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Today’s Earworm

Musings

  • Girlie Bear learned a valuable life lesson the other day – It is a bad thing to put an empty Pyrex measuring cup in the microwave and turn it on for four minutes.
    • Apparently she needs coffee as much as I do.
    • I was actually impressed.  I had no idea that our microwave could heat glass enough that it would weld itself to the glass rotating tray.
    • Of course, this ruined the microwave and shattered the measuring cup, but she was trying to find an excuse to do $135 worth of menial labor for me anyway.
  • Going to the grocery store the evening before a snow storm and Valentine’s Day, which also happens to be the full moon, was an adventure.
    • The french toast fixings didn’t seem to be in short supply, but I got the last bunch of bananas.
    • People who linger in the greeting card aisle, looking over each and every option, touching their lips as they read one that is rather poignant or whatever, are very annoying to those of us who choose by the “Hmmm, that one’s pretty.  She’ll like that.” method.
    • I won’t say that people in Kentucky don’t understand the term “stranger”, but I know more about the lady who was behind me in the checkout line than I knew about Irish Woman after two dates.
  • Koshka’s existence now consists of finding a heat register to sit in front of, finding a lamp with incandescent bulbs to sit under, or finding a lap to sit upon.
    • In related news, it is difficult to type properly with a Siamese cat sitting on your right forearm.
  • Irish Woman’s Valentine’s Day gift shipped today, and should arrive just in time tomorrow.
    • Nothing says “I love you” like a new microwave.
    • I am a romantic devil, aren’t I?
  • Before you ask, no, that’s not the actual present.  I’m smart enough to go to my wife a week before Valentine’s Day, demand she send me a link to what she wants, and buy it.  Again, romantic devil.

Movie Quotes – Day 44

Brantley Foster: [reading mail while sorting] Some of this stuff doesn’t make any sense. They send requisitions through two departments to get procurements for a third. What kind of thinking is that? — The Secret of My Success

Two of the things that make me absolutely crazy is bureaucracy and ‘process-oriented’ people.  I’m not a cowboy by any measure, but even stodgy old me needs to know that slogging through a process gets me closer to a goal.  Paperwork for the sake of paperwork, or meetings for the sake of meetings make me itch.  Sadly, things like this are almost predictable once an organization grows to a certain size or reaches a certain age.  Things get so ossified that no-one can explain how they got that way or why they are how they are.  The mind numbs and you start earning your keep by habit and reflex, and the good parts of your job start to fade.

The challenge is to find a way to enjoy your job despite the bureaucratic cruft that gets layered over it.  There’s no silver bullet for this, but it’s crucial to do so.  If you can’t, you’ll either stop caring or become bitter, and that attitude is corrosive to things far beyond the office.

Today’s Earworm

I’m sorry to do this to you, but you can blame JayG.

 

Insults and Refutations

I received the following email this afternoon.  I’m honored that His Excellency, President Obama, would take the time to reach out to little old me to explain his new initiative to make McDonalds hamburgers and ammunition at Walmart more expensive.

My remarks are in italics.  And yes, I know this got very, very long.  I just couldn’t find the bottom of this particular cesspool.

The White House

Washington

Hello everyone,

Howdy, Mr. President.  It’s nice to hear from you.

Earlier today, I signed an Executive Order to raise the minimum wage to $10.10 for federal contract workers.

How nice of you to do that.  I really appreciate you unilaterally doing things like that.  Nothing like going above and beyond the requirements of a signed contract.  How much of your own paycheck are you giving up to make this happen?

It’s the right thing to do. But what’s more, companies have found that when their employees earn more, they’re more motivated, they work harder, and they stick around longer. You should expect the same of your federal government.

Companies have found that what motivates people who make minimum wage is the chance to get the heck off the bottom rung of the economic ladder and quit making minimum wage.   You’d know this if you’d ever had to struggle.  By that, I mean ‘hold down a low-paying job in order to put food in your mouth’.  I’d really love to know how you managed to not starve while you were in college.  My guess your job didn’t involve brooms or deep fryers.

The bottom line is this: We are a nation that believes in rewarding honest work with honest wages. And America deserves a raise.

Sure we do.  Why don’t you give us one by cutting or eliminating income taxes?  What?  That’s not what you’re talking about?  How rude of me to suggest that you quit taking a good chunk of each and every mouthful of food that goes on my children’s plates.  Sorry.

The order I signed today will help folks across the country. But it’s not enough.

Right now, there’s a bill in Congress that would raise the federal minimum wage to $10.10 an hour for all Americans. It would lift wages for more than 28 million current workers, and would move millions of Americans out of poverty. That means businesses would have customers with more money to spend.

Raising the minimum wage would grow the economy for everyone.

Especially for people who figure out a way to make the same amount of food, wash the same number of dishes, or clean the same number of buildings with fewer people.

You don’t need to believe me: Believe the 600 economists — including seven Nobel Prize winners — who wrote both houses of Congress last month to remind them that the bill before them will have little or no negative effect on jobs.

Since you’re a Nobel laureate yourself, and we all know how much respect I got for the Nobel prize system when you got that, this means a lot to me.  

When I stood before both chambers of Congress and said that I intended for 2014 to be a year of action, that wasn’t just a nice line in a speech. It was an acknowledgment that we’ve got to restore opportunity for everyone in America — the idea that no matter who you are, or how you started out, you can get ahead here if you’re responsible and willing to work for it. That’s what this “year of action” is all about.

Funny, everyone I know who started out at minimum wage, busted their tail, and kept their nose clean seems to be doing OK at the moment.  It’s like the minimum wage wasn’t a hinderance to them getting ahead.  It’s almost like making crappy wages was a stimulus to do something that made more money.

And since that speech, I have taken actions on my own to make it easier for folks to save for retirement, help working Americans get the skills that good jobs demand, and assist millions of Americans who have been looking for work for several months. I’ve announced a major new commitment toward connecting our schools to 21st-century technology.

Right, because people couldn’t get an IRA, or get into a college or a tech school, or bust their ass to find a job before your speech.  And I hate to tell you this, Mr. President, but the only use I’ve seen most of the high schoolers I know put high-speed internet to is to download pictures of naked people, play games in class, or text their BFF’s about how much chemistry sucks.  A fractional T1 and some new iThingies aren’t going to make sure our children get a good education.  Right now, I’ll trade the ability to circumvent a proxy so they can get to pr0n for basic literacy and math skills, which we were able to impart upon our children way before Jobs and Wozniak started their little produce company.

That action continues today, and in the months to come.

Oh, praise Cthulhu.  It’s only been 5 years since you first mouthed the words to the oath of office, and we’re finally going to see some action out of your office. 

Take a look at what we’ve done already and what’s to come.

DB Note – That’s a link to a webpage detailing the things that the Grand Exalted Grand PooBah has done since the State of the Union address.  Here are the highlights:

Raising the Minimum Wage – I’ve already had my say about this, so I won’t beat this particular dead horse anymore.  I’ll leave that in your more than capable hands.

Helping Americans Retire With Dignity – Like I said above, nothing’s been keeping the American people from buying into a private retirement plan if that’s what they want to do.  All this does is funnel more of those sweet, sweet taxpayer dollars into the general federal budget.

Building 21st Century Workplaces – I was surprised by this one.  I honestly thought it might be a proposal to use federal funds to modernize failing industries, or subsidize the cost of bringing high-speed data links to rural businesses.  Imagine my shock when it talked about how the government is going to work toward “Revamping workplace policies in areas such as discrimination, flexibility, and paid leave will make our workplaces more inclusive to working families and ensure America’s global economic competitiveness in the coming decades.”  Seriously?  We’re going to waste cycles trying to make it easier for people to have a flexible schedule PTO?   Don’t you people have anything better to do with your time?

Investing in High-Tech Manufacturing Did the President get dropped on his head as a baby or something?  Didn’t we just go through five years of the government ‘investing’ in places like Solyndra and Fisker?  We should have taken all of that money and set it on fire.  We would have at least gotten some light and heat out of it.  

Training America’s WorkersI’m sorry, I thought that was what my federal tax dollars that go to the Department of Education went toward, or at least my local property and sales taxes did, for like my entire adult life.  You inbred, twinkle-toed, half-wit excuses for public servants have royally screwed up the best public education system the world had ever known, and now you want to do more?  I wouldn’t trust you jokers to teach wild dogs to eat raw meat, much less teach Billy Ray or Laquisha how to use a plasma torch.

Helping the Long-Term Unemployed How about we help the long-term unemployed by not doing things we know will discourage employers from hiring new people, like forcing them to pay a huge amount for health insurance or raising the minimum wage?  How about you all get the heck out of the way and let business owners make better profits, thereby giving them an incentive to expand capacity and hire more people?

Expanding ApprenticeshipsWow, you finally said something that makes sense.  Of course, you can have all the slots in tech schools and apprenticeship programs you want.  They won’t mean diddly over squat so long as you keep making noises about how no-one ever makes it in life without a degree in underwater upside-down race baiting or whatever it was that you ‘studied’.  Quit making it easy for Little Johnny to go hang out and play XBox with his friends for four years while racking up $50,000 in debt, and maybe he’ll discover that he has a talent for wiring houses or fixing cars because doing so will keep him off the streets.

Increasing Fuel EfficiencyRight, because trying to squeeze another drop out of that particular dried out husk of a lemon is going to make it more likely for the American auto industry to hire more people.  Apparently you never heard of the law of diminishing returns, nor did you ever learn that industry loves efficiency, and would have developed and bought  large fuel-efficient trucks if that could be done economically.  Of course, I’m sure this is going to cost me and my great-great-grandchildren money as you translate “incentivize” to mean “subsidize”.

Cutting Carbon PollutionAnd here we go with the “cut carbon emissions, because they’re icky and magic fairy money will fall from heaven”.  Quit conflating your economic and fiscal policies with your fixation on a single environmental issue.  If your goal is to make Americans better off financially, quit trying to shove higher costs for energy, food, and transportation down our throats.

Connecting Our ClassroomsBecause little Johnny and little Susie need the opportunity to get on FaceBook during English class that much quicker.  See my above comment about basic literacy.

Increasing College OpportunityWell, which is it?  Are you going to encourage more people to get what for most of them will be useless degrees, or are you going to encourage them to go into apprenticeship programs?  

Redesigning High SchoolsAgain, see my earlier comments about literacy.  You know what works for education?  Let’s try a classroom of students that know that if they don’t learn what’s put before them, they run a pretty good chance of starving to death in the cold because they can’t get a job.  Let’s try a classroom where the teacher is not only allowed, but encouraged to cause pain in the life of some jackass who wants to test his manhood by being a little shit?  How about we stop spending a good third of their time learning about sensitivity, down-trodden people, and the evils of capitalistic caucasian males and force the little darlings to learn their multiplication tables again?

DB Note:  At this point, exhausted just thinking about the damage that this guy can do in such a short amount of time, we get to the end of the web site and return to the email.

Thank you,

President Barack Obama

No, thank you, Mr. President.  That was cathartic.  Say hello to the wife and kids for me.

Movie Quotes – Day 43

This excitement isn’t just about the fun of baseball. It’s not about the prize. It’s about the gloating and rubbing their noses in it. The “Nah-Nah-Nah-Nah-Nah! We beat you!” taunting if you will, that comes with the winning. — Chicken Little

The Winter Olympics are going on now, and for the most part, I’m not watching.  It’s supposed to be an opportunity for the people of the world to come together to compete for the joy of competition.  What it has turned out to be is an opportunity for corruption, waste, poor sportsmanship, and show-boating.  Every athlete seems to come with their own made-for-TV backstory, every game of tiddlywinks is an opportunity for geo-political overanalysis on cable TV.

I think I’ll just watch old films of Cassius Clay.  He talked less smack than today’s Olympians.

Quote of the Day

Without even knowing it ourselves, we were ransomed by the small change in copper that was left from the golden coins our great-grandfathers had expended, at a time when morality was not considered relative and when the distinction between good and evil was very simply perceived by the heart. – Alexander Solzhentsyn, The Gulag Archipelago

Quote of the Day

One can only imagine what it was like in a Viking longhouse come the middle of February, when all there’s been to do for the last month is sharpen weapons and deplete the mead supply; when people’s fuses could be measured in microns, you’d need a pretty elaborate social code to keep it from being one lethal brawl after another. — Tam, ‘Tis The Season

 

Viking longhouse?  Heck, how about a 3 bedroom house with a basement in North Dakota?  I’m continually surprised that my siblings and I survived the long winters.

Thoughts on Winter Outages

Carteach0 recently went through a few days of weather-induced inconvenience, and seemed to come through it pretty well.  We went through a couple of days of touch-and-go with electricity, but thankfully nothing more than a few hours in a stretch.

Here’s some of the things we did to adapt on our end:

Lighting

We made sure to have a couple of inexpensive LED flashlights with magnets stuck to the refrigerator.  They go for about $3 apiece or less at the hardware store and are basically disposable when the batteries finally give out.  Ours have been getting regular use this winter, but I have a few extras squirreled away in case these start to give up the ghost at the same time we need them.

For illuminating a room, we did a few things.  In the main living area, we had the fireplace and candles ready to go.  Three or four jar candles on top of the china hutch provides enough light to see clearly in most of the room, and the fireplace adds to it.

A couple of new things have been added recently, and they came in very handy.  First, we bought a rechargeable Coleman LED lantern.  It’s the same form factor as the classic lantern, but the bottom is taken up with a battery pack and a storage bay for chargers.  Our model comes with a 110v charger for home use and a 12V charger for vehicles.  It’s kept in my room in the basement, and I plug it in for a few hours every week or so to keep the batteries topped off.  It gave enough light to read by for about 6 hours without needing a charge, and we could have gotten more out of it by using the “low” setting.  It also has a weak, yellow light for use as a night-light if you need it.

Next, we stumbled across LED electrical outlet plates.  Basically, you sacrifice one of the 110v plugs on a wall socket to charge a battery and power several small LED lights that make up the socket cover.  A light sensor on the cover turns the LED’s on when the light level drops, and they were bright enough to light up the bathroom, hallway, and Boo’s room for several hours after the lights went out.  The model we bought has a selector switch that has high, low, and power out settings.  If you use the power out setting, the lights don’t come on as long as there is power to the outlet.  If it’s interrupted and the light levels are low, the LED’s come on.  I’m going to get more of these and put them in strategic places in our basement, like near the circuit breaker and sump pump.

Heating

For the most part, we relied on our centrally located fireplace.  It gave off enough heat to keep the living room and our bedroom warm.  That meant that we had a sleep-out in the living room for the kids, but they didn’t complain.  To keep pipes from freezing, we opened up the faucets in the kitchen and bathroom to let them drip.  To keep the kitchen warm, Irish Woman put something on the gas range to cook all day long, which seemed to work pretty well.  I need to put a box of matches or a lighter in the cabinet above the stove, though.  Unfortunately, our gas oven has a cut-off which precludes its use during a power failure.  That kept me from using a trick I learned as a kid:  Bake when the power is out to heat up the kitchen.  Do they even make ovens with pilot lights anymore?

If the outage had gone on for a long time, I may have had to shut off and drain some of the water lines in the basement to keep them from freezing.  I just don’t have a solution for keeping them warm for more than a few hours.

Entertainment

Luckily, we had kept our devices charged, so we were able to let Boo watch a movie or two on my tablet, and we had Internet via our phones.  Girlie Bear continued her reading of Frankenstein for school, and she thought it was neat to read it by candlelight.  Crayons, paper, scissors, LEGO’s, and games were also used to keep Boo occupied.  It was also warm enough that on the second day of blips that he could go outside.  That was the day I took him sledding after work.

Food

I expressly forbid the opening of the freezers unless it was absolutely necessary.  For the rest of the stuff, the refrigerator kept things cool enough, long enough, that we didn’t have to put things out on the porch in coolers, but we were getting ready to do it.  Irish Woman kept things bubbling and sizzling on the gas range, and we ate well.

Things for next time

I’m beginning to consider installing a static transfer switch that would allow us to run a few of the circuits in the house with the generator.  That would keep a couple of lights, the oven, the freezers and refrigerator, and the furnace running in the event of a power outage.

We are definitely going to get a few more of those LED outlet covers and stash the LED flashlights in different places around the house.  Having lights handy was one of the things that worked out well here, and I want to make sure that we improve there.

One place where our preparations failed was the sump pump.  It’s been a wet winter, and the ground around our house is saturated.  Every time it warms up, our sump pump fills up.  Normally, that’s not a problem, and Irish Woman put in a battery-powered backup a few years ago.  Unfortunately, the marine battery that powers it is as dead as disco, so that’s getting replaced and tested.

On the cooking front, I’m considering adding a new stove to our budget for the kitchen remodel that’s looming in our future.  The current one is gas, and we’re going to stay with that.  I’m going to have to research stoves and find out if they still make them with pilot lights instead of electric ignition.  Yes, pilot lights aren’t as efficient, but an oven with a pilot light could have been used to bake or even just be kept at about 200 degrees to warm the kitchen.  This one is going to be expensive, but it will pay off the next time we lose power in January or February.

How did you all make out?

Movie Quotes – Day 42

I ain’t good enough for you, am I? I’m a hired hand. I got dirt on my hands. Pig slop. I ain’t fit to touch you, am I – you’re better. Oh, you’re so much better, Miss Laurey Williams! Well we’ll see how much better you are, and then you won’t be so free and easy and hifalutin’ with your airs! You such a FINE lady! — Oklahoma!

I’ve been guilty of jealousy, but I don’t understand it.  I also don’t understand people who think that their wife or husband is their property.  Jealousy and possessiveness mean, to me, that the person has issues trusting the other.  If you can’t trust someone to be a healthy part of your life, then why are they a part of your life in the first place?

The same goes for those who can’t take “No” for an answer.  I don’t mean the young Romeo who minds his manners, but won’t stop trying to convince a young lady of his love.  I’m talking about the guy who takes a negative response as an insult, and acts on this to make life uncomfortable, or worse, for the woman.  If someone doesn’t want you, what do you think the value of the relationship will be when it is coerced?