• Archives

  • Topics

  • Meta

  • The Boogeyman - Working Vacation
  • Coming Home
  • Via Serica

Heads Up

For my Hoosier friends, just got this from the DNR and wanted to pass it on:

Indiana Department of Natural Resources
402 W. Washington St.
Indianapolis, IN 46204-2748

Hunting Guide correction

To Wild Bulletin subscribers:

The print version of the 2014 Indiana Hunting/Trapping Regulation Guide contains incorrect information on Page 27 regarding the use of bonus antlerless licenses in “A” counties.

For counties with an “A” designation, a bonus antlerless license can be used to take one antlerless deer from Nov. 27 through Jan. 4 (the last four days of the regular firearms season, plus muzzleloader, archery and special antlerless season). Bonus antlerless licenses cannot be used in an “A” county prior to Nov. 27.

Tipton and Wells counties are the only two with an “A” designation this year.

-30-

Contact: Phil Bloom, DNR Communications, (317) 232-4003.

Not sure how many of you this impacts, but stay safe, stay legal, and good luck!

Movie Quotes – Day 323

Jo McKenna: So, what do you do?
Louis Bernard: I buy and sell.
Jo McKenna: I see. And what do you buy and sell?
Louis Bernard: Whatever gives the most profit.

The Man Who Knew Too Much

Is acting in your self-interest so bad?  Assuming that everyone participating in a transaction does so voluntarily, and that nobody is harmed by it, what is the big deal?  Capitalism has become a dirty word, and I don’t understand it.  At its most basic level, someone taking something they have of value, be it a skill or a physical thing, and selling it, is a freedom that gives the individual the ability to better their life.  On the other end of the spectrum, when a banker or investor gives money to someone to start a business or bring an idea into the real world, does the fact that they expect a return on that investment make it a bad thing?

Yes, we should all do things for truly selfless reasons. We should take care of those who are less fortunate and expect nothing more than a thank you.  But it’s the acts of self-interest that make selflessness possible.

Movie Quotes – Day 322

You want a prediction about the weather, you’re asking the wrong Phil. I’ll give you a winter prediction: It’s gonna be cold, it’s gonna be grey, and it’s gonna last you for the rest of your life. — Groundhog Day

Winter is upon us here in Kentucky.  It was cool on Saturday, but pleasant.  Yesterday, the wind started to bite, then a cold rain began falling.  By the time the sun came up at 8 this morning, there was between two and three inches of snow on the ground.  The sky was opaque and gray, and the temperature fluctuated with the wind.

Irish Woman has begun that time of year where she laments the death of the world.  No amount of Vitamin D and sun lamps will help.  Only sunshine and enjoyment will raise her spirits.  Soon, she will be distracted with the holidays.  The long, gray stretch of January and February will be broken up with the arrival of catalogs filled with pictures of flowering bushes and fruit trees.  She will begin to ‘nest’, with plans for wholesale renovations of our home, or even leaving it for something more to her liking filling her mind.  Just as her spirit seems fully broken, the first shoots of spring will find their way through the snow, and the leaden skies will slowly change over to the blue of early spring.  Then, my wife will return from the gray funk of winter, and all will be right with her world.

As for me, I’m going to revel in snow and soft sunlight through the clouds.  I am going to enjoy the months without yard work, mosquitoes, or chiggers.  I will go sledding with my youngest son, enjoy a hot cup of cocoa or cider, and go for brisk walks in the park.  This is my time.

Movie Quotes – Day 321

So that was Mrs. Lundegaard on the floor in there. And I guess that was your accomplice in the wood chipper. And those three people in Brainerd. And for what? For a little bit of money. There’s more to life than a little money, you know. Don’tcha know that? And here ya are, and it’s a beautiful day. Well. I just don’t understand it. — Fargo

Every time we watch the local news and they talk about the horrific crime du jour, Irish Woman almost always looks at me and asks “Don’t people have anything better to do?”.  I tend to agree with her sentiment.  The amount of thought and work it takes to commit a crime, then the trouble of staying out of prison, then the wasted years behind bars or under state supervision, seems to be a bad investment.  Look, I’m not talking about the “He stole bread to feed his children” thief.  I’m talking about the “I’d rather beat up old people for their money and kill witnesses” kind of thug.  Yeah, your average criminal isn’t exactly a degreed professional when he’s looking for a job, but if you just keep your nose clean, there are lots of entry level jobs around.  Entry level, when mixed with hard work and staying out of trouble, translates into something better.  If the trash who choose to rob, steal, loot, and intimidate their way into a prison cell would just figure that out, life would be a lot easier, not only for them, but also for everyone else.

Despicable

Recently, the public school system of Los Angeles defeated a lawsuit against it, in which a girl claimed that the schools did not do their duty to protect her from a sexual predator.  The scumbag in question was her teacher at the time, and she admits that during their five month ‘relationship’, she lied to her mother and snuck to hotels and other locations to meet with him.  The lawyer for the school district argued that, even though a 14-year-old child cannot give consent in criminal cases, her actions demonstrate that she knew what she was doing and that her participation was voluntary.  Apparently his reasoning is backed up by a decision in a federal court, and the jury bought it.  In addition, the judge allowed evidence of the girl’s sexual history to be introduced, which takes the creepiness and disgust up to 11 for me.

Basically, the lawyer argued that because she tried to hide her molestation and might have some sexual experience before her teacher decided to trawl the middle school for a victim, then she is at least partially responsible for what happened to her. Leo Terrell, a lawyer in the Los Angeles area, appeared on the Bryan Suits show on Friday, and argued that, as distasteful as it is, the attorney for the school district was not only right to do these things, but had a duty to do so in order to defend his client.  Mr. Terrell is correct, but I think that this assertion needs to be tempered with an admonition to the school district for allowing its lawyer to go down that dark legal alley.

Somewhere along the way, someone should have stood up and demanded that in the name of decency, these tactics should not have been used.

The school district has since severed itself from Mr. Wyatt, but the time for that was when he brought up this strategy and insisted on it, not after he follows it through in court. What should have happened was for the school district’s leadership and general counsel to tell Mr. Wyatt to not accuse the young girl of facilitating her own molestation, and that smearing her by implying that if she had a sexual history, then she should have known that sleeping with a teacher, is wrong.  The right thing to do was to find a way to defend the school district without blaming a child for being injured by one of its employees.  There has to be a better way.

I don’t necessarily agree that the school district was culpable in this case, but the leaders of Los Angeles schools should be ashamed of themselves.  The court cases that assert that a minor can give voluntary consent to sex with an adult need to be overturned and forgotten.  Their use can only widen a hole through which child molesters will escape.

Movie Quotes – Day 320

A.J.: Have you ever heard of Evel Knievel?
Lev Andropov: No, I never saw Star Wars.

— Armageddon

If you’re going to try to work with a culture, you have to know that culture.  Speaking slowly and loudly doesn’t work in a language conflict, and trying to connect your culture with others can be just as unsuccessful.  You have to know where the parallels are, where they aren’t, and work accordingly.

Movie Review – Interstellar

If you watched the TV series Firefly, you’ll recall the basic facts of how humans found themselves in the ‘Verse:  Earth got “used up”, and humans had to find a new home.  Interstellar could be the story of how that happened.

Plot Synopsis, with minimal spoilers:

Interstellar is set in the not too near, but not too far, future, where the nations of the world have had to give up their strife in order to concentrate on basic survival.  A “blight” has destroyed the world’s wheat crops entirely, and is slowly working its way through the rest of the staple crops, such as okra and corn.  Human population is crashing, with one character remarking about how it’s hard to imagine 6 billion people.  Add to that dust storms that are reminiscent of the 1930’s American Dust Bowl, and you can see why the world isn’t that great a place.  A secret program to find a better place is underway, and former pilot/astronaut Cooper is drawn into it in a desperate attempt to save his family.

Analysis:

The plot isn’t a techno-thriller, but it has an amazing amount of tension throughout most of the movie.  There are exciting semi-action scenes scattered through the movie, but they are neither over the top nor out-of-place.  They all happen for a reason, and they all support the furthering of the story.  While there is no overall antagonist, other than the “We have to save the world”, the conflicts, both big and small, between the characters fill that gap.  The movie clocks in at almost 3 hours, and by the end of it, you’ve noticed.  But don’t take that to mean that you’ll be bored and wanting to get it over with.  While the last 30 minutes or so definitely tie up all the loose ends and finish the story, it doesn’t feel too contrived.  This is a thinking movie, not a lens-flare and big explosions movie.

What I liked:

The casting is, for the most part, outstanding.  Matthew McConaughey plays the main character, Cooper.  Michael Caine plays Professor Brand, the leader of the effort to save humanity.  Anne Hathaway plays Brand’s daughter, who is a scientist and accompanies Cooper on his voyage.  John Lithgow plays Cooper’s father-in-law, who stays behind to look after his children, and puts in one of the better character roles I’ve seen in a while.  All of these actors seemed to fit into their roles extremely well, and they all turned in good performances, with Caine and McConaughey being the best in a crowd of experts.

The cinematography and visual effects in this movie were outstanding.  The space scenes look almost like something that NASA might beam back from the ISS, while the settings on alien worlds look photo-realistic.  If CGI was used as a backdrop to live actors, I couldn’t tell.

Something else that I liked was that the technology, especially the interiors of the space ships and habitats, looked real and lived-in.  Things are dirty and scuffed from use.  Things go wrong, and the characters have to live within the limits of their mission and the resources aboard their ship.  There is very little suspension of belief about how they travel, and where we have to take their word for something, it’s explained using plausible terms, rather than a semi-mystical talk of hyper-conductive crystals.

What I didn’t like:

There were only two things that I didn’t care for in this movie. One was Matt Damon, and the other one wasn’t.  Damon plays Dr. Mann, who is an astronaut who was sent on an earlier mission to scout for a habitable world and hasn’t seen another human being in years.  His performance was forced and heavy-handed, and I had a hard time believing that a man who had put himself into suspended animation after his supplies ran out would be pudgy.  This was the one place where I think the casting was wrong in this movie, and it distracted me from an important part of the story.

The other thing is really a quibble, and one I don’t think most people will notice or care about.  There is a scene late in the movie where one of the minor characters arms himself to protect against someone who he thinks will harm him or Cooper’s now-adult daughter.  They had travelled a long way from their secure area, through a world that is quickly coming apart, and the best weapon he has is a tire iron.  Maybe it’s just me, but if I was going to be traveling alone with a pretty woman across a landscape that is populated mostly with dying farms and refugees, I’d have brought something a little more ballistic for both of us.  For a movie that put a lot of thought and effort into making the space-based storyline realistic and plausible, this stuck out for me.

Overall, I’d give this movie an A.  As you can see, what I disliked in it was, to be honest, minor, and there is a lot to like.  If you like relatively hard science fiction without too much Buck Rogers, you will definitely enjoy this one.

Discussion:  (Warning, spoilers ahead)

Read the full post »

Dead Tree Version Announcement

The hard copy version of “Tales of the Minivandians” is now available at Amazon.  If you prefer the feel of paper to that of a tablet or computer, it’s ready and waiting for you.

This book is a handy paperweight, or it can be used as a backstop for precision archery.  It is a fully customizable tool for steadying table legs that just can’t seem to reach the ground.  Oh yeah, there are some short stories in there as well.

Movie Quotes – Day 319

The world is what you make of it, friend. If it doesn’t fit, you make alterations. — Silverado

I’ve never understood those who just accept things as they are.  I’m a conservative by nature, and a realist, and I realize that sometimes you just have to keep your head down and live through things.  But there are a lot of people for whom apathy is a daily companion.  Be it tradition, inertia, or just plain hopelessness, but something keeps them from looking at their condition, recognizing it for what it is, and making it better.  I hope I never get to that point.

Picture of the Day

The people who have read “Tales” have good taste in other books.