Sunday, October 22, 2006

Robin turns sixty


Robin’s 60th birthday. When she got home from work at 7:30, James and I took her to breakfast at Paradise Cove, and got her back home in time for Kris’ surprise arrival from Davis.


Then, while Kris took her mom out for a manicure, James and I decorated the house, and the food arrived from Brent’s Deli. By the time Robin and Kris got home, the first guests were arriving for her surprise party. Guests: David, Kenlyn, Rachel, and Ryan; Liz, Gary, and Devyn; Darryl, Angela, and Kaitlin; Liz’s Aunt Jeanne; Steve & Veronica Winston; Burt & Charlene Weinstein; Roger Eaton & Sandy Chaves; Peter Rashkin & Camilla; Steve, Celina, and Gideon Shutman.

Sunday, March 5, 2006

White House Going After Journalists

Re: Huffington Post article "White House Going After Journalists And Their Govt. Sources..."

It's difficult for me to understand how stories like this can surface, day after day, year after year, without the public rising up to throw these scumbags out on their collective asses. In a reasonable, just, world, the Bush regime and its currupt, cronie-laden Republican supporting apparatus would be impeached, hooted out of office – and Bush and Cheney would have their sorry asses hauled into court and charged with war crimes, along with Rumsfield, Rowe, Wolfowitz, and their ilk.

Monday, January 30, 2006

Hamas wins Palestinian elections

My reaction to the recent news that Hamas, the radical “terrorist” faction, has swept the Palestinian elections:

I can only hope that (a) the vote was indeed a reflection of disgust with the corruption and lack of progress with the long standing party of record, and (b) there will be some kind of “Nixon goes to China” effect – that Hamas will be able to compromise without the charge of being weak, etc.

I’ve thought for a long time that settling this issue would be the greatest achievement of our era, and that the U. S. could be the catalyst in pulling it off. Here’s where our use of “force” would be justified – not in Iraq, not in Iran, but in Israel. And we could do it without any direct military action. I say we should tell both sides that…

1) Enough is enough: The world recognizes that you both have legitimate claims, concerns, and grievances that go back countless centuries. But your continued squabbling, and failure to settle your dispute, is disrupting the entire world.

2) Israel, you need to cede the West Bank and Gaza to the Palestinians for creation of a state of Palestine. Not an “autonomous region”, but a completely independent, sovereign state. If you don’t, we will cut off all support, both military and financial. No kidding. But if you do, the U.S. will guarantee your security with the full force of its military.

3) Hamas, or whoever currently represents the Palestinian people, this is the best deal you’re going to get. You need to accept the existence of Israel and get on with your lives, building a society of your own, in your own newly sovereign state.

For a country that currently preaches “preemptive” military invasions, our failure to apply power where it might really make a difference is inexplicable.

Wednesday, November 23, 2005

Coming to an end

Ted Koppel is leaving Nightline after 25 years of hosting the best news show on network TV. He's considered too old, too stodgy, and will be replaced by a younger team that's more dynamic, with fewer scruples - dumbing the news ever further down.

On last night’s final episode, he replayed excerpts from his shows featuring Morrie Schwartz, a professor dying from ALS, who became the subject of Mitch Albom’s best selling book Tuesdays With Morrie.

I haven’t read the book, but the Ted Koppel interviews were quite moving, and I especially liked Schwartz's tale illustrating his view of his coming demise...

A small ocean wave is cresting along quite happily until he notices that the waves ahead of him are crashing on the shore, disappearing into nothingness. Terrified at the realization that he too will soon crash on the shore and die, he confides his fear to another wave. But the other wave explains that there’s nothing to fear: he will not be crashing and dying - he'll merely return to being a part of the larger ocean.

Monday, October 24, 2005

Tragic Fire

Crawford, Texas (not AP) - A tragic fire this morning destroyed the
personal library of President George W. Bush. The fire began in the
presidential bathroom where both of the books were kept. Both of his books have been lost. A presidential spokesman said the president was devastated, as he had almost finished coloring the second one.
[a story currently circulating on the internet, courtesy Paul Bleifeld]

Thursday, October 13, 2005

The Pro-Torture Nine

In a vote to add an anti-torture amendment to a defense spending bill, 9 senators (all Republicans) voted against:

Wayne Allard - Colorado
Kit Bond - Missouri
Tom Coburn - Oklahoma
Thad Cochran - Mississippi
John Cornyn - Texas
James Inhofe - Oklahoma
Pat Roberts - Kansas
Jeff Sessions - Alabama
Ted Stevens - Alaska

Keep this list. Never let them forget.

Wednesday, August 17, 2005

Internet Radio

Sittin’ late in the night, listening to Doc Watson sing St. Louis Blues, courtesy of the Yahoo! Custom radio service that Darryl turned me on to. Thank you Darryl! Now it’s Delbert McClinton doing Lovey Dovey...

Monday, August 15, 2005

Fifty Years Ago

As a reward for enduring torture sessions with my Huntington Park orthodontist, Dr. Elsie C. Schildwachter, the embodiment of a German Nazi in my own mind (if not in reality), Mom always took me out for a treat: often to a nearby Newberry's, where I might get a malt at the soda fountain - or a record from the music department. Those 78 RPM singles were my first pop records, and I played them over and over.

I can remember them to this day: off-brand covers of pop hits such as "Learnin' the Blues", "You Gotta Have Heart", and "Wake the Town and Tell The People."

Wednesday, July 20, 2005

Chavez Ravine

I picked up Ry Cooder’s new album, Chavez Ravine today. How many times do you play an album a second time immediately after hearing it for the first? For me, it’s almost never. Listen to Chavez Ravine. It's a "concept" album featuring some of the chicano musicians who were around during the heydey of the community, leading up to the evictions and city / corporate takeover for the building of Dodger Stadium.

I've been a huge fan of Ry Cooder, from his earliest albums through the Buena Vista Social Club sets - and Chavez Ravine maintains the same high level of excellence.

Tuesday, June 21, 2005

Gobbledeygook

I spend my days getting mainframes to talk to application servers to talk to clients, in both directions. This is J2EE, TCP/IP socket programming in Java, Cobol, C/C++, and mainframe Assembler language, with resource adapters, connection pooling, subscribe/publish messaging - requiring additional knowledge in IBM mainframe Cobol, TSO, JCL, CICS, IMS/DB, IMS/TM, DB2, Oracle, and their associated interfaces: CICS Transaction Gateway, IMS Connect, IMS Connector for Java.

None of this has anything to do with electronics or hardware. It’s all computer programming. Nothing that I program will last more than a few years, and none of the above terms and acronyms will mean anything to even the most technical of my grandchildren.

It sure would be nice to get into doing something more lasting, and of more help to the world.