Archive for November, 2008

New Monitor

The monitor that came with our creaky ol’ Dell desktop so many years ago still works, but I’ve been growing increasingly annoyed with its lack of screen space and its abundance of physical space. Ours was a tube-based monitor, you see: all clunky, heavy box, with a relatively wee little screen perched up front. In addition to such problems, it was an energy sink.

The news that a friend needed a monitor prompted us to replace our monitor at last. After some research, I identified a Samsung T220HD as the one I wanted. Found a great deal on Amazon, and the beauty arrived today. All I can say is Wow. 22″ of HD landscape is a gorgeous thing!

Especially great is that I can now have a facsimile of a medieval manuscript up on one half of the screen while I work on the edition thereof in the other. That’ll be wonderful.

Now to run that Dell monitor to the friend…

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Carolina in the Pines

I really must stay away from YouTube. It’s the greatest time sinkhole ever invented. Indeed, I’m of a mind that if we truly want to take on another nation — I’m not naming names, but I’m looking at you, Liechtenstein! — our best weapon of mass destruction in the fight is to give them unfettered access to YouTube servers. Video by video, minute by minute, it will destroy their national efficiency, slowly bringing them to their trembling, fattening knees.

Anyway, I mention this because I was considering buying myself a few songs for my just-passed birthday — G.I. Joes and Transformers just don’t cut it anymore — and on a lark punched up some old Michael Martin Murphey songs on iTunes. That sent me to YouTube, where one can often find videos that will allow the sampling of more than 30 seconds of a tune.

And that, in turn, led me to this clip from a 2007 David Letterman show. Talk about bringing home memories . . . this is one of my favorite MMM tunes. I daresay the man’s still got it:

I’m going to go do some work now. Really.

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We’re All Related to Jesus (Literally)

I was trying to explain the inter-connectedness of populations in one of my classes this past week — because 1) I can never stay on track and 2) it seemed pertinent with so many folks locally coughing up so much vitriolic racism since Obama’s win — and in the course of that discussion I pointed out as an example the bio-mathematical likelihood that if the Dan Brown whack-jobs conspiracists are right about Jesus having children then we’re all likely to be Jesus’ children.

I was met with blank stares. (Not for the first time in my life.)

Well, here’s a link to a summation of that argument.

A more technical — and therefore way more fun — explanation is here.

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Setting Obama’s Agenda

We all have hopes and dreams for what our 44th president might do to help restore our country’s honor both at home and abroad. I’ve been reading a lot of proposals of one kind or another in this regard, but I’ve found one of the most succinct and well-considered to be Michael Grunwald’s, from Time Magazine.

Among my personal favorites among this proposed agenda are some of the items under the heading “Repeal Bush,” including this sequence:

And while he’s at it: No more timber lobbyists running the Forest Service, oil lobbyists editing climate reports, Wall Street lobbyists running the sec or Arabian-horse commissioners running anything. (Sorry, Brownie.) No more T-ball in the Rose Garden either. It’s cute, but it might bring back memories.

The Do Not Call Registry and that marine reserve in Hawaii can stay.

Underlying these suggestions is the habit of making political appointments to oversee federal agencies, which reached wider and deeper and more costly than ever under the Bush regime administration: its estimated that he has made an unprecedented 3,000 of them across the government (ah, a true small-government man!). Simply put, it makes zero sense to have political friends overseeing the day-to-day operations of entrenched federal agencies; it reeks of the kind of Christmas-stocking handing out of ambassadorships to big campaign donors that is also an old Washington habit. It prevents progress at every level.

So let’s get some leadership into these positions that’s honorable, intelligent, non-partisan, and — preferably — already respected in the agencies they’re appointed to oversee.

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History

My birthday is Thursday. Looks like I got an early gift. I’d say more but, well, I just don’t know what words would fit.

OBAMA WINS.

It’s history in so very many ways.

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I Voted

It took me 2.5 hours to do it, but I fought through the stiff headwind of long lines and ill-organized election volunteers (God bless ‘em) and made my digital mark. I voted.

I hope you vote, too, no matter the inconvenience. Nothing is more essential than voting to the continued vitality of our beautifully imperfect union. Indeed, looking back on what I’ve just written makes me wonder if there is any finer sentence possible in the English language than that simple declaration which proclaims the freedom and the responsibility and the ideals of America: I voted.

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Voting: Just Do It

And when you do it, do it with your head and not your heart should they disagree.

That’s all.

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Beware the Barbarian at Halloween

Knight and barbarian storming 4th Battalion. Photo courtesy Darron Raines.

Knight and barbarian storming 4th Battalion. Photo courtesy Darron Raines.

By request, here’s a shot from one of The Citadel photographers of the Halloween festivities at Fourth Battalion here on campus. It’s a little known fact, proved here, that knights actually wear Reeboks (and hold their mommies’ hands).

Isn’t he precious? And the Hobbit, too, right?

I’m thinking that this sort of behavior — noting especially the real working battle-axe I have at my right hip and am fingering as I look toward the camera — might have something to do with why some of my cadets fear me. Maybe. Possibly.

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