Monday, November 10, 2008

Palin 2012!

I'm watching the Sarah Palin interview On the Record. I ignored her interviews during the campaign, mostly because I hated the interviewers. I'm not a huge fan of Greta Van Susteren, but I've liked this interview. Mostly, I think it's because I love Sarah Palin. I don't think Palin will get another chance at the Oval Office (modern politics doesn't give many second chances), but I'd be more than comfortable with her making decisions for this country.

I want to write something a little tongue-in-cheek bashing some feminism, but this post isn't the appropriate place for that (not when I've just endorsed a woman for President). I'm going to write it offline and post it tomorrow night.

November 11 is Armistice Day, the official end to World War I. World War I was the "war to end all wars." Then tens of millions died only a couple of decades later in World War II. Then Korea, Vietnam, Desert Storm, Afghanistan, and Iraq again. And that's just the major wars. Some gave all. All gave some. More tomorrow.

Sunday, November 02, 2008

Daylight Saving Time

I should blog more. Don't count on it. More tomorrow . . . or sometime.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Undecided Voters

Are the stupidest people in the country. We've had a 20-month campaign, three debates, and two candidates who are nothing alike. If you can't make a decision by now, you don't deserve to vote.

I hate all-day meetings. I was in a meeting from 8:30 until 5. It was scheduled to continue until 6:30 and was already an hour behind at lunch time. We made it through the afternoon keeping that one hour behind, but I wasn't going to stay until 6:30, much less 7:30.

Tomorrow, I get to stretch 2 5-minute conference calls and a 1-hour meeting (at the same time as the conference calls) into 8 hours of looking busy. At least they gave me a new title. Not any extra money, just a title. More tomorrow (yeah, right).

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Debates Are Over

This one was the best for McCain, by far.

My problem is that I find all the holes in Obama's position, but never remember to write them down.

Here's one on education:

Obama wants to recruit new teachers, especially in math and science. The HUGE problem with that is that we've been near the bottom in math and science for so long that the possible teachers are so inept that they can't teach it. I've seen it. Don't get me wrong, there are some good ones out there. The problem, as I see it, is that when you allow people to major in "early childhood education" or the like but don't require that they know basic math and science. Part of that is understanding WHAT basic math and science are used for. The question of "what will I ever use this for?" stumps them. You can't teach math and science without an understanding of what all this stuff means.

NB: I know several people who are now teaching. Based on my memory, only one has a science degree of any kind.

More tomorrow.

Tuesday, October 07, 2008

They Keep Calling for the Smartest People in America to Handle These Crises

Yet I never get a phone call. I mean, I already work for the government. It's not like they have to look very far to find me.

Just tonight, McCain called for a commission of the smartest people in America to look at the economic "crisis." I'll bet I never get a call to be on that commission. They're missing out.

More tomorrow.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

"A Box of Doughnuts"

What is something you can bring to the work environment to benefit the group?

The question was asked in all seriousness at one of our training sessions. It was one of those things meant to get people to think about their skills and abilities in relation to organizational goals. If you've ever been to corporate training, you're familiar with the drill. I wasn't there. Neither was the person telling me the story. According to my source, the respondent was completely serious. Knowing the person who allegedly made the statement, I'm wondering if the people there missed the sarcasm. The Human Resources rep (we always have one in our training) was apparently trying to kill him with her eyes from across the room. The more I think about the story, the more I doubt it was a serious response. It's still very inappropriate.

The reason I heard the story (I'm telling everything in reverse - it's a literary technique), is that I'm being asked to offer some thoughts on the intern program for our internal newsletter. Our public affairs office puts it together. My number one goal: don't screw up. When I fail that, my new goal is to keep my job after the interview gets posted. I'm hoping they rely heavily on the other 4 or 5 interns they're interviewing, and my name just gets mentioned in passing.

An actual new TV season is a great thing, even if it means I get nothing done. More tomorrow.

Sunday, September 28, 2008

And Boom Goes the Dynamite

Nice, relaxing weekend. Even cutting the yard wasn't so bad. I only had to cut the back yard (thank you, cooler weather), so it was more "good exercise" and less "almost killing myself." Tennessee went 1-1 this weekend, so that could have been better (Vols lost, Titans won).

Don't forget tomorrow is Chili's "Donate Our Profits Day" benefitting St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. More tomorrow.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Mmmmm, Steak

I have now pan-seared a steak. The taste was very good - not quite as good as grilled (nothing beats grilling), but the searing part had some _issues_. The smoke generated when I put the oil-coated steak on the scorching hot pan set off all of my smoke alarms. I already had the windows open and started a fan going, but the smoke alarms decided they needed some exercise. That was annoying. If I can solve that problem, it's hard to beat a steak that tasty in about 10 minutes (I cooked longer than the recipe called for, I prefer something closer to medium-well). Grilling a steak, I have to start the grill before anything else. Pan searing, I just about finished everything else before I even started the steak. Another key is to completely thaw the steak. Lee's was still a little frozen in the middle and had to be re-cooked just to get to medium. No harm, no foul, just delayed things.

Work is quiet . . . too quiet. Something is going to blow up (in a bad way) very soon. I can feel it. Part of it is that they're going to try to hand the ground testing over to me. No one has said that, but I'm about to be the only government guy working on ground tests. There's a contractor in ground tests, and flight tests are handled by two contractors (no government lead), but I can just feel them trying to put me in charge. I don't wanna be in charge.

I like watching Food TV. It gives me good ideas. Sometimes the ideas are crazy, but, like the pan-seared steaks, some ideas are worth trying. More tomorrow.

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Congratulatoriations

Lee and Jennifer are engaged. And everyone yawned. It's not that we're not happy for them. It's just that we all saw this coming. They're perfect for each other (and after 4 years, we all acknowledge this), and it was time for some life-changing decisions. So good for them.

I also had a good weekend. Well, Saturday morning was no fun (cleaning up my parents' new house they're building). And Saturday afternoon was no fun (the University of Florida needs to be washed into the Gulf). And Sunday was no fun (no complaints, just needed to be parallel to the other statements). Saturday night, though, was good. I'd say more, but I don't know you well enough to go into details here.

Nappy time. More tomorrow.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

I Am the One I've Been Waiting For

I had training all day today. It was stupid. I snarked the whole time. It was the smallest intern class we've had - 11 people. 5 of them were new (3 with about 6 weeks on the job, 1 who started yesterday, and someone else). One of them thought I was hilarious (she's clearly very smart). Another was an aerospace engineer (she got lost on the way to the building this morning, always a good sign). David (the guy who started yesterday) seems like a nice enough guy, except he said he had an engineering degree and is now doing cost estimating. I don't trust people who abandon their engineering.

Tonight, I've been watching the last of Heroes Season 1. I'd been watching it with my dad to introduce him to the show, but I wanted to finish it before I start Season 2, which I want to finish before Season 3 premieres Monday. I forgot how awesome the end of Season 1 was.

I'm looking forward to the weekend, and not just because it's another weekend. More tomorrow.

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Ladies and Gentlemen, Michael Phelps

The Shatner just showed up during Michael Phelps' monologue. I think they knew they needed to do something to liven him up. I'm not going to watch any more, I just wanted to see a few minutes of it. I'm not interested in their brand of political "humor."

Nothing to report, either yesterday or today. More tomorrow.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Nine Eleven

People alive in 1963 remember exactly where they were when they heard the news that President Kennedy had been shot in Dallas. People alive on September 11, 2001 feel the same way.

It was a Tuesday. I hadn't been in college that long. I was still living at home. My routine was to get up, eat breakfast, dress for school, then watch TV before I left for CBU. I was on a news kick at the time, so I turned on Fox News. They were already showing live pictures of the World Trade Center burning, and there were confused reports that a plane had struck the building. As reports started to come in that _something_ had happened at the Pentagon, I stood in my living room and watched the second plane fly into the Twin Towers. At first, I thought it was some footage they found of the first plane, but then I realized that you could see the first building on fire while the second plane struck.

Around this time, pictures started coming in from the Pentagon, then reports that it, too, had been struck by an airplane. In 2001, no one's first thought was "terrorist attack," not until we started to see how coordinated, how planned this was. The first tower to fall came down about the time I was leaving for school. 7 years removed, I don't remember if I saw it live or heard it on the radio then saw a video, but I still have that image in my mind. I drove to CBU with the news on every radio station. When I got to class, Dr. Brown was just putting a sign on the door that class was cancelled. I still had my peer counselling class that afternoon, but I emailed the PC that I wouldn't be there and then drove home. The news was still on the radio, but I had to turn it off. The news of another plane crash, somewhere in Pennsylvannia, was out there, but I was too drained to keep listening. I don't remember much else from that day. The next vivid memory of the events is when President Bush went down to Ground Zero. The now lampooned exchange where the President began speaking and someone shouted "we can't hear you." President Bush's reply, of course, was the "the people who knocked these buildings down will hear from all of us pretty soon" line. At that point, I think everyone was expecting another attack, and sooner rather than later.

It's been 7 years. There have been attacks elsewhere in the world. Domestic terrorists have attacked here at home. There has not been a single successful attack by foreign terrorists on American soil. Nearly 3,000 people were killed that day. Among them were heroes, fighting with their last breath to save just one more life. Also included were average people, doing nothing more than showing up for work. Buildings came down, symbols were damaged, but you don't poke a lion just because it's snoozing. As a nation, we came together in grief and sorrow and pain.
No politics today. No regular blog entry. More tomorrow.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Just a Typo Away

From being the ultimate junior high joke.

The Large Hadron Collider began operation today (actually 11:30 last night, my time), and the world keeps going on. No strange matter converting all the other matter it touches (like some kind of sub-atomic Mormons). No mini-black holes that keep growing and growing, eventually swallowing the universe (but think, no more landfill problems). No whatever else the crazies were worried about happening. Just one big phallic joke.

In other news: The Oprah has decided that presenting opposing viewpoints to hers is unfair. I love that logic: I've made up my mind, so none of the rest of you would benefit from more information. The implication is that if you're a fan of the Oprah (and she has an audience of millions), then you should vote the same way she does. Which is why I hate celebrity endorsements. They get all holier-than-thou about it.

In still other news: John McCain is polling ahead of B. Hussein Obama in several national polls. Traditional thinking is that the first convention gives that candidate a bounce, then the second convention gives that candidate a bounce to net to about zero. Before the conventions, McCain was about 5 points behind. After the Democrats' convention, Barry led by 8 - 12, depending on the poll, for about a 5-point bounce. In some recent polls, McCain made up 20 points to go from about 8 down to as much as 12 up. Most have him leading by about 4 - 6 points. The only poll that matters is the unscientific one conducted on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November (that would be the election), but I think it's clear that the choice of Sarah Palin was a wise one. Well, and Obamessiah and Slow Joe keep running their mouths. Lipstick on a pig? Really? Even if you didn't mean it the way _everyone_ took it (and I don't grant that), your great skill and experience at campaigning didn't tell you this was a bad idea?

Oh, and here's a Missile Defense editorial: Wall Street Journal

For Lee, since he was asking about a transcript of the Bill O'Rielly / Barack Obama interview:
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4

[Note: Time adjusted for my convenience.]

More tomorrow.

Monday, September 08, 2008

Cameron <3 John

Terminator: The Sarah Conner Chronicles returned tonight with a bang. Several of them, in fact. Cameron, the terminator sent by future John Conner to protect young John Conner, (and, incidentally, named after the key grip from the first three films) declared her love for the future leader of the human resistance. Then, things got weird.

I have nothing to do at work this week. It means there's nothing to mess up, but it also makes for a very long 40 hours. I guess I could try to get some information to do the stupid thing my boss wants (he's on vacation this week, but I bet he'll ask for it next week at the staff meeting). I have two degrees in mechanical engineering, and he wants me to compile people's vacation and travel into a calendar. I've made the calendar, I just haven't bugged people for the information to fill it in. These people have real work to be doing, and I just . . . don't care. Lee, what does Dilbert say about this situation?

Politics. I may have a project to keep me busy. I need to hear back. I received a request for topics of interest for teaching middle school-aged kids how to look at politics for themselves. I sent about 25 - 30 items and volunteered to help fit them to a curriculum. The trick is to do so fairly with a conservative slant. Raising little Republicans is the goal.

Back to my book. More tomorrow.

Sunday, September 07, 2008

I Missed You Guys

Well, not really. But this is what happens when I'm left to my own devices for blogging - several days, no updates.

I'm a little disappointed in myself, actually. Last year, I was done with The Sunrise Lands by Saturday afternoon after its release. This year, I'm not done on Sunday night with The Scourge of God. Granted, "real job" isn't quite the same as "grad school job," but I should have been done by now. I lost some momentum with a night I felt bad, and I just haven't picked up steam again.

Then this weekend, I've been watching a USA marathon of season 1 of House. I can waste time with the best of them.

I cooked tonight. Grilled marinated chicken, mashed potatoes, butterpeas, cornbread. It was tasty. I'm going to try to pick back up with the cooking. My timing is off - some food done way too early for other food. Also, leftovers are better for lunch than deli ham.

For the record, I hate cutting my yard. More tomorrow.

Wednesday, September 03, 2008

Sarah Palin - The Pit Bull

I'm taking a break from reading to watch the Palin speech. I stopped a little early because Rudy Guiliani was speaking, and I'm glad I did. Rudy's speech was amazing. He and I don't agree on everything politically, but this speech was perfect.

And now, Sarah speaks. Shhh, I'm listening.

The accent is odd to my ear, but the words are pure music. If they let me, I'm going to vote twice or three times.

She's forceful and authentic. She's hitting a little harder at the Dems than I thought she would, but I'm not complaining. As a matter of fact, as she goes on, I'm starting to wear out my hands from clapping. Here, alone in my house, I'm clapping, cheering, and yelling. I liked the choice of Sarah Palin before. Now, I love the choice.

I'm tearing up during the part about McCain's heroism. That stuff gets to me.

I want to end with two quotes I typed quickly during the speech:

"There are those who use change to promote their careers, and there are those, like John McCain, who use their careers to promote change."

"Do you know the difference between a hockey mom and a pit bull? Lipstick."

More tomorrow.

Tuesday, September 02, 2008

The Scourge of God

For some odd reason, this morning I planned to write a real blog entry tonight. This afternoon, however, I picked up the next book in my series. I've been waiting almost a year for this book, so no more from me tonight. More tomorrow.

Monday, September 01, 2008

Stupid Placekicker

You have one job on the team. One. Job. They set the ball on the ground; you kick it between the tall yellow things. While everyone else is practicing real skills like passing and tackling, you set the ball on the ground and kick it between the tall yellow things. I realize if it were easy, everyone would be a placekicker, but that's YOUR JOB. 1 out of 4 ain't gonna cut it.

David Tran Hates the Mexicans

Ask Sheena, she heard him say so at the wedding. Context is unimportant - the Asian guy dislikes Mexicans.

I'm back in Harvest, AL. Nice drive again. Actually, the whole weekend has been pretty good. Of course, leaving early Friday is always nice, and the drive was pleasant. Saturday went well. Sunday was relaxing. I could have done without the packing and loading and unloading today, but it was all my stuff, so I'm the only one to blame.

I'm thinking about spending some time before the election detailing some of the big issues, as I see them. Feel free to offer suggestions in the comments.

Now, I'm watching football. Go Vols! More tomorrow.

Sunday, August 31, 2008

Football and FoodTV

Stupid people at Borders bookstore. No one will sell me my book. OK, so it isn't officially released until Tuesday, but I want it now!

I also struck out on replacing my favorite disc golf Frisbee (yes, it's a Frisbee brand disc, I'm not just calling it that). The only place I've found Frisbees is Sportsman's Warehouse (near my parents' house here in Memphis). They usually have putters, mid-ranges, and a starter pack (putter, mid-range, and driver boxed together). Today, they had the starter pack and the mid-range, but no putter alone. I could have bought the starter pack, but I have plenty of the other discs, and I'm cheap. So no joy.

Let's hope I avoid strike 3 today (though I might not know until after the day is done). More tomorrow.

Saturday, August 30, 2008

Don't Make Me Smack You with My Wedding Gift

Russell and Laura gt married today. Russell didn't cry during his vows, and the entire wedding party didn't break out into a cachophony of laughter. It was a very nice ceremony and reception. There was more afterwards, but it involved heavy drinking, so I wasn't really interested. Congratulations to the happy couple, though.

After the wedding, I went home, stopping off at Germantown Commissary for some barbecue. Central BBQ may be better, but the Commissary is top-notch. And nothing beats Memphis barbecue.

Some other interesting developments, but details will have to wait until things are clearer. More tomorrow.

Friday, August 29, 2008

McCain-Palin 2008

I'd been thinking Romney and hoping for Kay Bailey Hutchison (Texas senator). I'd seen Sarah Palin's name bounced around a few times, but not much recently. I didn't know much about her before today, but I have to say that the more I know, the more excited I am about the ticket. She's solidly socially and fiscally conservative, which balances McCain's more moderate stances (though he is strongly pro-life, as is she). She's a reformer and opponent of pork barrel spending (which McCain has to love, and I know I do). She's young and attractive (runner-up to Miss Alaska several years ago). She's a lifetime member of the National Rifle Association, an avid hunter, worked hard for a living (commercial fishing), and her son enlisted in the Army and is preparing to fight in Iraq. The Obama campaign has the audacity to impugn her experience. First, that's ludacris coming from Barack "Freshman Senator" Huessein "Most of That Time Spent Campaigning for President" Obama. Second, McCain is running for President. Yes, she's a heartbeat away, but we expect her to learn and become more experienced with every passing day. Also, when Obama was first getting elected to the state senate, she'd been in elected office for 5 years. She may not have the same time in an office of a McCain or Biden, but she trumps Obama. Third, what experience she does have comes as an executive - mayor, then governor. She was commander-in-chief of the Alaska National Guard. While not the Navy SEALS, it's more than Obama can say. While her foreign policy experience doesn't come from "living overseas," she's worked with the Canadian government on an oil and gas pipeline (it's more than you've done).

I think my favorite thing about Gov. Palin is that she seems very authentic. She was a hunter before she was running for office. She saw problems in her state and ran for office to fix them. When a corrupt establishment (of her own party) got in the way, she defeated the incumbent (Republican) governor and took out the trash. The most telling example of her truth to her beliefs is the commitment to have her youngest child (now four months old) who she knew would be born with Down syndrome. Many people, even those leaning pro-life, would have ended the pregnancy. The thought had to cross her mind; you can't be human and not think about it. She had the child. She had a choice, and she chose life. I don't take a hard-and-fast position on abortion. I think it's wrong, but I admit there is a moral element to my belief. Until we, as a nation, can come to a general consensus, I have a hard time imposing my moral standards on the rest of the country (at least until I take over the world). I do, however, have the utmost respect for a person who takes a position and stands by it, even when it's difficult to do, especially when it's diffcult to do.

I haven't even mentioned directly that she's a she. That has to make Hillary furious. Hillary was never going to be the first woman nominated as VP (that's one good thing Geraldine Ferraro did), but Palin has a very good shot at being the first female president. My preferred scenario for that is for McCain to serve, and Palin to get the nomination when he steps aside (after a term or two).

I feared a McCain-Lieberman ticket. I foresaw McCain-Romney. I hoped for McCain-Hutchison. I love the McCain-Palin ticket. I think Lieberman gets a Cabinet spot; I think Romney gets one (as both should), but I love the choice of Sarah Palin. Order me up a mooseburger, I've got some politickin' to do! More tomorrow.

Thursday, August 28, 2008

I Should Know Better

Today, I went to a meeting I didn't have to go to. Not only did they not have cookies, I got assigned an action. Really, my action is to make someone else answer a question, but I never would have gotten even that if I'd just stayed in my office like a good little intern.

I hate Barnes & Noble. I've been waiting on a book for about a year. It's set to be released Tuesday. I went to Barnes & Noble after work and inquired about the book. They had it in stock (though not out on the shelves), but they wouldn't sell it to me. It's not some hardline policiy, either. Other books, it seems, they might sell early, but not this one that I want. I don't think any of the people making that decision were old enough to drink (yes, I'm ageist again young people).

I hate packing. More tomorrow.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Boom-de-atta, Boom-de-atta

I've had that song in my head since this afternoon. (That's the song from the Discovery Channel comemrcials in case it's not clear.)

Not much at work to report today. After work, Lee and I combined cooking talents to prepare our own basil pesto pasta with chicken and mushrooms. He found some basil pesto at the store and gets tons of chicken. I cook. It turned out really, really well. It's different from the Nothin' but Noodles version, but still excellent. For a first attempt, it was more than a success.

I don't want to work the rest of the week. I want to sleep, then read my new book that comes out next week. More tomorrow.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Monday, August 25, 2008

Takes a Lot of Vodka to Get Through the Day

This from the guy who I overheard explain:

"2 bottles [of Wild Turkey, scotch, etc.] used to last 3 months. Now, I'm going through 3 bottles in 7 weeks"

Another quote from today:
Same guy: Aren't you on the wrong floor?
Female Invader: What are you going to do about it? Are you going to spank me?
Same guy: I'm not into that.
Female Invader: I didn't mean it like that.

At various points in that conversation, about half the surrounding cubes had gophers. That is, people popped their heads up over the cube walls to see what was going on.

It's early, but I'm calling it a night. I almost didn't blog, but if I'm going to do this, I need to get back in practice. More tomorrow.

Sunday, August 24, 2008

There's a Man Going 'Round, Taking Names

It's been a while. Lee says it's like riding a bike. I'm not very good at that, either - it's too much like exercise.

A lot has happened since January:
  • I turned 25 (halfway to 30)
  • I bought a house
  • I got a raise.
  • I changed jobs. I still work for MDA, but as part of my program, I rotate to different project offices. I started in Systems Engineering; I'm now working in the Radar office.
  • I took a trip to Colorado Springs on the government's dime.

All of those would have made good entries, or several good entries. Then, there's been politics. I bet you can guess where I stand on a lot of that. I'll get into that more going forward.

Go Team Venture! More tomorrow.

I'm Back, Baby!

After several months of ignoring this blog, I'm going to make a concerted effort to bring it back. "Daily" might be stretching things, but my initial goal is 3 or 4 times a week.

Check back here for politics, generalized work commentary, and random musings.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Three Months

As of today, I've been working for 3 months.

I'd promise to write more, but that's not a promise I can keep. I am going to try to do better. With the writers' strike, I'll need something to do when all new TV shows go away. More tomorrow, if you're lucky.