“May we never confuse honest dissent with disloyal subversion.”
— Dwight Eisenhower
Sometimes funny, sometimes thoughtful, always a good time
“May we never confuse honest dissent with disloyal subversion.”
— Dwight Eisenhower
Ahh, another productive meeting with a client. I was at IZZE’s headquarters talking with them about a deal with Amazon, and when I left they asked if I wanted to take any product home with me.
I love my clients.
In today’s mail I received a little brochure for summer kids’ programs at a nearby school. Although I’m sure the programs themselves are a real hoot, I must say their choice of a photo for the brochure is even funnier.
So we have a bunch of kids all waiting in line for little Maria to stop staring at that rock and get on with the game. Whatever the game is… that looks like a four-square grid, but I don’t see any balls and that’s way too many kids to play a proper game.
Maybe they’re doing some kind of geology study, learning about rocks in nature. Or physics: why an object at rest tends to remain at rest? Although you never know– the rock might suddenly and unpredictably move across the playground or do something equally spooky.
In any case, this makes their summer program look like as much fun as watching grass grow. Sign me up!
This may be the best spam message I’ve ever received.
If it’s even spam, that is. Maybe it’s a secret communique from my agents in Kazakhstan. Or the al Qaeda. Or a beautiful Russian woman asking me to marry her so she can become a citizen and realize her lifelong dream of working at Burger King slapping patties on a triple-decker. The wonder of it is I just don’t know.
Today General William Odom, a three-star Army general and former NSA Director, addressed the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Iraq. His condemnation of the Bush administration’s tactics was resounding and to the point.
He starts with a scathing attack on the “troop surge”…
I see no reason to change my judgment now. The surge is prolonging instability, not creating the conditions for unity as the president claims.
… and continued with details about different regions of Iraq and how each and every one of them is less stable than a year ago. Then he denounced the administration’s oft-repeated claims about how the al-Qaeda would rise like a phoenix if the U.S. troops abandon the country:
He proceeded into the tenuous alliance the U.S. has with Sunni groups:
Then he addressed the fact that Iraq continues to destabilize into fragmented groups:
I challenge you to press the administration’s witnesses this week to explain this absurdity. Ask them to name a single historical case where power has been aggregated successfully from local strong men to a central government except through bloody violence leading to a single winner, most often a dictator.
Then he called John McCain and his buddies to task:
And finally, he summed up his arguments with something I (and many others) have been saying for a long time:
With such harsh criticisms from an experienced military commander, it will be interesting to see how the administration spins this.
I finally put the finishing touches on my 2007 taxes.
Wow, what a nightmarish adventure of confusion and drudgery to navigate the labyrinthine tax system. For the past eight years I’ve been using software (first Turbo Tax and now TaxCut) because it’s worth the forty bucks to type in all the numbers have a program put it all together for me.
Of course I started back in January; it’s always good to get a good head of steam when you’re running the tax gauntlet. But it took a while to get all of the right paperwork from the various agencies that send that kind of paperwork, and of course it took a while to figure out all the numbers for my businesses and investments and whatnot. Every weekend I’d spend an hour or so crunching through the math, creating spreadsheets, entering numbers, and frowning at the result. I owe how much? And now it’s a week before they’re due, and I’m finally finishing everything and printing the 29 pages that I have to file with the IRS. (That’s not counting the 106 pages that TaxCut prints “for my records”, which apparently include all of the worksheets and calculations it did to come up with the 29 pages.)
In contrast, my friend Amanda had a different tax experience:
She got away with filing the legendary 1040-EZ form, which explains her all-too-chipper attitude. I remember that form from fifteen years ago… ahh, good times.
Luke has some interesting taste in music, so during the workday we often get to listen to his wacky random selections. I’m listening to some MP3 tracks that he let me *cough* borrow, and out of the blue this crazy song from Leonard Nimoy came on.
I think my ears are bleeding now. Wow.
Coming up: the classic song “Kana’i Aupuni” by Israel Kamakawiwo’ole, on their amazing album “Ka ‘Ano’i”. It should be interesting seeing what that’s all about.
Ahh, memories. Here’s a beautiful photo of an Atari 800 desktop computer, circa 1983.
I love the box of “certified diskettes” in the top right– I remember when you’d buy 5.25″ disks and they were always “certified”. And of course you’d cut a notch on the side so you could double-side them (I never understood why they didn’t just manufacture them with the notch; I guess it was so suckers not in the know would buy twice as many disks.)
Good times.
I’m on the phone with some yahoo over at Chase Bank, applying for a new business credit card. I have no idea where this particular call center is– probably somewhere in India– but the guy cracks me up because he sounds like one of those computer synthesizers trying really hard to sound like a human.
It reminds me of Stephen Hawking’s speech synthesizer…
In fact, it sounds just like him. Maybe it is him! Astrophysics is such a dull field; call centers are probably much more fun.
An insightful post by Jim Hightower, which exactly mirrors my feelings about the “economic stimulus package” on its way to all of us:
In a celebrated display of bipartisanship, both parties joined hands last month to pass a whopper of a stimulus package. Cash, they crowed, would soon be flowing. “We’re sending a $600 check to you, and $300 to you, and $1,200 to couples, and…well, almost everyone will get money! It’s manna straight from heaven to get our big ol’ economy high-ballin’ down Prosperity Highway,” they exulted.
“Not that there’s anything wrong with our economy,” they quickly added. “No, no,” said the self-congratulatory stimulators. “Everything’s fine. Really fine. Really.” In his State of the Union peroration, Bush insisted, “Americans can be confident about our economic growth.” Treasury Secretary Henry Paulsen chimed in, “The U.S. economy is fundamentally strong.” Buckshot Cheney came out of his bunker to assert that America has a “solid platform” for continued economic growth. And Condi Rice assured world leaders that our economy is “resilient, its structure sound, and its long-term economic fundamentals are healthy.”
Hmmm. If the basics of the economy are in such great shape, why would we need all this cheerleading by the wizards in charge? You don’t have to be in Who’s Who to know what’s what. They can whoop it up ’til they’re hoarse, but for most Americans, the kitchen-table fundamentals are nothing to cheer about.
Let’s say your check arrives and you drive straight to Wal-Mart to pick out some new clothes, an electronic gizmo you’ve been wanting, and a couple of toys for the kids. Pay your $300 to $600 and– listen!– you can almost hear the economic machinery kicking into gear, stimulated by your purchase of products.
But wait– we make very little of that stuff in America anymore. Those machinery noises are coming from China, where Wal-Mart and most other retailers have their goods made. Thus, our leaders are shipping billions of dollars from our public treasury to you and me, asking us to spend it in an economy that’s based on further enriching Wal-Mart’s wealthiest investors and further stimulating China’s massive export economy. How sound is that? Wal-Mart and China profit, but we don’t.
It’s amazing to me that stuff like this stimulus package even gets off the drawing board. But I guess it gives Congresspeople (who aren’t spending their own money here) something to point at when they’re up for re-election. “Look!” they can say, “I was one of the boneheads who voted to grab billions of dollars from our debt-ridden Treasury so you could have a little extra spending money!”
Sigh.