Category: Current Affairs

  • Jesse Jackson is Insane (so is Robertson)

    What was left of Jesse Jackson’s credibility has been completely flushed down the toilet with his latest trip to Venuezala to support Chavez. Doesn’t he have advisors to tell him what an awful idea it is to throw your support behind a guy like Chavez? Is this "sticking up for the little guy"? Would Jackson’s idol Reverend King go down there?

    Let’s let Jackson and Robertson get into a ring and settle this like the spotlight-seeking weasels they are?

    Link: CNN.com – Jackson offers support to Chavez – Aug 28, 2005.

  • I’m Sitting Down All Weekend

    Sometime in 1899, Harry Sharp, a prison doctor from Indiana had the bright idea that he could "fix" habitual criminals, especially those that excessively, uh, touched themselves. His idea was to remove the biological drive entirely. Castration was deemed "too mutilating", so Dr Sharp (ha ha) opted instead on snipping the Vas Deferens, creating some of the first case studies in the effects, techniques and human responses to the vasectomy in humans.

    That’s where it all started,  but it’s not just for onanists anymore. These days, its a short operation done on sunny friday afternoons with a local anesthetic by doctors more interested in their drivetimes to the cabin than your private behaviors. It’s not that debilitating and you can even drive yourself home from it. Slowly. Anyone can do it! And, there are benefits today that you didn’t get as a prisoner back in 1899. You get three days of freedom from almost any type of lifting, moving, working, etc. You get to sit on the couch all day, not moving. Anything you do should be done carefully. Slowly. Or by someone else. Keep the activity level low and and it’s not that bad.

    (You can learn the whole history of the procedure at the comprehensive "Vasectomy Information" website. File this in the "more than you wanted to know" category. )

  • CNN.com – Former NFL kicker sought in shooting at Siegfried & Roy home – Oct 6, 2004

    God, where to start with this story?

    a) Placekicker at Sigfried & Roy’s house? Surprise! Kickers like gay guys!
    b) Former NFL star driving a mini-van?
    c) Former kicker getting so crazy he actually wants to shoot someone?

    I’d like to call upon my friends, Dirty John, X and EZ to the microphone to take over on this one. Please comment below while I sit down and wonder about this…

  • In Through the Out Door

    You know that awkward instance when you go to push open the door of the restroom, but almost fall over because someone else is on the other side pulling it open at the exact same second? Oh, I hate that. It happened to me twice today. It was that kind of a day.

    It’s such an infrequently discussed moment, I wonder it it’s sort of taboo, one of the few social patterns that hasn’t yet been named, classified and exposed by some eager academic. It’s an instance of precarious social balance where there’s no clear manners for getting through it. Your mother, Dear Abby, Dr Phil and the Internet are no help, yet I bet everybody’s had it happen to them at least once. Or, maybe, because I consume the equivalent of an oil drum of caffeine everyday, my trips to the loo are more frequent, my step is perhaps just a bit more, shall we say, urgent than the average guy and this has a greater importance to me than most. Ah, my life.

    First, what do you call it when one’s obviously in a hurry to go in and the other is, one would presume, just as anxious to get out? There’s that nano-second, half a tick of the second, where the two must stop, pause, and put aside their individual extreme self interest – they both can’t go through the door at the same time; I tried it and it doesn’t end well – in an effort to arrive at a mutally agreeable solution. That pause where the doorway agenda gets reset? I’d like to propose we call it a “doorway detente”.

    Then, who has the right of way, the person going in or the person going out? Who could deny the import of either side’s case? A reasonable person, though, might agree that the out-goer, having done their “work” would be under just a bit less pressure than the in-goer and should cede the passage.

    What do you say in a moment like that? To the in-goer, “Get out of my way”, “Look out!”, “Excuse you,” all seem like reasonable choices. Mostly, though, both parties end up offering an uncomfortable expression of surprise like “Doh!”, “Whoa!”, “Oh!” or something. I usually say, “sorry ’bout that” as though I did something really wrong, like piss on the other guys foot or accidently walked into an occupied stall.

    Of course, these are the questions that come up after you’ve made it through the door and on to the rest of the task where the politics of restroom traffic flow are the least of your concerns.

  • Boing Boing: ABC news reports on “debate” that hasn’t happened yet

    If you watched the daily show last night, you probably saw the bit about filing a report on the debates before they actually happened. It was sort of a commentary on the laziness of the media and the willingness to take their story cues from the campaigns themselves. Funny stuff. This however, is just kind of sad. I guess I understand that a lot of this is in fact boilerplate, but still.

  • Where’s My Grey Flannel Suit?

    Interesting realization today, driving home from work after 11 hours, trying to get through traffic, late again: I might be stuck in the 50’s. With some new responsibilities at work, it’s getting tougher to get everything done in a 9 hour day and I’ll be working later than I used to (while still working earlier, stretching the day on both ends). She’s trying to be patient with it, but it always seems like we’ve got mismatched expectations for “work” side of the “work/life” balance and I’m the one that needs to recalibrate the scale. I guess, in my Ward Cleaver mode, I always had it figured that working hard meant sometimes working late and working hard was desirable but it’s clear, after a couple years, that’s not the case. So, I’ll never get a “pass” from Andrea for working late. In her mind, working late does not equal working hard and working late is always working too much. It makes sense to me now, finally, that I’ll always have to explain my hours, always have to come home with my hat in my hand, never get the pipe-and-slippers treatment, always be ready to apologize. I’ll get used to it.

  • Stripper Blogger Profiled “Offline”; Audience Not Titillated

    Everything that’s great about your favorite blogger/dancer (her writer’s “voice” [seriously]) get’s stripped away (pun intended) when someone else does the writing. Diablo Cody, Minneapolis’ favorite stripper/blogger/media critic is written up in this week’s CityPages and it’s really kind of a dissapointment. A disclaimer: I read her site for the writing, not the neccid pictures, of which there are few (psst… update the pics, Diablo).

    A couple complaints: First, the title: “Pussy Galore”? That’s all the geniuses could come up with for a title? Second, like a lot of english majors, I get more interested in the po-mo “stripper is the watcher/critic, the audience is the author/text” switch, rather than the standard “Stripper isn’t dumb” storyline (does that make me a literary voyeur?). More of her observations on her audience, less of her observations on wedding cakes. Third, every stripper (or welder, or line cook, or customer service rep) has their own story and their own dreams their working toward, so why another story about someone in the sex biz? (1). Lastly, everything you have to explain is ruined when in the explanation. If CityPages thinks Diablo Cody is interesting, they should have sent her to the bridal fair without the mouth-breathing Real Journalist and let her write the damn story. The essence of the profile was “here’s a stripper who writes” so why not just let her tell us what she saw, in her own voice, at the bridal show? Show (or publish), don’t tell.

    Small World Story #1: My father in law used to be sort-of business partners with a guy who ran a dance club in what is now the Choice.

    Small World Story #2: Back in the dot-com glory days, I used to work directly across the street from Choice and up 4 stories. My office looked down, but not too judgementally, at the front door where I could see the folks duck in and the bouncers keep the bums out. I could also see the roof of the 1 story club. On hot summer days, the “workers” would go to the roof and cool down in a pool, sending all of us sweaty web-geeks into a bit of a tizzy. Combine that with our “full fridge” policy and we’d lose a lot of productivity when the mercury went over 80 degrees. No wonder we couldn’t turn a profit.

    (1) Obviously, sex sells, even when the story is ostensibly not about the sex. It’s just edgy enough to feel a little dirty without actually being too dirty. What’s revealing is that the author “Rod” Smith makes no mention of going to see her at work. Writing about the intellectual in the sex business is still writing about the sex business, no matter how detached you try to make your observations, so he might as well have gone right up to the front row and put his dollars down with the rest of ’em. Boy, I would have loved to hear him pitch his editor about doing this story, though.

  • This Will Freak People Out

    Instead of sending this out to the generally liberal readers of Reason, they should send this out to the readers of Soldier of Fortune, the New Republic etc. Get those paranoid thoughts going…

  • Fast Company’s Guide to Strategy

    A listing of strategy related articles that focus on the nuts and bolts of developing and implementing new or renewed strategy

  • Power Laws & the New Science of Complexity Management

    In an intricately networked world, the study of “nonequilibrium” systems is teaching companies how to overcome risk.