Sep. 10th, 2007

silveradept: A representation of the green 1up mushroom iconic to the Super Mario Brothers video game series. (One-up Mushroom!)
Carpet cleaning is tomorrow, not today. At the desk all by myself today, so any screw-ups are mine and mine alone. Called/Will call appropriate places today to set up new utilities, and luxury services such as cable television and internet service. Sunday looks to be the only day I can make it work and actually be there. So, computer access at work only for the next week or so. Meh. Have taken care of last bill of old utilities, am wondering whether my mail forwarding is working at all, because of the way things are going. Am really wishing for a paycheck, but won't get one until two weeks yet, so I'm hoping that the people back home simply smile when bills come in. Oy. It's expensive to set yourself up, and this is without any of the stuff I left behind.

Anyway, onward to more interesting things. Like a very good reason why you should all friend [livejournal.com profile] greyweirdo - The Sesame Street Mafia.

If fracturing the thigns that many people hold dear isn't your thing, then maybe some things you might not want to purchase at the local dollar store.

Or the bigger picture on things - [livejournal.com profile] bradhicks asks how many more lives will be sacrificed before someone decides that it's best not to stay involved in Iraq. This coming close to the advent of the report made by the General, of which it appears there will be no hard copy written and disseminated, instead, a report will be written by the White House and then the general will read it and explain it. The public will not know what data, if any, comes from the General's assessment and what has been added or changed by any of the writers. For those seeking hard numbers and a chance to interpret the materials for themselves, they will be sadly disappointed. Numbers that are available, however, are things like Syria's restrictions on accepting Iraqi refugees. Isn't that a funny thing to see, where Syria's been taking on many, while the United States, with a statue proclaiming its willingness to take on everyone who wants to arrive, seems to be dragging its feet pretty hard on taking anyone.

Of course, all of this is done in the name of protecting people from terrorism. I'm prety sure, though, that this is statistically speaking, something we should not worry about at all. Of course, we can and should worry about all the other thigns that are being done to protect us that also conveniently take away cherished freedoms.

Other possible political machinations include the strange case of a Decmocratic Alabama governor being imprisoned, possibly because he was seen as a political threat. There's probably a lot of dirty laundry at the Justice Department that need airing. I do wonder what sort of skeletons will come out of the closet on all these administrations when things like the statute of limitations on some of them have passed, and others when they finally get declassified. Althoguh accidentally, we may have an answer to how people voted in the last election. Utilizing two different lists on the public record, it may be possible to match voter to vote. Which screws over entirely the idea of the secret ballot, in the nam of making sure that votes are beign counted and catalogued accurately. D'oh!

Green cars are available for sale. Just not where you are, most likely. In fact, some environmental regulations may be preventing you from buying a greener, cleaner, although not necessarily any more fuel-efficient car.

Finally, from [livejournal.com profile] bladespark, a useful way of reframing the idea of men versus women. Namely, that it's not men versus women at all, and that the oppressive overarching Patriarchy may very well be a myth (not to say that there aren't people who do believe that women are somehow less than men). Roy F. Baumeister posits in Is There Anything Good About Men? that culture and evolutionary strategy has produced the "gender gap", with very good reasons - women prefer intimate relationships, men prefer broad and shallow networks. Combined with the idea that at any given time, there is an excess of males in the populace, high-risk, high-reward behavior tends to be the way that men distinguish themselves and pass on their genes. Well, the successful risk-takers, anyway - the unsuccessful ones tend to be dead or die out childless. Sounds like Monica Piper was right - "A man on a date wonders if he'll get lucky. The woman already knows." And that might extend all the way up and down our culture.

Profile

silveradept: A kodama with a trombone. The trombone is playing music, even though it is held in a rest position (Default)
Silver Adept

August 2025

S M T W T F S
     12
345678 9
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Sep. 6th, 2025 04:09 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios