If you really loved me...
You'd buy me one of these for Christmas. Or my birthday.
I am dubious. (I am metal.) I am stainless. I am milk in your plastic.
Aaron pointed me to this, and it is a thing of beauty.
That's the song that's playing at work right now.
I had a bunch of coffee with breakfast this morning, and I think I'm coming down from it. Our guests who came for the holiday are on their way home, and I find myself missing them tremendously. A wonderful time was had by all and our house is remarkably quiet now that they've gone.
Watch Dan Rather apologize for not getting his facts straight, humiliated before the eyes of America, voluntarily undermining his credibility and career of over thirty years. Observe Donna Brazille squirm as she is ridiculed by Bay Buchanan, and pronounced irrelevant and nearly non-existent. Listen as Donna and Nancy Pelosi and Senator Charles Schumer take to the airwaves saying that they have to go back to the drawing board and learn from their mistakes and try to be better, more likable, more appealing, have a stronger message, speak to morality. Watch them awkwardly quote the bible, trying to speak the new language of America. Surf the blogs, and read the comments of dismayed, discombobulated, confused individuals trying to figure out what they did wrong. Hear the cacophony of voices, crying out, “Why did they beat me?”
And then ask anyone who has ever worked in a domestic violence shelter if they have heard this before.
They will tell you, every single day.
The answer is quite simple. They beat us because they are abusers. We can call it hate. We can call it fear. We can say it is unfair. But we are looped into the cycle of violence, and we need to start calling the dominating side what they are: abusive. And we need to recognize that we are the victims of verbal, mental, and even, in the case of Iraq, physical violence.
AdBusters will tell you today is Buy Nothing Day, but they are neglecting to mention that if you refuse, you will miss out on the 160GB hard drive I bought at Staples today for $40.
Spending the evening watching them blow shit up on Mythbusters. There's something about watching two guys in SF blow cans up or fire chickens out of a cannon. Hilarious. Frozen chickens will, in fact, go through 12 panes of glass pretty easily. Thawed chickens, not so much.
We gather together
To watch cheesy movies
At Comedy Central
On Thanksgiving Day
We're Mystery Science
Theater 3000
It's thirty straight hours
And it's called Turkey Day...
Turkey has enough l-tryptophan in it to knock you on your sorry Thanksgiving ass.
As seen on Kevin's blog...
I've spent the day pricing DSL.
Spent a lot of the weekend doing stuff, so I've been a little quiet.
Currently trying to reduce the size of a PowerPoint file for a coworker. It is giving me yet another reason to hate PowerPoint--it seems that they convert everything to .bmp format on the fly, so saved documents with 8 images balloon up to 19 MB in size.
There are two stories catching my eye this morning:
The European Union is now, arguably, the world's largest superpower. Militarily, the US is the undisputed champ. But in eceonomic terms, and in notions of freedom, the welfare of its citizens, and in human rights, we've been lapped.
Much of American "productivity," Rifkin suggests, is accounted for by economic activity that might be better described as wasteful: military spending; the endlessly expanding police and prison bureaucracies; the spiraling cost of healthcare; suburban sprawl; the fast-food industry and its inevitable corollary, the weight-loss craze. Meaningful comparisons of living standards, he says, consistently favor the Europeans. In France, for instance, the work week is 35 hours and most employees take 10 to 12 weeks off every year, factors that clearly depress GDP. Yet it takes a John Locke heart of stone to say that France is worse off as a nation for all that time people spend in the countryside downing du vin rouge et du Camembert with friends and family [...]
European children are consistently better educated; the United States would rank ninth in the EU in reading, ninth in scientific literacy, and 13th in math. Twenty-two percent of American children grow up in poverty, which means that our country ranks 22nd out of the 23 industrialized nations, ahead of only Mexico and behind all 15 of the pre-2004 EU countries. What's more horrifying: the statistic itself or the fact that no American politician to the right of Dennis Kucinich would ever address it?
This story in the Guardian is about the only funny thing I've seen today. It seems that somebody on a ship off the coast of Scotland was enjoying a program on the BBC. Which is fine. What was not fine was that by doing so, they were jamming a VHF emergency broadcast frequency.
Today presenter Jim Naughtie was given the unusual task of interrupting the programme just before 7am to ask the guilty sailor to clear the airwaves.
"Someone on a vessel near Inverness is listening to this programme," Mr Naughtie said. "The coastguard can hear you listening to the programme, but your VHF transmitter is blocking a channel used for emergency calls.
"So if you are on a ship somewhere around Inverness and listening to the Today programme, will you check you are not the one that's blocking the emergency channel?"
I just got spam from Exonerating A. Pointillists!
Spent part of the day raking leaves. The front yard resulted in five 30-gallon bags full of leaves, and I'm pretty sure I'm not done there yet. The backyard has a bunch of leaves still to go, so I am waiting on that a bit.
Cabel Sasser's story of Audion is a thing of beauty. I especially like knowing this tidbit.
There's this story at MyDD about an editorial by Brad Carson (you may remember him as the guy who lost to Tom "Teenage lesbians are so prevalent that they only send girls to the bathroom one at a time" Coburn, who's fucking insane). In it he writes that it's not that the Democrats have a problem getting their message out, it's that some voters want to bring us back to the 18th century itself.
By the time the avalanche has started, it is too late for the pebbles to vote.
It's like Teddy Roosevelt, Jr. said on Utah Beach "well, we might as start the war from right here, the supplies will have to catch up to us no matter where we are."
We need to start the fight close to home. In our lives and in our local politics. We can't just focus on federal offices. State and local matter more, right now. Every race we win, the more we learn, the better we get. And we need to start now. Today. Who is that school board candidate who needs your help. Where is that councilman who has progressive ideas? We need to start from where ever we are and work from there. Idealism is our enemy, reality and practicality are our friends. No race is too small to learn from, no office too unimportant to win. We need to use what we learned this year and take it home, then take those lessons and use them in 2006.
This will be neither easy nor quick. It will take work and effort and some disappointment. But every time we act, we learn and we help make the America we want. And that is the goal we're striving for. Not just winning one election for one man.
The Marines brought tanks an anti-war protest in LA yesterday.
As if you ever needed confirmation that most managers cannot find their ass with both hands, a map, and a compass, there's this article about IT worker morale turning to shit. Duh.
IT workers also are feeling quite cynical toward top management, which they regard as having its head stuck in the sand on key issues ranging from communication to outsourcing.
"Outsourcing is euphemistically called 'global sourcing,' " says an IT worker at a large insurer. "Memos [about outsourcing] are self-congratulatory about how it will benefit employees, totally ignoring how many fewer domestic employees we have year to year."
He is particularly resentful about layoffs, which his employer officially refers to as "position migrations."
"High-minded phrases and motivational meetings do not conceal the venality and incredible lack of long-term planning that offshoring represents," he says.
I am applying liberal amounts of coffee to my brain to get it to remember something it hid away years ago. Once upon a time, I used Access a lot. Now I barely remember how it works. Bleh.
The Parable of the Old Man and the Young
So Abram rose, and clave the wood, and went,
And took the fire with him, and a knife.
And as they sojourned both of them together,
Isaac the first-born spake and said, My Father,
Behold the preparations, fire and iron,
But where the lamb, for this burnt-offering?
Then Abram bound the youth with belts and straps,
And builded parapets and trenches there,
And stretchèd forth the knife to slay his son.
When lo! an Angel called him out of heaven,
Saying, Lay not they hand upon the lad,
Neither do anything to him, thy son.
Behold! Caught in a thicket by its horns,
A Ram. Offer the Ram of Pride instead.
But the old man would not so, but slew his son,
And half the seed of Europe, one by one.
So now that the election is sinking into the collective subconscious, we're bombing the fuck out of Falluja again. Only this time it's at the orders of our puppet Allawi.
There's an episode of Animaniacs where the Warner siblings are beseiged by survey takers. Taking a survey now, which is why I'm reminded of it. And hey, that website I just linked dates from about the last time I even saw an episode of the show...
Wanda and the Colossus looks like a beautiful game.
Bush is already saying that he has a clear mandate.
I know where Men can still be found,
Anger and clamorous accord,
And virtues growing from the ground,
And fellowship of beer and board,
And song, that is a sturdy cord,
And hope, that is a hardy shrub,
And goodness, that is God's last word--
Will someone take me to a pub?
So we were walking home from the store and this kitten followed us home.
I know you are as confused as we are about Bush being reelected. Perhaps more so.
Some of the anecdotal evidence of the election is that people voted for Bush based on their perceived values of him, rather than the facts. Bush has now claimed his 3-point victory as a clear mandate to push the further neocon/Pharisee agenda.
The election of Bush is a very, very bad choice. It is a major setback for humanity, for a long list of reasons each of us either fully understand already or will very soon. (More on this in the next few days. But for starters, America just announced to the entire planet that we're OK with Abu Ghraib, we're OK with Guantanamo, and we're OK with illegal wars. This was an important announcement.)
I was evidently unclear in what kind of change I was seeing.
Jesus Fucking Christ, people.
Media Matters has a listing of who's calling what state, and when.
And at long last the day is finally here.
They that shall live this day, and see old age,
Will on the eve thereof feast with his neighbours,
And say 'To-morrow is when we threw Bush out:'
Then will they open their wallet and show their cards.
And say 'This I used to vote upon Election day.'
Get out there and vote!
Democracy is not a spectator sport. It only works when we all come off the bench and participate.
There's this horrible pain in the diodes all along my right side. And my left side. And my head. And my torso, my precious torso.