Sunday, April 30, 2006
I Think I Ate (Part of) a Worm
I had really wanted to do the 60 mile version this year, and I think if the weather had been the same as last year, I would have. But when I got there and it was (still) raining and I noted that my gear was water resistant, not water proof, I took the wiser course of action. I am no longer 20-something. Weird sighting - I think I saw the guy who stopped by our duplex yesterday to see about renting the open half. Can't be sure as he was far away, but that would be strange.
I'd do it again - the weather, if there hadn't been rain, would have been great. It was in the upper 40s and the part of the ride that's normally flag-snapping windy was the least windy part of the ride (though for a 30 miler, there's a lot of uphill). Seeing as it comes at the end of the ride, it was a pleasant change of pace. And, and...I got a free Summit beer! Not an actual one, mind you, though that would have been best, but a coupon for a free Summit in St. Paul. That should serve to wash away the taste of the worm bit that I think was on my water bottle.
Friday, April 28, 2006
Inappropriate Easel
This is a picture of the box the kept easel came in. Notice anything strange? Sure, ABCDEF looks pretty normal. But what about PSTAR? And once you see PSTAR, do MOON or SKYN seem quite so innocent? There's also another bad word sort of mixed up and hidden in there as well. It's like a dirty game of Boggle for preschoolers. Shocking!
Thursday, April 27, 2006
Scooter Quest 2006
So, I've set my sights low and I'm hoping she'll name just one fish after one of my coworkers - one who can obviously be representin' for all of them. That's my Scooter Quest 2006. The fish I'm sure is necessary that makes the most sense to name after a coworker is the plecostomus (that's him upper left). Hangin' out, looking dark, gloomy and grumpy, though of essential purpose and an integral part of the group, and trailing some occassional mucus (in this case fish-related, not allergies) - I'm talking about you Mean Mr. Mustard - but your real name, not 3M. I'll let you know how it goes after the tank is in place.
Commuting Notes
Three notes from today's commute:
1.) To the Eagan Fire Station: the quote on your board, "Just use your head, figuratively, wear a helmet" should appropriately be "literally, wear a helmet", because you're going to actually use your physical head to install the helmet. I think I can see the figurative part - maybe you mean "think real hard about it", but I think that's the more common use of "use your head", so it really should be "literally". I'm open to being convinced otherwise.
2.) To the guy whose golf ball was sitting on the corner of Cliff and Pilot Knob: dude, the closest golf course is way way up the hill and over the top, and there's a bunch of trees between that dogleg right and the road on the 18th hole - I know, I've played the course. You are a seriously bad...bad...golfer. But my daughter appreciates the free golf ball.
3.) Only one person took a right turn in front of me and cut me off as I was on the bike trail (see the comments at the very bottom), forcing me to stop. That's a record (in a good way) so far this season.
Bring Your Child to Work Day
The coworker who had his little girl bike to work told me a story about his daughter and today that I thought I'd share, hopefully I get it correct.
After the tour and all the activities were done, Coworker's daughter noted that last year he'd been on floor one of the building, and now he was on floor two. Did that mean he was moving up and becoming more important (it took him a long time to get to floor two, so he'll probably be dead before he gets to floor six). Standing in the middle of his new cube, a mere 60% the size of his old one, with lower walls, more noise and a mail box that's basically a big shared plastic tub, he replied, "This is not what important looks like."
Tuesday, April 25, 2006
18 Families
- Allyn-Soderberg Family (Welch Allyn Inc.)
- Blethen Family (Seattle Times Co.)
- Cox Family (Cox Enterprises, Inc.)
- DeVos and Van Andel Families (Alticor/Amway)
- Dorrance Family (Campbell Soup Company)
- Gallo (E&J Gallo Winery)
- Harbert Family
- Johnson Family (BET, RLJ Development Co.)
- Koch Family (Koch Industries)
- Mars Family (Mars Inc.)
- Mayer Family (Captiva Resources)
- Nordstrom Family (Nordstrom Inc.)
- Sobrato Family (Sobrato Development)
- Stephens Family (Stephens Inc.)
- Timken Family (The Timken Company)
- Walton Family (Wal-Mart)
- Wegman Family (Wegmans Food Markets, Inc.)
Fond Memories For Kyle - Tsuki
1 Hitachino
1 Kirin Ichiban
1 Glass Pour 01Cha. St. Roe
1 Glass Pour Diet Coke
1 Beni Toro Nigiri
1 Smoked Duck Nigiri
1 Spicy Tako Nigiri
1 Shime Saba Nigiri
1 Smoked Duck Nigiri
1 Spicy Tako Nigiri
1 Uni Nigiri
1 Kappa Maki
1 Unagi Cucumber Maki
1 Philadelphia Maki
1 Crazy Tuna Maki
1 Honey Miso Steak
1 Pasta Stick (Eryn's!)
1 Oyster Shooter and Shot
2 Tobiko Nigiri (Wasbi) - extra $0.50 for quail eggs
2 Smoked Duck Nigiri
1 Green Tea Ice Cream (with Boysenberry on top)
3/20/2006 - Tsuki Japanese Restaurant and Lounge, 1441 W. Fullerton Ave., Chicago, IL.
Sunday, April 23, 2006
Sweden Gets the W
'W' Gets Its Own Place in Swedish Language (Yahoo) - "The letter 'W' has entered the mainstream of the Swedish language, getting its own section for the first time in the country's most respected dictionary..."
Saturday, April 22, 2006
Your Tax Dollars At Work
Smithsonian Institution: $1.01
US Institute of Peace: $0.13
Intelligence Community Mgmt. Account: $0.63
Institute of Museum & Library Services: $0.38
United Mine Workers Benefit Funds: $0.13
Corporation for National Service: $1.14
Court Services Agency for DC: $0.25
Denali Commission: $0.13
Broadcasting Board of Governors: $0.89
Public Company Acct. Oversight Board: $0.13
Anticipated Hurricane Supplemental: $7.35
Denali Commission? The program needs hyperlinks so I know what the heck I'm paying for - it reminds me of those bills I used to get at the University of Minnesota for student services that listed 85 separate groups and services.
Apparently the Denali Commission is a way to fund programs in Alaska. I believe it targets the poorest of the poor in Alaska, so I think I can afford the $0.13. I just wish I spent more than $0.13 on the United States Institute of Peace - after all, they only recently started an Iraq Study Group. Nice website though, and extremely up to date. I also spend $0.13 on Spectrum Relocation, which is, as near as I can tell, money I'm paying so they government can move radio/wireless networks so that private companies have access to those bandwidths. When the government finally sells those airwaves, I better see a $0.13 a year cashback on my taxes, plus interest for the length of time since I spent the money. I'm not fond of funding wireless initiatives for private companies considering they tend to pursue monopolistic practices in individual communities.
Bad Role Model
Bush's bike ride Saturday was no Earth Day stunt. The president rides on most weekend mornings, but made the special detour to overnight in St. Helena
just to get in a picturesque ride through wine country. He had no official events there.
"I can't wait," Bush told his San Jose audience. "I'll be plugged into an iPod."
AmericaBlog also has a link up to Pink's Dear Mr. President at YouTube (it's not a Marilyn Monroe thing), and if you're more of a just listen without hearing the words sort of person, you can catch the lyrics here.
What kind of father would take his own daughter's rights away
And what kind of father might hate his own daughter if she were gay
I can only imagine what the first lady has to say
You've come a long way from whiskey and cocaine
Pooteewheet has her first really sizeable post in quite some time up: I Heart Porn.
And finally, Kyle, TallBrad, Erik and I (shout out to Darren from work who was also there) went to the Summit Brewery Scandia Release Party this last Thursday to try their new beer - a wheat beer not unlike Blue Moon. S4xton left a comment on my blog and has pictures up - not too exciting, but you can see TallBrad looming a head over everyone else in the fifth (and perhaps eleventh) pictures.
Thursday, April 20, 2006
Snarky and Scooter
Snarky, a torts lawyer turned PHP programmer involved in a freak legal information accident that turned him into an encyclopedia of law, able to access large legal caselaw repositories remotely without the aid of a computer. He hates the law and the people subject to laws, but his unique gift always draws him back.
Scooter, another programmer. Involved in a freak biking accident that merged him with his Bianchi Brava 1988 road bike making him a living bicycle. Wild and unpredictable, his primary motivation is to get women to sit on him.
One bitter and jaded. One footloose and maybe certifiable. Together they flee the powers that would bring anarchy to all law-abiding citizens, an anarchy that would force everyone to increase their use of online legal information repositories.
Episode 1: The One With Miss Pisbo Beach
Miss Pisbo Beach: "Help! Help!"
Snarky, running up panting, a slight limp from a volleyball injury: "What's wrong?"
Miss Pisbo Beach: "I need the tax law details about how to claim my pet kitten as an accessory to my pageant activities and whether I can sue my manager for publicly defaming Mr. Whisker-kins at the Miss Pisbo Beach nude invitational."
Scooter, rolling up: "Oh man...that is so much Greek to me. Actus corpus reus. You were a lawyer, Snarky. Can you help her?"
Snarky, standing stock still with a far away look on his face, then a vicious shake of the head as though disgusted at the very air around him: "Damn it. No way, Scooter. That database isn't in my subscription model. It's a dead end."
Scooter: "Bend my freakin' spokes. Maybe you should search Lex..."
Snarky, with a vicious, downward cut of his hand: "..Shut up, you pile of rusty gears! You want them to hear you? It'll cost us just to use their name."
Miss Pisbo Beach: "Who?"
Snarky: "Them. They're all around us, and they're watching, and we're covered by an airtight non-compete clause. Scooter. Give me two of your spokes, your sprocket, your chain and two feet of brake cable."
Scooter: "Dude! That is so inappropriate!"
Snarky: "Quick. Before the law changes and I have to graphically cite the information!"
Scooter: "Only if she removes the pieces for me."
Miss Pisbo Beach: "Do it yourself, you pervert!"
Scooter: "If I could lift my own chain tool, do you think I'd be hanging around here? You'd never get me off the hooks in the garage, lady."
Miss Pisbo Beach, looks disgusted.
Scooter: "Fine..." The pieces just fall off.
Snarky: "I think we can create an antenna to boost my access levels. Stuff the chain down my pants while I put the spokes in my ears and write a quick PHP injection script."
Scooter: "F' that, man. I'm going to have to pass."
Miss Pisbo Beach: "I'll do it."
Scooter: "Baby. After what we had together?"
Snarky: "Yep...no...almost...left...further...further. Right there. Compile me!"
Scooter: "Excuse me while I wrap a few more layers of handlebar tape around everything that might be my eyes. "
Snarky: "Got it. I'm printing off the relevant laws for you right now."
Scooter: "I don't think you took enough of my parts to make a printer."
Miss Pisbo Beach: "My hero!"
Scooter: "Lame! You should have been mine. You know my seat has pleasure nubs?"
Miss Pisbo Beach, looks revolted, but surreptitiously rubs his seat to check.
Snarky: "All in a day's work, ma'am."
Scooter: "Coffee?"
All three: "Always!" Back and handlebar patting accompanied by laughter and happy ending theme song.
Wednesday, April 19, 2006
Loss of Teeth
#1 West Virginia 42.8%
#2 Kentucky 38.1%
#3 Tennessee 32.2%
#49 Minnesota 14.3%
A Grab Bag of Variety
"Let me see if I've got this straight," the Marine cadet said. "The Minutemen are protesting Mexican immigrants, the anarchists are protesting theMinutemen and the Nazis, the Nazis are protesting the Minutemen and the anarchists, and the Black Panthers are protesting the Nazis, who are American, but also Nazis, like 'We love Hitler' Nazis?"
The reporter confirmed that was indeed correct.
And this is for my friend Kyle, who gets far more upset about toll roads than I do, and I hate them. I think he'll be avoiding Indiana for the next 75 years or so.
In the biggest highway privatization deal in U.S. history, state officials last week signed an agreement to turn the 157-mile Indiana Toll Road over to a Spanish-Australian consortium that will operate it for a profit for the next 75 years.
And, just for a bit of a trip to the past for some of my friends, the Summit Brewery Tour, 2003. Marnie's Brother, Marnie, Scooter, Tall Brad, Lisa, Mean Mr. Mustard, Christy Two Fist, Erik the Hairy Swede, Sandy and Pete. A few of us (and Kyle) will be attending the Summit Brewery's release of Scandia Ale tomorrow. Should have just stayed there since the tour.
Tuesday, April 18, 2006
Easter Penis
So...some pictures of the event. Conner/P'mon during the egg hunt, blowing bubbles with the crack pipes the Easter Bunny left him and Eryn. This was about the only picture I have of him not in a pink tutu. Eryn really liked her pipe and spent a lot of time pouring bubbles all over her arm, the pipe stem and the ground. You can't see him, but Cancer Bunny is somewhere in the background! We thought he was dead, but he made a special appearance for Easter, great big tumors and all. He's either very tough or Easter really is about resurrection.
Conner and Eryn looking for some eggs. Pink tutu in evidence. Eggs visible in the background.
My niece being a serious cutie. My happa happa bunny rabbit joke just made my sister groan. She's a good sister/aunt; she actually went out to Chuck E. Cheese with us tonight for Eryn's third birthday even though my niece isn't old enough to really do much (although her sugar-deprived system seemed to be thriving on the sugar-added pizza sauce they feed kids at C.E.C.).
A squished egg. Pooteewheet can't cook them right - at least not this batch. And Conner didn't seem capable of not stepping on them. It's ok, because Eryn was pretty sure that any eggs left by the Easter Bunny were going to look like this anyway, considering he sits on all of them.
At one point, our neighbors, Steve, Ty and Christy came home (from vacation in West Virginia - thanks for the beer mug! ummm...go Mountees?) and were practicing pitching a baseball in the backyard - so I threw one of the eggs across the immediate neighbors' yard and into their yard. They proceeded to throw the three pieces (or so) back, which came no where near our yard, instead landing in the other neighbors' yard and actually on the roof of the inbetween neighbors' house. They'll be wondering what the hell the Easter bunny was doing up there for a long time!
And finally, the snake in a can that's really a penis in a can that I secretly wedged in Cookie Queen's license plate before they left and then told them about when they got home. In my defense, it was actually Dan'l penis and he left it at our house quite some time ago, so I was just returning it. And, Pooteewheet found it while doing Easter cleaning. Not to mention, Easter is about reproduction... I'm surprised you don't see more of them on Easter.
Sunday, April 16, 2006
Easter Blogging
The name for this holiday comes from much older times whose customs we're now not all that familiar with. Many old religions had a Spring Goddess, a special deity who breathed life back into the world, both by banishing Old Man Winter and by encouraging growing things to grow and living things to mate. She went by
many names. The Scandinavians called her Ostra, the Anglo-Saxons Eostre, and those who lived in the region that is now Germany knew her as Eastre.
(so much for farming my back yard: "a shower of rain promises a good crop
of grass but little hay. ")
But he doesn't want you to go to MySpace.
According to Rebecca Hagelin, the author of Home Invasion: Protecting Your Family in a Culture That’s Gone Stark Raving Mad, youth ministers who use the website myspace.com to reach out to their congregants, in the hopes of meeting them where they are, are simply saying to teens: “Meet me at the pornography store, and we’ll talk about Jesus.”
Saturday, April 15, 2006
The Power of Three Meme
The Power of Three: See Spot run.
Three things you'd like to SEE in your lifetime, whether or not you think it's likely.
1. Any minority President of the United States (that doesn't mean Catholic) - see question #3.
2. A permanent colony on another planetoid.
3. Eryn (my daughter) the age I am now (actually, I most want to see a grandkid, but more than that I want to see my daughter happy, and that might not include a grandkid).
Three SPOTs that you have visited that are "must see".
1. London and the surrounds - one of my fondest memories as I went when I was young and by myself. I'm a bit partial to the city because I have a (English) History major with a secondary major in (English) literature, so every step I took was walking through one of my books.
2. Blue Spring State Park in Florida - manatees and a big hole through/under the mountain that you can (or could) swim over with a particularly eerie feeling that you might suddenly be sucked away. It's beautiful and I've never forgotten it - so it had an impact.
3. Chicago - New York for Midwesterners. I love the skyline, I love the buildings, I love the art and the museums, I love the food, and I love their choice of politicians (see question #1 and #3).
Three people you'd like to see RUN for public office and why.
1. Al Franken - but not for the reasons She Says gave. I want him to run because I live in the state he's likely to run in and it would give Powerline and folks on the right an aneurism if he won. They'd be convinced we'd returned to the days of Wellstone.
2. Barack Obama. Yeah, yeah...I know he's already run and he's a U.S. Senator. I'm looking forward to the day he runs for a higher office (see question #1).
3. My coworker, Erik. I already know he's electable, even with the beard, because I've seen his doppleganger in office (as a righty). I like his politics, I like his beer choices, and people like him - he should be destined for shinier things than his current job. If not him, then his long-term girlfriend should run and he could be the activist first spouse.
If I must tag someone, I tag Pooteewheet, Cookie Queen and Lissy Jo. Not Mean Mr. Mustard - I can't be sure he has three friends.
NOW and the South Dakota Abortion Ban
There are more resources at the site, as well as a scheduler to see when the next showing is in your zip code.
Pharyngula Blogs Lil Markie
If you need to listen to Lil' Markie's Christian stylings, you can hit WFMU's Beware of the Blog. And if you have obnoxiously Christian friends, maybe this is what you need to subject them to at Christmas and as presents on Christian-themed holidays. After all, they created Lil' Markie, they should have to pretend to enjoy him.
Remember to Do A Last Minute Scan
This makes me wonder how the logistics of buying iTunes tunes works for tax purposes. Say I take my laptop to Arizona...do I owe iTunes taxes? Or is based on state of residency? But that wouldn't work if I were buying something tangible, like the actual CD the tune was on, because then I'd be paying taxes in Arizona, not Minnesota. But if the reverse is true and it works just like regular sales tax, and you pay based on where you were when you downloaded, then shouldn't I save up my list of tunes and download them when I'm in a state that doesn't specify the tax? And what are the implications for this on sales taxes long term? Will all my sales taxes start being submitted back to my state of residency? Seems like that would annoy the heck of states which deal with tourism and would directly benefit states with a higher standard of living. I guess that's why I follow Caron's blog - the answers to my important amateur tax questions...and video of DEA agents shooting themselves in the foot.
- Alabama
- Arizona
- Colorado
- Hawaii
- Idaho
- Indiana
- Kentucky
- Louisiana
- Maine
- New Mexico
- South Dakota
- Texas
- Utah
- Washington
- West Virginia
- Washington, D.C.
I Am Not Kewl Enough for MySpace
The terms seemed tenuous at best.
So, at least if they're not willing to give me terms, they're willing to keep my access somewhat private...right?
But...being of a generation and general computer-related persuasion that I just don't care too much about terms and privacy statements, I thought I'd just sign up anyway. After all, there's the weight of millions of users behind the site - the terms can't be so rough as to cost me my child or a tithe off my salary. That's when I learned that what they were really implying was that I'm not cool enough for MySpace. Several attempts to enter my information resulted in just being pushed back to the registration screen with some of my data cleared, the "share your birthday" checkbox rechecked, and an error message that told me absolutely nothing about how to resolve my issue. I think it was all a big joke. They saw the "human interactive proofs" shortcut (top picture) in my links bar and decided they'd make me reenter one half a dozen times. Sounds like a twenty year old's sense of humor.
Wednesday, April 12, 2006
No Legal Marriages, Only Spiritual Ones
"I will no longer sign marriage licenses. Opposite gender couples will have to go to the judge at city hall to have them signed," said Pastor Don Portwood from the Lyndale United Church of Christ.
Members of the 120 year old church in South Minneapolis voted unanimously to support the move. "We have decided that we are no longer going to discriminate against same gender couples, that we will only do religious weddings and religious ceremonies for same gender or opposite gender couples."
This, on the other hand, is not cool: "If you like sushi, you're supporting the world's biggest religious cult." Rew is right, the Wege should be cursed - not for ruining something trendy, just for ruining a little bit of something that's freaking delicious. I look forward to Rew's right up of the best places to eat sushi in the Twin Cities (and Chicago, and NY) that are not funneling money to the Rev. Sun Myung Moon. I find it particularly disturbing that I went to Chicago solely to eat sushi....is nothing sacred? Ah...weddings at the Lyndale United Church of Christ are...hmm...wonder if they have a Moon-less sushi potluck?
Tuesday, April 11, 2006
Memes and Masks
And...because I read Generic Heretic, I'm going to give up my meme virginity as well...
"I'm not sure I like their plan for converting us to their religion, seeing as it involves dying and all."
The Venerable Book:
1. Grab the nearest book.
2. Open it to page 161.
3. Find the fifth sentence.
4. Post the text of the sentence along with these instructions.
5. Don't search around and look for the coolest book you can find. Do what's actually next to you.
Monday, April 10, 2006
I Think...
It is beautiful here in Minnesota. Gorgeous. Wonderful. It's why people put up with the rest of the crap in Minnesota. Everyone is outside - grilling, chilling, willing the weather never to change. No bugs, just an edge of cool in a whole bunch of warmth with an impending perfect evening. And it was good commuting by bike weather as well - just enough to make your nipples cold, but not so much as to require a second jacket.
As for substance...I'll be piggybacking. After School Snack has a post up about what it's like to live in El Dakota...whoops...El Salvador...where abortion is completely illegal under all circumstances. I hope I never have to hear the phrase " forensic vagina inspectors " again. And as for the rest: " stories of women sticking battery acid and pesticides into their vaginas as abortifacients, women serving sentences of 30 years for having an abortion, forced vaginal examinations for any miscarriage"...ugh. Yeah...f-in' paradise.
And Smartie at Power Liberal has a post that I was still remembering after two Summits at the company happy hour: 101 Issues more important than Michele Bachmann and her stupid amendment proposal (I paraphrase...and Smartie, did you mispell her name on purpose? Two l's together implies "lesbian". After all, they're touching): "Class sizes; War in Iraq; Special Ed funding; War in Afghanistan; Graduation rates; Renewable energy; Traffic; Conservation; Government corruption; Higher Ed. funding; Trade deficit; Bird flu; Terrorism; Iran; Preschool/Headstart funding; School funding; Drug war policy; Other pandemics/diseases/etc.; Education equality; Student loan funding"...and 81 others. By the way, don't forget shrinking cubical sizes...that one impacts me personally and is far more important than a gay marriage amendment.
Sunday, April 09, 2006
Chalk Drawings
It wasn't really necessary to wear the gloves -it wasn't that cold - and I even biked back in a t-shirt, which given the uphill climb, with a Burley, and a little girl who's not as little as she was last year, and the headwind, was a good idea, because I was working the 1x3 gear for all it was worth and getting a little sweaty. It's my plan to actually bring Eryn home from daycare in the Burley now and then, so I'll get plenty of practice going up that same hill.
Eryn and Conner also made some chalk drawings that Pooteewheet didn't post. Left to right, top to bottom you can observe Eryn with her Cookie Monster sweatshirt on. Eryn as a boy. Two-headed Eryn (she was sure one of those heads was mine at first - but now she just seems a little worried about the whole two-headed Eryn thing - it was the result of her hoodie). And...umm...the chalk drawing Conner/P'mon's mom made of him. I think that's supposed to be his butt - although I'm not sure why it's on the front. Do your own psychoanalysis (clickable for larger consideration).
And what is this thing on my car? From far away, I was worried it was a rat, but up close it just seemed to be a piece of carpet. I'm confused as to how it got there, and for a while I was really worried that it was the blob (go watch the Steve McQueen version if you don't worry about things stuck to the axle of your car - I don't go under there unless it's absolutely necessary).
Bombing Iran
"Bush bombs Iran back to the stone age, and what -- in his imagination, anyway -- is the result? Mass disillusionment. A nation losing its religion. And that, in his book, seems to be a good thing."
From Hersh's Article:
One former defense official, who still deals with sensitive issues for the Bush Administration, told me that the military planning was premised on a belief that “a sustained bombing campaign in Iran will humiliate the religious leadership and lead the public to rise up and overthrow the government.” He added, “I was shocked when I heard it, and asked myself, ‘What are they smoking?’”
Friday, April 07, 2006
North Koreans Stereotypes?
There is a pretty cool fish tank in the movie that's three plexi glass tubes with screw on ends all wired together like a ladder with really thick rungs. I'm pretty sure Kyle needs one for his frontroom.
My Adopted Daughter Is The Most Beautiful Child in the Third World
"You really couldn't hope for a better child from the Third World. When I look into her brown, almond-shaped eyes, I don't see light-absorbing blotches so much as a window to another perspective, another way of life. By that I mean the American way of life. And she's going to love it.
We're renaming her Whitney, by the way..."
Thursday, April 06, 2006
Howl's Moving Castle
We think this bodes well for finding her a copy of Kiki's Delivery Service.
Just Not So Much
Otherwise...allergies, allergies, allergies, and taxes, taxes, taxes. Taxes for my personal use. Taxes for the business with my brother. Taxes for my wife's self-employment and estimated quarterly filing. Taxes for her business that are special taxes health care providers pay. Don't get me wrong - most of those things are losing money, so it really just comes off the top of my personal taxes, but there's the possibility I'll have to be a competent tax lawyer, or accountant, to figure it all out by the time it's through.
For something fun, Musing of Law and Gender has a neat picture of a diving tower to train bubbleheads on U.S. Naval submersibles. When I was growing up, my Dad would tell me about having to swim in one of these, and I never could get a clear picture of one in my head. I usually pictured one of those cheesy tanks they put half dressed mermaid women in at long-gone 50's bars. But he says he was actually in this one, and one in Hawaii as well.
If you don't read World O'Crap, they have a funny series up discussing the impact of Red Dawn on red staters. I wish they would have actually done a more academic-style discussion of how Red Dawn influenced red staters, but it looks as though you might be able to get some of that by following links in the comments.
Tuesday, April 04, 2006
Asian American Political Memorabilia
Olympos
And Achilles - well, if you truly feel that the Greek hero deserves some sort of sanctity of image - this isn't the book for you. But if you recognize that no matter how one paints a warrior, they still kill, lust, and are driven by needs which can almost seem ridiculous when taken off the battlefield, then he makes a lot of sense, more sense than Ulysses who knows enough to tame his nature off the battle field, and yet still seems bounded by his warrior nature.
In the end, the book is really just quite a bit of fun and a step above Ilium precisely because it seems to be having more fun and because most things that were confusing in that book really are explained, although only as many things as can be dreamt up in Simmons philosophy.
5:4 - the Marriage Amendment Bill Dies in Committee
DeLay resigns from Congress as well...it's a good day.
Sometimes I Don't Feel So Smart
And speaking of being a tool, this seems like the work of a tool to me: Jesus Could Have Walked on Ice, Scientist Says. Not because it's not possible that it wasn't a miracle and just a patch of ice, but because if it was a patch of ice, I really can't believe that none of Jesus's wine-drinking disciples wouldn't have stepped out to prove they were "blessed" too, "Dude, this is sweeet! I am so being a miracle man!" Or maybe this is one of those logic problems they give you on the Christian GRE where the answer is, "Jesus was the lightest! Paul was second heaviest. And Judas weighed the most!" (he had the spirtual weight of those future pieces of silver hanging on his soul).
Sunday, April 02, 2006
Law Related - Duke and 3L Epiphany's Taxonomy of Law Blogs
Secondly, Paul Caron at TaxProf Blog has a post up linking to 3L Epiphany's taxonomy of law blogs. 600 law blogs broken down by various categories. Cool. I used to maintain cycling links for our local group, and the process of maintaining a database, multiple categories and the validity of links is painful, so it's great to see someone tackling it with any category of blogs, and law blogs are a rich source of content. However, in this age of wikis and shared links, it always seems like it would work better if it were a system multiple users could help to maintain, otherwise it has a hard time defying blog block, missed sites (and there are many missing on that list), and ennui unless he figures out a way to make money off of it. Note to some lawyers I know that Minnesota State Law is completely unrepresented in the taxonomy - then again, maybe that's conflict of interest for the lawyers I know - forget I said anything.
Surly and The Horny Gnome
We also had food, although the selection seemed limited, as was evident in the sheer volume of bison burgers that hit the table. My medium came well done, which is usually a serious problem with buffalo - but was tolerable in this case, which indicated it wasn't all buffalo. The waitress assured us it wasn't, but was mixed with bacon to give it some moisture. The waitress also gave the three guys a hard time latter when she noticed that the women and children had abandoned ship and we were left drinking all alone.
Two other observations - I ran into yet another coworker, Matt. Not someone who works in another department even, but formerly within a few cubes of me - so that was interesting. And curling must be way more popular than I realized as the lot was packed so full people were parking on the street, and yet the bar didn't have that many people in it. As it shares its lot with the Curling Club, that had to be where people were hanging out - Winter Olympics residue?