, but that’s just the start of his strategy. He’s made no secret of his wish to run the entire state.

He is pictured at left at the offices of The Daily Bugle, where he was threatening Editor J. Jonah Jameson.

He’s running under an assumed name, but you can’t fool an old Marvel fan.

Correction: It was just the opposite, partly

Altman
I now have a firsthand report, and the previous one was exactly backwards on the second point. If you follow me.

Apparently, what Rep. Altman actually said about editors at The State was that we can’t get anything for free at any stores — even temporarily. More specifically, he is said to have said that the newspaper’s owners won’t let us get so much as a box of paper clips on credit, on account of how we’re such terrible business people.

With regard to myself, I must endorse the representative’s remarks on this score. I am not a businessman, terrible or otherwise, but if I were I’d probably be a lousy one. And while the paper clip thing may be a tad hyperbolic, he’s caught the gist of what it’s like working with Knight Ridder. I can get the paper clips, but then we have to go through all sorts of gyrations to get the expense processed.

There are many reasons why we’ll all be glad to be owned by McClatchy soon.

As for the other — well, my first source seems to have gotten it right. Of my having called him a "jerk," he seems to have observed that "that is the extent of his erudition."

So, bottom line: John Graham Altman is still a jerk, but that doesn’t mean he’s always wrong.

Try squinting; you can see it

In a desperate attempt to wrest back momentum from incumbent Andre Bauer, Mike Campbell apparently has also decided make himself scarce from the campaign trail.

Campbellmattdamon_2In his place, he has recruited actor Matt Damon to make all of his public appearances. This way, he shrewdly hedges his bets. He can seem to keep his commitments on the stump, but later claim to have been just as absent as his opponent. The plan isn’t perfect, but it’s less risky than a plane crash.

And Mr. Damon, who hasn’t had a hit movie since 2004, gets a paying gig. It’s a win-win situation.

Do you doubt my interpretation of the evidence? Take a look at theCampbellblog Associated Press photo at left, allegedly of Mr. Campbell, and compare it to the actual photo of Mr. Campbell, shot weeks ago by yours truly, to the right.

A mere case of a bad likeness? I don’t think so. There’s something going on here.

And it doesn’t matter whether you believe me. Oliver Stone believes me, and he’s already got somebody lined up for the lead role.

And I didn’t get him a thing. Or him, either

Willis_brochure_1
More news you can use!

In case you didn’t get this slick brochure from state Treasurer candidate Jeff Willis, I want to pass on part of its contents, included along with the urgent admonishment to "Put Me On Your Refrigerator!"

Here it is, with misspellings and stylistic inconsistencies included:

Important Dates to Remember
2005

Nov 19 — Carolina/Clemson Game
Dec 05 — Sen. Strom Thurmond’s Birthday
Dec 20 — Cong. Henry Brown’s Birthday

2006
Jan 30 — Vice President Dick Cheney’s Birthday
Feb 14 — Cong. Gresham Barrett’s Birthday
Feb 29 — SC GOP Chairman Katon Dawson’s Birthday
Mar 20 — Lt. Gov. Andre Bauer’s Birthday
May 27 — Atty Gen. Henry McMaster’s Birthday
May 28 — Gov. Mark Sanford’s Birthday
Jun 13 — Primary Election Day
June 27 — Runoff Election Day

Jul 06 — President George Bush’s Birthday
Jul 09 — Sen. Lindsey Graham’s Birthday
Jul 24 — Gov. Carol (sic) Campbell’s Birthday
Jul 31 — Cong. Joe Wilson’s Birthday
Sep 02 — Sen. Jim DeMint Birthday
Oct 11 — Cong. Bob Inglis’ Birthday
Nov 7th — 2006 Election Day

I’ll let you guess which party’s nomination Mr. Willis is seeking (and no fair looking at the little elephant!).

Here’s yer ‘choice’: Git or else

Possum
Not showing up for the GOP candidate’s debate for superintendent of education tonight was elusive write-in candidate Zeb Hatfield.

However, I did manage to track down Mr. Hatfield for a brief interview at his secluded hideaway in the sandhills. I was only able to get this one photograph before he got his flintlock smoothbore musket loaded. That’s his campaign consultant on his shoulder — nothing unusual about it; that’s exactly where you’ll find most such critters during interviews.

I asked him what he thought about his opponents. He dismissed Bob Staton as a "suit." He allowed as how Karen Floyd was "rat purty," yet "too slick by half." He said Mike Ryan had spent "way too much time in the Yankee Army to be trusted." He said he didn’t know enough about the other two to say for sure why he didn’t like them; he just knew he didn’t.

As he was ramming the wad home in the musket, I tried to pin down his views regarding EFA, EIA, PACT, EAA, NCLB and PPIC. He said he reckoned if I hung around about half a minute longer, he’d "larn" me to go "pokin’ fun at folks who couldn’t read or write a lick by spellin’ out nasty words rat to they faces."

I asked him something about his views on "choice" as I backed toward my vehicle. He said he’d give me a choice: I could either GIT or taste lead.

After two debates, I had thought I was getting the hang of moderating. But there are just some folks that refuse to be moderated. Mr. Hatfield is one. I chose to git.

Last words

It’s not just headlines. I can’t stop myself from doing that "finishing thoughts" thing with quotes, either.

Take this one from Gen. Michael Hayden:

Clearly the privacy of American citizens is a concern, constantly. And it’s a concern in this program, it’s a concern in everything we’ve done.

The rest of the thought:

It’s more than a concern; it’s a damned nuisance if you ask me. And I’ve heard more than I want to hear about it.

That’s the trouble with the biased media — always taking quotes out of context, leaving behind the good parts.