| Word | Use | Definition | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alpha | adj | the socially dominant among a group of animals, particularly mammals. Among humans, the ones who control politcal, economic or spiritual power are considered alphas. Humans have throughout recorded history, chosen males to be alphas; this is currently changing. It remains to be seen if females will be any improvement. | |
| Anger | n | a natural response to reality. It should be noted that this response requires a fair amount of energy. A more efficient response is depression. | |
| Conflict | n | the natural state of relations between humans. In situations of conflict each party attempts to achieve his or her personal goals at the expense of others. | |
| Death | n | the permanent achievement of peace on an individual basis. | |
| Hope | vb | word used to describe an illusory feeling that things will get better or improve somehow. Most often followed by despair or disappointment; on infrequent occasions followed by success. Invariably this will ultimately lead to a greater disappointment or despair. | |
| Life | n | the temporary state of being between birth and death. During this period, the biological purpose of the organism is to maximize the number of similar, cooperative organisms and to minimize through competition and elimination the number of competing organisms. | |
| Love | vb | an emotion generated biochemically in the brain; designed to create bonds of dependence between humans and thus promote survival of the species. | |
| Omega | adj | in human society anyone other than an alpha. (see alpha). | |
| Peace | n | word used to describe the periods when nations are either recovering from a previous conflict or preparing to fight a new conflict. | |
| Work | vb | what you are expected to do in the period between adolescence and death. A few small numbers of humans are able to do this for their own benefit; this is unnatural. A more natural state of affairs is to perform for the benefit of the alphas of a given group (state, corporation or church being typical group examples. Dictator, despot, monarch, president, CEO, priest or minister being typical titles of alphas). |
Friday, January 19, 2007
A Depressive's Dictionary
Inspired by Ambrose Bierce's The Devil's Dictionary. Like everything else, I shall doubtless fail to complete it.
Wednesday, January 17, 2007
Sick Again
My daughter is sick again. I am worried that where they put the tubes into her right ear has become infected. Hence, no posting.
Saturday, January 13, 2007
Some things never change...
So I am reading Herodotus: The Histories. This is one of those classic books I have always meant to read and only now gotten around to. Anyway, I came across a passage that seems so apropos of the whole lobbying/corruption scandal encompassing the pigs representing the Republican party today that I thought I would share it.
For those unfamiliar with Herodotus, he has been called "The Father of History" which is not nearly as fatuous a title as it initially appears to be. So far as we have records, Herodotus was the first to write down a record of events in a form that was not dramatized, based on accounts of witnesses with both sides presented. Not bad, considering he lived in 5th century BCE, 2,500 years ago. Basically he recorded events around the Mediterranean, focusing on the wars between the Persians and the Hellenes (or Greeks). Considering Herodotus Greek citizenship, he's pretty well known to have given the Persians a chance to recount events from their viewpoints - then a novel concept in recording events (novel to the Bush administration as well, they like to accuse people who do that as giving aid and comfort to the enemy. And if knowledge and intelligence is the enemy, they are right).
Herodotus was also given the title The Father of Lies which shows not everyone liked his work. More recent historical and archeological discoveries and research has bolstered many of Herodotus' writings, which has given Herodotus high stature in the eyes of historians who are not complete assholes.
If you are planning on seeing the movie, 300, which looks to be a kick ass movie about the Battle of Thermopylae, Herodotus is very relevant as his accounting of the battle is one of the prime sources available to us today.
Enough digression, back to the story at hand. We are all familiar with how things work in the world of politics today, or at least from November 1994 until November of 2006. If you want to play, you got to pay. Donors get prime treatment, direct meetings with the power brokers and various side benefits like box seats at sporting events, dinner at exclusive restaurants and access, access, access!
Compare that with the below. Our cast of characters is Lydian king Croseus and the Oracle of Delphi. In this case, the Oracle represents the power establishment and Croseus is the campaign contributor, seeking favorable prophecies for his coming military campaign against the Persians.
It begins with Croseus having received a prophecy that convinced him the the Oracle of Delphi was genuine. Croseus decided to butter them up:
After this Croesus, having resolved to propitiate the Delphic god with a magnificent sacrifice... the king melted down a vast quantity of gold, and ran it into ingots, making them six palms long, three palms broad, and one palm in thickness. The number of ingots was a hundred and seventeen, four being of refined gold, in weight two talents and a half; the others of pale gold, and in weight two talents. He also caused a statue of a lion to be made in refined gold, the weight of which was ten talents...
On the completion of these works Croesus sent them away to Delphi, and with them two bowls of an enormous size, one of gold, the other of silver, which used to stand, the latter upon the right, the former upon the left, as one entered the temple... Croesus sent also four silver casks... and two lustral vases, a golden and a silver one... Besides these various offerings, Croesus sent to Delphi many others of less account, among the rest a number of round silver basins. Also he dedicated a female figure in gold, three cubits high, which is said by the Delphians to be the statue of his baking-woman; and further, he presented the necklace and the girdles of his wife.
Herodotus, The Histories 1.50
Then, after the donations, Croseus appeals to the Oracle, seeking favorable omens for his proposed military campaign. Upon receiving his reply:
At the receipt of these oracular replies Croesus was overjoyed, and feeling sure now that he would destroy the empire of the Persians, he sent once more to Pytho, and presented to the Delphians, the number of whom he had ascertained, two gold staters apiece. In return for this the Delphians granted to Croesus and the Lydians the privilege of precedency in consulting the oracle, exemption from all charges, the right to front seats at the games, and the perpetual right of becoming at pleasure citizens of their town.
Herodotus, The Histories 1.54
Lets compare:
Since 1997, Abramoff and his wife, Pam, have given DeLay's political action committees $40,000. Additionally, the Capital Athletic Foundation, one of Abramoff's charity/slush funds gave the DeLay Foundation for Kids $25,000 in 2003...
Superbowl
In January 2000, Abramoff leased a corporate jet and sent Tim Berry, a DeLay staffer, and Tony Rudy, a former DeLay staffer-turned-lobbyist, to watch the Super Bowl and then spend a night gambling on a SunCruz ship. They were joined by two of Conrad Burns' staffers.
Skyboxes and Other Travel
DeLay was also a frequent guest of Abramoff at the lobbyist's MCI Center and FedEx Field Skyboxes. DeLay staffers were guests of Abramoff on a trip to Pebble Beach, CA, to see the US Open.
Taken from TPM Muckraker
and:
Abramoff sent congressmen on luxury trips.
Abramoff organized trips for congressmen, their aides and their families to places such as Scotland, Puerto Rico, the Marshall Islands, and Russia, as well as the 2000 Super Bowl. These trips cost tens of thousands of dollars, and often included golfing, gambling or other recreation. Abramoff's clients footed the bills.
Legislators who traveled on Abramoff's dime include Reps. Tom DeLay (R-TX), Bob Ney (R-OH), John Doolittle (R-CA), and Conrad Burns (R-MT)...
Abramoff has admitted to bribing Rep. Bob Ney (R-OH).
According to Abramoff's plea deal, he provided gifts and contributions to Ney in exchange for official acts.
Abramoff organized a trip to Scotland for Bob Ney and his staff that was paid for in part by the Tigua tribe. Ney created legislation to allow the Tiguas to regain their gaming rights - a plan that eventually failed.
Abramoff also reportedly helped guide $10,000 to the Republican committee, a donation for which Ney received credit. At the request of Abramoff, Ney entered two statements in the Congressional Record that favored the Abramoff-Kidan acquisition of SunCruz.
Abramoff paid Tony Rudy's wife in return for Rudy's help in Congress.
According to his plea deal, Abramoff paid Lisa Rudy, wife of Tom DeLay chief of staff Tony Rudy, $5,000 per month for 10 months while she worked with a group called Toward Tradition.
In return, Tony Rudy used his sway to help the Abramoff clients who supplied the funding - eLottery and the Magazine Publishers of America.
Abramoff offered to arrange meetings with President Bush for foreign heads of state.
In 2002, Abramoff used his connection to Karl Rove to set up a meeting between President Bush and Malaysian President Mahathir Mohamad. Abramoff received about $1 million from the Malaysian government for his lobbying services in 2001 and 2002.
Abramoff also offered to arrange a meeting between President Bush and President Omar Bongo of Gabon for $9 million. Though there is no record that the offer was accepted, Bush did eventually meet with Bongo.
Grover Norquist arranged meetings with Bush every year from 2001 through 2004 for Abramoff's tribal clients. For example, on May 9, 2001, Norquist arranged a meeting between the Coushatta, Choctaw and Bush. Two other corporate entities were there. The price to attend was $25,000 per person.
Taken from TPM Muckraker
Pay to play. Some things never change.
Wednesday, January 10, 2007
iDivorce coming soon...
Of course, later, when we had a two hour plane flight back from Denver and a toddler with a raging ear infection, my wife finally admitted the iPod was useful. The kid spent two hours watching Baby Einstien videos in silence. That beat the flight up all to hell because that was two hours of screaming, kicking, crying and throwing toys. When kids ears don't feel well, doing things that cause them to pop is not smart.
Back to the subject at hand - the iMac G5 and the MacBook both have added strain to our marriage as my wife ask where her toys are? Suggesting she go buy some has not won me any brownie points either.
And now you bastards at Apple have done it again! It is unbelievable, the hatred you have for my family. Just as things get settled down after the laptop you come out with this. The simplest, most elegant, easy to use mobile phone. Seriously, if you have not seen this thing in action, go to Apple and have a look. I'm not kidding. Whether it is the iPod that lets you search through album covers, the phone that lets you use your fingers to scroll through contacts or the fully functional web browser... wow. Just wow.
It blows my PPC-6700 from Sprint out of the water. Keep in mind that that PPC is a fully functional PC and it is just DOA against iPhone. Jesus, I don't dare use it in the car - there is no way to dial with one hand and even speed dial is a pain in the ass. You need two hands, one to hold and one to use the stylus. I think you can use the iPhone with one.
Oh, Goddess, I am in so much trouble...
Tuesday, January 09, 2007
Shame
Note to my friends in the northeast: please dress in bright clothing for the next few days. Try not to look like an elderly white lawyer for the weekend. Dick Cheney is going hunting somewhere up there.
I'm not proud to be an American; I've said it before and I'll say it again, this time with fewer links. Been sitting here thinking and I realized that I cannot come up with even three reasons to be proud of my country today. Shit, the only two that come to mind are our National parks (which are badly underfunded) and our highway system which is crumbling.
There is a guy I do business with in India, we've done business together for two years. We chit chat a lot in emails and talk about family and even a very, very little about politics. He is muslim. It is pretty goddamned sad to talk to him over the phone and hear him ask if I have heard that somewhere in Texas there is a concentration camp for muslims? Is this true?
Well of course it's true.
That is just so goddamn shameful I can't think of anything else to say.
I'm not proud to be an American; I've said it before and I'll say it again, this time with fewer links. Been sitting here thinking and I realized that I cannot come up with even three reasons to be proud of my country today. Shit, the only two that come to mind are our National parks (which are badly underfunded) and our highway system which is crumbling.
There is a guy I do business with in India, we've done business together for two years. We chit chat a lot in emails and talk about family and even a very, very little about politics. He is muslim. It is pretty goddamned sad to talk to him over the phone and hear him ask if I have heard that somewhere in Texas there is a concentration camp for muslims? Is this true?
Well of course it's true.
That is just so goddamn shameful I can't think of anything else to say.
Sunday, January 07, 2007
Small miracles
No word yet on the Prius. In some ways, I don't even want to hear. I have this sickening feeling it will never be quite the same car that I loved so well. Also, I am now having to clean the hell out of the garage so that there is room for the Prius inside. No more leaving the Prius outside. I still think I am more likely to use a gun on myself than an intruder, so that is out of the question... but Goddess, I want to hunt them down and hurt them. Which really is a sign of spiritual immaturity.
Went to an AA meeting today, something I do not do with the frequency that I need to. It was a good meeting; there was a newcomer and she reminded me why it is so important not to take that first drink. Because if my life is terrible now, all I have to do to make it much worse is drink.
There is so much more I want to write but it is 12:19am and I have work in the morning so I must stop.
EDIT: Man, I didn't realize how fucking fat and ugly I was till I looked at the pictures. Maybe I should buy a gun after all.
Tuesday, January 02, 2007
For your viewing pleasure...
Wanna hear the amazing part? They didn't take the child car seat and completely missed the iPod that I never, ever, leave in the car except last night...
People suck.
Well, that's a great start to the new year...
Went to go to work and the Prius has been burglarized. They drilled the lock, stole the airbags and the seatbelts. Left everything else including stereo, system monitor and child safety seat. Waiting on the cops now.
BTW - how do I feel about handgun ownership now? I'm still glad I don't own one. I'm still a lot more likely to kill myself than anyone else.
BTW - how do I feel about handgun ownership now? I'm still glad I don't own one. I'm still a lot more likely to kill myself than anyone else.
Too Cold
It is too cold to blog. Two days and my daughter gets tubes in her ears. Hopefully that will help her. She's too young to be this miserable.
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