Sunday, October 27, 2013

Anything Goes at the 5th Avenue




I enjoyed the Cole Porter musical "Anything Goes" at the 5th Avenue Theater today.

The two numbers I enjoyed the most (and received the most applause) were the last song of the first act, "Anything Goes" and the second act song "Blow, Gabriel, Blow".  Those were the two songs that had the most dancing.  Both can be found on YouTube.

The singing was fantastic - everyone had a wonderful voice.

I love live theater.  I appreciate the effort the cast and crew put into creating a nice experience for me.  

I was sitting in the back.  Sadly for the 5th Avenue it was not sold out.  But, for me it was wonderful to spread out.  No one was sitting around me.

I have a hard time sitting still for plays.  99% of other people are still and quiet during the play.  Me?  I fidget and shift around, I cross and uncross my leg, I sit up on the chair, I sit back.  I feel a lot of pressure if someone is behind me.  Today - no one was behind me so I could change my position all I wanted to.





Wednesday, October 23, 2013

My HP Deskjet 5650



I can count on my printer.  I've had it for nearly 10 years and it still works beautifully.
Isn't it nice when you can rely on something?

I have an HP laptop I bought in 2009 that's still going strong as well. 

Thank you HP

Oops

I feel terrible for this Metro bus driver.  He entered the express lanes going southbound soon after it had been closed to southbound traffic and one minute after it was open to northbound traffic.  







Friday, October 18, 2013

I want this

Link directly to article with the video

3D images of you, you and your dog, you and your spouse, you and your baby.

Hot.  I like it.

Here's a link to another video about 3D images of ourselves.  I'm sad to say the store featured on this link is owned by another major retail store that I don't like and will never visit.


Thursday, October 17, 2013

Government Shutdown - Rachel Maddow


The Shutdown:  A Summary by Rachel Maddow


Participating in the Battle of Ideas


I don't have an image for today's post so this is a scanned picture of my Grandmother while on a trip to Asia (South Korea and China?) in the 1970's.

CBS This Morning  - This is a story about how police in London are approaching the problem of young people becoming radicalized.

I was particularly struck by Charlie Rose's ending comment that we need to be participants in the Battle of Ideas.

***

To change the world, we must be participants in the Battle of Ideas.

Silence leaves room for negative energy.

Active participation is exhausting, but necessary.


Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Closer to resolution

John Boehner put out a statement at 3:30 ET today.

“The House has fought with everything it has to convince the president of the United States to engage in bipartisan negotiations aimed at addressing our country's debt and providing fairness for the American people under ObamaCare. That fight will continue. But blocking the bipartisan agreement reached today by the members of the Senate will not be a tactic for us.  In addition to the risk of default, doing so would open the door for the Democratic majority in Washington to raise taxes again on the American people and undo the spending caps in the 2011 Budget Control Act without replacing them with better spending cuts. With our nation's economy still struggling under years of the president's policies, raising taxes is not a viable option. Our drive to stop the train wreck that is the president's health care law will continue.  We will rely on aggressive oversight that highlights the law's massive flaws and smart, targeted strikes that split the legislative coalition the president has relied upon to force his health care law on the American people.”

I have some quibbles with Boehner's view on things:
1. Obamacare was already debated and voted on by the congress.  During the course of developing the plan, Obama did engage in bipartisan negotiations.  If it had been Obama's choice, we would have a single payer health system.  The fact that Obamacare isn't perfect is a testament to his efforts to bring Republicans into the process.
2. Our nation is still struggling under the years of conservative policies of President George Bush and company - not Obama.  Obama's been digging us out of this mess as best he can with a Congress who doesn't care about anything except getting re-elected and destroying the federal government.    
3. Nobody even knows if Obamacare is a train wreck yet.  According to the Tea Party types implementation of Obamacare is worse for our country than defaulting on our debt.  I just don't see that.  And most economists would disagree with the Tea Partiers.  Yes, the website hasn't been perfect - but that's not a condemnation of the policy.  

And, based on his last sentence we can look forward to more of the same from them in the future - ugh.
Next step - the votes. 

Congress

I am so angry at John Boehner and the 'Tea Party' Republicans in Congress.
If John Boehner had allowed the House to vote (to open the government and increase the debt limit), this would be worked out already.  There are enough Democrats and Republicans who would vote yes to move the bill to the Senate who would have voted for it, and the President would have signed it.  The story would be that the Tea Party Republicans tried a strategy to defund Obamacare and it didn't work.

Instead, John Boehner is catering to the Tea Party Republicans by putting changes to Obamacare into the bill so they will be happy.  Which will never be acceptable to the Senate or the President.

On Monday, the Senate Majority and Minority leader had almost reached an agreement.  John Boehner decided he needed to get an acceptable House bill to the Senate before he lost control and the Senate came up with a plan.  The Senate stopped their negotiations (I don't know why - out of respect?  Crazy.)  Boehner created a bill that had at least one small change to Obamacare.  He couldn't get the Tea Party Republicans behind it because it didn't go far enough to defund Obamacare!  He had to drop it.

Now, it's the final day and the Senate is back to creating their deal.  A wasted day brought to you by John Boehner.

The final day before what, you ask?  The United States will not have enough money to fund the current programs and the debts..  The Treasury Department will have to choose what doesn't get paid.  Of course, the debt has to be paid first, so programs will get cut.

We don't know what will happen next.  The financial people are using words like armageddon, and global economic meltdown.  The stock market hasn't tanked yet because the people in charge of Wall Street believe cooler heads will prevail in the end.

I'm not so sure.  I mean, it seems unthinkable, but so did so much of the other stuff that has happened.  Personally, I'm afraid my company will shrink and my job is on the line.  I worry about my savings and what will become of me.

The Tea Party Republicans want this to happen.  They want a smaller government.  They want the government to stop spending so much.  They win no matter what.
And they were voted into office by people - Americans who don't care about anyone else; they want us all to live and believe just like they do.  They're a minority and they're holding the rest of us hostage.

Do I wish Obama had taken control of them a long time ago?  Yes.  But, I don't fault him for believing the Congress should do their job and act like adults.

Whatever happens in the next few hours or days, or weeks, I wonder what will happen in the next election.  Will Tea Party people get more power?  Will conservative Republicans get more power?  Will people remember this?  What will people value when they go to the polls?

Okay - I'm done.  Sorry this isn't written well - I'm very frustrated by the subject matter.

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Slate

Slate redesigned their website in the last couple weeks.
David Plotz explains how, why, and what.

Four reasons I'm disappointed with the update:
1. I'd love to give them feedback, but I can't because you have to register to make a comment.  I didn't register with them before and I don't want to encourage their changes by registering now; they might think it's because I love the changes.
2. Did they fire the proofreader?  Lots of mistakes - missing words, bad punctuation, typos.  I thought a serious news site would care about how words and sentences work together to communicate ideas.  I guess not.
3. It's hard to tell which home page 'tile' is from Slate, a content partner, or an advertisement.
4. No search field.

I don't dislike the Slate content, but I don't enjoy the content presentation.

Here are some articles about the redesign:
Digitopoly
Washington Post
Mashable - this article makes clear to me why I don't like the homepage...the new version has 13 'boxes' of information while the old version had only 7.  I don't understand why they think it's a cleaner design.

It's a testament to my disappointment that I'm compelled to write about the redesign two weeks later.  It still bothers me.
I guess I'll get used to it.
Will I also get used to the lousy proofreading?  (Will I get used to lower standards?)

The Tea Party gets what they want

The Tea Party wants a smaller federal government.
They're getting it.

There's no sense in what they're doing because the thing they really want is already happening.

The Tea Party Republicans won't approve a continuing resolution to fund the government unless the Affordable Care Act is delayed for a year (originally they wanted ACA to be completely dismantled).  The ACA is funded separately and doesn't rely on the continuing resolution to continue.  In fact, the ACA website opened yesterday.  Taking an idealogical stand at this time doesn't make sense.

I think they're shaking shiny keys in front of our face while behind our back they're pleased with themselves for 'shrinking' the federal government.

The sequestor was a shrinking of the government and we're getting along.  They're hoping that after a while we'll all get used to the current federal shutdown and realize how unnecessary a large federal government is.

We're in a no win situation. unless someone comes up with a creative way to get out of this.
(By 'we' I mean people who appreciate a federal government)
This tactic is similar to what perpetrators of domestic violence do.
(I know that's a provocative statement.  It's not intended to minimize the horror of domestic violence or equate the brutality of domestic abuse to the  government shutdown.  It's a comment about the tactic.)

Two other factors that are contributing to the current stand-off
1.  The debt ceiling needs to be raised by October 17th and the Tea Party people don't like that either.  Economists think this will have the greatest impact on our economy.
2.  The Tea Party Republicans come from districts that have been gerry-mandered so much that the representatives don't worry about getting re-elected (usually, the only leverage people have to send a message to their representative).  They're representing districts that support this ridiculous plan.

Grrrrr...this makes me angry!