03. March 2006 · Comments Off on Somber road trip · Categories: General

I’m heading south in the morning (southeast, more accurately), to attend Joe’s funeral. I’ve printed out copies of our various postings about Joe for Nurse Jenny, and I’ll stop along the way and get a sympathy card, signing it on behalf of all of us here. Sgt Mom and I talked about flowers/plants, and if I get a chance, I’ll get something, again saying that it’s from all of us. I spent 9 hours getting from point A to point B today, and by the time I landed, I’d forgotten about tracking down flowers, darn it.

Afterwards, I’m spending the night with some other friends in that general area, so it will most likely be Sunday evening before I’m back in the land of the internet (although I might be setting up their wireless network while I’m at my friends’, so that might mean that I *am* able to get online Sat night. we’ll see).

At any rate, once I’m back and have composed some coherent thoughts, I’ll do a final “Joe post,” about the funeral. I’m glad I’m able to be there and bid him one last farewell, but man, I’m wishing that it wasn’t necessary. I’d much rather have him here, posting his thoughts and enjoying his grandkids, ya know?

02. March 2006 · Comments Off on Joe is gone · Categories: General

…but his writing lives on, I suppose as long as Jenny allows Patriot Flyer to stay up. Just like Radar, words fail me, but what better tribute than to point you to his writing here, or at his PF blog.

Go and see that he was able to attend his daughter’s wedding before he passed.

See what he did for the victims of Katrina.

And read his advice to his grandchildren; it is clear what kind of man he was:

6. Be prayerful. Your relationship with God is all-important. You can never have a relationship with anyone if you never talk to them. Pray in praise to God for His goodness, pray in thanksgiving for His gifts, pray in humility for His greatness in you, and pray in submission to His will in your life. Pray in love for His love, and for the love He has given you by sending His Son Jesus to be the sacrifice for your sins. Seek His guidance and you can never go wrong.

I look forward to seeing you again, Joe. Thanks for everything.

David

PS Hope this is in keeping with Timmer’s suggestion.

02. March 2006 · Comments Off on When words fail… · Categories: General

Sometimes images work better than words.

Bye Joe.

02. March 2006 · Comments Off on Flying Without Wings (for Joe) · Categories: General
    Flying Without Wings

Some folks are bound to earth
with heavy chains of tempered steel,
Others with but silken threads
they seem to break at will.

Some folks fly high because they know
the art of air machines,
and some, like Joe, can know the joy
of flying without wings.

He’s soaring now, above the clouds
that block our earthbound view,
and we celebrate his flight
although our hearts are torn in two.

He flies alone, without his wife
and kids – it’s solo time.
We’re left behind, and yet our friend
is with us for all time.

We watch his acrobatic flight
with hearts that are tear-dimmed.
He soars, he wheels, he dips and dives,
then skyward soars again.

We sense his joy at chains released,
delighting in his flight,
and even though the sky is dark,
he’s flying into Light.

One last approach over his old home,
one last message to send.
A feather-kiss to Jenny,
then skyward he ascends.

He’ll wait for her to join him,
for their hearts are so entwined
that even in his new home,
she’ll be always on his mind.

Love doesn’t stop for death or grief,
or other earthly things,
and when the time is right
they’ll both be flying without wings.

3/1/06, mvy
In memory of Joe Comer, cyberfriend and honorary dad.
I’ll fly with you someday, my friend. I promise.

01. March 2006 · Comments Off on In Fond Memory · Categories: General

Oh! I have slipped the surly bonds of earth,

And danced the skies on laughter-silvered wings;

Sunward I’ve climbed, and joined the tumbling mirth

Of sun-split clouds, –and done a hundred things

You have not dreamed of –Wheeled and soared and swung

High in the sunlit silence. Hov’ring there

I’ve chased the shouting wind along, and flung

My eager craft through footless halls of air…

Up, up the long, delirious, burning blue

I’ve topped the wind-swept heights with easy grace

Where never lark or even eagle flew —

And, while with silent lifting mind I’ve trod

The high untrespassed sanctity of space,

Put out my hand, and touched the face of God.

~~John Gillespie Magee, Jr~~

If I may be so bold…I would request that we, none of us, post anything for a full 24 hours… Or at least keep the posts related to Joe.

Gonna miss that ol’ man.

01. March 2006 · Comments Off on Some Tears For A Very Good Man · Categories: General, Site News

I’ve just received this email frome “Nurse” Jenny Comer:

Just want to let all of you know that Joe passed away at around 10:00 this morning. One of his favorite things to do was write posts for the Daily brief. Thank you for all the kind comments earlier.

I’m sorry – I had some other posts I wanted to do tonight. But I just don’t think I can bring myself to it.

27. February 2006 · Comments Off on Memo: It’s Just Business · Categories: European Disunion, General, Media Matters Not, Rant, sarcasm, That's Entertainment!

To: Gary Busey, Billy Zane
From: Sgt Mom
Re: Your Next Career Move

1. I assume, of course, that you will still have one in movies catering to mainstream American audiences. You know, America… that country of which you are both ostensibly citizens? The one where a decreasing number of people with disposable income and an inclination to be amused by well-crafted entertainment at the multiplex are in fact declining to report as commanded by the lords of the entertainment industry to be sliced, diced, insulted and lectured on the most recent cause du jour? Yeah, that country. Feel free, though, to cast your lot in with whoever’s movie industry floats your personal boat… this place is still, although you might get some argument among the entertainment wheelers and dealers, a free country.

2. So, guys, how do you feel, after having participated with apparent glee, in what looks like (from this admittedly distant perspective) the 21st Century’s version of that hateful Third Reich propaganda crap-fest “The Eternal Jew”? Full of that nice warm glow that comes of having stuck it to “the man”, I presume. How very daring of you. I do hope you were well paid, as that paycheck might have to last for a while.

3. So, as working actors…
(“Blondie, sweetie, have we ever seen a movie starring either one of these goofs?”
“Billy Zane was the baddie on “Titanic, Mom.”
“I think he was in “Memphis Belle, too. Maybe that’s where he got to be a pacifist.”
“And Gary Busey… who’s he?”
“I think he played Buddy Holly, ages ago… you do know who Buddy Holly is….?.”
“S**t, Mom, you were a DJ, you trained me well… he was killed with Richie Valens… wasn’t he in Point Break, with Keanau Reeves? Oh-oh-oh-oh… Billy Zane was the the “Phantom”… he wore lavender spandex, for Ch****t sake!”)
….
It looks like we shall in future be seeing rather less of you two than before… one way or the other— either the free markets’ choice or ours, as consumers.

4. I would also venture a guess, that any future American big-screen production that you have a major role in… will probably not show in an AAFES theater, not once word about this little movie escapade gets around. It’s just a guess, mind you, but I do have an instinct about these things. Military members have a long, long memory about movie actors who either mouth off about the military, or play very prominent roles in movies which defame the military. I know lots of people who have been boycotting Jane Fonda for decades. Of course, that duty was made less onerous when she barely made any movies for decades— interesting coincidence, don’t you think?

Sincerely,
Sgt Mom.

PS: Please don’t do any interviews in which you lament the unflattering way in which Americans in general and the American military in particularly, are seen by foreigners… seeing that you just now, and a couple of decades of Hollywood efforts before you have contributed so much to that state of affairs. We owe so much to you all, for generally portraying Americans as brutal, racist, crude, uncultured, ignorant and generally benighted. Thanks for all your sterling service in that regard.

PPSS: Rremember, make that paycheck last!

27. February 2006 · Comments Off on “I’m an Okie from Muskogee” · Categories: General, Media Matters Not, The Funny

Today, on FNC’s Special Report with Brit Hume, they corrected an earlier story, which claimed Oklahoma was a landlocked state, with no interest in seaports. They said, “Oklahoma is connected to the Gulf of Mexico via Catoosa.” *Sigh* I guess they don’t listen to Merle Haggard in New York.

27. February 2006 · Comments Off on Are Traditionalist Christians Now Disfavored By The Courts? · Categories: General

This from guest-blogger Gene Sisk at Volokh::

The enduring legal myth is that members of minority religious groups face a decidedly uphill battle in securing accommodation for unconventional religious practices, expression, or values from the courts. According to the conventional wisdom, traditional Christian believers may anticipate a more hospitable welcome from the judiciary when asserting claims of conscience or religious liberty. However based upon our empirical study of religious liberty decisions in the federal courts, the proposition that minority religions are less successful with their claims was found to be without support, at least in the modern era and in the lower federal courts. In fact, counter to popular belief, adherents to traditionalist Christian faiths, notably Roman Catholics and Baptists, appear to be the ones that today enter the courthouse doors at a disadvantage.

For those concerned with religion and the courts, the rest of this, and Gene’s whole series, are a must read.

As I commented at Volokh: My initial reaction is that those of nominally “Christian” faiths are more a target currently, because the practices of other religions, which the secular state have found abhorrent, have already been adequately circumscribed by the courts.

But I find this most interesting, and will follow these posts “religiously”.

26. February 2006 · Comments Off on Ghost Ship · Categories: General

The searchers found it, the ghost ship, when they were looking for something else; it lay, broken but deceptively complete, draped across the crest of a dune, like a seabird on the flat swells of a calm sea. But this metal bird had landed in a desolate and frozen sand sea, an aeronautical Mary Celeste, all of itself, and remained eerily preserved. Baked in the desert sun, wheels-up, pancake-landed and broken in half aft of the wings and entirely empty of its’ crew… but still, their gear, and extra ammunition was perfectly stowed, the guns functional… the radio worked, so did the compass and at least one of the engines. There was still-edible emergency rations, drinkable water, even a thermos of still-potable coffee… everything as it had been left.

The ghost ship fell into the abyss in April, 1943… not over water, as the crew had clearly expected, when they were at long last found and their epic of endurance reconstructed… how long did that agony last? At least a week, perhaps as long as a fortnight; there is no knowing for sure: we can only guess, starting from a scratch diary left by one who survived for a little while:

Sunday, Apr. 4, 1943
Naples–28 places–things pretty well mixed up–got lost returning, out of gas, jumped, landed in desert at 2:00 in morning. no one badly hurt, cant find John, all others present.
Monday 5
Start walking N.W., still no John. a few rations, 1/2 canteen of water, 1 cap full per day. Sun fairly warm. Good breeze from N.W. Nite very cold. no sleep. Rested & walked.
Tuesday 6
Rested at 11:30, sun very warm. no breeze, spent P.M. in hell, no planes, etc. rested until 5:00 P.M. Walked & rested all nite. 15 min on, 5 off.
Wednesday, Apr. 7, 1943
Same routine, everyone getting weak, cant get very far, prayers all the time, again P.M. very warm, hell. Can’t sleep. everyone sore from ground.
Thursday 8
Hit Sand Dunes, very miserable, good wind but continuous blowing of sand, every[one] now very weak, thought Sam & Moore were all done. La Motte eyes are gone, everyone else’s eyes are bad. Still going N.W.
Friday 9
Shelly [sic], Rip, Moore separate & try to go for help, rest of us all very weak, eyes bad, not any travel, all want to die. still very little water. nites are about 35, good n wind, no shelter, 1 parachute left.
Saturday, Apr. 10, 1943
Still having prayer meetings for help. No sign of anything, a couple of birds; good wind from N. –Really weak now, cant walk. pains all over, still all want to die. Nites very cold. no sleep.
Sunday 11
Still waiting for help, still praying. eyes bad, lost all our wgt. aching all over, could make it if we had water; just enough left to put our tongues to, have hope for help very soon, no rest, still same place.
Monday 12
No help yet, very cold nite.

The bodies of five of the crew were found, by a search party who came for them sixteen years later, 85 miles north of where they had assembled in the desert, after bailing out of their lady, their sweet and lovely lady. They were nearly 400 miles into the North Africal desert, about 400 miles farther south of where they appeared to think the were… not over the Med, or along the shoreline someplace, but deep into the desert, nearly trackless, absolutely waterless, hundreds of miles off from where anyone was expected to come.

Three of the strongest continued walking north: one was found 21 miles farther northwest, another an astounding 26 miles farther north of that. (The third was never found, although it was he who might have been found and buried in anonymity by a British unit on a long-range desert patrol exercise late in the 1940ies or early 1950ies) Airmen put such trust in their machines, such deep and abiding trust. An airman told me once, they were always told to jump when it seemed things had gone past a certain point, the point when it would seem the sensible thing to do… but so often, when it came to that point, so many of them just couldn’t do it. And there so many stories of wickedly skillful pilots, who stuck with their lady, their precious airship, and brought all home safely, against the odds, to the praise and honor of all. And yet… airplanes are things, they can and are replaced… pilots and aircrew are unique. People are unique, even the most prosaic of us might be yet, if called upon, to perform miracles of heroism, of strength and endurance… even though no one sees except our fellows, and no one knows of it, until brought to it by chance, a decade and a half later.

Oh sweet and lovely,
Lady be good,
Oh lady be good to me.
I am so awf’lly misunderstood,
So lady be good, to me.
Oh, please have some pity
I’m all alone in this big city.
I tell you i’m just a lonesome babe in the wood,
So lady be good….to me.

I don’t know what brought me to think of this, except that there are places that are supposed to be haunted, and I was thinking of these when I was on my daily walk. There are some relics of this incident in the Air Force Museum at Wright Patterson AFB…and according to some accounts, that section of the museum is particularly… interesting at night. There was also a haunting ( and I use that phrase knowingly) movie called “Sole Survivor”, made in the late 1960ies, and based on this incident, which used to show around Halloween on one of the local LA TV channels; it visualized the crew, playing endless rounds of baseball in the desert, by their wrecked ship… waiting for someone to come for them.

26. February 2006 · Comments Off on Going, Going, Gone · Categories: Ain't That America?, General, Pajama Game

The advent of spring brings with it the serious start of auction season. I only went to one or two auctions prior to taking up residence in the land of pigs, corn and soy beans, so I can’t speak much in the way of what they are like elsewhere. I suspect that because they are, in a way, a passion play that tends to be governed by human nature, they are pretty much the same no matter where you go. I’m not talking about the artsy fartsy auctions like Christi’s, or the charity type auctions where the only purpose is to provide a social means of funding something or another. I mean the kind of auctions where the auctioneers wear cowboy hats and the bidders are there for blood sport.

Real Wife and I traded a small two-bedroom bungalow for a large Victorian soon after our wedding and upon learning of the upcoming arrival of Red Haired Girl. As a consequence we needed lots of furniture. Keeping with the architecture of the house, we decided to hit the auction circuit and decorate the house with antiques. It seemed to us that if we bought carefully, we could obtain many pieces for prices equivalent to those of new ones, and that appreciation rather than depreciation would be the rule. Certain things needed to be new – Victorians were alien to the concept of a queen bed or comfortable living room furniture. So we bought some new and went auctioning for the rest.
More »

26. February 2006 · Comments Off on Farewell Friend · Categories: General

I recently learned that Joe Comer worked in the same USAF career field as I did (328X1), which led to an exchange of emails comparing notes on the pros and cons of working on various different aircraft types, as well as different duty stations. I would like to have served with him, and I share Aproud Veteran’s sentiments about a man whom I’ve never met in the real world. Joe, when you arrive at your final resting place, look up another old ham operator, WA2GRQ – you’ll likely find him on the 2 or 6 meter band. You and my dad will really hit it off.

To Nurse Jenny and Joe’s other loved ones, my thoughts and prayers are with you.

Radar

26. February 2006 · Comments Off on My friend Joe · Categories: General

Yesterday, Kevin posted the news he received from Nurse Jenny about our own Joe Comer (herkybirdman). I spent the rest of my evening thinking about Joe, and emailing friends asking them to pray for him and his family. I also posted about him on my personal blog, so that the 2-3 readers I have there can also be praying for him.

I’d like to share those thoughts with you, because Joe and Jenny are still on my mind and heart, and talking is one of my ways of dealing with my emotions.

**************
Joe Comer is a retired AF member, vietnam vet, and devout Christian. He’s also a ham radio operator, and spent a few weeks in MS last summer helping with the aftermath of Katrina. He loves to fly (has his own small plane), and loves to share his thoughts on the internet. That’s how I met him. He was a regular contributor to a milblog I’m part of, The Daily Brief . He also had his own blog at http://patriotflyer.blogspot.com/

It was thanks to a post on TDB that I learned of his current precarious status. My friend Joe had a massive stroke, and is in hospice care. My immediate response was tears, and a prayer for his family.

For all that he’s a crusty old country boy, Joe has a heart of gold, and one of the sweetest emails I’ve ever gotten in my life was from him last spring/summer, where he told me that he and his wife (Nurse Jenny, as he calls her online) considered me to be another daughter, even though we’d never met.

When I was driving back from FL last sept, we intended to meet, but he was enroute to Atlanta to buy more ham radio equipment the day I passed within 20 miles of his home, and we just never connected.

And now he’s in hospice, which means he’s just waiting to hear those magic words: “Well done, thou good and faithful servant.” and I find that everytime I think about it, I’m crying for the loss of a man I’ve never met, that I’ve only known as words on a computer screen, but who somehow was able to send compassion and caring across the void we call cyberspace, and touch another person’s heart.

Godspeed, Joe. Vaya con Dios.

Please link your heart with mine, and say a prayer for Joe and his family, and his cyberfriends. Thanks.

*****

My heart hurts, and my eyes keep leaking. I was gonna run down to Vidalia this spring, and go to the airshow with Joe & Nurse Jenny. And now that won’t happen.

What amazes me is how deeply I’m touched by the circumstances of someone I barely know, and have never met in real life.

I trust that God is comforting his family, and preparing them for his homecoming. I know that Joe’s not worried about where he’ll wind up, or who he’ll be visiting for the next gazillion years or so. Maybe he’ll find out what it’s like to fly without being strapped to an airplane – I’m sure he’d like that.

And I can smile at the picture of him gliding through the air, arms outstretched like Superman, but still, my heart hurts.

26. February 2006 · Comments Off on Iran To Enrich Uranium In Russia · Categories: General, GWOT, Iran, Technology, World

This from Reuters:

Busher, Iran – Iran has reached a “basic” agreement with Russia on a joint venture to enrich uranium and will continue talks in coming days, Iran’s nuclear chief Gholamreza Aghazadeh said on Sunday.

My other sources believe the enrichment will be performed, at least partially, by Iranian personnel, but in Russian facilities. My only opinion, at this point, is: trust, but verify.

26. February 2006 · Comments Off on InstaSPAN · Categories: General, Media Matters Not

Glenn Reynolds will be on C-SPAN’s Q & A, tonight at 8pm EST. It repeats at 11 and 6am tomorrow.

24. February 2006 · Comments Off on Tales of the Lesser Weevil: The Over-large Cat-Dog · Categories: Domestic, General, Pajama Game

So, OK, the Lesser Weevil has been in my increasingly battered, chewed and pee-bedewed household for… oh, my, has it been two months now? How the time flies when you are having fun. Other casualties include a couple of rosebushes, most of the border planting, the space where a small lawn used to be (I have kissed off any possibility of there ever being one there again and resigned myself to paving it all with limestone flagstones and gravel), my gardening hat, a long length of garden hose, three window screens, and the sliding screen door to the back porch, and other stuff too long and depressing a list to think about.

However the Lesser Weevil’s socialization progresses… somewhat erratically, but it is progress. I look at all the stuff that she could chew, trash, dig, crap on and otherwise demolish— but hasn’t yet— and I have reason for hope. After all, she only knocked me down three times last week, during the morning run, and this week she hasn’t managed to do it once. There has been only one puddle on the floor in the morning this whole week; kicking her outside for half an hour in the evening just before we go to bed, and letting her out as soon as I get up has paid off. The chain leash is working well, and she does pay attention when I snap the leash and halti. She sits patiently to have the whole contraption put on, before her walk in the morning, but I really don’t know that she is grasping this whole guard—dog concept. She loves people, and frolics up to them, eager to be petted and admired. Last week I was admiring some renovations being done to the outside, and the inside of a house up the street. It turns out the owners were doing more than just replacing the garage door with a bay window and new front door: the inside of the house was being entirely re-done. I stopped to admire, and get a card from the construction firm, and the work-crew supervisor very kindly offered to hold Weevil’s leash so I could look at the work being done on the inside. Blondie and I suspect that in the event of any danger or threat, Weevil will be cowering behind us.

My neighbor Judy reminded me about dogs being pack animals at heart. They live for the pack, run with the pack, play with the pack, curl up and sleep with the pack. In casting their lot with us humans, all of that affection and loyalty is transferred to humans, as their pack leader, or other members of the household. And thus the Weevil’s overflowing fountain of love and devotion has focused on us, on Blondie and I… and those others in the household, the lesser members of the new pack, but members who are above her in the hierarchy and often above her, physically. That is, the cats.

There is an amusing dynamic going on here. The Weevil’s self-identity as a dog is somewhat fluid. It is likely that she, in fact, sees herself as some sort of over-sized, barking cat. She spends a great deal of energy in trying to get them to play with her, she has tried on several occasions to climb up onto one of the favored cat-perches in the house (the back of the chair and the back of the sofa), she responds to the cats’ favored toy, a tuft of pink feathers at the end of a string and wand. She vies with the cats to be closest to Blondie or I… there is always at least one of the cats orbiting around us. She would sleep on our beds, too, but I—and the cats refuse to let her go that far.

The cats response to the Weevil is mixed; none of them is the least bit afraid of her, and only Little Arthur (AKA “El Blob”, who checks in at 16 pounds and is so fat that he is entirely circular when he plops down on the floor) is actively hostile. Henry VIII and Morgie, as the senior ranking cats are lordly and indifferent. She rates a hiss and a dismissive swipe of the paw when she tries to get them to play with her. They stalk off towards their refuge in Blondie’s room. But Sammy the Gimp, and Percival are recent additions, and relatively junior, and permit an astonishing degree of familiarity. Percival allows her to nuzzle his flanks, and to lick and even gum his ears, head and paws. Sammy will let her nuzzle, not quite so sloppily. They both bop her on the muzzle and head with their paws— claws lightly unsheathed— when it gets too much. Eventually, I think, they might curl up and sleep contentedly side by side, especially when the weather is very, very cold.

But I don’t think Weevil will ever, ever learn to use a litter-box. Damn.

24. February 2006 · Comments Off on No Tears For Larry · Categories: Ain't That America?, General, Politics

Many on “the right” seem to be considering former Harvard President Larry Summers as some sort of conservative martyr. This is a bit amazing, as he is hardly a “conservative” – more of a left-of-center sort of guy, really. They are lamenting that he is some sort of victim of a Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) “political machine.” The fact of the matter is, if there is a “machine” there, he enabled it.

Some think that Summers simply didn’t have the intestinal fortitude to stand-up to the FAS. I tend to subscribe to the opinion of Ruth R. Wisse1 (herself a Harvard professor):

In my opinion, the truly ghastly aspect of this whole affair is that the accused man actually believed he had committed an offense. Summers apologized not because, like Nikolai Bukharin, he was forced to, but because he was convinced he had done something wrong.

And what was that? “I deeply regret the impact of my comments and apologize for not having weighed them more carefully,” the president wrote in a letter to his faculty:

I have learned a great deal from all that I have heard in the last few days. The many compelling e-mails and calls that I have received have made vivid the very real barriers faced by women in pursuing scientific and other academic careers. They have also powerfully underscored the imperative of providing strong and unequivocal encouragement to girls and young women interested in science. . . . I was wrong to have spoken in a way that has resulted in an unintended signal of discouragement to talented girls and women.

I see no reason to doubt Summers’ sincerity; he usually says what he means and means what he says. Taking him at his word, then, I conclude that he was not sorry for having offended liberal orthodoxy; he was sorry, genuinely so, for having given some sort of offense to women, for sending them “an unintended signal of discouragement.” Having first done our sex the courtesy of treating us as peers, he was now determined to treat us as a victimized species. Henceforth, he would tailor his thoughts to the ability of women to bear the hearing of them.

If Prof. Wisse is to be believed, Larry Summers is hardly the champion of free inquiry that some might make him out to be. James D. Miller thinks Harvard should hire him as President2. I don’t know about Jim, but I think a good model would be John Bolton, who is kicking ass and taking names at the UN. (BTW, with Bush looking rather “soft” now on international affairs, it might be a good time to renominate Bolton as permanent UN ambassador.)

And, for more from Wisse on the Summers ousting, check Coup d’Ecole: Harvard professors oust Larry Summers. Now they must face their students, in Thursday’s Opinion Journal. She seems to think that the student body, who broadly support Summers, will have some sway over the FAS. I’m skeptical. After all, Harvard is so rich, it’s been called “a hedge fund with a medium-sized university attached.”


1. This excerpt from her article “Dear Ellen”; or, Sexual Correctness at Harvard in Commentary, April 2005 (subscribers only), via Steve Burton at Right Reason. If anyone can forward me a copy of the full article, it would be appreciated.)

2. Hat Tip: InstaPundit

23. February 2006 · Comments Off on A Royal Rendezvous · Categories: General, Technology

I wish I could have been there to see this, but I was up the road at LB VAMC all day today.


Queen Mary & Queen Mary 2

Queen Mary & Queen Mary 2
(H/T Bob Chamberlin / LATimes)


Those are two of the most beautiful civilian ships on the ocean. They look to be similar in size in these photos. And, indeed, the Queen Mary 2 is only a bit over one hundred feet longer than her namesake (1,132′ vs. 1,019′). But she displaces almost twice as much (151,000 tons vs. 81,000). She is actually far less powerful; her four azipods producing “only” 86 megawatts total, verses the older ship’s mechanically coupled 119 megawatts (Cunard also boasts that her steam turbines’ boilers are far cleaner). However, superior hydrodynamics, and no mechanical transmission losses with the azipods on the newer ship, mean best cruise for both is the same: 28.5 knots.

QM2 is currently the largest passenger ship afloat. She will be supplanted shortly by Royal Caribbean’s Freedom of the Seas, which will be a tad shorter, at 1112′, but will displace 158,000 tons gross. “Purists” might say, “yes, but FotS is just a cruise ship, while QM2 is an ocean liner. Taken to task on the fine distinction between the two, one usually hears something about, “a cruise ship is not built to endure the rigors of transoceanic crossings.” That sounds like so much hooey to me; I mean, getting caught out to sea during a Caribbean hurricane has got to be pretty darn rigorous. I think the principal difference is more likely that cruise ship designers have less concern for range or speed. Best cruise on the Freedom of the Seas is only 21.6 knots. As well, the cruise ship designer will lean towards smaller, and more Spartan cabins (who wants to stay in their cabin on a three day, two nighter anyway?). FotS is designed to carry 3600 passengers, QM2 only 2620.

The more important difference to me is that Queen Mary 2, like her namesake, is all majesty, grace and elegance. Freedom of the Seas, on the other hand, is theme park kitsch. The water park, replete with FlowRiderTM surf pool, really takes the cake.

Oh, and BTW: Sir Winston’s, with its sweeping view of the sea, and the Long Beach coastline, is among SoCal’s most romantic restaurants. Provided that the city continues to stage it this year, the restaurant is also the perfect place to take-in the Fourth of July fireworks show.

Hail to the Queen.

22. February 2006 · Comments Off on A Carnival Of Trivia · Categories: General

For those interested, I’ve cached this list of 1244 items of trivia. Not all are that great, but there are some real jems. Here’s a few:

13. Abdul Kassem Ismael, Grand Vizier of Persian the tenth century, carried his library with him wherever he went. The 117,000 volumes were carried by 400 camels trained to walk in alphabetical order.

24. All English men over 14 are meant to carry out 2 hours (or so) of longbow practice a week supervised by the local clergy. [I wonder if readers Al and Robin are aware of this? 🙂 ]

28. An average pair of feet will sweat a pint of perspiration a day.

54. Cats have a normal body temperature of 101.5. A dog’s is 101.

97. Everyone is familiar with the RCA logo with Nipper the dog listening to the RCA gramophone. But the original picture had both the dog and the gramophone sitting on his dead master’s casket. The idea being that the closest thing to his dead master’s voice was the RCA gramophone. The ad was eventually considered too morbid and they removed the casket.

And here’s one for Timmer:

1052. Studies indicate that listening to music is good for digestion.

Have fun. 🙂

22. February 2006 · Comments Off on Of Hackers and Bot-makers… · Categories: A Href, General

Been playing link-tag around the sphere, to such a degree that I forget where I found the link to this article (might have been from beautiful atrocities?). Yep, it was (I just checked back). It’s on his list of outside reading.

At any rate, it’s an interesting article about bot-nets, and those who make them.

Near the end of the article….

His hard-boiled pose has begun to break down, and instead of sneering at the risks of getting caught and brought to justice, he’s begun to talk about quitting the criminal hacking scene to join the Army, which, he reasons, will offer not only discipline and the motivation to earn his GED but also potentially a free ride to college. From there, he can imagine a more respectable future working on information technology projects for the military.

“It’s nice to have up to $10,000 a month coming in, but, if it’s not legit, then I also have all this other stuff to worry about,” 0x80 says. “Like, I gotta hide my laptop every night, and every time I don’t come online for a day I have people blowing up my cell phone asking if I got raided by the feds.”

21. February 2006 · Comments Off on Around the ‘sphere…. · Categories: A Href, Fun and Games, General

Abe Lincoln had a blog. Who knew?

Be sure you read the comments as well as the blog entry.

h/t: Amy Ridenour

20. February 2006 · Comments Off on The Ancient Lore of My People: Granny Clarke · Categories: Ain't That America?, Domestic, Eat, Drink and be Merry, General, Memoir, Pajama Game

Granny Clarke was the mother of my mothers’ dearest friend from the time that JP and I were small children, from that time before Pippy was born, and my parents were living in a tiny rented cottage in the hills part of Beverly Hills… a house on a dirt road, with the surrounding area abundant in nothing much else but chaparral, eucalypts and rattlesnakes. Mom and her friend, who was eventually of such closeness that we called her “Auntie Mary” met when Mom began to attend services at a Lutheran congregation in West Hollywood, rather than endure the long drive to Pasadena and the ancestral congregation at Trinity Lutheran in Pasadena.

Auntie Mary Hammond was a little older than Mom, with four sons, each more strapping than the other, in spite of Auntie Mary’s wistful hopes for one of them to have been a girl. The oldest were teenagers, the youngest slightly younger than JP… although Paulie was as large and boisterous as his older brothers and appeared to be more my contemporary. They lived all together with Auntie Mary Hammonds’ mother, Granny Clarke, in a townhouse in West Hollywood, an intriguing house built on a steeply sloping street, up a flight of stairs from the concrete sidewalk, with only a tiny garden at one side, and the constant background noise and bustle of the city all around, not the quiet wilderness of the hills, which JP and I were more used to. But there was one thing we had in common with Paulie and his brothers— an immigrant grandparent with a curious accent and a long career in domestic service in Southern California.

It is a little known curiosity, outside Southern California (and maybe a surprise to even those inside it, in this modern day) that there was once a thriving and very cohesive British ex-pat community there; one that revolved around the twin suns of the old and established wealthy families, and the slightly newer movie business… united in their desire for employment as high-class and supremely competent domestic service, or just residence in a place offering considerably nicer weather. They all met on Sundays at Victor McLaughlin Park, where there were British-rules football games, and even cricket matches, all during the 20ies and 30ies. (My maternal and paternal grandfathers may even have met there, twenty years before their son and daughter resolved to marry their respective fortunes together).

All unknowing, my own Grandpa Jim and Auntie Mary’s mother, Granny Clarke, represented the poles of that lonely expat community. Grandpa Jim worked for nearly three decades for a wealthy, well-established Pasadena family of irreproachable respectability… and Granny Clark, for reasons that may be forever unknown, sometime in the mid teens or early 20ies of the last century, took it into her head to work for “those Hollywood people”. According to my mother, who took much more interest in Granny Clarke and held her in considerable reverence, this was an irrevocable career move. In the world of domestic service in Southern California in the late teens or early 20ies, once a domestic had “Hollywood” people on the professional resume, they were pretty well sunk as far as the other respectable employers were concerned. It is all rather amusing at this 21st century date to discover that the Old Money Pasadena/Montebello People looked down on the New Money Los Angeles People, who all in turn and in unison looked down on the very new Hollywood People… who had, as legend has it, arrived on a train, looking for nice weather and a place to film those newfangled moving picture thingies without being bothered by an assortment of … well, people that did not have their best economic interests at hand, back on the Other Coast.

So, while Granny Clarke might have been originally advised that she was committing professional suicide by casting her fortunes with “those Hollywood People”, it turned out very well in the end, for her, even though she appeared, personally, to have been the very last likely person to take to the waters of the Tinseltown domestic pool with any enthusiasm. She was a being of the old breed, a stern and unbending Calvinist, the sort of Scots Lowlander featured in all sorts of 19th century stories; rigidly honest and a lifelong teetotaler, fearlessly confident in the presence of those who might have assumed themselves to be her social and economic betters, honest to a fault… and thrifty to a degree that my mother (no slouch in that department, herself) could only genuflect towards, in awe and wonder. One of the first things that I remember Mom telling me about Granny Clarke was that she would carefully melt and re-mold the half-consumed remnants of jelled salads, pouring the liquid into an even smaller mold, and presenting a neat appearance at a subsequent meal. Neither Mom nor Grannie Jessie ever had felt obliged to dress up leftovers as anything else than what they were, but Granny Clarke was a consummate professional.

Her early employers, so Mom related to me, were so enormously and touchingly grateful not to be abused, cheated and skinned economically, (or betrayed to the tabloids and gossip columnists) that no matter how personally uncomfortably they might have felt in the presence of someone who was the embodiment of sternly Calvinistic disapproval of their personal peccadilloes, Granny Clarke was fully and generously employed by a long sequence of “Hollywood people” for the subsequent half-century. Granny Clarke managed to achieve, I think, a certain ideal, of being able to tolerate in the larger arena, while disapproving personally, and being respected and valued in spite of it all. She was painfully honest about household accounts, and ran the kitchen on a shoestring, buying the least expensive cuts… and with magical skill, conjuring the most wonderful and richly flavored meals out of them.

She was for a time, employed by Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks at the legendary Pickfair mansion, before moving on to her longest stretch of employment, as housekeeper and cook for the dancer and star, Eleanor Powell. According to Mom, she only and regretfully left service with Ms. Powell after the formers’ marriage to Glenn Ford. The impetus was that Granny Clarke collected stamps and so did Mr. Ford, and after the marriage of Mr. Ford and Miss Powell, Granny Clarke no longer had an uncontested pick of the many exotic stamps that came in attached to Miss Powell’s fan mail. She went to work for James Mason, instead. Presumably, he didn’t grudge her the stamps from his fan mail.

In retirement, she lived with her daughter and son in law, and their four sons, which is when I knew her. We were all only aware in the vaguest way that she had been the housekeeper to the stars; that all paled besides the wonderful way she cooked, and the way she cosseted us smaller children. I wish I had thought to ask for more stories about Hollywood in her time, for she must have been a rich fund of them. One hot summer day, when we were at their house for dinner, Mom was not feeling very well, and when she confessed this, Granny Clarke said, sympathetically,
“Oh, then I’ll fix you some poached eggs in cheese sauce.”
It sounded quite revolting to Mom— I think she may have been pregnant with Pippy— but when Granny Clarke set down a beautifully composed dish of perfectly poached eggs, bathed in a delicately flavored cheese sauce, Mom was able to eat every bite, and keep it down, too. She had never tasted anything quite so delicious, and when she said so, Granny Clarke allowed as how her poached eggs in cheese sauce had been a favorite among certain guests at Pickfair. Those movie moguls and directors and that, she said, all had ulcers and stomach upsets, through being so stressed… but they were all, to a man, very fond of her poached eggs and cheese sauce.

I rather think it must have been something rather like this cheese sauce, taken from Jan & Michael Sterns’ “Square Meals” savory cheese sauce:

Melt 2 TBsp butter, adding 3 TBsp four, 1 Tsp salt, a dash of pepper, 1 Tsp prepared mustard and 1 Tsp Worchester sauce, and whisk until smooth. Stir in slowly;
2 Cups milk, and add 1 cup grated American or cheddar cheese. Simmer 5-10 minutes, stirring constantly until sauce is smooth and thick. Makes about 2 cups of sauce, enough to puddle generously around 4 poached eggs— two servings of 2 eggs each. Depends on how much you like cheese sauce, I guess, or how much you like eggs… or have toast fingers to dunk in the cheese sauce.

The trick to poached eggs is to break each egg into a small bowl, and to pour it into a pot of boiling water after you have taken a spoon and whisked the water to make a small whirlpool… or to use one of those patent egg-poacher saucepan inserts so beloved of outlets like Williams-Sonoma.

20. February 2006 · Comments Off on Just Leave For a Minute · Categories: General

I do not consider myself much of anything beyond a guy who gets the job done. The whole concept or The Daily Brief to me was to express how those of us in the military and beyond have done this. This past week I traveled to Munich on business, and both in the coming and going I spent time with Army guys on rotation to and from Iraq. I also spent some time in Munich with troops (at the Hofbrauhaus) with unhappy wives and ready to go off at the least insult. Life is the same no matter what we do.\

Then I got this in response to my parody of the Cheney hunting accident:

    Hey Rupert, what a dumb fuck you are, just another Bush butt hole licking
    stupid Republican. It is really to bad that it was not the Nazi piece shit
    Cheney that got his head blown off, now that would have been really good
    news. It is so nice to see that the Shrub Boy and his culture of corruption
    are going down. God I hate Republicans.

    Fuck Off And Die, Dr. El Duko

I’ll field this one this as follows

Memo to El Duko and those of your ilk: (Daily Kos perhaps?)

I just returned from an overseas trip to find this little infected egg of wisdom in my mailbox. Your (cowardly) email, my response, and your counter-response are subject to publication – something that may seem a bit frightful to you given that you chose to make your intimidation private to my email. No hiding here slick. My piece actually, to me, was a little critical of all sides. You, El Duko, have actually confirmed the premise of an earlier piece that posited the there is little difference between the tactics of “Muslim Cartoon Protesters” and extreme democrats such as yourself.

I do not like the cronyism that seems to pervade this White House re. Michael Brown, Stuart Symington, etc. and I think that there is a tendency to circle the wagons. I won’t get over it and neither should you. Keep in mind though that RFK and Hoover at the FBI (presumably with JFK knowledge) wiretapped MLK, Bill Clinton got serviced, although technically not having had sex with that women. And who can forget the joke that Jimmy Carter made of the Presidency (and continues to even to this day). You are not even remotely in a position to know whether John Kerry is a War Hero – what would you know about that? I have seen your ilk my entire life. You were best characterized in Forrest Gump as the Nazi protestor, and your command of both language and context support this (btw, genius, I was there in the 60’s, 70’s – I know from whence I speak)

That’s it El Duko, I will never spend another millisecond responding to your vitriol. I do welcome a more reasoned response to future posts – in other words – grow up son.

Radar

19. February 2006 · Comments Off on Blargon? · Categories: General, Media Matters Not

Here’s an interesting article of the jargon associated with blogging from William Safire at the NYTimes Magazine:

Some of our special vocabulary is being stolen from us by the denizens of the world of Web logs. Above the fold — the top half of a standard-size newspaper page, where the major stories begin — now, in “blargon,” is what we see on a blog’s screen before we begin to scroll down. The jump — the continuation of an article on an inside page — is now a place to which the blog’s readership is referred inside the Web site. A sidebar — which we fondly remember as a boxed, related article alongside the main newspaper article — is, to a blogger, a column down one side of the screen displaying advertisements, archived links or a list of other blogs called a blogroll. Even the reporter’s byline, that coveted assertion of journalistic authorship, has been snatched by the writers derogated as “guys in pajamas” and changed to bye-line, an adios or similar farewell at the end of the blogger’s politely expressed opinion or angry screed. (The prevailing put-down of right-wing bloggers is wingnuts; this has recently been countered by the vilification of left-wing partisans who use the Web as moonbats, the origin of which I currently seek.)

As I just emailed Bill, the term “moonbats” – short for “barking moonbats“, was coined a few years ago by Perry deHavilland of Samizdata.net

Hat Tip: Todd Zywicki at Volokh..

18. February 2006 · Comments Off on Stick This In Your Pipe And Smoke It, Gumbel · Categories: General

It was just over a week ago, at the opening of the Torino Winter Olympics, that HBO’s Bryant Gumbel, another sportscaster with more mouth than brains, denounced them, for their lack of black participants, and the fact that “the ancient Greeks never heard of skating of skiing.”

Well, as for the latter, the ancient Greeks also never heard of basketball, but…

And as for the former


Shani Davis
AP Photo: Shani Davis of the United States competes against Jeremy Wotherspoon of Canada (not seen)…

TURIN, Italy – Say what you want about Shani Davis. Call him a trailblazer. Accuse him of selfishness. Snicker at him for being a momma’s boy.

Just don’t forget this: He’s also an Olympic champion.

Davis became the first black athlete to claim an individual gold medal in Winter Olympic history Saturday, winning the 1,000-meter speedskating race and justifying his decision to focus on himself first, his team second.

There’s always got to be a beginning. Every sport has to have its Jackie Robinson. Instead of promoting black participation in winter sports, it seems Gumbel would prefer to just write them of. I don’t see how that serves people of color at all.

18. February 2006 · Comments Off on Cash-for-Kofi · Categories: General, World

More UN antics from Claudia Rosett at The Weekly Standard:

DESPITE FREQUENT DECLARATIONS OF REFORM, it seems that United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan has learned nothing from the U.N.’s Oil-for-Food scandal, in which Saddam Hussein’s billions corrupted the U.N.’s entire Iraq embargo bureaucracy. Earlier this month, Annan accepted from the ruler of Dubai an environmental prize of $500,000–a fat sum that represents the latest in a long series of glaring conflicts of interest. Call this one Cash-for-Kofi.

[…]

So entwined were Annan’s own U.N. colleagues in the process that selected him for this award that it’s tempting to relabel the entire affair as one of the U.N.’s biggest back-scratching contests. Chairing the jury panel, which voted unanimously for Annan, was the executive director of the U.N. Environment Program, Klaus Toepfer, and among the jurors was the U.N. undersecretary-general for Economic and Social Affairs, José Antonio Ocampo. Both men owe their current jobs to Annan. Serving as an “observer” of the jury panel was Pakistan’s ambassador to the U.N., Munir Akram, who just finished a term as president of the U.N.’s Economic and Social Council, which works closely with Annan. On the
website for the Zayed prize, the public relations contacts include a U.N. staffer, Nick Nuttall, listed complete with his U.N. email account and phone number at the Nairobi headquarters of the U.N. Environment Program.

[…]

Not unaware of appearances, Annan announced at the Dubai award ceremony that he would be using his prize as seed money for a foundation he plans to set up in Africa, devoted to agriculture and girls’ education. To date, he has provided no information about what this promised foundation might be or who will run it, or what perquisites might go to its founder, or to anyone else associated with it. Asked recently for details, Annan’s spokesman replied, “When we have more information, we’ll pass it on to you.”

Hat Tip: Glenn Reynolds, who quips, “Note to Condi: Why don’t we give this sort of outright bribery a try? It seems to be all the rage.”

17. February 2006 · Comments Off on Memo: Heroes of the Day Before Yesterday · Categories: Ain't That America?, General, Good God, Military, Pajama Game, Rant, Wild Blue Yonder

To: Ms. Jill Edwards, Ms. Ashley Miller, Student Body Senate, University of Washington
From: Sgt Mom
Re: “The University of Washington’s student senate rejected a memorial for alumnus Gregory “Pappy” Boyington of “Black Sheep Squadron” fame amid concerns a military hero who shot down enemy planes was not the right kind of person to represent the school.”

1. How very, very precious, and I do not mean that in a complimentary way, Ms. Edwards & Ms. Miller. It does not reflect well on the education for which someone is presumably paying a great deal of money, to be so casually dismissive of the qualities of someone who of someone who— along with a great many of his contemporaries— risked his life decades ago in order to make it possible for you to sit in a quiet, well-appointed classroom and pass judgment… and a factually misplaced judgment, at that.

2. I really can’t, at this distance, make out what you and your peers may have been taught or not taught in your comfortable, academic Eden, but it appears that history, ancient and modern, is most decidedly not on your personal study plan. If more than anything can be learned in a… ahem… a real history class, not the thinly disguised Marxist polemic so in fashion at certain establishments, it would be the truth of the old adage that “Peace is the dream of the wise, but wars are the history of men.” And by “men” of course, I mean humankind as a whole, not the gender in particular. So sic the Women’s Studies Department on me for not using the approved PC phrase du jour… like I give a flying F**k anyway.

3. Since war is lamentably a certain constant, much as we might wish and hope and pray otherwise, warriors are also a constant. Let me break it to you gently, Ms Edwards, Ms Miller, the common experience of a lot of your fellow humans down the ages has been that of being hapless, inoffensive, hardworking and peace-and-quiet loving… prey. Yes, my dear, sweet innocent student body senators, they wound up having their peaceful happy little agrarian communities or states smashed and ravaged, burnt and sacked, and themselves and their families murdered, raped and/or enslaved by every robber gang, army or larger, more un-socially aware human organization… unless the community, state or kingdom which they happened to find themselves resident in had the ability and the will to prevent this from happening.

4. Yes, my dear innocent students, peace is not the natural happy state of humankind… it is a rare and dear-bought commodity, purchased in blood for, and sometimes by the citizens of the state or city in which they lived. The first, and most original obligation owed by the free citizens of ancient Greece and Rome was their duty to defend their polis, their city, their community and their fellows and families with arms, as soldiers, according to their means. This, alas, was a necessary duty, for people who just want to live in peace and quiet, with their families, communities and livelihoods all secure. If you don’t believe me on this, just check any of the recent news stories about Darfur. Just because you are not interested in war, does not mean that war is uninterested in you.

5. Of late, in this age of specialization, we have tended to farm the job of military defense of the polis out to those who are truly interested in doing it, and who have a natural skill. There are, and have always been people who do not mind going into danger, and in fact rather enjoy blowing stuff up. They are good at it, for the most part. Warriors, like war, and the poor, are always with us; wishing it weren’t so won’t make it all go away. The whole purpose of a military, as I have written before, is to kill those designated as our enemies. Think of our warriors as another blogosphere essayist did, as they are our sheepdogs, protection against the wolves, the wolves that always threaten any community.

6. Yes, I can see why Colonel Gregory “Pappy” Boyington would not exactly be the beau ideal of your pretty little campus: he was crude and rude, an unrepentant killer; a rowdy, undisciplined and brawling menace; a drinker and alleged wife-beater, cheerfully willing to go to China as a mercenary… not exactly anyone’s notion of a model citizen. He lived fast and recklessly, and was probably the most surprised of all that he lived long enough to die within a breath of old age; No, Ms. Miller, he would not have been your set’s cup of tea at all. Very probably in some vast imaginary late 20th century dictionary, there is a picture of him, next to the entry for “Politically Incorrect.”

7. And yet… there you go; he had a certain set of skills; as a pilot, a leader, and a warrior. For whatever his reasons, he served, in China and in the Pacific. He and his ilk kept the wolf of the moment from the door of the peaceful, the harmless and the inoffensive, in such security that they could begin to think their shelter owed everything to their own honest good will, and not the blood and dedication of those who secured such for them at such cost. For all his faults, and in company with his peers, “Pappy” Boyington might have done more to protect the defenseless than all the college senates and interest groups ever convened.

8. Frankly, I am enjoying a mental image of a statue of Colonel Boyington coming to life and delivering a good old-fashioned and profane Marine Corps ass-chewing. Such might be a truly educational experience to a student body which, lamentably appears to be a collection of sheltered, spoiled, candy-ass yuppy puppies… and one which seems to exist in ignorance of the means by which they can continue to be sheltered, spoiled, etc cetera.

Sincerely,
Sgt Mom.

(Link courtesy of The Belmont Club.. BTW, Cpl/Sgt. Blondie points out that most USMC Medal of Honor awards were made postumously)