Sunday, August 03, 2008

She didn't die without a verb

You may recall (or not) I've written a poem about the obituaries--and how sad it is that some die without a verb. Pastor Petersen at Redeemer Lutheran in Fort Wayne knows his scripture and his verb phrases
    ". . . reported that Vivian has been relieved of this life's burdens and gone early to the reward of faith in Jesus Christ. She has come to Mount Zion and to the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, to an innumerable company of angels, to the general assembly and church of the firstborn who are registered in heaven, to God the Judge of all, to the spirits of just men made perfect, to Jesus the Mediator of the new covenant, and to the blood of sprinkling that speaks better things than that of Abel. The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away. Blessed be the Name of the Lord."
It doesn't mean her parents aren't grieving. I have two sons buried in Illinois; wish I'd known then what I know now. But the resurrection is coming.

Defeating Islamic terrorism

Iraq the Model blog says
    Terrorism cannot be defeated by killing Bin Laden or even killing every single existing member of Al-Qaeda, especially considering the decentralized structure of terrorist organizations. Terrorism can be defeated by offering a model for a bright future that gives people who have suffered for so long hope and saves them from despair.

    Iraq is now closer than ever to becoming this model, and victory in this chapter of the war is within hand…unless Obama succeeds in ending the war his way.
Other Obama Posts at Collecting my thoughts
On abortion
Windfall Profits Tax
Speeches without Teleprompter
Obama and new taxes
Europeans prefer Obama
Obama's marxism
Don't ask, don't gossip
The real hope and change
Listening to Obama, a poem
Hymn for the Obama campaign
The isms in this campaign
Obama and the Israel tantrum
Obama's Illinois record
Speechifying
The Obamas and the poor
Who's next under the Obama bus?

with contributions by Sununu.

Who needs art classes?

I saw this fun add-on at Cathy's site.

You submit a photo to any one of many possibilities at PhotoFunia--billboards, t-shirts, appliances, and there you are!

This week at Lakeside there are two art classes (one for portraits) and two writing classes being offered that I might consider. My husband is also teaching, but his classes are too hard! I don't write well on assignment, and my last portrait effort certainly wasn't as good as this little computer trickster.

Not me, Michelle

"Every woman I know, regardless of race, education, income, background, is struggling every day to keep her head above water. We've been told we can have it all, but lose ourselves in the process." Michelle Obama

Not me, Michelle. But she said, every woman she knows, and I'm old enough to be her mother and I'm not a wealthy lawyer in a high profile life. (Obama's numbers are going up now that she's back in the closet.) That "we can have it all" was a message the feminists, progressives, humanists and liberals promoted almost 40+ years ago; now it's just a straw-woman to knock down in the ladies' magazines, one more thing for women to whine about. No one gives it serious consideration these days. I was a liberal back in the 1970s, but I knew better even then. Yes, you can have it all, just not all at the same time.

My husband has been on two mission trips to Haiti and is going back again in November. He says he's never met such happy people, yet they have nothing by our standards--not a road system, not clean water, not utilities, not sanitation, and certainly not a working government. It takes confiscatory taxes and gives nothing in return. Not even promises of hope and change. When you place your faith in careers, government bureaucracy, relationships, consumer goods or even your own power to make everything work your way, you're bound to be disappointed.

Carville on the 2004 loss

I saw this at The Chief Source, a Democrat blog, in November 2004.
    MR. CARVILLE: The purpose of a political party in a democracy is to win elections. We're not doing that well enough, and I think that we can't deny that the problem exists. I think we have to confront the problem. And by and large, our message has been we can manage problems, while the Republicans, although they will say we can solve problems, they produce a narrative. We produce a litany. They say, "I'm going to protect you from the terrorists in Tehran and the homos in Hollywood." We say, "We're for clean air, better schools, more health care." And so there's a Republican narrative, a story, and there's a Democratic litany. And, you know, at a point, you look at 45 Senate seats, you look at a lost presidential election, and you say, "We have to rethink this thing." I really believe that.

    MR. RUSSERT: But you're suggesting the Democrats lost, that George Bush didn't win.

    MR. CARVILLE: Well, I'm suggesting--look, I said both. I gave him enormous credit. I said it was the signature political achievement of my life, but it wasn't just this election--and I think it's an election that people wanted change. I think if we had produced--the party itself--I just don't want to focus on Senator Kerry or his campaign. This is not the first election that we've lost. There's--something is setting in here.

    Now, having said that, my friends caution me, and they're right. I mean, 48 percent--I mean, we're not starting in terms of shambles here, but I think this is a message to the Democratic Party: We need to produce a narrative. We need to be more about solving problems as opposed to managing them, and I think it's going to be interesting to see how it comes out.
Now it's the Republicans saying we're for clean air, better schools, and more health care, and the Democrats are for hope and change. They've switched focuses. Democrats decided they don't win with Hollywood and have gone to church. Republicans decided to go to warm and fuzzy specifics that sound good and offer nothing. It worked. Carville is one smart guy (he married a Republican). At that time (November 2004), Obama was preferred by 3% of Democrats, Hillary Clinton by 25%.

I watched all those weepy Democrats and sad faced media-folk in the post 2004 election analyses. They really focused on religion and cultivating the grass roots as the keys to winning (so long Hollywood celebs--see you after the election). And it worked--at least in Ohio--in 2006. We elected a former Methodist minister as our next governor. Very pious man, nice looking, good machine. But it really grates on my nerves to see him in ads for the state lottery.

Evangelicals have helped. The "emergent church" movement has decided the message of the cross isn't nearly as much fun as social feel-good topics and flashy worship services with loud music. So we can't give the Democrats all the credit.

Saturday, August 02, 2008

Lakeside 2008 Sound of Music

Our local community theater group performed Sound of Music this past week. I didn't go--I heard it was about 3 hours; see my item on arthritis! However, did you know Maria von Trapp is 93 and still playing music? She visited her home town recently. Story here.

SiteMeter and blogspot having a problem

Imagine my surprise when IE said it wouldn't open my blog! I refuse to do any add-ons since the laptop is so touchy, so I didn't want to try Firefox. So I poked around on the various discussion lists and someone said SiteMeter was the problem. I really hesitated to pull it, because I really like that system (it's free and easy for non-techies like me), but oh well. ZIP, now I seem to be working again.

Arthur and me

There’s a joke going around since before my grandmother’s day about going out with Arthur--i.e. arthritis. The last time I chatted with my nice doctor, who increasingly has moved into management and can’t take on new patients (sorry), I told him about the aches I have in my legs and hip joints especially first thing in the morning, or after vigorous exercise. It goes away, but if I‘ve done much walking on Tuesday, especially on hard surfaces like concrete sidewalks or mall walking, Wednesday morning I‘m a bit unsteady. When I stand up to leave during intermission (here at Lakeside), I’m almost out of the auditorium before my gait is normal. So even a few minutes of sitting creates an ache similar to 30 minutes of brisk walking. He didn’t seem too concerned, but said it was arthritis and recommended glucosamine chondroitin (3 weeks before you notice any change, he said) or some pain medications.

So I’ve been doing a bit of research on the internet (PubMed, Medscape, Google Scholar), looking at 1) physical problems that aggravate the joints, 2) affects of mild exercise, 3) interventions like acupuncture or supplements for osteoarthritis, 4) and the possibility of orthotics. The pain I experience is actually very familiar--I remember it as young as age 12 when repetitive motion like ballroom dancing or horse back riding would create that same ache after only a few minutes. So I’m guessing something is out of alignment and it gets worse as I age. I’ve learned that any type of aerobic dance exercise, although great fun and a good cardio workout, will really set in motion a pain sequence. Some years ago my doctor recommended trying acupuncture for hip pain, and I did--only 2 or 3 sessions. Whatever it did, either reducing inflammation or interrupting pain messages to the brain, a few sessions worked for many months. So I’m definitely taking another look at that research.

Because of our aging population, this is a rich vein for researchers. If you don’t have arthritis now, just wait a few years. The mine field in working through medical research is “the gap.” If you go to any web page of the NIH or health foundation, you see there are vast amounts of grant money if you want to research the gap in care, treatment, or diagnosis between races, income groups, genders, education, etc. Now all I have to do is find the researcher looking for ME--white, healthy, well-educated, normal BMI, married, suburban and retired.

Right now I’m looking through the research of Brian C. Focht, an assistant professor in the College of Public Health at Ohio State. Here’s why. Assistant professors are hungry for grants and publications, because that’s how you get ahead in academe--they need to be cutting edge and find their niche**; the College of Public Health used to be the School of Public Health, so it is eager to establish itself (recently got a mega grant from NIH to do all that “gap” research--our tax dollar at work); and OSU is right next door, so it’s easy to check things out if a new study is gearing up and they are looking for me.

Millions are being invested in "lifestyle" research. It's not just the women's magazines--the government is eager to get you coming and going and control everything that goes in your mouth, nose or other orifices. That's why I liked the results of this one.
    “Exercise + dietary weight loss results in improved mobility-related self efficacy; changes in these task-specific control beliefs and self-reported pain serve as independent partial mediators of the beneficial effect of exercise + dietary weight loss on stair-climb performance.” “Exercise, self-efficacy, and mobility performance in overweight and obese older adults with knee osteoarthritis,” Brian C. Focht and others, Arthritis Care and Research, 53:5; 659-665.
It seems this group did better than the “healthy lifestyle” control group. I love it when my own “eat less, move more” plan comes out on top, and doesn’t cost a thing.

Another article I read, also about knees, not hips, described mild exercise as slow walking. So I’ve slowed down, and right away I can tell the impact on the hip joints has lessened. Seems simple, but so much in exercise stresses cardio, that sometimes we forget those other muscles and joints have needs too.

Johns Hopkins Health Alerts--Arthritis

**Barack Obama, who spent 12 years teaching at the University of Chicago Law School and didn't publish a single paper, is the exception (according to the NYT, July 30). Some folks get a different set of rules.

Friday, August 01, 2008

Polls show Americans quickly forget who supported the surge

"A new poll from the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press shows the American public increasingly concerned about rising energy and food costs. The national survey, conducted July 23-27 among 1,503 adults, shows Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) did not gain significantly from his trip to the Middle East and Europe last week. The survey indicates voters are split on which candidate is better on foreign policy. 43 percent listed McCain, while 42 percent named Obama.

48 percent of voters still view Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) as more capable than Obama of defending the country against a terrorist attack, but that lead has narrowed in the last month. In June, 55 percent selected McCain as better on terrorism. On Iraq, McCain has a slim 44 percent lead over Obama’s 41 percent." from Campaign Blog, Council on Foreign Relations

What sort of change?

Just because it appears in a newspaper letters column doesn’t guarantee its authenticity, but most editors require some sort of authentication, so it‘s got a bit more veracity than a forwarded 100-times anonymous e-mail. But it's still just one man's opinion on change. This one I checked--a letter to the editor of the Richmond Times (VA) on July 7. You can read the whole thing. The Cuban American writer states he’s now been in the U.S. for forty years, but he remembers a young leader in the late 1950s who promised change and they all, particularly the press, put their faith in him. He continues. . .
    "But nobody asked about the change, so by the time the executioner's guns went silent the people's guns had been taken away. By the time everyone was equal, they were equally poor, hungry, and oppressed. By the time everyone received their free education it was worth nothing. By the time the press noticed, it was too late, because they were now working for him. By the time the change was finally implemented Cuba had been knocked down a couple of notches to Third-World status. By the time the change was over more than a million people had taken to boats, rafts, and inner tubes. You can call those who made it ashore anywhere else in the world the most fortunate Cubans. And now I'm back to the beginning of my story.

    Luckily, we would never fall in America for a young leader who promised change without asking, what change? How will you carry it out? What will it cost America?

    Would we?

    Manuel Alvarez Jr., Sandy Hook."

Digital repositories

    ". . . the digital collections that libraries, museums and archives create with great effort and expense are not always well-indexed by Web search engines, thus decreasing the potential use and impact of those digital resources. OAIster, a "union catalog of digital resources" developed at the University of Michigan, provides access to over 16 million digital resources by harvesting OAI metadata from over 1000 repositories worldwide. About 45% of this material, the authors determine, is also indexed by Google, leaving the remaining 55% "hidden" in the deep web, unindexed by Web search engines." Hagedorn, Kat, and Joshua Santelli. "Google Still Not Indexing Hidden Web URLs" D-Lib Magazine 14(7/8)(July/August 2008)
No surprise to me. Hidden probably because librarians had little to say in the design, from the looks of it. I’ve never seen anything more poorly indexed than OSU’s Knowledge Bank. Some items look like they were retrieved from the circular file or store room by the secretary and then scanned and cataloged by the lowest paid, newest hire in the department--sometimes no title page, no date of publication, no thought to subject terms or even the official name of the Department. And really folks, a lot of “senior thesis papers“ need to be tossed in a box and stored at their parents, not indexed on the internet where a junior high kid or left wing blogger can find it.

Here lies the problem (from an October 2007 presentation) in my opinion. Keep in mind that a "community" is any division or department within the Ohio State University.
    KB Community & Collection Policies

    A Knowledge Bank Community has the right to:
    • decide policy regarding content to be submitted
    • decide who may submit content
    • limit access to content
    • customize interfaces to community content
You can search by author, title, subject, "community," or date. There is no search for "creator," or "publisher," even though that information appears in whatever main page you bring up. In a database by and about OSU, I'd expect more than five entries to come up for the author, "Ohio. . .", but that was it. As subject, however, Ohio State University brings up 11. Adding subdivisions, there are probably hundreds, including Ohio State Univerity--Libraries, and Ohio State University Libraries, and library and libraries. But to actually find documents created, sponsored, published or about Ohio State University Libraries and its faculty, you'd have to search "community," and sorry, but that's not what comes to mind when I think of a university department. If in desperation you try a general search on the word Ohio, you'll get thousands, including "front matter," and "back matter," of scanned journals with the word Ohio in the title.

If other repositories created with dspace with our tax money “with great effort and expense” are this poor, why should Google have to rescue it with private money?

Covert Radio

I'm having an interesting time working through David's links (Heretical Librarian), and this morning tuned into Covert Radio, via The Long War Journal link, a real relief from listening to the Cleveland corruption and Toledo's crime wave stories (I'm on Lake Erie).
    "Brett Winterble joins Tim Lynch from VSSA, Bill Roggio from the Long War Journal and Amy Sun from the FAB LAB, from MIT. Brett interviews Tim Lynch from VSSA, a contractor working in Afghanistan, about the current situation there. Also on the line was Amy Sun from the FAB Lab at MIT, Amy is working on a ground breaking new project to help redevelop Afghanistan's infrastructure. Bill Roggio from Long War Journal also joins in to talk about his take on the latest reports on ISI involvement with AQ and the TalibanPlus reaction to the latest report from RAND."
I had never heard of an MIT FAB Lab (2,000 tons of equipment in the middle of nowhere), but Amy (an engineer) is certainly excited about it. I've also enjoyed reading some foreign newspapers on-line; I'd almost forgotten, if I ever knew, what non-editorialized "news" looked like. You don't have to slog your way to paragraph 11 to get to the point.

One of the Taliban pro-jihad poems distributed as a ring tone for cell phones — “Death is a gift,” on Al Emarah — included the phrase, “I will not kiss the hand of Laura Bush.” Perfect for the ALA anarchists. Seen at Covert Radio blog.

As mentioned before, my laptop isn't very stable. I haven't reloaded the software since October. I hope I've discovered the trick--I've stopped updating or adding anything that it didn't come with. This seems to interfere with some adobe documents and pod-casts, but this one comes through fine.

A second income? Think again

If Mr. Obama wants to raise your taxes, but still encourage marriage, the greatest non-government, anti-poverty program we have, he should first read the Smart Money article on what that second income really costs.
    "After you subtract what you'll owe the feds, your city and state, Social Security and Medicare, you may end up bringing home 60% or less of your spouse's new salary. And if the first spouse already earns a healthy income and you live in a high-tax state, the government pickpockets could easily hit you up for 50%."
But it gets worse; read on.

Two things aren't mentioned in the article. First, the illusion that you actually have that second salary, so you spend accordingly. There's no calculator that can factor in pipe dreams. If your spouse went to work really understanding she'd have less than 1/2 of that $40,000, maybe you'd think twice before buying new toys, or trading up on a higher mortgage and you'd use it to pay down debt or save. Second, keep in mind that if your spouse is in the education field or contributes to a public employees plan, all that money taken out for Social Security is for nothing if they have a state retirement plan. Neither your spouse nor you will see that when you retire. Our federal employees and military can double-dip, but not teachers. The RINOs refused to help Bush fix SS, so now it will be up to the next guy, or the next or the next.

Keep in mind also that no one has fixed the AGI--and Mr. Obama is eyeing you like the fatted lamb; he thinks you're "rich" and can pay more taxes. Remember, the middle class pays; the rich hire accountants and lawyers to hide their wealth.

Also not mentioned in the Smart Money worksheet because it's about as popular as telling someone to stop smoking, a church tithe (start with 10% and work up) on that spousal income is a good way to stay out of debt, but you need to take it off the top so you don't think you have it to spend.

Unfortunately, articles like this do not reduce taxes, they just encourage people to not marry.

Thursday, July 31, 2008

Fewer homeless

“The U.S. had 12% fewer homeless last year than in 2005, and the greatest decline occurred among those who chronically live on the streets or in emergency shelters, according to a federal report to be released Tuesday.” USAToday reports (HT Black and Right) Homeless advocates, liberals, progressives, etc. are not happy about this. Chronic homelessness especially is down, and this could put these guys out of work! It’s a huge report--144 pp. Read it if you dare.

Lakeside--a favorite place to eat

We haven’t been doing much eating out in restaurants--just our little concession to higher prices--but we are outside. Some things get repeated on the house menu because of leftovers, but they’re still tasty.


Sunday
    bratwurst
    Potato salad
    Asparagus
    applesauce
    Rice pudding
Monday
    Salmon patties
    Asparagus
    Tomatoes with mozzarella and olive oil
    Fresh blueberry pie
Tuesday
    Pork chops
    Potato salad
    Fresh beets
    Blueberry pie
Wednesday
    Meat balls in tomato sauce
    Fresh green beans with onions
    Beets
    Fresh peaches with Cool Whip and cookies
Where's the sweet corn, you ask. My husband hates it. So I eat it either for breakfast or lunch, by myself. Two minutes in the husk in the microwave. Fabulous.

Silly, inaccurate campaign ads


It's nothing new, of course. Campaign ads are intended to misinform, to terrify and mangle the truth. Take McCain's ad about the Obama "celebrity" status. Frankly, when I see an articulate, emotional speech in front of masses of Germans, Britney Spears is not who comes to mind. I'm just saying. . . It's scary!

And when Obama looks deep in our eyes and assures the TV audience that he wants to bring us back to some fabled time in history when we were such terrific folks with a proud past just as the U.S. Congress votes to apologize for slavery and Jim Crow laws, I do wonder how much this son of an Kenyan knows about being black in America.

Gigolo Golf--If I'd only known

This appeared on Craig's List
    "Please help me out as I need a place to stay next week near OSU. I am coming to town for the golf tournament. I am in my 40s, SWM, 6'3" with an athletic build. I have an air mattress so only need a room. Thanks"
View from our place, complete with outhouse

Now why do you suppose he described himself if he only needs a room? At least he can spell. If he'd checked a map, he'd see that the golf course is a long way from OSU. You could probably walk it in 45 minutes, or take the bus for an hour.

Dress code violations

There’s been a lot on the news lately about public schools instituting a dress code--mostly to get the guys out of those saggy, huge, underwear exposing jeans and the girls to tuck it in a bit. I’ve been “on vacation” for four weeks and I’ve seen every violation from skimpy to slovenly to salacious--but mostly on people my age or older! When I was a child, “slovenly” was an older adult with only one working strap on the bib overalls and tobacco juice dribbling down the chin, or a blue haired woman wearing a food stained, feed-sack apron with a run in her stockings. Today, that is practically formal wear for the over-60 crowd at leisure.

Honey, it’s OK to cover up your sagging saddle bags, lumpy knees and purple spider veins--truly it is, please! The wrinkled look was in style a few years ago, but that was for 100% linen. In polyester cotton with a touch of lycra, it’s just messy. Ladies and Gentlemen! Where is the pride, dignity and good taste you had in the 1950s, 1960s, and even the 1990s? The other day at a public event on the lakefront I saw a woman who must have been a stunning prom queen in 1949--very long legs and a lovely figure with beautiful white hair. But in short shorts? Oh my. She wasn’t wearing glasses, but I was. Those kinds of dimples are for old Shirley Temple movies.

This was OK for the 1950s

“Hang on droopy” as we sing at football games in Columbus. As the waist expands, and you purchase capris or shorts to accommodate, there’s nothing to fill out the back of the pants. I’m walking behind you or sitting in the aisle seat at the auditorium. It’s not pretty.

The younger people, however, are cleaning up their acts. I’ve seen some gorgeous 30-something moms pushing baby strollers, wearing cute circle skirts and full coverage darling t-shirts and sparkling sandals. They look fabulous. Then comes granny--often 10 years younger than me. She looks like flattened fauna, as we used to say in the vet library. I’ve even seen some mini-skirts on the 20-somethings that look great--but that’s the last cut off for looking good in that 1960s fashion retread. The younger women are heading for the dock in beach cover-ups; Oh! that their grandmothers were doing the same.

Ben Stein laments the demise of the neck-tie in the business world, but he apparently hasn’t taken a look at vacation wear.

Another blogger gone

In my last post, I mentioned some links to women bloggers, now silent. David Durant, Heretical Librarian, also turned in his blogger keys and has left the building. Dave is the trifecta of librarianship bravery. Not only is he in a female dominated profession, but he is a conservative in a profession where liberals outnumber conservatives 223:1 (which accounts for the real banned books--the ones that never get to your library's shelves), and in addition he joined the North Carolina National Guard after the war started. He gained some fame by having one of his blogs printed in the Chronicle of Higher Education. During my last remodeling of my web page, his link fell off my list of librarians, so as an apology, I'm listing HIS very interesting list of links on terror, international affairs, and radical Islamism. I'm slowly looking through them, only some of which I've read before, so I don't know how many are still current.

The War on Terror and International Affairs

Across the Bay
American Enterprise Institute
American Footprints
Benador Associates
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
Committee on the Present Danger
Council on Foreign Relations
The Counterterrorism Blog
Defend America
Foundation for the Defense of Democracies
The Jamestown Foundation
Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs (JINSA)
Long War Journal
Michael Yon
The National Interest
9/11 Families for a Safe & Strong America
Small Wars Journal
StrategyPage
Threats Watch
Victor Davis Hanson's Private Papers
Winds of Change

Radical Islamism, The Middle East and Reforming Islam

Ali Eteraz
Apostasy and Islam
Arab Media & Society
Asharq Alawsat
Big Pharaoh
Center for Liberty in the Middle East
Center on Islam, Democracy, and the Future of the Muslim World
Daily Star (Lebanon)
Daniel Pipes
Faith Freedom International
Free Muslim Coalition Against Terrorism
Hammorabi
Healing Iraq
Initiative for an Open Arab Internet
Interfaith Strength
Iraq Blog Count
Iraq the Model
Iraq Updates
Irshad Manji
Islamist Watch
Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs
Jihad Watch
Laura Mansfield
Martin Kramer on the Middle East
The Mesopotamian
Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI)
Middle East Times
Middle East Transparent
Secular Islam
Site Institute
Washington Institute for Near East Policy
Watch

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

It's happened again

Now Deborah has closed for repairs. If you are a woman blogger, and I link to you, it's almost a given that you will fold your tent, change jobs, leave your husband, or enter a family crisis that will prevent you from blogging. I'm coming up on the 5 year anniversary of blogging, and there will be no gal pals to help me celebrate. Last I looked, The Laundress and Florida Cracker were still plugging away.