Happy New Year
I start a new job in 2 days. I'm psyched.
File under general/
Sat Dec 31 20:35:08 CT 2005
Brewery Tour
My friend
Saul sent a link to
this movie about how beer is made.
A very interesting tour of the Anchor Steam brewery in San Francisco.
On another note, Andy and I made a nice lager earlier this year that tasted amazingly like Anchor Steam beer.
Don
pointed out to me that we used a California yeast ... leave it to Don to i.d. the beer facts.
File under general/
Sun Dec 18 13:57:32 CT 2005
xooglers
A blog written by ex-Google employees.
Kind of a 'behind the music' for the hippest
tech company in the land.
File under general/
Thu Dec 8 10:43:30 CT 2005
Oh, the shame
Minneapolis is ranked ahead of St Paul in terms of literacy.
On the up side, both cities are in the top 10, which makes
Minnesota the only state nationwide with two cities in the top 10.
The rankings are interesting to me because they attempt to measure internet access,
libraries, and newspaper circulation in separate categories. A place like Seattle (
ranked #1 overall) is first in internet access (well, duh!) but nowhere on the
newspaper circulation list. A sign of the times...
File under general/
Thu Dec 8 10:15:03 CT 2005
Firefox and popups
My friend Bob passed along this note last week:
Like you, I love Firefox for many reasons, including popup blocking.
So over the last few weeks I've been surprised to see occasional popups.
It turns out that some clever people figured out that you could launch
popups from Flash, getting around the Firefox default settings.
Fortunately, you can get around it:
1. Type about:config into the Firefox location bar.
2. Right-click on the page and select New and then Integer.
3. Name it privacy.popups.disable_from_plugins
4. Set the value to 2.
The possible values are:
* 0: Allow all popups from plugins.
* 1: Allow popups, but limit them to dom.popup_maximum.
* 2: Block popups from plugins.
* 3: Block popups from plugins, even on whitelisted sites.
File under general/
Thu Dec 1 09:23:04 CT 2005
Web 2.0
Living in the midwest spares me from rubbing shoulders
every day with the buzzword crazies on the coasts. But still,
I like to keep tabs on what's new: I give thanks to the net
for that.
Tim O'Reilly has
a good summary article on the latest buzzphrase: Web 2.0.
Ten years after I got my first email account and started using Netscape
to surf the infant web, it's of historical interest to me to watch folks
examining the industry (and themselves) and drawing out the threads.
File under general/
Wed Nov 30 13:28:11 CT 2005
Big Blue gives away Unicode libraries
IBM has graciously released a set of
Unicode libraries
under the X license (compatible with the GPL). I have
just started playing with it, but the sentiment alone
deserves some praise.
File under projects/
Mon Nov 28 14:01:40 CT 2005
Spam Hall of Shame
I've made it official with its own blog category: the
Spam Hall of Shame is now open.
File under general/
Fri Nov 25 11:11:51 CT 2005
xmas crap
At long last, a completely honest spam this morning. Subject line: xmas crap.
File under spam hall of shame/
Fri Nov 25 10:45:55 CT 2005
Fan Letter
So you got drunk one night with your buddies and watched a horror movie
and were reminded of how
good that one actor is and how he's in so
many of those slasher movies and just doesn't get the credit he deserves.
And in your fit of intoxicated and scary enthusiasm you googled for his name
and found an email address where you could pour out your fanly (manly)
adoration.
Trouble is, that email address you found wasn't his. It belongs to a friend of mine
who happens to share his name. And now your drunken love letter is laid bare to the world
here in my spam hall of shame (though to spare you some of that deserved shame, I'll not
publish your name or email address).
what's up man???? you still making that one movie called "The Forest"???? it sounds pretty fuckin interesting... Kane Hodder (JASON) and Andrew Bryniarski (LEATHERFACE); all we need now is Robert Englund (FREDDY KRUEGER)... lol... you were pretty kick ass in Army Of Darkness... the first movie I ever saw you in... then you really grabbed my attention as Otis, and made me realize who played the Deadite Captian in Army Of Darkness... then I realized you were originally reknowned as Chop Top in Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2... what a fuckin trippy motherfucker... lol... now we're all just speculating about what you'll do next... some say you should be The Joker in the next Batman movie... I think you should co-star with Iggy Pop and go around bein brothers who murder people... either that, or you should be in a movie with Robert Englund... cuz Freddy Krueger rules, but Otis is a much more realistic murder icon... maybe Rob Zombie could direct that movie... that'd rule hardcore... anyways... just wanted to say you fucking rule and that you are very much underrated...
Dude. You rule hardcore.
File under spam hall of shame/
Fri Nov 18 10:10:33 CT 2005
ViewCVS for SVN repositories
At last. After some weeks of on-again off-again attempts
at getting a web-based browser for my SVN repositories
working, I finally hit the magic combination. Seems that the
load path for Python was not including /usr/local/lib by default
(despite it being set for the system) so I added a SetEnv
directive to my httpd.conf and viola. [ link deleted since I'm not
ready to actually reveal any code... ]
File under general/
Thu Nov 10 09:15:34 CT 2005
Usability
I'm a big fan of those people who work at making things easier to use.
And since I've mentioned this site twice to folks, and since I've had
to search for it twice now too, thought I should make it easier on myself
and record it here. The
Open Usability
group lets you register your project for consultation with folks who care
how things work (via
the
Minnesota Interactive site).
File under general/
Wed Nov 9 20:14:14 CT 2005
New Job
A little slow here recently, as I've taken a new job and with it, a new
schedule. After five years, I've moved on to a new IT job. Five years is a long
time to stay in one place, in this industry. The change is good.
File under general/
Tue Oct 4 08:10:18 CT 2005
Post-Rapture Radio

Russell Rathbun's book is funny, thoughtful and crazy ... in a good way. I was reminded
of the off-balance depths of Douglas Coupland's best writing.
Full disclosure: Russell is a friend, and I was a member of his congregation for over seven years.
Yes, most of the sermons in the book I've heard before. They actually come across better in print,
or at least, in the context of the whole book. He's done a good job weaving these parts together.
I especially liked how dis-integrated/confused the identities of the character(s)
got in the second half of the book. The levels
of identity kept shifting on me: was it a typo? did he really mean Rathbun, not Lamblove?
That sense
of keeping the reader (listener) off-balance is what I've always enjoyed about Russell's sermons: in the
space that opens when I'm off-balance or caught thinking in a different direction, the shock of the twist,
the unexpected feint, in his stories, is where I feel the wind move. Flannery O'Connor did that well (there's a
nice allusion to her in the closing line of one story); so did Kierkegaard, Walker Percy -- other great writers
to whom Russell is indebted and to whom he will be compared. He deserves the comparison.
File under books/
Sun Sep 11 20:14:25 CT 2005
AJAX
I'm no Javascript wizard by any means, but I find the latest AJAX apps (particularly Google Maps)
too cool.
Here's where it all gets defined.
File under projects/
Fri Aug 19 13:51:06 CT 2005
Puddle
My son and I went walking last night after a day of periodic rain. Most of the water had dried, but
he found one puddle in the park, about the size of a salad plate. He
worked that puddle: stomped it,
splashed it, patted it with his hands, circled it, tapped it. That puddle just kept on. After about 5 minutes
of solid puddle play, Ari seemed satisfied with the puddle's veracity and we moved on down the path.
File under general/
Fri Aug 19 06:22:23 CT 2005
Calendar paging
Added the feature to page from month to month using the calendar in the right column.
File under general/
Sat Aug 13 13:54:38 CT 2005
Xapian
Bill pointed me at
Xapian as a potential direction for a better Swish-e.
I like what I've seen so far. Xapian is a C++ library for probablistic information retrieval, supports UTF
encoding, and provides lots of language bindings via SWIG. Nice. I'll post more as I play more.
File under projects/
Sat Aug 13 12:10:15 CT 2005
Blog spam
Too many spammers leaving their cruft via the comments. If you want to reach me, send
mail to
blog@peknet.com
File under general/
Sat Aug 13 08:08:38 CT 2005
Singular, like a fish
I'm sure this has happened to you before.
My friend quoted me back to myself the other day, referring to something
I had apparently written many years ago. I said something was "singular,
like a fish."
What the hell was I thinking? Fish aren't singular, are they? But I like the way
that sounds, so I'll take credit for it. Even if I can't remember saying it.
File under general/
Fri Aug 12 07:49:12 CT 2005
Recommended to me
I've had the following books recommended to me by people I respect:
- Girl Meets God by Lauren Winner
- The Death of Adam by Marilynne Robinson
- anything by Dan Chaon
- 'The Circus in Winter' by Cathy Day (short story)
File under books/
Fri Jul 15 09:14:47 CT 2005
google blue
I was sick of google blue; a little CSS makeover today.
And I found this
CSS cheatsheet.
File under projects/
Fri Jul 1 10:27:05 CT 2005
The Water-Method Man

Not as good as
Owen Meany or
A Widow for One Year but there
are some very funny parts. I'd never really noticed before Irving's talent
for slapstick. Some scenes are so visual, I feel like I'm in a Marx Brothers
movie.
File under books/
Thu Jun 30 10:34:46 CT 2005
Best American Short Stories of 2004

We've been enjoying this series for quite some years now. Lorrie Moore picked
this collection, and a very nice one it is. Stories I especially liked:
"What You Pawn I Will Redeem" by Sherman Alexie, "Intervention" by Jill McCorkle, and
"All Saints Day" by Angela Pneuman.
File under books/
Thu Jun 30 09:02:40 CT 2005
Setting Free the Bears

John Irving's first novel feels a little green to me, but only in comparison
to the brilliant work he's done since.
File under books/
Thu Jun 30 08:56:47 CT 2005
The Peknet Support Team
Apparently, I have help I never knew about. A whole team in fact. Got this spam this morning:
*Dear user karpet, *
You have successfully updated the password of your Peknet account.
If you did not authorize this change or if you need assistance with your
account, please contact Peknet customer service at: mail@peknet.com
Thank you for using Peknet!
The Peknet Support Team
+++ Attachment: No Virus (Clean)
+++ Peknet Antivirus - www.peknet.com
Insidious. Lots of unsuspecting folks will bite at that one, if it happens to come from a real
ISP (which peknet is not). There was even a virus attached as a zip file. Do these people have
anything better to do?
File under spam hall of shame/
Tue Jun 14 08:14:49 CT 2005
Backup is for Wimps
I always tell my clients to do a backup. Of course, none of them do. Until that day when their
hard drive fails. It's not a question of
if it fails, I tell them, but
when.
Usually it only takes that one staggering, painful experience to scar them into becoming
Backup Believers. Usually.
Today one of the hard drives in my Linux server, which hosts this site, failed on me. It was
the main root filesystem drive. It had been
spinning nearly non-stop for over four years. That's decent, I think. The other drive that I bought
at the same time is still going strong (at least, it is as of this minute).
Fortunately, I had a backup system in place, with redundant hard drives in the machine. I don't use a RAID (which I probably should), but instead rely on regular rsync backups from the main drives
to a couple backup drives. I think I have 5 hard drives in that machine (yes, it gets warm).
Once I discovered the failed drive, I was back up in an hour. It should have taken less time, but
I had never practiced the restore before, and there was a little trouble booting from the mirror.
But I prevailed. Up and at 'em again. What a relief. Not what I expected to be doing today. What I expected to be doing was digging post holes in my backyard. Hard to say which I ended up preferring...
File under general/
Fri Jun 3 19:42:43 CT 2005
Star Wars
Saw episode III yesterday with my wife and our young friend. I feel the same
kind of disappointment everyone seems to feel with these first 3 episodes of the
long saga.
Sure, my formative years were shaped by the original trilogy. I was 5 when the first
Star Wars came out. Saw it three times in one week in the theater during its re-release
a few years later. My Lego adventures revolved around Luke and Han Solo.
The thing that helped make the first 3 so myth-like and epic was that I felt
dropped into the middle of something much bigger than I was. There were many unexplained
things just presented as part of the story: the robots escaping to the planet in the middle
of a battle; a mysterious princess asking for help from an even more mysterious magical man
in a hood; a simple farm boy told his father was someone special but killed by an evil
lord; a quest; a rebellion; the Force. Nothing was explained; everything mattered.
In these latest three episodes, everything is explained, and nothing seems to matter.
It's a tragic story, how one wounded man wounds everyone around him, and finally the whole
universe. But we know it ends happily. Everything is explained; and so, nothing really matters.
No mysteries are left lying about to confuse or mess the tidy universe of Lucas' making. All
questions are answered in the end: how Anakin becomes Vader; what the Force is, exactly;
how the Jedi die; even down to how Obi Wan can commune from beyond the grave.
Don't get me started on the dialogue. So wooden.
I realized that part of what made the first
3 so good was the chemistry between Han Solo and Leia. I'd go so far as to say that Harrison
Ford made the first trilogy as good as it was. He had a great character and he played him really well,
made him breathe. He wasn't a comic book caricature; Solo was a scoundrel, and a believable, lovable
one.
I'll watch them all again; and I'll remind myself that it's a good story, a comic book story.
I'm disappointed, like everyone else, because I wanted Star Wars to explain something more
about the world, my world. Instead, it explained everything very tidily about its own world.
I guess I shouldn't expect more. And because I do, that's why I'm disappointed.
File under general/
Thu Jun 2 20:54:00 CT 2005
Have a nice eternity.
Somehow this blog has become a spam hall of shame. I find my amusement where I can. And since this
arrives unbidden, might as well enjoy it.
Before its too late make peace with GOD,
and make sure the ones you love do also.
You need to pick between a eternity of joy or one of torment.
Accept him.
Repent.
Get baptized.
And have a nice eternity.
In ablow we can axwise as always casaba alpinely theirfore antodontalgic is arthrorheumatism and anadicrotism.
What I like is that "Repent" comes after "Accept him".
An eternity of torment would be clicking delete on all the spam I get...
File under spam hall of shame/
Mon May 23 14:34:56 CT 2005
I hereby nominate
this spam as the most entertaining one I've gotten yet. Sure, it's a total scam
and a hoax, but the story telling is first-rate and the idiomatic English is very
amusing. Look for this line: "the one
that makes me to blubber and scuttle away from my dad's
abode is the deposit certificate." Brilliant. Miss Jane Sandra, my hat is off to you.
No doubt some sucker will fall for this and we'll read about it in the dailies
some months from now. After all, it's hard to resist the damsel in distress,
especially when she's waving $5M.
Continue reading ...
File under spam hall of shame/
Mon May 9 09:46:32 CT 2005
New features
Added some Blosxom plug-ins: the calendar on the right column, and the see more feature.
Continue reading ...
File under general/
Mon May 9 09:44:32 CT 2005
Lemur Project
Lemur Project is an information retrieval development library.
How to build Lemur 3.1 for OS X (10.3.9)
See http://www.lemurproject.org/phorum/read.php?11,840
The note about "copy Apple's config.guess from /sw" is ambiguous.
What I did was create a shell script that does:
#!/bin/sh
echo 'powerpc-apple-aux'
exit
and then make all the src modifications as indicated in the URL above.
Tip: this one-liner will updated the include paths in the src files:
grep -r 'include ' * | \
grep 'indri/Parameters' | \
perl -n -e 's/:.*//;print' | \
xargs perl -pi.orig -e \
's,indri/Parameters.hpp,indri/IndriParameters.hpp,'
Spurious errors about
'-static: no such option' from the g++ compiler can be
ignored, or might try
--disabled-shared option to
configure.
File under general/
Tue Apr 26 07:48:33 CT 2005
Endian
I did not know this:
The names `big-endian' and `little-endian' are comic references to the classic "Gulliver's Travels" (via the paper "On Holy Wars and a Plea for Peace" by Danny Cohen, USC/ISI IEN 137, April 1, 1980) and the egg-eating habits of the Lilliputians.
From the
perlfunc man page discussion of the
pack() function.
Endian-ness is one of those esoteric (or not) computer subjects that makes the internet work (or not).
Basically, do you (or more accurately, your computer) count from left-to-right, or right-to-left. Little
endian is left-to-right (1234) and big-endian right-to-left (4321).
File under general/
Mon Mar 28 20:31:52 CT 2005
The Baroque Cycle

Just finished racing through Neal Stephenson's
Baroque Cycle, three novels
set in the 17th century. As early modern European
history was my undergrad major, and technology my current occupation, this series
was a real treat (which can explain how I finished 3000 pages in 3 weeks).
Barbary Corsair pirates, the birth of the commodities markets, the debate
over the origins of the calculus, defenestrations of all kinds. What a riot.
File under books/
Mon Mar 28 10:49:38 CT 2005
In Xanadu: A Quest

I liked William Dalrymple's
From the Holy Mountain so much that I convinced my book
club to try another of his travel books.
The short review: it's not as good as
Mountain but still worth a read.
This is his first book, for which he became (justifiably) famous while still an undergrad.
It feels a little "green" compared to
Mountain -- I'm chalking that up to Dalrymple's
relative youth and it being his first book. I hear traces of what will become excellent writing
10 years later.
File under books/
Mon Mar 28 10:11:08 CT 2005
The Unconquerable World

Jonathan Schell's book was a Christmas gift a couple years ago. Took me some time
to get through it. Not because it was poor writing (though it's not particularly
lyrical) but because it's emotionally difficult to consider war when your country
is mired in one.
I guess I should feel hopeful after reading it; maybe I'm too cynical, but I didn't feel it.
Maybe I just need to listen to less NPR news and take more walks in the woods.
File under books/
Mon Mar 28 10:10:47 CT 2005
The Philosophical Programmer: Reflections on the Moth in the Machine
My friend Lori read this several years ago, when she was a programmer and I was not.
I ran across it at the library and thought I could do with a little rumination on
my current occupation.
Daniel Kohanski offers a nice historical overview of the computer, some thoughts
on writing beautiful code, and best of all, some observations on how the rigid
and unforgiving logic of computers is changing the way we (programmers) think. There's
some good theology in there somewhere.
The most advanced work in computers today is in artificial intelligence,
which is one way of saying,
we're trying to make computers a little more forgiving and a little more fuzzy. Take
your PC out for a few beers; that'll fuzzy it up.
My favorite excerpt:
At one job, I came up with a maxim henceforth to be known as Kohanski's First Law
of Programming: Something that has a one-in-a-million chance of going wrong
will go wrong the first day we go live. To which was added Liff's Corollary: It will
either happen in the first five minutes or just after everyone has left for the day.
Ain't it the truth.
File under books/
Mon Mar 28 10:08:29 CT 2005
Schiavo
Don't really care that much. Don't listen to the news anymore. But I know enough to know
that this is brilliant commentary from
Dork
(via
Tiny Revolution).
File under general/
Mon Mar 28 09:21:18 CT 2005
Library Jobs
An interesting take on the "
myth of library employment shortage."
Here's the
local listing for library jobs.
I don't know the local graduation rate, but I would guess it's upwards of 30+ a year. You can do the math.
File under general/
Fri Mar 18 06:56:54 CT 2005
New Look
Yet again. I'm experimenting with more CSS and trying to make it a little
easier to navigate.
File under general/
Wed Mar 16 13:23:45 CT 2005
Google
I use it. Don't you?
But at what cost?
We spent a lot of time discussing Google in my library class last fall. Google is ripe fodder
for librarian anxiety, because at first glance, it poses the single biggest threat to the future
of real, live, paid librarians. From the
Google email site:
Google's mission is to organize the world's information and make it universally useful and accessible.
Sounds like a library mission statement, yes?
As a poet put it, in the information glut, poets are the ones who help
discern knowledge from information. That's what librarians do too. And usually
with a little less opaqueness than poets.
But if the powerful Google aims to do the same thing, how can mere mortal librarians stand
in its mighty path? Do they need to? Librarians use Google all the time, as a tool to help
find relevant and authoritative information for library users.
It's well known, however, that it is possible to buy and/or fool rankings in
Google. And rank is the arbiter of authority, at least, to the casual user
(ie., 95% of Google users).
So for now, librarians provide that vital service: helping
weed what's relevant and authoritative from what's not. That's what librarians
have always done. Can Google replace that function? Can a machine replace a
human being?
That's a pretty stale question, I know. Perhaps a better point to make is that
if we
believe that a machine can replace a human being, then we will
fail to fund things like libraries and librarians. If the popular mindset is
that Google offers everything a librarian can, soon there won't be a library to go to.
File under general/
Wed Mar 16 08:10:56 CT 2005
Jack Handy
Got this great spam last week. Part of the lastest spam trend: non sequitor emails
intended to elicit a reply -- just so the spammer will know they hit a real address.
It's like TV: free entertainment delivered right to my screen.
Sometimes when I reflect back on all the beer I drink I feel ashamed.
Then I look into the glass and think about the workers in the brewery
and all of their hopes and dreams. If I didn't drink this beer,
they might be out of work and their dreams would be shattered.
Then I say to myself, "It is better that I drink this beer and let
their dreams come true than to be selfish and worry about my liver."
-- Jack Handy
Beautiful.
File under spam hall of shame/
Fri Mar 4 09:24:17 CT 2005
Weather != Climate
I was at the dentist this morning, and amid the smalltalk, the dentist made
this off-hand comment that I hear so often from my fellow Minnesotans: I wouldn't mind
more 40-degree days.
Around here, that's a very warm winter day.
Comments like that really bother me. They're symptomatic of our culture's
myopia. I enjoy the occasional 40-degree day in February -- the annual
February thaw is a holy thing -- but that's not the problem. The problem is when
we have lots of 40-degree days in a winter. Winter after winter. Then it's not weather
anymore; it's climate. And climate change, while perhaps unavoidable in the long run,
is going to alter human life on this planet -- and not for the better.
File under general/
Fri Feb 18 12:45:23 CT 2005
Ebay spam
You might get this spam yourself, as I did this morning. A clever hoax purporting to be from Ebay
asking you to verify your credit card information. Don't be fooled; this is a
scam intended to steal your credit identity.
Of course, you could avoid credit cards altogether, as
Bob Smith seems to suggest.
I guess
I suggest that too.
File under spam hall of shame/
Fri Feb 18 10:38:47 CT 2005
Franken for Senate!
I know, I know. He's just announced he's not running. But I woulda worked for him!
File under general/
Thu Feb 10 14:50:08 CT 2005
Spam
You've gotten it too, I know. But I must say, they just get more and more interesting.
Just this morning I got one with the subject line
==Best Online Pharmacy=== -- pure
spam for sure. When I clicked on it to delete it, I got a glance at the body before it disappeared
and I had to retrieve it from the trash. Incredible. It was like 100 of the most cliched
hallmark-like one-liners you have ever heard, all run together in a long paragraph. Sure,
there was a URL at the beginning to some jibberish site (which I subsequently traced back to China
Telecom (is that a real company?) via whois) -- but the concept was really smart. Lots of
random English phrases, real phrases, that should bypass all but the cruelest spam blockers (as
it did mine).
A little excerpt for fun:
They'll tell you what can't be done, and why. Then do it. All love shifts and changes. I don't know if you can be wholeheartedly in love all the time. The Babylon project was our last, best hope for peace. .. It failed. .. But in the year of the Shadow war it became something greater: our last, best hope .. for victory. The year is 2260, the place: Babylon 5.Love is always bestowed as a gift - freely, willingly and without expectation. We don't love to be loved; we love to love. When we drink, we get drunk. When we get drunk, we fall asleep. When we fall asleep, we commit no sin. When we commit no sin, we go to heaven. So, let's all get drunk and go to heaven!
I kid you not. That's some great stuff. It's like spam magnetic refrigerator poetry.
Update: got another one, same content, but a better subject line:
Phermacy you wish.
File under spam hall of shame/
Thu Feb 10 10:34:46 CT 2005
You'd think...
That nothing happens around here since there's no recent entry, right?
But of course, just the opposite is true. A late night tonight, upgrading
some sw for work. Found a great new site today:
workzoo.
They use Swish-e to spider job sites from all over the US and make them searchable
from one place. Very nice. And check out the cool map with geographic distribution
of your search results. Tres cool.
File under general/
Tue Feb 8 23:17:05 CT 2005
Credit Cards = Lotus Flowers
I've been thinking a lot about Frank's
Kansas book. Mostly I've been thinking that he did an excellent
job of describing the situation, but wasn't as conclusive as I would have liked about the
why of his thesis.
Why do so many lower income Americans vote against their
economic interests and vote Republican? Because of
class, Frank argues. Because there
persists in this country a class resentment against the 'educated Eastern elite' --
a kind of reverse snobbery that (to my ears) sounds vaguely anti-Semitic.
Continue reading "Credit Cards = Lotus Flowers" ...
File under books/
Thu Feb 3 10:48:22 CT 2005
Death, Taxes, the death of taxes, social security and death and ...
A
very interesting
cover story in this week's City Pages, an interview
with a NYT journalist on his new book about taxes in America. Wow. This guy's
got the stats to prove what we've suspected all along: big business has been
legislating its own wealth.
I've been trying to follow the current Social Security debate, and this quote
I found very provocative.
CP: Another complex topic you render understandable in your book is how
Social Security has been used to underwrite cuts for the wealthiest taxpayers.
Given how hard Bush leaned on Social Security to finance those tax cuts during
his first term, is his plan to privatize it going to come back to haunt
him?
Johnston: None of the news coverage of social security is addressing
how it is a subsidy program for the super rich, none of it is addressing that
President Bush is not being internally consistent when he says I want you to
have more of your own money. Why isn't he simply proposing that we reduce
social security taxes by the amount of money he thinks younger workers
shouldn't pay, and then they can choose whether they want to spend it, which
would stimulate the economy, or save it, which would stimulate long-term
investment? Instead, why is he proposing to create a massive, new government
program that will funnel fees to Wall Street? None of the news coverage is
stepping back and asking that. It's all reactive to what the president is
saying. I think that's in good part because the Democrats don't have a clue.
The Republicans have an agenda and the Democrats don't have a clue.
Now, the reason the president would not propose letting younger workers pay a reduced social security tax in return for smaller benefits is that it would immediately expose that the financing of his tax cuts depends in good part on middle class workers paying excess social security taxes so that rich people can have lower income taxes. It would bring it right to the front of the budget debate. So they would never propose that.
I'd
love to hear from any economics-savvy folks out there on what you think about the
validity of these claims.
File under general/
Fri Jan 28 08:00:31 CT 2005
The Cross and the Crescent

Richard Fletcher gives us a
nice little summary
of the formative years of Christian/Muslim
interaction. And they weren't pretty. Or simple. I highly recommend this book to anyone
interested in understanding the current conflict between Christians and Muslims.

It's a sibling rivalry, similar in dynamic to the Jewish/Christian relationship.
I particularly like Jon Levenson's
book on the Jewish themes of this complicated rivalry.
The most fascinating similarity is that Christians in the early years of Islam
saw it as just another Christian sect -- in much the same way that Judaism
saw early Christianity as a Jewish sect.
File under books/
Thu Jan 20 12:49:28 CT 2005
picts
Trying to be more fun to look at. I'm a
Unix geek and don't immediately think
of graphics as a good use of bandwidth, but if it makes the page more interesting
to look at, I'll try anything once. :)
File under general/
Thu Jan 20 08:49:27 CT 2005
lisnews makes my little career decisions controversial...
the internet is such a strange and glorious place. where else could a little
term paper and my decision to drop out of grad school stir up passions amongst
a bunch of strangers.
seems my
library search got picked up on
lisnews.com
and several folks decided to weigh in.
it's not about the money, silly. it's about my time, and with whom I spend it.
as
Gillian Welch once sung it:
never minded working hard -- it's who I'm workin' for
File under books/
Thu Jan 20 08:43:29 CT 2005
What's the Matter with Kansas
The
hot buzz book
in lefty circles right now, Thomas Frank offers a
provocative theory on why many American conservatives vote against their own economic
interests. He re-frames the current political clash as a struggle between classes, over
the rightful claim to
who is the authentic American.
He doesn't spend enough time looking at the psyche of the American evangelical, who
he caricatures accurately enough but doesn't understand internally. The rest of his
book is spot on: entertaining, insightful, and I want to re-read it with a notebook
in hand.
File under books/
Thu Jan 20 08:40:43 CT 2005
The Final Martyrs

I am a long-time fan of Shusaku Endo, the Japanese writer. I have read (I think)
nearly all of his books available in English translation. I discovered
this book
of short stories during my recent adventure at the St Paul Public Library.

If you have read
Silence or any of the other Endo novels, you might find this collection interesting. He used
many of the short stories (and, to be accurate, personal essays) as exercises for working
out many of the characters that appear in other novels.

If you read one Endo novel, I'd recommend
Silence or
Deep River.

If your tastes run more to nonfiction, I highly recommend his
A Life of Jesus,
one of the most thoughtful and moving retellings of the Christian story that I have read.
Note: in
The Final Martyrs is an essay talking about the experience of writing
Life
and he mentions that he re-wrote it, feeling very dis-satisfied with the original edition. I'd like
to read both editions now, to see if I can understand his feelings.
File under books/
Thu Jan 20 08:40:34 CT 2005
In the Beginning
I finished Frank's
Kansas much quicker than I expected (though it bears a more thorough
re-read) and picked up Chaim Potok's
novel from my in-laws' shelf. It got me thinking about
the complicated feelings America has toward the Jews who live here and in Israel, and the horrific events
of the Shoah.

On that thread, I highly recommend James Carroll's
Constantine's Sword. I read it a couple summers ago and was all fired up to start
a grad program in ancient Jewish studies...till my lack of ancient Hebrew finally got in my way. A piercing
history of the Church and the Jews. There are lots of holes in his academic theories, but they are
very interesting holes, and his case is very compelling.
File under books/
Thu Jan 20 08:35:17 CT 2005
supersize this!

watched
this movie last night with my wife. wow. you'll have to drag me into mickey d's kicking
and screaming from here on in. not that we go often, but those french fries... well. salty goodness.
the longer I live the more a marxist I become. it's all economics. everything. but more insidious
is the creation of desire -- often through manufactured nostalgia.
more on the nostalgia bit later.
Jean Sulivan has good ideas
on that evil beast...
File under general/
Thu Jan 20 08:29:39 CT 2005
Past entries:
2004 .
2005 .
2006 .
2007 .
2008 .
2009 .
2010 .
2011 .
2012 .