HAH!
Those people are boring.
I thought maybe I’d play “Grievance Olympics” on my own (and maybe I’d win this time), but I just can’t get motivated to wallow in all that. It’s a pointless exercise, isn’t it?
Random thoughts, critter reports, book lists and anything else I think of reporting. Not really expecting "deep thoughts", but I may surprise myself.
Those people are boring.
I thought maybe I’d play “Grievance Olympics” on my own (and maybe I’d win this time), but I just can’t get motivated to wallow in all that. It’s a pointless exercise, isn’t it?
I have trouble with documentation. Paperwork, especially, but also: I can never cite a reference in real time. I know stuff, but I forget where I heard it. Dumb stuff, too—stuff nobody needs to know, like I was once asked what country had the lowest birth-rate, and I knew it was Ireland, and that was true (at the time), but they also asked where I heard that, and I couldn't say. I remember now, where I heard it, but it doesn't matter anymore. The point is, documentation matters to some people, so you have to provide it, just in case somebody wants to refer to it later.
Once upon a time, my grandmother had a ladies' pendant watch in a bell-glass case on her livingroom table. She always told me that I could have that lovely little golden watch, someday.
One day, my grandmother died, and then my grandfather took care of that little watch, and told me that it would be mine, someday.
Eventually, my grandfather actually offered that I just take the watch, but I told him to keep it in Grandmother's memory, and that his heirs would know that my grandmother wanted me to have it.
Then, one day, my grandfather died. He had a will, but it was deemed void because others had taken over everything he owned anyway, before he died. That had distressed him, but there seemed nothing could be done. In the event, the house my grandfather had built himself from a kit was sold, for a very nice price, in a town that was gaining popularity at the time. From all they got from what he had, I was allowed to have $1000.
The little watch disappeared. It was probably sold. As with everything else they inherited that day, the people who inherited the watch had no attachment to it beyond the price they could get. They probably got the best price they could for all the things, and had a nice evening out. They didn't give a thought to the symbolic importance of any of it, or the legacy it might have represented; just the price they could get.
Now, both of my parents have died, and my brothers have sold everything they could. My school photos, prizes, mementos—in fact, every bit of evidence that i was even in that family has probably gone to the trash collectors.
I am free.
I guess.
Free like people who have no love for the things their ancestors paid dearly for, or made with their own hands, or gathered to themselves from the fruits of their labors. What happened to my grandfather's fountain pen, that he used to write the FCC with when the local TV station bled over their assigned bandwidth? (Citizen reports used to be the only way to enforce those limits.) What happened to Grandma's collection of 1930's milk glass? The beautiful teak hutch in the dining room? And her pedal-organ? Why did no one ask me whether those things would be valuable to me?
I really wanted that little watch most of all. Ultimately, I guess even that was just too much.
I’ve been watching what’s happening in Syria for a while now, and the kaleidoscopic permutations of alliances among the players, and the fact that, while victory is periodically declared by one team or another, the war just goes on and on.
I was part of my local Occupy events.
The headline on Al Jazeera said “Death Toll Mounts in Cameroon’s Linguistic Unrest”.
I can’t even.
I know what the problem is: those “thoughts & prayers” people keep sending their prayers to that violent, angry god. Time to choose somebody new! How about Ganesh‽
I thought everybody knew this:
Since 2009, the military has been paying $millions$ to the NFL for these “patriotic” displays.
It makes Uncle Sam look like some kind of sad sack, paying people to like him: “Please clap”.
I’m in favor of Universal Coverage.
This is not the same as “Medicare for All”. Medicare is an insurance plan. In fact, it’s a set of insurance plans, with the Part A, Part B, Part D, and the premiums and the co-pays and the donut hole and all that. Plus the yearly requirement to revisit one’s choices on each item. And it doesn’t cover Dental, of course, so that's an extra you have to find and buy and re-choose on a yearly basis. Who wants all that?