Apocalyptic stories are always popular. I think the reason for their popularity is that people want to think they’d be a survivor. Talking about the purely fictional stories, here. The religious ones are usually more depressing – whether it’s the Hell on Earth immediately following the Christian Rapture, or the total destruction of everything as foretold by the Norse Ragnarok. I’d like to note the whole 2012 thing from the Mayans, but researchers (and crackpots) disagree as to whether it will be a good or bad thing.
I’ve noticed that a lot of post-apocalypse stories have a very industrial feel to them, which is kind of ironic considering we’d lose our industrial base immediately. It always annoys me when a writer sets the story far enough in the future that modern-day technologies are puzzled over when the remnants are found (It says ”Pan…a…son…ic.” What does it mean?), but people are still driving around in gasoline-powered automobiles.
Another cliché is that we’d return to a feudal/agrarian society. The agrarian I’ll grant, but I have doubts about the feudal system taking root in America, even after everything falls over and goes squick. I figure cities will become No Man’s lands – the refuge of scattered groups protecting their rooftop gardens and rain barrels, while small rural towns will dynamite their bridges or otherwise barricade themselves in. Bartering will become the norm, and xenophobia will be seen as a rational worldview.
The Postman, The Stand, The Road Warrior, Jericho – they all use the end of civilization as their starting point, and they all approach it differently. Brin’s Postman brings hope to suspicious, insular townspeople, while King allowed his survivors to restore the power grids before Good fought Evil. The Road Warrior didn’t even try to be anything other than a popcorn romp. I enjoyed Jericho because the writers did a good job exploring the problems (technical, social, and otherwise) involved with a town suddenly cut off from their entire support structure (i.e. everyone else).
One of my favorite books on the subject is Lucifer’s Hammer, by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle. Two scenes that stand out in my mind: the diabetic scientist who collects (and hides) engineering books and Chilton manuals to increase his worth, so he can convince a township to let him have a valuable pig or goat every month in order to make the insulin he needs; the Boy Scouts that become guerrilla fighters who prefer to stay in the mountains rather than join any of the towns.
Sometimes, when I’m mowing the lawn or washing dishes or doing some other repetitive, brain-neutral task, I think of the different types of people you might run into in a post-apocalyptic world. The military would probably be the only governmental agency to come through fairly intact, because they already have the infrastructure in place to function in other-than-first-world conditions.
Then you’d have the paranoid survivalists who have been preparing for just such an occasion, and have stockpiled food, water, medicine and toilet paper. I think we’d probably lose about 5% of them in the first week because they’d be picked off while they were gloating.
If, for whatever reason, we did end up as a feudal society, expect the D&D and SCA nerds to rise to the top, because they’re already used to working within that framework. The Scadians in particular have studied the Dark Ages closely, and have developed skills that aren’t dependent on electricity.
Similar to the diabetic scientist mentioned above, I imagine reference librarians would be in demand, just for their knowledge base. Similarly, chemists and medical personnel would be sought after. On the opposite end of the spectrum, gossip columnists and American Idol “celebrities” would become food.
Farmers would find themselves targeted by desperate, short-sighted people, and we’d probably lose most of them to mob action.
That’s all just off the top of my head. It would take a much larger canvas than this blog to explore all of the ramifications.
Of course, you have to wonder how you would fare in “Year Zero.” A friend who read my comment a few days ago about snaring birds and rabbits called to chortle at me, because she thought I had no skills in that area. I assured her that I had plenty of dental floss.
If you understand that last comment, you’ll probably be among the survivors. For the rest of you, I’ll explain.
Dental floss is one of the most useful filaments in the world because of its high tensile strength. It can replace a shoelace, slice cheese, serve as heavy-duty thread, and replace Teflon plumbing tape. You can braid it into an extremely strong rope (a few years ago, a Washington prisoner escaped by scaling the prison wall on a dental floss rope), hang pictures with it, replace a broken zipper pull, or even clean your teeth with it.
In addition to all of the everyday uses, dental floss is also a vital part to any post-apocalyptic survival kit, as it makes a great fishing line, suture thread, tripwire, garrote, or small animal snare.
My Scout troop once went on a “Shoebox Campout.” As the name implies, all of the gear we carried (apart from food) had to fit inside one shoebox. That will prioritize you in a hurry, and force you to think creatively. It also serves as a pretty good model for an emergency kit in case the bombs go off or the zombies arise.
There are a metric buttload of sites that offer survival packs, ranging from the outdoor enthusiast sites to the oh-my-god-we’re-all-doomed-dig-a-bunker sites. They’re all fun to browse through, though. This site
http://www.survival-gear.com/
is pretty good because they offer pre-made kits, as well as the individual pieces to build your own custom kit.
Whether it’s nukular war, alien invasion, zombie uprising, plague, or you’re just hiking in the backcountry, these kits don’t do a bit of good if you don’t know how to use them. Throw a Boy Scout manual in there, too.
Or you can just come get me.
Tuesday, May 26, 2009
Monday, May 25, 2009
Not What, but Who
Another Million-Dollar Idea
It's one of those doggie-door or paper clip ideas; the kind that seems so obvious once someone has put it out there.
Wouldn't it be handy if your cooking pots had liquid measurements inscribed on their interior? That way, you could fill it directly at the sink, or pour your milk into the pot without having to mess up a separate measuring cup.
If anyone is already doing this, don't tell me. I'd like to think I was first.
Thanks.
Sunday, May 24, 2009
Unfortunately, there's no rule against stupidity.
Mama Cat is visiting, and I was dispatched to a pharmacy today in order to pick up a supply of needles for her. She's diabetic, and had forgotten to grab her pack from home while she was loading the car.
Imagine my surprise when I was told I couldn't buy them.
Me: Hi. I need a pack of this type of needle, please. *displays the needle supplied by Mama Cat* My mother-in-law forgot to pack hers.
Drone: Sure. Do you know her birth date?
Me: Not the year. Why?
Drone: So I can look up her insulin prescription.
Me: She lives in another part of the state. She's never filled a prescription here.
Drone: Oh. Hmmm. See...we have new rules that prevent us from selling needles unless accompanied by an insulin prescription. All the pharmacies here are doing it.
Me: So she's out of luck?
Drone: I think so, yeah.
Me: That's not the best thing to say to a diabetic, you know. Any other options?
Manager Drone: If you can tell us what brand of insulin she uses, and how many units she administers per dose, we can make an exception.
Me, translating in my head: If you can prove to us that you know something about treating diabetes, we'll assume you're not going to shoot heroin into your eyeballs behind our store.
*a quick cell conversation ensues, and I get the information*
Manager Drone: Thank you. If you could just sign this register, I'll get the needles.
Me: Sure.
Manager Drone, handing me the bag: I'm sorry for the hassle, but we're trying to cut down on illegal drug use.
Me: I understand. Thank you.
Now, here's the thing: I was asked to sign a register, but at no point did anyone ask to see any ID from me. I could have written the address for Wrigley Field, and they'd been none the wiser. That's some fine security work, Lou.
Furthermore, they claim that their policy is to cut down on substance abuse, yet on my way out of the store, I passed displays full of:
· lighters and matches (used to ignite joints, pipes and bongs, and melt powdered drugs)
· spray paint and glue (huffed for a high)
· rolling papers (duh)
· spoons (used to cook powdered drugs)
· pipes (used to smoke pot and crack)
· plastic bottles (used to make water bongs)
The point is that we should spend our energy trying to prevent people from acquiring the illegal drugs to begin with, not the paraphernalia. When I was in school, one of the earrings I wore was a coke spoon attached to a French hook. Have I ever done coke? No. Besides, if heroin users can't get nice new clean needles, they'll just reuse old ones. They're not going to kick their habit because a pharmacy's board of directors makes a new rule.
Put that in your hookah and smoke it.
Imagine my surprise when I was told I couldn't buy them.
Me: Hi. I need a pack of this type of needle, please. *displays the needle supplied by Mama Cat* My mother-in-law forgot to pack hers.
Drone: Sure. Do you know her birth date?
Me: Not the year. Why?
Drone: So I can look up her insulin prescription.
Me: She lives in another part of the state. She's never filled a prescription here.
Drone: Oh. Hmmm. See...we have new rules that prevent us from selling needles unless accompanied by an insulin prescription. All the pharmacies here are doing it.
Me: So she's out of luck?
Drone: I think so, yeah.
Me: That's not the best thing to say to a diabetic, you know. Any other options?
Manager Drone: If you can tell us what brand of insulin she uses, and how many units she administers per dose, we can make an exception.
Me, translating in my head: If you can prove to us that you know something about treating diabetes, we'll assume you're not going to shoot heroin into your eyeballs behind our store.
*a quick cell conversation ensues, and I get the information*
Manager Drone: Thank you. If you could just sign this register, I'll get the needles.
Me: Sure.
Manager Drone, handing me the bag: I'm sorry for the hassle, but we're trying to cut down on illegal drug use.
Me: I understand. Thank you.
Now, here's the thing: I was asked to sign a register, but at no point did anyone ask to see any ID from me. I could have written the address for Wrigley Field, and they'd been none the wiser. That's some fine security work, Lou.
Furthermore, they claim that their policy is to cut down on substance abuse, yet on my way out of the store, I passed displays full of:
· lighters and matches (used to ignite joints, pipes and bongs, and melt powdered drugs)
· spray paint and glue (huffed for a high)
· rolling papers (duh)
· spoons (used to cook powdered drugs)
· pipes (used to smoke pot and crack)
· plastic bottles (used to make water bongs)
The point is that we should spend our energy trying to prevent people from acquiring the illegal drugs to begin with, not the paraphernalia. When I was in school, one of the earrings I wore was a coke spoon attached to a French hook. Have I ever done coke? No. Besides, if heroin users can't get nice new clean needles, they'll just reuse old ones. They're not going to kick their habit because a pharmacy's board of directors makes a new rule.
Put that in your hookah and smoke it.
Saturday, May 23, 2009
The Secret
The reason we've defied the odds and stayed together seventeen years is that I know - without a shadow of a doubt - when civilaztion collapses, you'll be right there beside me on the porch, picking off zombies (and probably cooking up something delicious from whatever birds and rabbits I manage to snare, with a side dish cobbled together from looting forgotten gardens).
And really...what more could you ask from a partner?
Happy anniversary, Mrs. Cat.
Friday, May 22, 2009
Thursday, May 21, 2009
Wipe Out
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
We must attack someone…anyone…right now. Preferably the French.
“Mr Sarkozy is pouring cold water on President Obama's efforts to recast American leadership on the world stage, depicting them as unoriginal, unsubstantial and overrated.”
"The American President's call 'to free the world of the menace of a nuclear nightmare' was hot air...It was rhetoric – not a speech on American security policy but an export model aimed at improving the image of the United States...Most of Mr Obama's proposals had already been made by the Bush administration..."
Sounds like President Sarkozy might be a Limbaugh listener.
When the French think you’re weak and meek, you have an image problem.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/world_agenda/article6098836.ece
"The American President's call 'to free the world of the menace of a nuclear nightmare' was hot air...It was rhetoric – not a speech on American security policy but an export model aimed at improving the image of the United States...Most of Mr Obama's proposals had already been made by the Bush administration..."
Sounds like President Sarkozy might be a Limbaugh listener.
When the French think you’re weak and meek, you have an image problem.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/world_agenda/article6098836.ece
Monday, May 18, 2009
Sunday, May 17, 2009
Saturday, May 16, 2009
The Finding of the Snark
The internet is awesome. While there are vast hordes of single-minded, ideologically-driven morons out there, there are those who take great delight in sniping at them. Since everybody knows that arguing online is futile, your only option is to highlight idiocy, hypocrisy, and just plain annoying-as-shit behavior with the spotlight of sarcasm. It's even better if you can work in a pop culture reference or two. This is so much faster than trying to present well-reasoned arguments, list copious links, or just automatically gainsaying whatever the other person posts.
You can't argue with Blazing Saddles. You just can't.
Like most internet junkies, I've been taken in by trolls. I've even been a troll once or twice (but the novelty of that soon wears off). I've learned to hold off on hitting the "Reply" button until I've seen several posts by the same person carrying their ideas further. Then I look for the weak or inconsistent spot and retrieve one of my carefully-horded LOLcats or mocking pics and let it do all the work.
I've been known to bemoan the fact that the Left in general is better at rapidly coming up with mocking or demeaning nicknames that undercut an opponent's position or gravitas. I guess when that's your only style of argument you tend to get good at it. (Ha!) However, I did see this humorous post today from someone on the Right, addressing the "torture" at Gitmo:
You can't argue with Blazing Saddles. You just can't.
Friday, May 15, 2009
Geeks bearing gifts.
Mrs. Cat, being all girly and stuff, gets a number of frou-frou catalogs for things like Bath & Body elixirs and potions, pretty stationery sets, and various clothing and collectibles. She got one recently from a company that offers Victorian reproductions of all of the above, and whiled away an hour or so sitting on the couch, marking those items she’d like to have at such a time as I start treating her in the style to which she’d like to become accustomed.
I picked up the catalog earlier today to sneak a peek at the things she’d noted, thinking that maybe I’d find something with which to surprise her for our upcoming anniversary. I was browsing through it, looking for her distinctive check-marks, and kind of keeping a mental inventory of the types of things she’d picked out.
The Victorian poison ring was checked twice, so this may be the last anniversary I have to worry about it.
In amongst the furnishings and decorative pieces was a table clock. It was done in a sort of caryatid style, where the female figure was holding up the clockworks. It was labeled “Cassandra’s Clock,” which tickled me, because I could picture someone looking at it and commenting “I can’t believe the time!” I can just see the blurb on the ads for it, too:
“Perfectly accurate!”
I shared these observations with a friend who is just as much a Classical reference nerd as I am, and he pointed out that while useful, the Cassandra clock would only be able to be consulted once, and then you’d be compelled to destroy it.
So I’m not getting her that. Seems like a waste of money.
I picked up the catalog earlier today to sneak a peek at the things she’d noted, thinking that maybe I’d find something with which to surprise her for our upcoming anniversary. I was browsing through it, looking for her distinctive check-marks, and kind of keeping a mental inventory of the types of things she’d picked out.
The Victorian poison ring was checked twice, so this may be the last anniversary I have to worry about it.
In amongst the furnishings and decorative pieces was a table clock. It was done in a sort of caryatid style, where the female figure was holding up the clockworks. It was labeled “Cassandra’s Clock,” which tickled me, because I could picture someone looking at it and commenting “I can’t believe the time!” I can just see the blurb on the ads for it, too:
“Perfectly accurate!”
I shared these observations with a friend who is just as much a Classical reference nerd as I am, and he pointed out that while useful, the Cassandra clock would only be able to be consulted once, and then you’d be compelled to destroy it.
So I’m not getting her that. Seems like a waste of money.
Thursday, May 14, 2009
Naturally
From time to time, I run across someone – usually a flavor of environmentalist – that, for whatever reason, places native people and third-world tribes on a pedestal. Usually, the reason has something to do with those people living closer to the land or in some sort of idyllic “balance” with Nature. Nevermind the fact that Native Americans practiced land-management techniques consisting of clear-cutting, massive burning, and aggressive animal culling. And let’s forget that for the most part, third-world denizens are trying like hell to grab hold of whatever amenities they can to drag themselves out of their situation. Little things like clean water, reliable power grids, and food for the day. Stuff we take for granted.
When I lived on the Cherokee reservation, I convinced the owner of the shop I worked at to stock an herbal collection, because I knew that we’d sell out every month (we did). It’s the same romanticized utopian vision at work in that case. Granted, there are herbal medicines that have been used for thousands of years, but people in clean white lab coats have studied those roots and leaves, determined which compounds were the effective ones, then extracted, purified, and synthesized them. If you have a headache, what would you rather do: chew on a willow branch (which will most likely make your headache worse), or take an aspirin? Despite what the rabid vegetarians claim, neither our dentition nor our digestive system is suited for processing raw cellulose. We are perfectly adapted, however, to working a child-safety cap (it’s the opposable thumbs that make the difference!).
See…I’m an unrepentant first-worlder, because I know that without the great strides we’ve made (particularly in the medical fields), Kitten would be a flat-footed, cross-eyed mouth-breather who, when not falling over while standing still, would be walking into walls. That’s the difference between living in a mud shack somewhere “in natural harmony,” and living in a country where you can take your child into a doctor’s office to get orthotics, eye surgery, allergy treatments, tubes in their ears, and glasses. Now, instead of knocking down the thatched roof every time she misses the door, she’ll be able to be a productive member of society.
Maybe even the one that finds that perfect balance between industrialization and Nature.
When I lived on the Cherokee reservation, I convinced the owner of the shop I worked at to stock an herbal collection, because I knew that we’d sell out every month (we did). It’s the same romanticized utopian vision at work in that case. Granted, there are herbal medicines that have been used for thousands of years, but people in clean white lab coats have studied those roots and leaves, determined which compounds were the effective ones, then extracted, purified, and synthesized them. If you have a headache, what would you rather do: chew on a willow branch (which will most likely make your headache worse), or take an aspirin? Despite what the rabid vegetarians claim, neither our dentition nor our digestive system is suited for processing raw cellulose. We are perfectly adapted, however, to working a child-safety cap (it’s the opposable thumbs that make the difference!).
See…I’m an unrepentant first-worlder, because I know that without the great strides we’ve made (particularly in the medical fields), Kitten would be a flat-footed, cross-eyed mouth-breather who, when not falling over while standing still, would be walking into walls. That’s the difference between living in a mud shack somewhere “in natural harmony,” and living in a country where you can take your child into a doctor’s office to get orthotics, eye surgery, allergy treatments, tubes in their ears, and glasses. Now, instead of knocking down the thatched roof every time she misses the door, she’ll be able to be a productive member of society.
Maybe even the one that finds that perfect balance between industrialization and Nature.
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Everything’s Better with Muppets
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Holy Hell
The following picture is (choose all that apply):
1. A nudist family on Winter vacation.
2. People's Exhibit A in an upcoming court case.
3. Green Day's next album cover
4. A taxpayer-funded "art" piece.
5. Proof that people are damn fools and the Internet is forever.
6. Featuring in my nightmares for the next several weeks.
Our Sitcom Moment
There was a military funeral next door this afternoon and, as is usual, they offered a 21-gun salute before playing "Taps." We knew it was coming because we'd seen the men in formation, but it still made us jump when it happened.
As the echoes of the last fusillade died out, our neighbor came crashing out onto her porch, shouting "BOYS!"
"Remind me to be extra vigilant when the neighbor's kids are outdoors," I asked Mrs. Cat.
"Take your crowbar," she suggested.
Seriously, if you hear a cascade of gunfire in the neighborhood and your first thought is that it's your kids, you may be doing something wrong.
Sunday, May 10, 2009
I'd like to thank me for being here.
So what are you reading now, ‘Cat?
State of Fear by Michael Crichton
What’s it about?
The Global Warming “crisis.”
I take it from your use of quote marks that you don’t believe the hype.
You would be correct.
Is it compelling to someone already inclined towards disbelief?
That it is.
Would it be as compelling to someone who believes in Global Warming?
Doubtful.
But doesn’t it contain actual objective scientific data proving that it’s all bullshit?
As a matter of fact, it does.
Shouldn’t that be considered proof?
You’d think so, wouldn’t you?
This subject is one of your major button-pushing issues, isn’t it?
Why yes…yes it is.
Are you taking notes in preparation for the next time the subject comes up?
You bet your ass.
One last question: Do you often interview yourself in this manner?
Apparently I do.
State of Fear by Michael Crichton
What’s it about?
The Global Warming “crisis.”
I take it from your use of quote marks that you don’t believe the hype.
You would be correct.
Is it compelling to someone already inclined towards disbelief?
That it is.
Would it be as compelling to someone who believes in Global Warming?
Doubtful.
But doesn’t it contain actual objective scientific data proving that it’s all bullshit?
As a matter of fact, it does.
Shouldn’t that be considered proof?
You’d think so, wouldn’t you?
This subject is one of your major button-pushing issues, isn’t it?
Why yes…yes it is.
Are you taking notes in preparation for the next time the subject comes up?
You bet your ass.
One last question: Do you often interview yourself in this manner?
Apparently I do.
Saturday, May 9, 2009
The Nature of an Opinion
It’s based on my experiences, my travels, my studies, my readings, my experiments.
I listen and weigh and measure.
I place things in context historically, geographically, and linguistically.
I study all sides.
I follow the money.
I watch what people do instead of taking them at their word.
I footnote.
I make allowances for variables.
I don’t adhere blindly to any particular school of thought.
It means that I know what I’m talking about and you are just. Fucking. Wrong.
I listen and weigh and measure.
I place things in context historically, geographically, and linguistically.
I study all sides.
I follow the money.
I watch what people do instead of taking them at their word.
I footnote.
I make allowances for variables.
I don’t adhere blindly to any particular school of thought.
It means that I know what I’m talking about and you are just. Fucking. Wrong.
My New Catchphrase
You know those movies where the autistic kid is babbling, or making odd pictures, or otherwise communicating in a weird way, and once it’s been deciphered it turns out to be the vital clue that the hero needs to save the day?
Cub has a set of magnetic letters that he uses to practice the words he’s become familiar with, and we’ve gotten used to seeing them stuck to random appliances or filing cabinets. Today, I went to the fridge (my Happy Place, remember) and found this phrase:
FLAY THE PIG
No one else in the house has copped to putting it up there, and I’m not really sure what Cub is ordering us to do. Does he want bacon? Has he cracked the swine flu vaccine? Did he convert to Islam?
I’m keeping an eye out for any random boars in the neighborhood, just in case.
Cub has a set of magnetic letters that he uses to practice the words he’s become familiar with, and we’ve gotten used to seeing them stuck to random appliances or filing cabinets. Today, I went to the fridge (my Happy Place, remember) and found this phrase:
FLAY THE PIG
No one else in the house has copped to putting it up there, and I’m not really sure what Cub is ordering us to do. Does he want bacon? Has he cracked the swine flu vaccine? Did he convert to Islam?
I’m keeping an eye out for any random boars in the neighborhood, just in case.
That reminds me of one of my most favoritest cartoons ever...
Thursday, May 7, 2009
Anon! A mouse!
Anonymous left an instructional Wikipedia link on my “All Smug in their Beds” post from March 28. Anonymous thinks that by providing a single example of a pebble bed reactor going bad, s/he has demonstrated the futility of using them for any purpose, anywhere, ever again.
I sure hope Anonymous doesn’t travel by car, train, bus, surfboard, ship, plane, horse, truck, skateboard, roller skates, snowmobile, dogsled, skis, or on his/her feet, because I’ve seen at least one fatal accident involving each of those.
I also hope Anonymous doesn’t sleep in a bed, because 400 people die each year falling out of them.
I really hope Anonymous stays away from all liquids, because people drown every day.
And I also hope s/he doesn’t try to eat anything, because the morgues are full of choking victims.
Need I go further?
There’s a wonderful scene in one of Steven Brust’s books - The Phoenix Guards, I think - where a character speaks about getting too caught up in “What if?”. His elegant and succinct point is that they would become completely immobile, afraid to throw a stick into a stream on the chance that it had somehow become poisoned.
Life is risky. Are you a man or a mouse?
You know what cats do to mice.
I sure hope Anonymous doesn’t travel by car, train, bus, surfboard, ship, plane, horse, truck, skateboard, roller skates, snowmobile, dogsled, skis, or on his/her feet, because I’ve seen at least one fatal accident involving each of those.
I also hope Anonymous doesn’t sleep in a bed, because 400 people die each year falling out of them.
I really hope Anonymous stays away from all liquids, because people drown every day.
And I also hope s/he doesn’t try to eat anything, because the morgues are full of choking victims.
Need I go further?
There’s a wonderful scene in one of Steven Brust’s books - The Phoenix Guards, I think - where a character speaks about getting too caught up in “What if?”. His elegant and succinct point is that they would become completely immobile, afraid to throw a stick into a stream on the chance that it had somehow become poisoned.
Life is risky. Are you a man or a mouse?
You know what cats do to mice.
Unreal Estate
We did some traveling over the past couple of days, and I got tickled going through one of the cities. Evidently, the City Planners have a sense of humor because at one end of town, I saw a Chinese restaurant with a big wall on one side of the lot. On the other side of the wall was a business called Hun Equipment. Further on, there was a tiny strip mall containing the following businesses (I am not making this up):
· Lucky’s Laundromat
· Providence Realtors
· Divine Intervention Counseling Services
· Serendipity Studios (a hair salon)
There’s one space left for lease in the mall, so I’m in the early stages of opening the Predestination Travel Agency.
· Lucky’s Laundromat
· Providence Realtors
· Divine Intervention Counseling Services
· Serendipity Studios (a hair salon)
There’s one space left for lease in the mall, so I’m in the early stages of opening the Predestination Travel Agency.
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
Red Tape and Bandwidth
One of the current debates in our community is whether the state should deny a license renewal to a hydroelectric company in favor of the state taking it over. I am amazed at the number of people that think this is a good idea. Their reasons for approving the theft of a private business by the state seem to distill into one of two arguments: 1. The company has polluted the water (the hard Left), and 2. They might sell it to foreigners (the hard Right).
My stance is that if pollution is your concern, enforce the laws already on the books and make the company pay for cleaning up their mess. And if you’re concerned about “Johnny Foreigner” controlling your water access, make it a condition of the relicensing that the state gets first option on any resale of the license, whereupon they can offer it to another local company.
My primary worry is not that a governmental group wants to steal a private business – hell…that doesn’t even blip on my radar anymore; I assume that’s a matter of course lately – my concern is that these folks that think it’s a good idea aren’t really considering the ramifications of the group that taxes us having total control over a truly necessary commodity. What do they think will happen the next time the state hits a budget shortfall? Our Governor has already diverted funds from our “Education” lottery to prop up their deficits, I can’t imagine she’d hesitate for one damned minute on raising fees for the water the state supplies.
On another stage, our city is planning to start a new fiber-optic service to every resident, and the big cable monopoly here in the area (Time Warner) is spending a hellacious amount of our subscription fees to lobby against it. At the same time, TW is trying to institute bandwidth “caps” because so many people are using the internet to watch shows when they want to, not when cable broadcasts them.
I’m squarely on the side of the city in this one because they’re not taking over anybody’s existing business, and it’s about time someone challenged the cable monopoly. With the amount of streaming data I consume, I’d be thrilled with fiber-optic. One of the very few things government does effectively is projects that involve dense infrastructure, and running lines to everyone’s house and business falls under that definition.
I’ve had people who know I lean Right question how I could be pleased with the city government offering internet service and be against the state offering water service. The answer is threefold: 1. The internet is not a necessity. As much as I joke about it, I don’t have to have it to live. Water, I do. 2. If I don’t like the city’s services, prices, etc., I can go back to TW. Competition is a good thing. If I don’t like the prices of my water bill (or the taxes attached to it, more likely), what do I do, invest in rain barrels and a home filtration system? Sure, there’s a monopoly with the private company, too, but they don’t raise their rates every time another division loses a few million dollars, and the state would. 3. State bureaucracy versus city bureaucracy. The larger the agency, the more complicated the labyrinthine warren of petty power players. Obviously, the Feds are the champions of this, but it’s plenty bad at the state level. At their best, they are merely competent. At their worst, they are colossal fuckups insulated behind thick tomes of regulations and phone trees whose maps resemble illustrations of the more complex ganglial structures. You can ask three different people in the same department the same question, and get three different answers. And if you call them back the next day, each answer has changed, and none of the six answers agree.
I think this is how, four years later, there are still Katrina refugees living off governmental assistance. They just keep calling FEMA employees until they get the answer they want, then cling to it as if it were holy writ.
Try that with Time Warner and see how far you get.
My stance is that if pollution is your concern, enforce the laws already on the books and make the company pay for cleaning up their mess. And if you’re concerned about “Johnny Foreigner” controlling your water access, make it a condition of the relicensing that the state gets first option on any resale of the license, whereupon they can offer it to another local company.
My primary worry is not that a governmental group wants to steal a private business – hell…that doesn’t even blip on my radar anymore; I assume that’s a matter of course lately – my concern is that these folks that think it’s a good idea aren’t really considering the ramifications of the group that taxes us having total control over a truly necessary commodity. What do they think will happen the next time the state hits a budget shortfall? Our Governor has already diverted funds from our “Education” lottery to prop up their deficits, I can’t imagine she’d hesitate for one damned minute on raising fees for the water the state supplies.
On another stage, our city is planning to start a new fiber-optic service to every resident, and the big cable monopoly here in the area (Time Warner) is spending a hellacious amount of our subscription fees to lobby against it. At the same time, TW is trying to institute bandwidth “caps” because so many people are using the internet to watch shows when they want to, not when cable broadcasts them.
I’m squarely on the side of the city in this one because they’re not taking over anybody’s existing business, and it’s about time someone challenged the cable monopoly. With the amount of streaming data I consume, I’d be thrilled with fiber-optic. One of the very few things government does effectively is projects that involve dense infrastructure, and running lines to everyone’s house and business falls under that definition.
I’ve had people who know I lean Right question how I could be pleased with the city government offering internet service and be against the state offering water service. The answer is threefold: 1. The internet is not a necessity. As much as I joke about it, I don’t have to have it to live. Water, I do. 2. If I don’t like the city’s services, prices, etc., I can go back to TW. Competition is a good thing. If I don’t like the prices of my water bill (or the taxes attached to it, more likely), what do I do, invest in rain barrels and a home filtration system? Sure, there’s a monopoly with the private company, too, but they don’t raise their rates every time another division loses a few million dollars, and the state would. 3. State bureaucracy versus city bureaucracy. The larger the agency, the more complicated the labyrinthine warren of petty power players. Obviously, the Feds are the champions of this, but it’s plenty bad at the state level. At their best, they are merely competent. At their worst, they are colossal fuckups insulated behind thick tomes of regulations and phone trees whose maps resemble illustrations of the more complex ganglial structures. You can ask three different people in the same department the same question, and get three different answers. And if you call them back the next day, each answer has changed, and none of the six answers agree.
I think this is how, four years later, there are still Katrina refugees living off governmental assistance. They just keep calling FEMA employees until they get the answer they want, then cling to it as if it were holy writ.
Try that with Time Warner and see how far you get.
Monday, May 4, 2009
Can I Go To Bed Now?
Ever have one of those days?
Yeah...me, too.
I was at least secure in the knowledge that I would mow my lawn before my neighbor mowed his. Since he hadn't mowed at all this year, it seemed a sure bet, until the bastard showed up with a brand new Briggs & Stratton this afternoon. My mower's in the shop until later this week, so our yard is officially the most overgrown in the neighborhood. And since we're supposed to get rain the next couple of days, it looks like we'll hold on to that title for a little while.
Sigh.
This program has been sponsored by Hooters and Victoria's Secret
Saturday, May 2, 2009
Behind the Mask
We got up early-for-a-Saturday today to hit the 25¢ paperback sale at the library, and came home with a couple dozen books (so much for that equilibrium thing I mentioned last post). I also misled Mrs. Cat about where I wanted to get lunch so I could pilot the Catmobile over to the local Comic store to check out the Free Comic Book Day selections. Didn’t pick up anything off the free table, but I did get the next issue of “Preacher” on sale, which I’d been idly meaning to pick up for a while.
I was wandering through the shop (sideways, because every comic shop I’ve ever visited is small, crammed with shelving, and is overflowing with both merchandise and the fanboys that love it), looking at the panorama of titles available. The covers were near-universally somber in color and dramatic in tone, promising thrills, action, titillation, and escape. I stood there, looking at the panoply of heroes and villains, each with their own quest, their own drive, their own powers and flaws, and something resonated within me. See…I understand why the more popular characters adopt alter egos and include masks with their costumes, because I once dressed up as a chicken for a local trade show.
I’m so tempted to just leave it at that.
I was a freshman in high school. I don’t even remember what the trade show was for, but one of our church members was going to be there selling his fried chicken, and asked the Youth Pastor if any of our group would wear the suit and bring people in to the booth. $10 an hour? Under the table? Sign me up.
I got to the Civic Center early, and retrieved a surprisingly heavy box from the restaurant’s booth. The costume was freshly cleaned, which I didn’t really appreciate at the time. Having done costume work on two other occasions since then, I know now how much of a treat that was. Costumes get funky after a couple hours, and if you don’t at least air them out before you pack them away, you edge into biohazard territory.
I was in one of the dressing rooms in the back of the Center, trying to figure out how to attach everything so the weight of the costume would be evenly distributed and both my heads would stay on straight. It was a full-body costume that stood about seven feet tall, and the head was attached to a frame that rested on my shoulders. It had a stiff piece of cloth – similar to that in a fencing mask – built in behind the open mouth so I could see out. While I adjusted and fidgeted, I was wondering if $10 an hour was a good price for pride and self-image.
The last zipper closed, and I examined the result in the mirrors.
I was invisible. The costume covered me completely, and even the visual port in the mouth was woven so that you couldn’t see through to the real face inside.
I stood there for a few moments, awash in the realization that, apart from the owner of the restaurant, no one at the show would know who I was. All hesitation and self-doubt disappeared. I was free to act however I chose – within the boundaries of good taste, of course – and there would be no reprisals.
I cavorted; I mocked; I postured. I acted silly with children. I pantomimed increasingly bizarre situations with the merchandise on display (it was a boat and RV/camper show, I just recalled), and flirted with the booth bunnies. I had a grand ol’ time.
I remember seeing some guys from my school come in. They were part of the “cool kids” clique and while not really bullies, didn’t make life any easier for me and the other nerds. I hesitated at first out of habit, but then remembered my power of invisibility, and proceeded to harass them for a good ten minutes, pulling old Harpo Marx slapstick moves, “biting” the tops of their heads, and stealing their hats. It was liberating. I remember a change in their attitude towards me in school after that, because mine had changed towards them, but I may be looking backwards through John Hughes-colored glasses.
I forget which author said in reference to the Peter Parker/Spiderman dichotomy (I’m paraphrasing): Do the relatively few moments I get to kick ass as Spiderman make up for all the crap I have to take as the nebbish, Peter?
The answer is yes.
There are myriad reasons to put on a mask – protect your social standing or your loved ones, confuse your enemies or illustrate a theme. But the underlying reason is that it frees you from constraint and increases the sphere in which you can act. For good or ill is up to you.
I was wandering through the shop (sideways, because every comic shop I’ve ever visited is small, crammed with shelving, and is overflowing with both merchandise and the fanboys that love it), looking at the panorama of titles available. The covers were near-universally somber in color and dramatic in tone, promising thrills, action, titillation, and escape. I stood there, looking at the panoply of heroes and villains, each with their own quest, their own drive, their own powers and flaws, and something resonated within me. See…I understand why the more popular characters adopt alter egos and include masks with their costumes, because I once dressed up as a chicken for a local trade show.
I’m so tempted to just leave it at that.
I was a freshman in high school. I don’t even remember what the trade show was for, but one of our church members was going to be there selling his fried chicken, and asked the Youth Pastor if any of our group would wear the suit and bring people in to the booth. $10 an hour? Under the table? Sign me up.
I got to the Civic Center early, and retrieved a surprisingly heavy box from the restaurant’s booth. The costume was freshly cleaned, which I didn’t really appreciate at the time. Having done costume work on two other occasions since then, I know now how much of a treat that was. Costumes get funky after a couple hours, and if you don’t at least air them out before you pack them away, you edge into biohazard territory.
I was in one of the dressing rooms in the back of the Center, trying to figure out how to attach everything so the weight of the costume would be evenly distributed and both my heads would stay on straight. It was a full-body costume that stood about seven feet tall, and the head was attached to a frame that rested on my shoulders. It had a stiff piece of cloth – similar to that in a fencing mask – built in behind the open mouth so I could see out. While I adjusted and fidgeted, I was wondering if $10 an hour was a good price for pride and self-image.
The last zipper closed, and I examined the result in the mirrors.
I was invisible. The costume covered me completely, and even the visual port in the mouth was woven so that you couldn’t see through to the real face inside.
I stood there for a few moments, awash in the realization that, apart from the owner of the restaurant, no one at the show would know who I was. All hesitation and self-doubt disappeared. I was free to act however I chose – within the boundaries of good taste, of course – and there would be no reprisals.
I cavorted; I mocked; I postured. I acted silly with children. I pantomimed increasingly bizarre situations with the merchandise on display (it was a boat and RV/camper show, I just recalled), and flirted with the booth bunnies. I had a grand ol’ time.
I remember seeing some guys from my school come in. They were part of the “cool kids” clique and while not really bullies, didn’t make life any easier for me and the other nerds. I hesitated at first out of habit, but then remembered my power of invisibility, and proceeded to harass them for a good ten minutes, pulling old Harpo Marx slapstick moves, “biting” the tops of their heads, and stealing their hats. It was liberating. I remember a change in their attitude towards me in school after that, because mine had changed towards them, but I may be looking backwards through John Hughes-colored glasses.
I forget which author said in reference to the Peter Parker/Spiderman dichotomy (I’m paraphrasing): Do the relatively few moments I get to kick ass as Spiderman make up for all the crap I have to take as the nebbish, Peter?
The answer is yes.
There are myriad reasons to put on a mask – protect your social standing or your loved ones, confuse your enemies or illustrate a theme. But the underlying reason is that it frees you from constraint and increases the sphere in which you can act. For good or ill is up to you.
Because with great chicken costumes comes great responsibility.
A Balance of Knowing
Like every other family, especially those with small kids, we lose things. Game pieces, school papers, parts for toys…stuff like that.
Something I’ve noticed recently is that we seem to maintain a consistent number of lost things, though the things themselves change from day to day.
A couple of nights ago, I found one of Cub’s toys that had disappeared last week, but yesterday, I couldn’t find one of his shoes. The shoe turned up, but now one of Mrs. Cat’s handbags is off on its own recognizance. I’d misplaced the first book in a series I wanted to reread, and in searching for it, found another book I’d lost track of during our move.
It makes me wonder: if we reduced the amount of stuff we have, would we hit some ideal point of equilibrium where nothing else would get lost?
The whole situation reminds me of this great quote from The Zero Effect:
“When you go looking for something specific, your chances of finding it are very bad. Because of all the things in the world, you're only looking for one of them. When you go looking for anything at all, your chances of finding it are very good. Because of all the things in the world, you're sure to find some of them.”
Something I’ve noticed recently is that we seem to maintain a consistent number of lost things, though the things themselves change from day to day.
A couple of nights ago, I found one of Cub’s toys that had disappeared last week, but yesterday, I couldn’t find one of his shoes. The shoe turned up, but now one of Mrs. Cat’s handbags is off on its own recognizance. I’d misplaced the first book in a series I wanted to reread, and in searching for it, found another book I’d lost track of during our move.
It makes me wonder: if we reduced the amount of stuff we have, would we hit some ideal point of equilibrium where nothing else would get lost?
The whole situation reminds me of this great quote from The Zero Effect:
“When you go looking for something specific, your chances of finding it are very bad. Because of all the things in the world, you're only looking for one of them. When you go looking for anything at all, your chances of finding it are very good. Because of all the things in the world, you're sure to find some of them.”
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