Thursday, August 10, 2006 

Via Peter, a site full of "inspirational" posters drawn from Star Trek in the vein of the satirical ones at Despair.com.

This poster of course plays on the trope of Kirk/Spock fan fiction, where Kirk and Spock are portrayed as lovers. Emma has long been a fan of slash, particularly pairings such as Solo/Kuryakin (Man from U.N.C.L.E.) and Jack O'Neill/Daniel Jackson (Stargate SG-1).

posted on Friday, August 11, 2006 1:28:24 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Tuesday, August 08, 2006 

I found this opinion piece on bisexuality by Matthew Parris in The Times of London:

In my Notebook column in The Times I have been recording, in an occasional way, candidates for inclusion in a speculative list of truths or nonsenses staring us in the face that we somehow cannot see: things future ages may dismiss with a snort — just as we look with incredulity at our forebears’ faith in the theory of the four bodily humours or possession by demons. Here is another modern candidate: the idea that there is a set of males called homosexuals, and another called heterosexuals, plus a handful in the middle called bisexuals who can’t decide. This, we shall one day realise, is a distorting glass through which to look at male sexuality.

... 

Make a horizontal line whose left margin represents a sexual orientation so completely heterosexual that such men have never felt, however fleetingly, any sexual attraction to another man; and whose right margin represents gay men utterly unteased by any other interest. Mark 30 million dots between these two poles, representing each of us men in Britain, located towards left or right depending on the balance of the attractions we’ve felt in our own life. How will the resulting scatter look as a shape?

If popular talk is to be believed, the shape would trace the silhouette of a wine glass lying leftwards on its side: long, thin stem in the middle, opening out to a big bowl on the left and a small base on the right. The large cluster (at least 80 per cent, the bowl) would be the “straights”. A much smaller but distinct cluster (perhaps 5 to 10 per cent, the base) would be the “gays”. The stem would be a thin scatter of “bisexuals”.

But if only we knew it, the true shape, I believe, would be closer to that of a champagne bottle lying rightwards on its side, its base to the left, tapering gently towards its mouth at the right. I think a substantial preponderance of men are more heterosexual than homosexual, but scattered fairly evenly between 100 per cent and half-and-half; and that the smaller number who think of ourselves as gay are likewise quite evenly distributed along the spectrum from the halfway point.

... 

If I am right, why have both the gay and the straight worlds so fiercely resisted the ambivalent and perhaps fluid analysis I propose?

... 

Secondly — and this is very important — the idea that many of us have a potentially variable sexuality opens up the uncomfortable possibility of personal choice; and we gays have lived in a transitional era in which we have very much wanted to believe and claim that “God made us” like this, and “we can’t help it”. Whether or not this is true, it is comforting for those troubled by suppressed guilt, and has provided a knock-down argument against those moral conservatives who say we could choose, and therefore should choose, not to be gay. It has also seemed to rebut the complaint that homosexuality could be “promoted” or that gay men might “corrupt” potential heterosexuals. What, however, has not yet dawned on still embattled crusaders for equality is that true equality — equality of self-regard as well as public esteem — will have arrived when we are as careless as a blond or a redhead might be whether or not we were made that way.

Does “I can’t help being black” strike you as a self-respecting argument against racism? That “I can’t help it” is a subtly self-oppressing argument for acceptance does not seem to have occurred to supposedly liberated gay activists, for whom it has always been the easiest way of ending the argument.

But it is intellectually sloppy (would you accept it from a child molester?), calculated to close off troubling thoughts about might-have-beens, and no answer to the Christian evangelists’ insulting talk of cures for our “affliction”. We retreat into a simple, bipolar world of can’t-help-it straights and can’t-help-it gays. We push these feelings and people into closets marked “latent” homosexuality, “in-denial” homosexuality and “confused” homosexuality.

I think sexuality is a supple as well as subtle thing, and can sometimes be influenced, even promoted; I think that in some people some drives can be discouraged and others encouraged; I think some people can choose. I wish I were conscious of being able to. I would choose to be gay.

I do think that sexual orientation is largely innate. How we express our sexuality is a matter of choice. We should indeed be able to make an unfettered choice of which consenting adults we wish to love, to share our lives with, and to fuck.

It is wrong to discriminate on grounds of inborn characteristics (race, gender) and on chosen categories (religion, political affiliation). Religious identity is clearly a matter of choice, although far too many people uncritically accept the religion of their parents.

Like Parris, I don't care for the I-was-born-this-way defense of sexual orientation. We should be arguing for the freedom to live our own lives as we see fit.

posted on Wednesday, August 09, 2006 5:48:35 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Joe Lieberman, the 2000 vice-presidential nominee, lost the Democratic primary for his Senate seat tonight. He has said that he will run as an independent. In effect, he will not accept the will of the people.

Lieberman lost, in part, because of his continuing refusal to admit that the Iraq war is a disaster, and in part because he has been a leading enabler of the Republican agenda. Good riddance!

AmericaBlog suggests contacting your senators and demand that they come out in support of Lamont and that they strip Lieberman of his Senate committees.

I sent the following email to Senators Murray, Cantwell, and Reid:

Ned Lamont won the Democratic primary in Connecticut. I urge you to express your support for him publicly. He is a good man and he will make a good Senator.

Joe Lieberman has declared that his ego is more important than the Democratic party. You must repudiate him. You must strip him of all his Senate committee seats. You must shun him like a pariah.

If Lieberman runs as an independent all the way to November, he will be the big political story, not the failure of the Republican leadership, not the need for change.

posted on Wednesday, August 09, 2006 5:22:49 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Friday, July 28, 2006 

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I got an email earlier today from one of my relatives who has ties to South Africa, which read:

Last week a 3 year old girl (in South Africa ) was beaten and raped. She is still alive. The man responsible was released on bail yesterday. He is walking the streets. If you are too busy to read this then just sign your name and forward this on. The Government is planning to close the child protection unit and this is a petition against it. This is a very important petition. It is an essential part of the justice system for children. You may have already heard that there's a myth in South Africa that having sex with a virgin will cure AIDS. The younger the virgin, the more potent the cure. This has led to an epidemic of rapes by infected males, with the correspondent infection of innocent kids. Many have died in these cruel rapes. Recently in Cape Town, a 9-month-old baby was raped by 6 men. Please think about that for a moment. The child abuse situation is now reaching catastrophic proportions and if we don't do something, then who will?

Kindly add your name to the bottom of the list and please pass this on to as many people as you know. If you are signature no.: 120 please forward the mail-list to childprotectpca@saps.org.za

Please don't be complacent, do something about the kids of South Africa. You can make a difference. That child is fighting for life. This is just 1of the million cases of child abuse, so please pledge your support and help keep CPU (CHILD PROTECTION UNIT) open. Please give your support to the petition and ensure that it goes to as many people as possible. Please don't just leave it, make a difference. In order to write your name copy this messege and paste it in a new mail (compose). Or click on forward and add your name to the list and send it on to others.

Again, if you are number 120 please send this to childprotectpca@saps.org.za

[Lots of forwards stripped, as well as 97 signatures from South Africa, India, Nepal, the UK, and Australia.]

My immediate reaction was that this has to be a hoax. It has all the hallmarks:

  • Alarmist subject matter

  • Unsubstantiated assertions (but see note below)

  • Pass this letter on to everyone you know

  • No dates, no end dates

  • No provenance

Admittedly, many well-meaning but incompetently written petitions share the same problems.

Here's what I wrote back to everyone whose email address I could mine out of what I had been sent:

Stop! It's a hoax. Do NOT uncritically believe everything you get in email.

First thing you should do when you get a chain letter urging you to send email to everyone you know, is to Google around to see if it's horseshit. Nine times out of ten it will be.

The first link that shows up when you google for "childprotectpca chain letter" is this:

http://www.joewein.net/hoax/hoax-saps-child-protection-unit.htm

Which led me to the South African Police Service:

http://www.saps.gov.za/_dynamicModules/internetSite/faqBuild.asp?myURL=242

Snopes.com is the go-to site for all Internet hoaxes. Here's what they have to say about this one:

http://www.snopes.com/inboxer/petition/babyrape.htm

If you read any of these links, read this one. Then look around the Snopes website and get a feel for some of the crap that's out there.

Now, please go and forward THIS email to everyone you forwarded the previous email to, and also send this email to everyone who sent you the chain letter in the first place. Stamp it out before it spreads any further.

(Note: Snopes indicates that some of the rape stories mentioned in this letter are true. A nine-month-old girl really was raped, though it turns out that it wasn't the six men who were initially arrested, but the ex-boyfriend of the mother.)

I later followed up with the somewhat softer:

Let me just add this.

Hoax chain letters are a bad thing because some twit thinks it's fun to cause trouble and spread lies. This one has been circulating for four years. I'm sure it will still be turning up in four years' time.

About their only redeeming feature is that they get good-natured, if naive, people such as yourselves to do a little something in an attempt to make the world a better place. If these hoax letters actually achieved something constructive, I wouldn't mind nearly so much.

I've shot down a few chain letters before. Every single time, Snopes has already written up an extensive page about it.

posted on Friday, July 28, 2006 7:52:52 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Raven is now Doctor Raven. She successfully defended her doctoral dissertation in biomedical informations this morning. Six long years in the making.

Dr. Raven and Mr. Raven came over this evening for Games Night, a twice-monthly get-together we have for our friends to play board games. Emma and I had been given a bottle of Dom Perignon '92 for our wedding that we had never quite found a suitable occasion for until now, so we chilled that in anticipation of tonight's celebration. I generally don't care for champagne, but that went down nicely.

Congratulations, Raven!

posted on Friday, July 28, 2006 7:13:56 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Thursday, July 27, 2006 

Well, fuck! The Washington State Supreme Court handed down its long-awaited decision today on the constitionality of the state's Defense of Marriage Act. Somehow, they found that it didn't violate the state constitution's Equal Protection clause.

No same-sex marriages in Washington state anytime soon.

I attended the rally at the First Baptist church earlier this evening. (Find me in the photo!) Some anger, some disappointment. Mostly upbeat. The young Latina couple were very affecting. The Serkin-Pooles invited everyone to join their club, as they announced their formal engagement to each other. One speaker pointed out that even if the court had handed down a favorable decision, the process would not have been over.

Tomorrow we fight another day. I've been supporting same-sex marriage since 1993, when I heard of the Hawaii Equal Rights Marriage Project. I didn't expect the war to end today, though it would have been nice to win this battle.

The LMA have more on what it all means.

Dahlia Lithwick at Slate ably skewers the court's decision in Rational Lampoon:

If you vote to uphold the ban, on the other hand, you'll get to join your colleagues on the New York and Nebraska courts, who just did the same thing. You'll also find yourself in the warm embrace of your buddies on the Georgia and Tennessee courts (who ultimately ruled against gay marriage in recent weeks on narrower, more technical, terms). Nobody will excoriate you in the op-ed pages. Instead of causing widespread fury, you will unleash, at most, widespread resignation.

Still, you feel bad. You hold no personal animus toward gay people. You even think there is something slightly mean-spirited behind your state's Defense of Marriage Act. You talk it over with your wife/husband/clerks. It's a pickle. Months pass.

Until you hit upon the solution: Shift the blame. Make the legislature the bad guys. Find a way to frame the ban on gay marriage that makes it impossible to strike down. Rule that unless the ban is utterly insane, it's constitutional. Suggest that as long as the legislature passed it, it must be rational. Use the word "deferential" six times.

The key to appearing reasonable will be to vilify the dissenters. You'll want to use your majority opinion to emphasize that judges who vote their "personal views" are behaving like "legislators." Quote liberal lion Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens for that proposition. Then condemn—without quite using the words "judicial activist"—the dissenters for having been "uncharacteristically … led to depart significantly from the court's limited role when deciding constitutional challenges."

Be sure to tell your "readers unfamiliar with appellate court review" that your state's decision to ban gay marriage is solely the fault of the legislature. Because you yourself, of course, still love everyone.

posted on Thursday, July 27, 2006 7:16:39 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Saturday, July 01, 2006 

Sometimes spammers can be taken in by their would-be victims. Here's a hilarious, if long, story of just such a case.

It's even funnier if you're already familiar with the character of Derek 'Del Boy' Trotter.

posted on Saturday, July 01, 2006 8:57:20 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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I hadn't really planned to visit Ireland this year, but then my sister Michelle phoned the other day to say that her boyfriend, David Bowles, had just proposed to her. Not a big surprise. They had moved in together earlier this year, and we were all assuming that it was a question of when, not if.

They plan to get married quite soon, as his father has been given six-to-nine months to live, and they want him to be at the wedding. I don't know if the date is firm yet, but the latest that I'm hearing is November 11th.

posted on Saturday, July 01, 2006 8:47:29 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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At SIFF 2004, I saw an acclaimed trilogy from Hong Kong, Infernal Affairs, Infernal Affairs II, and Infernal Affairs III on three consecutive nights, Yan is a cop who's been in deep cover for ten years, infiltrating the triads. Lau is a triad who joined the cops about ten years ago, rising to the rank of inspector. Only their respective bosses, Superintendant Wong and Big Sam, know who they are. Each becomes aware of the other about the same time, and the chase to find the moles is on.

It's a tense and complex thriller and a meditation on good and evil. Yan has long blurred the line between cop and gangster. Lau is having second thoughts about being beholden to his old gang boss. Both men are in quiet agony, hating the deception and the danger.

I just watched the first movie again on NetFlix, and it holds up well. The other two movies are further down our queue. IA II is a prequel, showing Lau and Yan as young men just setting out on their long-term infiltrations. IA III is a sequel to IA I.

Martin Scorcese has remade IA as The Departed, due out later this year.

posted on Saturday, July 01, 2006 8:19:11 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Monday, June 26, 2006 

I read a piece in yesterday's New York Times about some useful lessons learned from animal trainers.

So, like many wives before me, I ignored a library of advice books and set about improving him. By nagging, of course, which only made his behavior worse: he'd drive faster instead of slower; shave less frequently, not more; and leave his reeking bike garb on the bedroom floor longer than ever.

... 

I listened, rapt, as professional trainers explained how they taught dolphins to flip and elephants to paint. Eventually it hit me that the same techniques might work on that stubborn but lovable species, the American husband.

The central lesson I learned from exotic animal trainers is that I should reward behavior I like and ignore behavior I don't. After all, you don't get a sea lion to balance a ball on the end of its nose by nagging. The same goes for the American husband.

Back in Maine, I began thanking Scott if he threw one dirty shirt into the hamper. If he threw in two, I'd kiss him. Meanwhile, I would step over any soiled clothes on the floor without one sharp word, though I did sometimes kick them under the bed. But as he basked in my appreciation, the piles became smaller.

I was using what trainers call "approximations," rewarding the small steps toward learning a whole new behavior. You can't expect a baboon to learn to flip on command in one session, just as you can't expect an American husband to begin regularly picking up his dirty socks by praising him once for picking up a single sock. With the baboon you first reward a hop, then a bigger hop, then an even bigger hop. With Scott the husband, I began to praise every small act every time: if he drove just a mile an hour slower, tossed one pair of shorts into the hamper, or was on time for anything.

... 

On a field trip with the students, I listened to a professional trainer describe how he had taught African crested cranes to stop landing on his head and shoulders. He did this by training the leggy birds to land on mats on the ground. This, he explained, is what is called an "incompatible behavior," a simple but brilliant concept.

Rather than teach the cranes to stop landing on him, the trainer taught the birds something else, a behavior that would make the undesirable behavior impossible. The birds couldn't alight on the mats and his head simultaneously.

At home, I came up with incompatible behaviors for Scott to keep him from crowding me while I cooked. To lure him away from the stove, I piled up parsley for him to chop or cheese for him to grate at the other end of the kitchen island. Or I'd set out a bowl of chips and salsa across the room. Soon I'd done it: no more Scott hovering around me while I cooked.

I followed the students to SeaWorld San Diego, where a dolphin trainer introduced me to least reinforcing syndrome (L. R. S.). When a dolphin does something wrong, the trainer doesn't respond in any way. He stands still for a few beats, careful not to look at the dolphin, and then returns to work. The idea is that any response, positive or negative, fuels a behavior. If a behavior provokes no response, it typically dies away.

... 

I adopted the trainers' motto: "It's never the animal's fault." When my training attempts failed, I didn't blame Scott. Rather, I brainstormed new strategies, thought up more incompatible behaviors and used smaller approximations. I dissected my own behavior, considered how my actions might inadvertently fuel his. I also accepted that some behaviors were too entrenched, too instinctive to train away. You can't stop a badger from digging, and you can't stop my husband from losing his wallet and keys.

Hmmm...

posted on Tuesday, June 27, 2006 6:25:57 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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I found an interesting piece on the NPR website about the modern anti-abortion movement:

In the 1980s, in order to solidify their shift from divorce to abortion, the Religious Right constructed an abortion myth, one accepted by most Americans as true. Simply put, the abortion myth is this: Leaders of the Religious Right would have us believe that their movement began in direct response to the U.S. Supreme Court's 1973 Roe v. Wade decision. Politically conservative evangelical leaders were so morally outraged by the ruling that they instantly shed their apolitical stupor in order to mobilize politically in defense of the sanctity of life. Most of these leaders did so reluctantly and at great personal sacrifice, risking the obloquy of their congregants and the contempt of liberals and "secular humanists," who were trying their best to ruin America. But these selfless, courageous leaders of the Religious Right, inspired by the opponents of slavery in the nineteenth century, trudged dutifully into battle in order to defend those innocent unborn children, newly endangered by the Supreme Court's misguided Roe decision.

It's a compelling story, no question about it. Except for one thing: It isn't true.

... 

Let's remember, [Paul Weyrich] said animatedly, that the Religious Right did not come together in response to the Roe decision. No, Weyrich insisted, what got us going as a political movement was the attempt on the part of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to rescind the tax-exempt status of Bob Jones University because of its racially discriminatory policies.

... 

"What caused the movement to surface," Weyrich reiterated,"was the federal government's moves against Christian schools." The IRS threat against segregated schools, he said, "enraged the Christian community." That, not abortion, according to Weyrich, was what galvanized politically conservative evangelicals into the Religious Right and goaded them into action. "It was not the other things," he said.

Excerpted from Thy Kingdom Come, by Randall Balmer.

posted on Tuesday, June 27, 2006 3:56:23 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Sunday, June 25, 2006 

In May, I pounded out a record 31 blog posts. June draws to a close and this is only my third post.

In brief, here's some of the highlights of June.

The Wild Geese Players of Seattle read the Cyclops chapter of Ulysses on June 16th. I read a part and I was also the script wrangler and webmaster.

My profile on my Windows XP laptop got corrupted. I decided that I would make flatten it and turn it into a dual-boot system. I'm now on my third week of running Ubuntu 6.06 (Dapper Drake). Quite easy to get going. Not so easy to get everything that I wanted running on it.

In late May at WinHEC, Microsoft announced FlexGo, the new pay-as-you-go and subscription versions of Windows. I spent a year working on this project, specifically on the hardware locking that underlies the business model. I swear I will write a more interesting post on this soon.

This weekend was Gay Pride, which was held for the first time at the Seattle Center. I helped staff the Freely Speaking Toastmasters booth yesterday morning.

As one of my commitments when I stepped down as president of BiNet Seattle I made up a new banner, which we marched behind in the Raise Your Voice march yesterday evening.

My woodworking class has finished, so my Tuesday nights are free for the summer. I'm making a coffee table. It's about half finished. I've taken a few photos along the way; I'll have to post some of them.

posted on Monday, June 26, 2006 6:57:01 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Saturday, June 03, 2006 

The Ninth Ward of New Orleans, as shot by Scout Prime.

Christy at FireDogLake has written a post about this year's hurricane season, which officially started on June 1st.

New Orleans and the rest of the Gulf is still a disaster area: watch the video linked to above. Disaster preparedness is far from where it should be. The levee improvements are inadequate. Reconstruction is mired in bureaucracy and stalled in incompetence. The money promised has not materialized. Only one-third of New Orleans residents have returned.

Christy links to a report put together by Nancy Pelosi, detailing the incompetence and cronyism of the Republicans, both in the immediate response and in the long-term followup.

  • Up to $1 billion dollars in waste and fraud for housing contractors and payments made by the government, mainly to contractors from outside the Gulf Region.

  • The SBA has rejected more than 60% of small business loan applications in the wake of Katrina. Of those that have been approved, only 4% of funds have been disbursed to small business owners at this point. (Oh yeah, I got yer business friendly environment here. What was that Republican talking point that small business is the backbone of American jobs and communities?)

  • Less than 2% of all Federal aid that has gone to the Gulf Coast has been used for education expenditures.

  • The Rubber Stamp Republican Congress still refuses to ease Medicare restrictions for children in the Gulf Coast region, despite the fact that there is a substantial health care crisis for children in the region, stemming from infections and other issues arising from prolonged exposure to pathogens from flood waters, stress, and other factors. (1/3 of all children living in FEMA trailer parks have been found to have a chronic illness.)

  • 40,000 families are still waiting for some sort of housing assistance, meanwhile there are 10,000 FEMA trailers still parked in the mud, just sitting there unused.

  • Contractors with a political connection to the Bush Administration were paid up to 15 times the actual cost of jobs contracted.

posted on Sunday, June 04, 2006 4:13:47 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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As I implicitly promised here, we went to see Al Gore's new documentary on global climate change, An Inconvenient Truth, when it opened in Seattle last night. We brought some friends too.

Gore lays out a compelling case that global climate change is real, that it's been happening for decades, and that it's spiralling out of control. He backs it up with plenty of statistics and graphs.

  • The ten hottest years on record have all been since 1990.

  • The glaciers are in full retreat everywhere. The "snows of Kilimanjaro" are almost gone.

  • At current rates, the Arctic ocean could be ice-free by 2050.

  • If either the ice covering Greenland or the ice on the western side of Antarctica goes -- both very real possibilities -- the global sea level could rise by 20 feet.

  • That rise would devastate coastal areas everywhere. At least 100 million people would be homeless.

Gore points to a review in Science magazine of 928 peer-reviewed scientific articles discussing "climate change". Not one of the papers disagreed with the scientific consensus that "climate change" is a real phenomenon. He points to a similar review of leading US newspapers over the last fourteen years, where more than half of the articles gave equal weight to the scientific consensus and to the view that human beings played no role in global warming.

The "controversy" has been manufactured by front groups for Exxon-Mobil and other leading polluters, just as the tobacco companies tried for decades to confuse the public about the linkage between smoking and lung cancer.

Gore earned the reputation in the 2000 election of being dry and wooden, but here he's engaging and animated. It's clearly a subject that he cares deeply about, and one that he's been agitating about for more than 30 years. He says that he's given his slideshow, which we see in several forms, over 1000 times, and he's gotten very good at delivering this message. The film is filled with science, but there's also a human touch. Gore brings in elements of his own life, such as his son's brush with death that energized him to make a difference to the Earth.

Terry Gross of NPR's Fresh Air interviewed Al Gore the other day: listen to the interview or read the transcript.

GROSS: ... at the beginning of the movie, you say that you've been trying to tell this story about global warming for a long time and that you feel as if you've failed to get the message across. Why was it so difficult as a politician to get the message across?

Former Vice President AL GORE (Author, "An Inconvenient Truth"): Well, Terry, I think there are several reasons. First, it's a complex issue. When you boil it all down, it's fairly simple, but it does have a lot of moving parts. And the complexity by itself is an obstacle. Secondly, there's a natural tendency to avoid thinking about the subjects that might involve some psychic pain, and the idea that human civilization is colliding with the earth's environment is a painful reality. And, third, it's a new reality. Nothing in our history or culture prepares us for the new reality, the new relationship between human civilization and the planet's ecosystem.

We've quadrupled our population globally in the last hundred years, and we've magnified the power of our technologies thousands of times over. And when you combine those two elements, 6.5 billion people times incredibly powerful ways of exploiting nature, and then you mix in a new philosophy of discounting the future consequences of present actions, it produces this new collision, the most dangerous part of which is global warming. And so it's hard to absorb it, but I think it is now beginning to sink in. I think people are coming to grips with it, and I'm actually becoming optimistic that we're going to respond in time.

... 

GROSS: You've traveled around different parts of the world looking at the symptoms of global warming. What's the most disturbing thing that you've seen in those travels?

Vice Pres. GORE: The melting of the North Pole is one of the most urgent catastrophes that should be prevented as quickly as we can convince people to act. It's a fairly thin floating ice cap, and as you know, the Arctic and the Antarctic are very different. The Arctic is ocean surrounded by land while the Antarctic is land surrounded by ocean, and that makes all the difference in the thickness of the ice. It's 10,000 feet thick in Antarctic and less than 10 feet thick in the Arctic. Much less now. We've lost 40 percent of it in the last 40 years. And when the ice there melts, there's a dramatic change in the relationship of the surface of the Earth there to the sun. The ice reflects 90 percent of the incoming sun's energy like a mirror. But the open seawater, after it melts, absorbs 90 percent. And that's a phase change. It sets up a positive feedback loop that magnifies and speeds up the melting process.

And the North Polar ice cap is in grave danger now. And nearby the great ice mound of Greenland is under increasing pressure from growing temperatures also. If that were to melt, it would--or to break up and slip into the sea, it would raise sea level 20 feet worldwide. The west Antarctic ice shelf, that's on the other end of the planet, the other pole, is the part of Antarctica propped up against islands that allow it to be affected by the warming ocean but also allow it to raise sea level by 20 feet, again, if it melts or breaks off and slides into the ocean.

And these are the three areas that many scientists point to as affecting a so-called point of no return which we need to avoid because if we cross that point of no return, then the process of a downward spiral would be irretrievable. So we have to stop short of that.

Gore has written a companion book, which I'm going to order.

I'm not the only one who thinks it's a great film. Roger Ebert gave it a 4-star review

What can you do? You can go see the film and you can take action.

This is something that (should) transcend politics and nationality. We are all going to be affected by climate change, for the worse.

posted on Sunday, June 04, 2006 12:30:40 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Saturday, May 27, 2006 

Jamison Foser writes on the defining issue of our time:

The defining issue of our time is not the Iraq war. It is not the "global war on terror." It is not our inability (or unwillingness) to ensure that all Americans have access to affordable health care. Nor is it immigration, outsourcing, or growing income inequity. It is not education, it is not global warming, and it is not Social Security.

The defining issue of our time is the media.

The dominant political force of our time is not Karl Rove or the Christian Right or Bill Clinton. It is not the ruthlessness or the tactical and strategic superiority of the Republicans, and it is not your favorite theory about what is wrong with the Democrats.

The dominant political force of our time is the media.

Time after time, the news media have covered progressives and conservatives in wildly different ways -- and, time after time, they do so to the benefit of conservatives.

Consider the last two presidents. Bill Clinton faced near-constant media obsession with his "scandals," while George W. Bush has gotten off comparatively easy.

... 

At this point, you'd have to be blind to miss the pattern. Every prominent progressive leader who comes along is openly derided in the media as fake, dishonest, conniving, out-of-the-mainstream, and weak. We simply can't continue to chalk this up to shortcomings on the part of Democratic candidates or their staff and consultants. It's all too clear that this will happen regardless of who the candidate or leader is; regardless of who works for him or her. The smearing of Jack Murtha should prove that to anyone who still doubts it.

Look what happened to Al Gore in the run-up to the 2000 election versus how George Bush was treated then by the media. Gore, the well-qualified candidate, was subjected to an endless barrage of ridiculous stories accusing him of everything from fraudulently claiming to have invented the Internet, to being the inspiration for Love Story. Meanwhile, Bush was making all kinds of nonsense claims for his tax cuts, and his insider trading at Harken was being completely overlooked.

posted on Sunday, May 28, 2006 4:28:07 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Wednesday, May 24, 2006 

Raven emailed me a link to this story in the Onion: Heroic Computer Dies to Save World From Master's Thesis:

"This fearless little machine saved me from unspoken hours of exasperated head-scratching and eyestrain, as well as years of agonizing self-doubt over my decision to devote my life to teaching," said professor John Rebson, who had already read through three drafts of Samoskevich's sprawling, 38,000-word dissertation, titled A Hermeneutical Exploration Of Onomatopoeia In The Works Of William Carlos Williams As It May Or May Not Relate To Post-Agrarian Appalachia. "It was an incredible act of bravery. This laptop sacrificed itself in order to put an end to Jill's senseless rambling."

Nothing like my own Master's Thesis, 3-D Text Objects in the Brown Animation Graphics System, which clocked in at just 8 pages. Mind you, it was backed up by tens of thousands of lines of C code.

posted on Wednesday, May 24, 2006 9:21:12 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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AmericaBlog links to a CNN segment on the quacks who claim they can "cure" homosexuality.

Very creepy. Very bogus. And typical of so-called reparative therapy.

I believe that those "ex-gays" who do manage to make a go of it are bisexual rather than gay. In other words, they're no more than 5 on the Kinsey scale.

And I'm not the only one.

posted on Wednesday, May 24, 2006 8:12:07 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Here's a selection of the lies propagated by the Right in the last few years:

  • Iraq sent its WMDs to Syria.
  • Democrats don't want to wiretap terrorists.
  • Mexicans are taking our jobs.
  • Scooter Libby has a faulty memory.
  • Tom DeLay is like Jesus Christ.
  • No one could have anticipated that the levees would be breached.
  • We do not torture.
  • There is no global warming.
  • There is global warming, but humans didn't cause it.
  • John F. Kerry is a flip-flopper.
  • George W. Bush is a decider.
  • Nobody at the White House knows Jack Abramoff.
  • Evolution isn't supported by the facts.
  • Diebold voting machines are secure.
  • Fox News is fair and balanced.
  • Mission accomplished.
  • No one could have anticipated the Iraqi insurgency.
  • The budget deficit will be cut in half in four years.
  • Anyone who thinks Dubai shouldn't control our ports is racist.
  • No one who thinks we should build a wall along the Mexican border is racist.
  • Terry Schiavo wants to live.
  • We've turned a corner in Iraq.
  • There's a war on Christmas.
  • There's no civil war in Iraq.
  • The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa.
  • Bush won Florida in 2000.
  • Bush won Ohio in 2004.
  • We support open, free, and fair elections ... for the Ukraine.
  • I earned political capital... and I intend to spend it.
  • Losing by 2 million votes in 2000 is a mandate.
  • Winning by 3 million votes in 2004 is a mandate.
  • The grownups will now be in charge.
  • Brownie, you're doing a heck of a job.
  • Kathleen Blanco never asked for federal help.
  • Moral values voters.
  • The earth is 6,000 years old.
  • We're not interested in banning contraceptives.
  • Bush flew F-102s in the Texas Air National Guard.
  • Bush is a compassionate conservative.
  • John Kerry "outed" Mary Cheney
  • John Kerry shot himself in the leg to earn his medals
  • Al Gore thinks he invented the internet.
  • Bill Clinton was once offered Bin Laden "on a silver platter" and turned it down.
  • Saddam Hussein attacked us on 9/11.
  • 9/11 changed everything.
  • No one could have anticipated airplanes flying into buildings.
  • We have removed the Taliban from Afghanistan.
  • The Iraqis will welcome us with open arms and flowers...
  • Yellow magnetic car ribbons really help the troops.
  • We're fighting them over there so we don't have to fight them over here.
  • Iraqi oil will pay for the war and the reconstruction.
  • Gas prices are high because of librul environmental regulations.
  • Drilling the ANWR will lower the price of oil.
  • The 'magic of the marketplace' will solve all problems.
  • Unemployment numbers have never been so low.
  • By far the vast majority of my tax cuts go to the bottom end of the spectrum.
  • Tax cuts increase revenue.
  • The estate tax hurts family farms.
  • Private Accounts will save Social Security.
  • No Child Left Behind will help all children.
  • Healthy Skies Initiative will reduce air pollution.
  • Republicans are compassionate conservatives.
  • Dissent is unpatriotic.
  • You're either with us, or against us.
  • All options are on the table.
  • Republicans are the party of ideas.
  • These are not assertions. These are facts backed up by solid intelligence.
  • Terri Schiavo is responsive. (Bill Frist on the Senate floor).
  • I never said she was responsive (Bill Frist, about a week later).
  • Anyone who leaks information will no longer be part of this administration.
  • Harriet would be a great justice. I know her heart.
  • Terrorists didn't know we could use wiretaps until they read about it in the paper.
  • I will restore honor and integrity to the White House.
  • I'm a uniter, not a divider.
  • The 'CEO' President.
  • If this were a dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier, just so long as I'm the dictator.
  • If gays are allowed to marry then heterosexual men will leave their wives.
  • Oceania has always been at war with Eurasia.
  • "I do solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States."

A much fuller list can be found at AmericaBlog.

posted on Wednesday, May 24, 2006 6:32:28 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Tuesday, May 23, 2006 

I've been sporting a goatee for the last two months, instead of my usual full beard. This has necessitated shaving, and I've been using those disposable Bic razors. I haven't been very happy with them. They left my face feeling like I had been making out with a cheese grater.

I bought one of those new five-bladed Fusion razors yesterday and shaved with it this morning. Oh my! Very smooth!

I'm convinced that five blades is marketing hokum and that five blades is probably not really better than four blades. Or three blades. But five blades is certainly better than one.

posted on Tuesday, May 23, 2006 7:38:54 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Saturday, May 20, 2006 

I have two blogs, my personal blog and my technical blog. The technical blog is a small subset of the personal blog containing posts that are more likely to be of interest to the techie audience at weblogs.asp.net.

Lately, the comments in one post at weblogs.asp.net have been repeatedly spammed with sad little gems like the following:

If you click the links above, you'll find that I'm not the only one who's getting this treatment. The spams are clearly generated by a bot, which is generating links to an enormous variety of randomly chosen sites, with no obvious commonality.

Surprisingly, I can find very few discussions of this particular phenomenon, save Nihilist spam and Best Comment Spam Ever. It seems to have been the catalyst triggering PocketNow: Requiring Registration [to Post].

My personal blog is running dasBlog, which has a CAPTCHA implementation, as well as some other anti-spam features. So far, I haven't had a spam problem there, but perhaps I'm just flying under the spammers' radar.

Brian Goldfarb recently sent mail to all the bloggers at weblogs.asp.net, detailing forthcoming changes and improvements (sorry, can't find a public post). There was no specific mention of dealing with comment spam, alas.

I found the SixApart Guide to Comment Spam to be useful, if wordy and Movable Type-centric. They agree with Scott Mitchell on the Worth(lessness) of CAPTCHAs. And this summary of the problem of Comment Spam ain't bad.

posted on Sunday, May 21, 2006 6:14:46 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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I mentioned last week that my parents have no aptitude for computers.

My father emailed me with a list of computer woes; notably, he was getting messages about no firewall. There was no way I was going to get to the bottom of the issue just by email or talking to him on the phone. It's 5,000 miles from Seattle to Dublin, so I can't drop by to take a look at the computer in person--much as my parents would like to have me visit.

I had tried using the built-in Windows Remote Assistance to troubleshoot issues on their laptop a couple of years ago, while they were on a protracted stay in Cape Town. I had solved the problem, but that had been fairly painful for me. The primary problem was the horrible sluggishness of the connection: they were on a slow dialup connection and the latency is something fierce. Another problem was the fragility of my control: if I dismissed a dialog by hitting Escape, I stopped controlling the remote desktop, and as a longtime vi user, I have certain deeply ingrained reflexes that are hard to overcome.

I decided to try out Joel Spolsky's Copilot. The Copilot service builds on TightVNC. The helper and the person being helped both make outbound connections to a Copilot server, which proxies the virtual session, neatly avoiding all kinds of NAT issues that can arise when you try to make a direct connection through a firewall. It's also supposedly easy to configure, requiring only a visit to the Copilot website and typing in an email address or a 12-digit number, before downloading a half-megabyte executable. It wasn't too painful to talk my father through making the connection, though the first time that he did it, he "lost" the binary and had to download it again. We initially tried the two-minute trial version, but that wasn't nearly enough time to do anything, so I shelled out the $10 for a day pass.

In Dublin, as in Cape Town, he dials up to the Internet on a 56K modem, and that once again proved to be the primary source of pain for me. It seemed a little less sluggish than I remembered Remote Assistance being, but I wasn't about to subject myself to trying that out too. The experience varied between tolerable and infuriating, but there's only so much that can be done at a little over 3Kbps.

The second reason the experience was so painful was that I ended up needing to repair the eTrust installation, and to download a full set of antivirus signatures, and I simply couldn't do it. The eTrust FTP site kept dropping the connection, and the full signature package takes over 20 minutes to download. I blame the FTP server, as I was VPN'd in to his laptop the whole time, so his Internet connection was obviously working. I eventually gave up at 4AM PDT, in utter frustration.

Verdict. Copilot works fairly well, although it can be painful over a dialup connection. I would have killed for a file-transfer facility so that I could send files directly between his computer and mine. $10 for a day pass isn't cheap, but he gets to pay it in future! I use Terminal Server and Virtual PC regularly: both of them provide ways to press all of the Windows keys (Terminal Server, Virtual PC); Copilot doesn't.

posted on Saturday, May 20, 2006 11:08:45 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Friday, May 19, 2006 

I just listened to This American Life on the radio. I am continually amazed at just how good this show is. They find so many compelling stories.

This week, Ira Glass interviewed Gene Cheek, who wrote a memoir, The Color of Love: A Mother's Choice in the Jim Crow South.

In the early 1960s, Cheek's divorced mother fell in love with Tuck, a black man. They lived in a small town in North Carolina, and the miscegenation laws were still on the books. They dated clandestinely, but eventually their relationship become known. The police would stop by regularly to harass them. After she had a baby by Tuck, her own family refused to have anything to do with her.

One day, Cheek's mother went to court, in an attempt to collect child-support payments for Gene from his alcoholic father. When she and Gene got there, they realized that the case being heard was a child-custody case. She was given the ultimatum: give up her infant mixed-race son or give up her 12-year-old son. His father said that he couldn't take Gene in, and neither could his uncle or his grandmother. Gene volunteered to leave his mother, and he was sent to a foster home. He began acting out and was eventually sent to a boy's prison, 200 miles from home, where he spent five years.

Years later, after the ban on interracial marriages was overturned in Loving v. Virgina, Cheek's mother married Tuck.

I was horrified by this story, by the barbarity of it, by the racism. Thank God this can no longer happen.

Yet it does. Gay parents still have to contend with the presumption that they are unfit parents in more benighted parts of the country. Fortunately, Lawrence v. Texas is overturning this presumption, but this issue is far from settled. The bigots are pushing to enact a Federal Marriage Amendment (HRC, Wikipedia) which would certainly affect custody rights for LGBT parents.

posted on Saturday, May 20, 2006 3:12:47 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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A front group for Big Oil is putting out ads denying the reality of global warming, in a pre-emptive bid to undermine Al Gore's new documentary, An Inconvenient Truth.

The first ad portrays global warming science as a vicious smear campaign against carbon dioxide. The ad, which despite appearances is not an SNL parody, helpfully reminds us that carbon dioxide is “essential to life” because “we breath[e] it out.”

"An Inconvenient Truth" opens in Seattle on June 2nd, 2006.

posted on Saturday, May 20, 2006 1:24:39 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Thursday, May 18, 2006 

I blogged last month on Jim McDermott's long-running First Amendment legal battle with John Boehner, the new Republican Majority Leader. The Stranger has a cover story giving a lot of detail on the case.

President Clinton will be appearing at the Seattle Center on June 3rd in a fundraiser for McDermott.

Update: The We The People event will be held from 5:30-7:30pm at the Seattle Center Exhibition Hall. Tickets can be ordered here. I just ordered tickets for Emma and me. See you there.

posted on Thursday, May 18, 2006 7:58:32 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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My opera education continues. Tonight, we saw Seattle Opera's production of Verdi's MacBeth.

I used to be very familiar with Shakespeare's MacBeth, having studied it for two years in preparation for the Leaving Certificate (the major examination at the end of Irish secondary school; effectively the entrance exam for university).

Verdi's opera of MacBeth truncates Shakespeare's plot, concentrating on the tragic flaw of the MacBeths. Their shared ambition, feeding off each other, both impels them to power, and leads to their ultimate downfall. The opera was written during the Risorgimento, when Italy was trying to break away from the Austrian empire, and doubles as a thinly veiled appeal to Italian patriotism.

I had more fun at Cosi Fan Tutte, when we saw it in March. The music and singing was fine in MacBeth, but I did not care for the monochromatic costumes and sets, which reminded me of Mourning Becomes Electra. The cast looked as if they had stepped out of a daguerrotype of a funeral. There's no fun in Verdi's MacBeth. Shakespeare's tragedies are always leavened by some comic doings, but not Verdi's.

posted on Thursday, May 18, 2006 7:27:07 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Monday, May 15, 2006 

A few weeks ago, I wrote a C++ routine to parse decimal numbers using the overflow detection principles of