Tuesday, February 6, 2007

What is it, exactly, that I do?

An aquaintance recently asked me that question, and for the umpteenth time, I realized that I didn't have an easy answer.

In the old days, I was called a programmer - then a programmer / analyst - then programmer / systems analyst. Now, programmers are "engineers."

So now I'm a "Senior Software Engineer": development team lead and manager for the EAI (Enterprise Application Integration) portion of Sun Microsystem's Java Composite Application Platform Suite (Java CAPS). Got that?

Here's the kind of stuff I look at while at work...

Sunday, February 4, 2007

My son and his daughter


Could anyone be more proud than I am? No. Impossible.

Robin, James, and I took Darryl, Angela, and Kaitlin to brunch at the Cheesecake Factory in Sherman Oaks, belatedly celebrating Angela's birthday. We walked there from D & A's house, and had a fine meal in the outdoor patio - dampened only by the fact that little Kaitlin was not feeling at all well.

Saturday, February 3, 2007

Happy Birthday to...

My sister-in-law Kenlyn Kanouse...the fresh new face you may have seen on TV (The West Wing) and in theatres of late. That's Kate Winslet (center) standing next to her in shots from The Holiday. To be up-and-coming in a new career on one's Big Six-O is quite an achievement. Three cheers for Kenlyn!!!






Wednesday, January 31, 2007

Molly Ivins, 1944 - 2007

Molly Ivins died today. As John Nichols of The Nation says, she was "the warmest-hearted populist ever to pick up a pen with the purpose of calling the rabble to the battlements."

She was a joy to read, not only because I agreed with just about everything she said, but because she said it with such a delicious mixture of passion and humor. She was renowned for her shoot-from-the-hip Texas-style zingers, and I've long marveled how the same notoriously right-wing state that gave us George W. Bush and Tom Delay (for starters) also produced a stellar lineup of progressives like Molly, Bill Moyers, John Henry Faulk, Jim Hightower, and Barbara Jordan.

From her column of January 7:

"This war is being prosecuted in our names, with our money, with our blood, against our will. Polls consistently show that less than 30 percent of the people want to maintain current troop levels. It is obscene and wrong for the president to go against the people in this fashion. And it's doubly wrong for him to increase U.S. troop levels in this hellhole by up to 20,000, as he reportedly will soon announce.

"What happened to the nation that never tortured? The nation that wasn't supposed to start wars of choice? The nation that respected human rights and life? A nation that from the beginning was against tyranny?

"Where have we gone? How did we let these people take us there? How did we let them fool us?"

From her last column, of January 11:

"We are the people who run this country. We are the deciders. And every single day, every single one of us needs to step outside and take some action to help stop this war"...

"We need people in the streets, banging pots and pans and demanding, 'Stop it, now!'"

During her losing battle with cancer, she was quoted as saying,

"So keep fightin' for freedom and justice, beloveds, but don't you forget to have fun doin' it. Lord, let your laughter ring forth. Be outrageous, ridicule the fraidy-cats, rejoice in all the oddities that freedom can produce. And when you get through kickin' ass and celebratin' the sheer joy of a good fight, be sure to tell those who come after how much fun it was."

I'm sure going to miss her.

For more quotes, go here .

(Painting by Robert Shatterly ) .

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Fifty Years ago in Pacoima

Planes Collide over Pacoima Junior High, January 31, 1957
I was just nine, but I remember it being a huge story: two planes colliding and falling from the sky onto a schoolyard where children were playing - a parent's worse nightmare, and many a kid's first awareness of random mortality. One student - Ricardo Valenzuela, was out of school, attending his uncle's funeral, that day - but legend has it that he (known to the world as Ritchie Valens), developed a fear of flying as a result - only to die, along with Buddy Holly, in the famous "Day the Music Died" small plane crash of February, 1959, at the age of 17.

Monday, January 29, 2007

Movie weekend


Robin got an unexpected Saturday off, so we've been catching up on movies, seeing Pan's Labyrinth and Letters from Iwo Jima in theatres, and a couple of others at home: Cabaret (1972), and Saraband (2003). My quick ratings:

**** Letters From Iwo Jima (2006) . Great film - my pick (so far) for Best Picture of 2006. See it in a theatre, not on a home screen.

*** Pan's Labyrinth (2006) . Good, but not as good as I'd expected from reviews.

**** Saraband (2003). Ingmar Bergman says it's his last movie. Sigh. When you see this movie, you know you've been run through the ringer, and seen something extraordinary.

**** Cabaret (1972).It captures the decadence of 1920-30s Berlin, the Kurt Weil-like music of the time, and great performances by Liza Minelli, Joel Gray, and Michael York. What's not to like? Nothing, from Robin and my point of view. Son James was more subdued in his praise.

Friday, January 26, 2007

Fifty Years Ago


At nine and a half, my reading consisted of Mad Magazine, Classics Illustrated, the Hardy Boys, and Tom Swift. Amazingly, Mad is still around. Back in the 1950s, it was cutting edge, and subversive - but in later years it seemed to go mainstream, losing its bite at the very time (the late 60s) when subversive was all the rage. I have no idea what Mad is like these days. My impression is that The Onion fills the role that Mad used to occupy.

Thursday, January 25, 2007

American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America. By Chris Hedges


The jacket blurb says that Hedges, "who graduated from seminary at Harvard Divinity School, was a foreign correspondant for nearly two decades for The New York Times and other publications. He was part of the team of reporters at The New York Times that won the Pulitzer Prize for its coverage of global terrorism. Heges is the author of War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning and Losing Moses on the Freeway: The 10 Commandments in America."

This book is a probing look at the various organizations that comprise the Christian Right, and a warning to the rest of us that these people are a serious threat to our democracy, and need to be confronted and opposed in ways that liberals in Germany failed to do in the 1920s. They are highly organized, with millions of members, and have specific ideas about how to take over when the next great terrorist attack - or depression - or environmental catastrophe - occurs.

These folks, with leaders like James Dobson, Tony Perkins, Pat Robertson, Jerry Fallwell, Rod Parsley, and many others, are looking forward to the gruesome deaths of all who disagree with them. They also look forward to "total war" in the Middle East. They may look kindly in their pronouncements on TV, but Hedges provide plenty of documented evidence to the contrary.

At the end of the book, Hedges makes an elequent summary:

"I do not deny the right of the Christian radicals to be, to believe and worship as they choose. But I will not engage in a dialogue with those who deny my right to be, who delegitimize my faith and denounce my struggle before God as worthless. All dialogue must include respect and tolerance for the beliefs, worth, and dignity of others, including those outside the nation and the faith. When this respect is denied, this clash of ideologies ceases to be merely difference of opinion and becomes a fight for survival. This movement seeks, in the name of Christianity and American democracy, to destroy that which it claims to defend. I do not believe that America will inevitably become a fascist state or that the Christian Right is the Nazi Party. But I do believe that the radical Christian Right is a sworn and potent enemy of the open society. Its ideology bears within it the tenets of a Christian fascism. In the event of a crisis, in the event of another catastrophic terrorist attack, an economic meltdown or huge environmental disaster, the movement stands poised to manipulate fear and chaos ruthlessly and reshape America in ways that have not been seen since the nation's founding. All Americans - not only those of faith - who care about our open society must learn to speak about this movement with a new vocabulary, to give up passivity, to challenge aggressively this movement's deluded appropriation of Christianity and to do everything possible to defend tolerance. The attacks by this movement on the rights and beliefs of Muslims, Jews, immigrants, gays, lesbians, women, scholars, scientists, those they dismiss as "nominal Christians," and those they brand with the curse of "secular humanism" are an attack on all of us, on our values, our freedoms and ultimately our democracy. Tolerance is a virtue, but tolerance coupled with passivity is a
vice. "

It's a great call to action: call these people out! don't be afraid to confront them. These Christo-Fascists are not interested in dialog, they're interested in taking over.

Monday, January 22, 2007

DEA goons raid medical marijuana outlets

Last Wednesday, federal government thugs descended on West Hollywood and shut down the area's medical marijuana dispensaries. Never mind that Californians voted to allow marijuana as medicine, and that the conservatives now in power at the Federal level have long argued for "states rights" when it comes to causes of their own (such as blocking civil rights laws).

The War on Drugs is like the War on Iraq: a bad idea, justified with truckloads of phony propaganda - but hard for politicians to oppose. Now, when most politicians have found their voice on Iraq, few are yet willing to state the obvious: that the War on Drugs is a total disaster. Our city streets are teeming with gangs that thrive on drug prohibition, our prisons are overflowing with people who wouldn't be there if drug use was treated as a health issue, and other countries - from Colombia to Afghanistan - have had their entire societies ripped apart because of our hunger for commodities that are only available through a black market.

Enough. We need to decriminalize drug use. For starters, marijuana, a plant with nowhere near the potential for harm that tobacco and alcohol pose, should be legalized, albeit controlled and regulated in much the same way as tobacco and alcohol. Then we should look at how to deal with the use of the "harder" drugs - oxycontin, cocaine, heroin, amphetamines, etc. It's simply not fair that conservative talk show hosts get off with "treatment" options for using their drugs of choice, while inner-city minorities get nailed to doing hard time for doing the same thing with different drugs.

I'm not saying that one should be able to buy cocaine without a prescription, any more than one can buy oxycontin without a prescription. I am saying that the debate over those kind of drugs should be centered on public health policy - education, addiction prevention, treatment, recovery - not on sending people to prison.

Saturday, January 20, 2007

Hillary announces White House run

Yucch! This was long anticipated - the big money, big establishment candidate, pimping and pandering to grab the nomination. I'll take Edwards, or Obama, or Kucinich, or Robertson, or Gore - or even Biden! - over Hillary.

If she's running in November, I'll have to hold my nose and vote for her over anyone the Republicans are likely to offer - but my favorites at this early stage are Barak Obama and John Edwards.