Wednesday, January 13, 2010

December



Pardon and Sanctify Me


This cross stands on top of my church. It no longer looks like this because the it was painted during the tuckpointing process last year. The name comes from a classic hymn:

1. On a hill far away stood an old rugged cross,
the emblem of suffering and shame;
and I love that old cross where the dearest and best
for a world of lost sinners was slain.
Refrain:
So I'll cherish the old rugged cross,
till my trophies at last I lay down;
I will cling to the old rugged cross,
and exchange it some day for a crown.

2. O that old rugged cross, so despised by the world,
has a wondrous attraction for me;
for the dear Lamb of God left his glory above
to bear it to dark Calvary.
(Refrain)

3. In that old rugged cross, stained with blood so divine,
a wondrous beauty I see,
for 'twas on that old cross Jesus suffered and died,
to pardon and sanctify me.
(Refrain)

4. To that old rugged cross I will ever be true,
its shame and reproach gladly bear;
then he'll call me some day to my home far away,
where his glory forever I'll share.
(Refrain)


The "story" of this picture and its original color incarnation can be seen by clicking on the link below:

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Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Proust Questionnaire Number Nine

Proust Quote:
"A powerful idea communicates some of its strength to him who challenges it."

Confessions Question:
Where would you like to live?

Confidences Question:
The country where I should like to live.

Proust's Answer:
A country where certain things that I should like would come true as though by magic, and where tenderness would always be reciprocated.

As I spin a globe I know for certain that I obviously would choose to live nowhere else but the greatest country on God's increasingly less green Earth, The United States of America.

But to think hypothetically, if I could change the United States here are a couple of things I would change to make this a "more perfect union."

Close the gap between the wealthy and the poor. Things that need to change:
  • The 400 richest Americans own more than the 150 million poorest Americans.
  • Over 40% of GNP comes from Fortune 500 Companies.
  • In 1955, the richest tax tier paid an average of 51.2% of their income in taxes. By 2006, the richest paid only 17.2% of their income in taxes.
  • In 1955 the proportion of federal income from corporate taxes was 33%. By 2003 that percentage was down to 7.4%.
  • In the 60s, 70s, and 80s the average ratio of executive pay to average paycheck was between 30-40 to 1. In 2001, it was 525 to 1. In 2009, the ratio is still an astronomical 317 to 1.
  • The top .01% of American earners earned 6% of total U.S. wages.
  • The top decile of American earners earned 49.7% of total U.S. wages.
Although some are terrified of the "S" word, this country desperately needs to create a single payer universal health care system.
  • The United States is the only wealthy, industrialized nation that does not have a universal health care system.
  • In 2006, 47 million Americans were uninsured. 15.8% of the population.
  • The United States spends twice as much on health care per capita ($7,129) than any other country. In 2005, health care expenditures totaled $2 trillion.
  • 75% of all health care dollars are spent on patients with one or more chronic conditions that could be prevented.
  • From 2000 to 2006, overall inflation was 3.5%. Wages increased 3.8%. Health care premiums increased 87%.
  • The average family health insurance premium, provided through an employer health benefit program, was $11,480. Employees paid an average of $2,973 towards the premium amount.
  • The United States ranks 43rd in lowest infant mortality rate, down from 12th in 1960 and 21st in 1990. Singapore has the lowest rate with 2.3 deaths per 1000 live births, while the United States has a rate of 6.3 deaths per 1000 live births. Some of the other 42 nations that have a lower infant mortality rate than the U.S. include Hong Kong, Slovenia, Canada, Ireland and Cuba.
  • Approximately 30,000 infants die in the United States each year. The infant mortality rate is related to the underlying health of the mother, public health practices, socioeconomic conditions and availability and use of appropriate health care for infants and pregnant women.
  • Life expectancy at birth in the US is an average of 78.14 years, which ranks 47th in highest total life expectancy compared to other countries.
  • About half of the bankruptcy filings in the United States are due to medical expenses.
  • More than 40 million adults stated that they needed but did not receive one or more of these health services (medical care, prescription medicines, mental health care, dental care or eyeglasses) in 2005 because they could not afford it.
I would want to live in no other country in the world, but we can do so much better.

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Friday, December 11, 2009

Proust Questionnaire Number Seven

Proust Quote:
"Our intonations contain our philosophy of life, what each of us is constantly telling himself about things."

Confessions Question:
Your favorite poets.

Confidences Question:
My favorite poets.

Proust's Answer:
Baudelaire and Alfred de Vigny

I'm not sure that there are any poets that I have "discovered" this year. My affection for William Ernest Henley grew over this past weekend after I saw a movie based on one of his short poems. I had heard the last lines of this poem before, but I don't believe that I had read the whole thing before.

Invictus

Out of the night that covers me,
Black as the pit from pole to pole,
I thank whatever gods may be
For my unconquerable soul.

In the fell clutch of circumstance
I have not winced nor cried aloud.
Under the bludgeonings of chance
My head is bloody, but unbowed.

Beyond this place of wrath and tears
Looms but the Horror of the shade,
And yet the menace of the years
Finds and shall find me unafraid.

It matters not how strait the gate,
How charged with punishments the scroll,
I am the master of my fate:
I am the captain of my soul.


The title is Latin for unconquered. On Monday mornings I struggle to leave my bed as my body is sore after Sunday night's basketball game I feel like a bit of a wuss, because William Ernest Henley wrote this poem. William Ernest Henley wrote this poem despite suffering from tuberculosis. He wrote this poem despite having his foot amputated directly below the knee. He wrote this poem despite having lived for 30 years with an artificial foot. William Ernest Henley wrote this poem from a hospital bed. And I wince a little bit on Monday mornings because my back is a bit tender.

Of course, my fondness for the poetry of local poet Dawn Krause has increased this year as well. I encourage you to check out her writings on her blog: Impassioned Versifier

One of my favorites of Dawn's poems:

Finding Inspiration

To be creative I must waste my time
Clear my head and be sublime
Find my muse and set it free
Let the words come in to me
Venture mourning and venture death
Give every word it's living breath


Of course there is also the poem that this picture slightly inspired...





Thelma & Louise

Louise a waitress in small town
Not known to be much of a clown
Thelma married without a life
Is miserable as Daryl’s wife

Drive away for weekend retreat
No clue of what fate they’ll meet
Encounter with a macho cad
Turned their weekend from good to bad

A girl cries like that she’s not happy
Keeps the movie from turning sappy
Stop his words and gun him down
Hurry up and get out of town

A hint at Louise’s secret past
Cop with pity wants to help them last
To Mexico they must make haste
Avoiding Texas time to waste


Make a stop to get some money
Thelma finds herself a honey
Sexual awakening for our gal
She learns too late he’s not a pal


Money gone and time running short
To rob a store their last resort
Thelma shows off her new learned skill
Cops closing in armed for the kill

Comic relief in the truck driver
His gestures insult every nine to fiver
Final standoff with obscene man
Set ablaze his rolling gas can

Thelma, Louise in their car sit
Symbolizing fear and grit
A friendship till it’s dying day
That’s something fate can’t take away

There are days when I fancy myself somewhat of a wordsmith, but poetry just isn't in my arsenal. There are days that I wish that it was, but most days I'm thankful that other people have put words together in a way that is pleasing to me and they save me the struggle of having to try to do it myself.

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Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Better than Work

I took Wednesday off to go down to Tom Harkin's office with Jesse to meet with one of Tom Harkin's assistants to discuss the situation in Uganda.

If you are not familiar with what is going on in Uganda, I would suggest you check out a video put together by a group called Invisible Children.

I posted it in a blog a long time ago:


Invisible Children Video


The meeting went well, but it was to be expected. Who is going to come out and support child soldiers?

On our way to the meeting, we walked by an advertisement. I don't think that there is anything in the world that could have encapsulated what is wrong with our country more.



Ugly America


When the meeting started, Tom Harkin's assistant presented us with a letter showing both his support for ending the civil war in Uganda and his (staff's) ability to use Wikipedia.





To see the letter in full size, click the link below:

Tom Harkin Letter




Jesse in front of the Federal Building


After the meeting, we met up with Sara and hit both Ted's Coney Island and Snookie's.











It was truly a great impromptu lunch. Including when Sara called nursing homes: "Purgatory with crafts."

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Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Happy Birthday and or Election Day

Happy Birthday to Elainie!





Of course today is also Election Day. I'm not the type that tells people how to think or vote politically. I think everybody knows who I'm supporting.








However, I've never felt it necessary to try and convince people to think like me. I trust that everybody does their own research and comes to the conclusion that best fits their personal value structure.

Now I have to admit that my faith in humanity has not been rewarded very often. It seems to me that most people that I know that study politics seem to engage in optional stopping. They study the issue enough to find enough information to support their side of the issue or to figure out ways to trash the opposition, but don't actually do any real studying to understand both sides of the issue.

I'm sometimes considered an elitist, because there is literally only a handful of people that I'm willing to talk politics too. I'm pretty sure everybody who is on that shortlist knows who they are so I don't need to call them out. They are people that I respect because I believe that they can think logically rather than ideologically.

I think that this is a very exciting time to be following politics. I've cited this fact to a couple of different people and none of them have been very impressed by it, but I think it is incredible. It absolutely blows my mind. (I'm not citing this as a reason to vote for the man, just as an illustration of how far we have come in this country.)

Do you realize that an person that was born from a mixed racial family has the chance to carry Virginia in a Presidential Election? Think about this: at the time that Barack Obama was born, his parents were breaking the law in Virginia.

Those of you that get the Photography 139 calendar and put it up on your wall rather than just shoving it in a desk drawer may have noticed that I always put Loving Day on the calendar.

Many of you may have noticed June 12th was Loving Day, but just thought it was some bogus holiday made up by the greeting card industry to get guys to buy more flowers and chocolates for their ladies.

But is Loving Day about love?

It is in fact about love, but the name comes from a Supreme Court Case and the name of the Plaintiff just happened to be Loving. In 1967, in the case of Loving v. Virginia the Supreme Court made a ruling that legalized interracial marriage in the United States.

In 1958 Mildred Loving and Richard Loving were married in the District of Columbia. They left Virginia to get married because interracial marriage was illegal in Virginia due to the Racial Integrity Act. Upon their return to Virginia, the Lovings were arrested (the story is a little more lascivious than that) and sentenced to one year in prison.

The sentence was suspended on the condition that the Lovings move out of the state of Virginia. They did so, but their case made it to the Supreme Court.

In 1967 the Supreme Court overturned their convictions in a unanimous decision.

Marriage is one of the "basic civil rights of man," fundamental to our very existence and survival.... To deny this fundamental freedom on so unsupportable a basis as the racial classifications embodied in these statutes, classifications so directly subversive of the principle of equality at the heart of the Fourteenth Amendment, is surely to deprive all the State's citizens of liberty without due process of law. The Fourteenth Amendment requires that the freedom of choice to marry not be restricted by invidious racial discrimination. Under our Constitution, the freedom to marry, or not marry, a person of another race resides with the individual and cannot be infringed by the State.


It boggles my mind that within his own lifetime Virginia can have changed so much as to actually maybe consider voting for a man of mixed race.

This is not to say that this country has come all the way on racial matters. It hasn't. Not by a long shot. Not to mention that we have propositions on state ballots in this very election that are based entirely on prejudice (albeit not racial prejudice) such as Proposition 8 in California.

It just makes me hopeful for the country that we can become. Best country in the world? No question. Best country in history? Without a doubt. But there is still work to be done and I hope that Proposition 8 gets defeated in California and we take another step forward as a country.

Like I said, this is a great time to be following politics.

Remember what the great George Bernard Shaw said:

Democracy substitutes election by the incompetent many for appointment by the corrupt few.

I hope everybody goes out an exercises their right to be one of the incompetent many. No matter how you are casting your ballot.

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Thursday, October 30, 2008

House Search

On Wednesday I looked at about 10 houses. I kind of liked 1 house, so I might have a bit of direction as to what kind of house I want.

Here are some pictures.






I think I want to build something like this at some point.



This house had a fireplace and built in glass cases, but kitchen floor and all of the electrical would have needed to be replaced.



The tub too. You can't really tell from the picture, but this is the smallest tub I've ever seen.



This was listed as a "full" basement.



Beautiful wraparound porch destroyed by turning part of it into a 3 seasons room.



Not even in the top ten of the scariest stairs I descended on this day.



I might be too impressed by built in cabinets.



This was the kitchen in the house I kind of liked. I actually was surprised how much I like the window over the sink.



I'm not even going to comment.



I kind of liked the kitchen in this house. But there was no electricity upstairs and all 3 bedrooms were upstairs. Actually the kitchen was the only thing to like about this house.



No electricity upstairs, but a brand new 3 car garage???


It was definitely an educational experience.

There was a weird experience where we looked around the house while the current occupants were still there.

Maybe I've lived in a cave, but I was shocked by how many houses only had access to the basement from outside. I didn't even realize that there were still houses like that.

On a small unrelated note, I did gain some insight into the "idiot" sign at the suffrage march.

The term idiot is in the Iowa Constitution.

Article II, Section 5:

No idiot, or insane person, or person convicted of any infamous crime, shall be entitled to the privilege of an elector.

I would write more, but I want it to be a surprise when you get in the voting booth on Tuesday. If you are voting in Iowa.

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Saturday, March 01, 2008

Too Perfect for Words

Jason Baier sent me this picture. It is one of the funniest pictures I've ever seen.



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Saturday, February 09, 2008

Love from the RNC

It looks like "true conservatives" took time out from their busy schedule of ripping John McCain (Go Gang of 14!) to design some Valentine's Day cards for the upcoming holiday. As a guy with a romantic spirit, I thought I would post their Obama Valentine's cards.











Interestingly enough,it seems like the same people that designed these cards are the same people that write Hillary Clinton's speeches. It seems like many of them will be looking for work pretty soon. Maybe they can sign on with the RNC.

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Wednesday, February 06, 2008

Ann Coulter Endorses Clinton

This might have finally moved Russell over to being an Obama supporter. Welcome home Russell, you know this is where you've always wanted to be.


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Monday, February 04, 2008

Happy Super Tuesday



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Saturday, January 26, 2008

More for the Clinton Apologist

These videos crack me up. I dedicate them to my friend Russell, the Great Clinton Apologist.






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Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Clinton Apologist

These videos are dedicated to Russell.






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Thursday, January 10, 2008

Not a Huckawas

I'm posting this for good friend Jason Baier. An excellent interview with Mike Huckabee on the Colbert Report. I can't put into words how great it is to have Colbert back!



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Wednesday, January 09, 2008

Edwards on New Year's Day

I'm very excited to announce that I got FTP capabilities back on my website. I'm hoping to get into a pattern of throwing up at least a brief blog every day. We'll see how that goes. This is perhaps the end of the long blog era, but more pictorial blogs are the hope.

Below are some pictures that aren't very timely. They are pictures that I took at an Edwards rally on New Year's Day. He has since went on to finish 2nd at the Iowa Caucuses and 3rd in the New Hampshire Primary. I didn't caucus for Edwards. I caucused for Obama, but I have a Political Science Degree from America's premiere land grant university collected dust in a box somewhere, so I like this kind of stuff. I went to see a few other people, but I didn't take any pictures or the pictures turned out to be unacceptable. You might have noticed a picture of Giuliani a few blogs back that I transformed into something more acceptable.

Incidentally, that degree that is collecting dust in a box somewhere. I only owe about 1800 smackers on it now. I've almost paid off my brain. In fact, if everything breaks just right, my brain will be mine in February. The US Department of Education will own me no longer.

I will finally be able to appreciate the lyrics from that old Pearl Jam song:

The selfish, they're all standing in line
Faithing and hoping to buy themselves time
Me, I figure as each breath goes by
I only own my mind


Here are some pictures from the Edwards speech:































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Monday, December 24, 2007

Bethelehem in 2007

To know me at all is to know that I listen to NPR on the way to work and the way home every day. I was really struck by this story on the way to work this morning. Although I do kind of want to punch the guy who said the last line of the story.


Graffiti Artists Decorate Bethlehem Barrier


Morning Edition, December 24, 2007 · This Christmas season, a group of guerilla graffiti artists have gone to work in Bethlehem, the West Bank city where Christians believe Jesus Christ was born.

Bethlehem's economy and tourism industry are in tatters. Palestinians blame this on Israeli checkpoints and on Israel's massive security barrier that now separates Bethlehem from Jerusalem.

This month, international and local artists used parts of that concrete barrier as their canvas.

An artist who calls himself "Sam 3" painted a long black silhouette of a man reclining. Nearby someone painted a giant boxing scene — Jake La Motta and Sugar Ray Robinson slug it out on the concrete. And a little farther down there's a silhouette of children riding an escalator up and over the wall.

Hassan Salama, an unemployed laborer, walks curiously along a garbage-strewn dirt road in north Bethlehem that hugs Israel's massive barrier. He looks at a painting of an enormous insect toppling colossal dominos that resemble the wall itself — and he cracks a slight smile.

"I don't understand what it means. But I like it!" he says.

Nearby, along a main road leading out of Bethlehem, the British guerilla graffiti artist who goes by the name "Banksy" has painted a picture of a little girl in a bright pink dress frisking an Israeli soldier. Farther down the road, the elusive artist depicts an Israeli soldier checking the ID of a donkey.

And outside of Maha Sakar's store, a group of anonymous painters created a white dove, wearing a bulletproof vest, in the crosshairs of a gun.

"They tell me — don't tell anybody about their name. And I don't know exactly," says Sakar, regarding the identity of the artists.

Sakar, a Christian Palestinian, says some of the art didn't go over well with locals. She was a little offended by pieces involving donkeys.

But Sakar says she likes much of the work and praises the artists for drawing attention to this downtrodden city.

Unemployment in Bethlehem remains staggeringly high. The West Bank economy is in ruins. Tourism actually has been up some in Bethlehem in the last three months, but is still nowhere near the pre-intifada tourism high, which topped nearly 1 million annual visitors in 2000.

Manger Square, just days before Christmas, is all but empty — the nearby shops idle.

Israeli officials say the West Bank barrier, a 400-plus mile-long mix of cement walls, fencing and barbed wire, is vital to the Jewish state's security. They say it has thwarted many would-be Palestinian suicide bombers and saved lives.

Palestinians see the barrier as an illegal, unilateral border that has stolen Palestinian land and ruined their economy.

"It's important for international artists to come to Palestine and express the situation here in their art. And it's a start. You know we don't have art galleries in Palestine," says Palestinian painter and sculptor Souleiman Mansour.

Mansour has several of his pieces in a makeshift exhibit in Manger Square across from the Church of the Nativity. The show, called "Santa's Ghetto," is linked to the graffiti art around the city.

Mansour says he's against using the Israeli barrier as a canvas. "The wall should be used for nothing," he says, "It should come down."

But Mansour praises the artists for raising awareness of Bethlehem's plight.

"The situation here is very strange and contradictory and also absurd," he says. "And this is heaven for contemporary artists because they deal with these subjects."

The "Santa's Ghetto" art show and art auction in Manger Square, proceeds of which go to a children's charity, runs until Christmas Eve. The graffiti art on the wall and around the city could last far longer.

On his Web site, Banksy encourages people to visit Bethlehem and to explore the art and the politics for themselves.

"If it's safe enough for a bunch of sissy artists," Banksy wrote, "then it's safe enough for anyone."








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Thursday, September 27, 2007

The Presbyterian Experience

I've just had a few random thoughts cross my brain in the last few days.

Harvest Moon

Last night was the Harvest Moon. I didn't really get to check it out myself because it was cloudy and I fell asleep on the couch waiting for score updates from the Padres game. I hope somebody else out there enjoyed it.

Iowa State's New Uniforms

Yesterday Jamie Pollard announced the new Iowa State football uniforms. Take a look:











My main thing is that I'm very thankful that they didn't decide to go with white helmets. The cardinal helmets look awesome. I am not crazy about the logo. Nobody in the world identifies us as "I State", but at least the logo looks good on the helmets even if it doesn't make perfect sense.

The home uniforms do have a very distinct USC flavor to them, but I can handle that because I'd rather look like USC and have our real colors than look like a loser franchise like the Chiefs and be sporting red and yellow for some reason.



The New Peso?

I don't want to tell you what to think politically, but thanks to the completely unnecessary war in Iraq, Mr. Bush's War (thanks to all the people that caught that sweet reference to and indictment of our 4th President), the United States is borrowing 2 billion dollars a day from foreign governments. This has lead to the weakening of the dollar. So much so that the Canadian dollar is now worth more than the American dollar. To think just 5 years ago, the Canadian dollar was only worth 64% of the American dollar and now it is worth more. If we continue on this kind of decline it might at least resolve one political issue that I personal could care less about but am sick of hearing about, the United States might be come little more than flyover territory for illegal immigrants trying to make their way to Canada.

Why should the average American care? That two dollar package of tube socks at Wal-Mart is about to go up in price. The American dollar can't buy what it used to buy.


The Daily Show

Tomorrow night Aasif Mandvi from The Daily Show is going to be speaking at Stephens Auditorium. I'm pretty excited for this event. It is going to be awesome.

A little fun fact for you. I have revealed this fun fact before, but it is sort of related to the title of this journal entry.

Presbyterians is an anagram for Britney Spears. That is really about all I know about Presbyterians. However, after watching this video, I might have a clue what it is like to be a Presbyterian.

However, below is a video of Buck Henry's recent appearance on The Daily Show. The bit itself is only moderately funny, but there is a line in there I think Iowa women should hear. It is an interesting theory on why Iowa gets to have the first caucus in the nation. So if you are an Iowa woman or a fan of Iowa women, watch the video.






My only real response to this is, I guess I'm glad I was born in Iowa.

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Saturday, September 22, 2007

Lunch Break

Yesterday I went to Central Campus to see Obama speak. I didn't have a memory card with me, so I had to borrow a camera from a co-worker. It is a good camera, but it only has a 3X optical zoom, so a couple of these pictures are very heavily cropped.

I met Nader and my sister Teresa there, but I forgot to get a picture of Teresa. The first picture is of Nader.






















I wasn't sure I was going to see Obama speak this time since I have already seen him speak twice this year. However, my resolve to see him speak hardened when a co-worker went off on a rant about how reading Obama's books were equivalent to brainwashing. I hadn't noticed that I had been brainwashed, but if it seems that I have, let me know. I'm willing to go through deprogramming.

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