Monthly Archives: May 2009

Middle School Protesters Cutting Class in Tigard

Yesterday at the local middle school, a bunch of students decided to cut class and protest some teacher layoffs (just like their grandparents did! (kinda)) that are likely coming down the pike. Interesting topic at the dinner table: is cutting class for this reason a good thing or not? I’d say that as long as they were ready to suffer the consequences, then it’s a valuable teaching lesson about both civic disobedience as well as economic realities. After they got their nod from the media, though, they probably had gotten what they could out of the stunt. Note, though, that simply saying you’re protesting and ready the suffer the consequences doesn’t make it something to be proud of; I think there’s a knee jerk reaction to the word “protest”, especially from the Left, that all dissidence is a great thing.

Probably most interesting to me, though, is where the students cast blame and how they’re starting to come to their own conclusions about things, and not just regurgitating what they’ve heard from adults (even though there’s plenty of that, too). Here’s a comment from one of the young dissidents, a “katlynLS”. Note the comment about “paying back money to banks and paying their taxes” (sic):

I am a student at Fowler Middle School, and i was in the protest. Now i know that people say that this generation is a selfish one but most of us do care about the people and the world around us. We did this for a reson and that reson is that we just got money to get more teachers for things like health and spanish…ect. things like that! But now its all being taken away from us! Now you may not think that we know what is going on with the comunity but we do we just want to show that we care and get our piont across!
Some of the kids yes did not care about the teachers and only did it to skip school but the kids that did this for the teachers got punishment that were not right yeah they knew were we were and refurals were so uncalled for maybe a lunch or an after school detention.
Yes we were skiping school but even Mr.Rice knew why we did it and was proud of us i hope that the econamy will get better before the next school year! i would hate for a pregnent spanish teacher to get layed off her first year. Or a new health teacher Mrs. pollici, we didnt have a health class the past year or 2 because we didnt have a teacher right for the job but now we have a perfect strict but funny and fun teacher!
SO PEOPLE THAT ARNT PAYING BACK MONEY TO BANKS AND PAYIN THERE TAXES THINK ABOUT YOUR COMUNITY. you may be effecting the people you know and love. please..voters of USA help with your cominity and help your schools around you we need your help!

Yeah, This Is One Thing I Wouldn’t Do

Don’t ask me how I located this page: on the interwebs, anything can happen. Did you know there was something called the Schmidt Pain Index? It was created by a researcher that poked and prodded stinging/biting insects until they caused him pain. I guess you can’t say his job is boring. And no, he says he’s not a masochist: just dedicated to his field. Right. Now, I have a pretty high pain tolerance, but dude.

Now, do NOT click this link to the article if you have, oh, I don’t know, some psychological thing about ants (wife!). There’s a close up of a bullet ant, right out of my own uncomfortable dreams. (My nightmares usually consist of losing things or regrets, not external threats. Yeah. Weird, I know.) Now, if you clicked through, and think you’re all that and a ball of mozzarella, go ahead and go to this page: The 5 Most Horrifying Bugs in the World. You know what’s great about Oregon? Yeah, none of these guys.

Yet.

The New York Times Travel Blog Meets Columbia Gorge Wineries

It’s always pretty cool, if you’re from a small town, to see the area you were raised in mentioned in a national rag. So, imagine my surprise and  happiness when my Google Alert for White Salmon told me about an article in the New York Times Travel blogs (the Frugal Traveler) where the writer biked from White Salmon to Lyle and did a little wine tasting. Pretty neat.

Then, after I had picked as my base the town of Hood River, Ore., I discovered that bicycles were banned from the bridge over the Columbia. Oops!

Yeah dude, it’s a bit narrow for bicycles. And yes, Syncline does make some fine vino. My wife and I purchased a few bottles there last year, as a matter of fact.

Cameron’s House for Sale!

Only 2.3 million! Can I still get 0% down adjustable rate jumbos? And the funny thing is — seriously — I just watched the movie last Saturday. Just what did Cameron’s Dad go when he got home after the Ferrari was wrecked? The body is probably still in the woods.

Thanks to Scalzi for the on-the-ball web action.

Suburban Survivalists or Just Preparedness?

I saw this over at Breitbart.com today, and had to post it. I’m still wary about the term “survivalist” being used in this context, but what they hey. It’s a reasonably fair handed article, I guess. The important thing to point out here is that people aren’t stocking up — for the most part — because they believe that the U.N. are going to come and take their guns away in black helicopters. It’s because they believe that it wouldn’t take much to cause their families to go hungry if they aren’t prepared. That doesn’t necessarily mean some huge economic breakdown: it could just mean a lay off at their job. Hardly crazy. It could mean a state enforced pandemic lockdown in your house. Not looney in the least.

I’d say that people that only have a couple days of food in their fridge with a whole family depending on them as crazy. Not the folks described in this article.

Warehouse Prices Compared

This is interesting. I’d like to see a more extensive list, though. I could also couldn’t care less about the comparison between different discounters: in Oregon, you only have one choice. I do find that for produce, Costco doesn’t regularly beat out regular supermarkets. For those that have been stocking up, a Costco card is pretty invaluable. A family of four will save over $50 in no time at all.

That’s why it’s important to compare prices on the items you need most frequently. A gallon of skim milk at Sam’s Club, for example, costs $1.88, while Costco charges $2.29. Need to stock up on Secret deodorant? At BJ’s, it’s 81% cheaper than at the supermarket, while it’s 67% less at Sam’s Club.

Health Care and Corporatism

Ron Bailey over at Reason wrote up a pretty interesting piece breaking down what some of Obama’s recent health care announcements mean to the average joe. It’s a good read, especially to someone who has had precious little time to study all of these announcement in detail of late. It’s also a defense of that dirty concept: capitalism and competition.

What’s more interesting to me is what he calls what the Obama’s administration is doing: “corporatism”. He quotes the Concise Oxford Dictionary of Politics:

“a system of interest intermediation linking producer interests and the state, in which explicitly recognized interest organizations are incorporated into the policy-making process, both in terms of the negotiation of policy and of securing compliance from their members with the agreed policy.”

He wisely doesn’t drop the ‘f’ bomb: fascism. No, I’m not calling Obama a fascist. That term has really lost all it’s meaning. Bush, also, was not a fascist. Wikipedia has an interesting section in their fascism article actually covering it’s loss of meaning due to it’s use as an epithet. So, Ron is smart not to use it, simply because it’s so polarizing.

Still, if you do happen to read the Wikipedia article, it really is kind of chilling. Corporatism? Check. Cult of personality? Check. Abortion and euthanasia? Check. Social interventionism? Oh yeah, big, big check. There’s a lot of commonly associated pieces of the puzzle that are missing, though: single party government, blatant disallowing of criticism, suppression of class warfare, blatant racism, etc.  It still bares watching, though. That Obama is a man of the Left is obvious. But, what Left, exactly? Something new?

I can certainly say, almost 4 months into his presidency, that he’s worse than I thought he was going to be, and closer to the serious doom and gloom predictions of the Republicans. I was hoping for something closer to Clinton, who wasn’t nearly as bad as the Republicans of the time warned he’d be. Instead, we have someone much farther to the Left than Clinton or Carter. Combined.

Wannabe Oregon Terrorist Sentenced

From Instapundit, a link to a story on the Knoxville News site about a conviction in a New York court concerning the guy (a Lebanese born Swede) trying to setup a Muslim terrorist site in southern Oregon. How strange. Anyway, this is great news. I remember when the news of this camp being busted original broke, and it really brought it to home now even in the Great Northwest, you have some dangerous religious wackos planning to kill us.

Another lesson for me with this story is how incredibly small the world has become. I mean, a Lebanese born Swede recruiting for al Qaeda in Oregon? This underlines how, again, America does not have the option of burying it’s head in the sand and wishing the world to leave it alone. If we disengage from the kinetic fight — and we probably will, due to both our current administration’s policies and simple and serious financial pressures — the world will get scarier and more dangerous and yes, more Americans will die. Technology, like what has made the world so much smaller, cannot be put back into the bag.

Toddler Learning Processes

This is over a week old now, but just now I finally found time to watch this 3 minutes of video on this post over at Baby Babble. If you have a toddler in the house, it’s pretty interesting. The question that researchers were trying to answer was this: do toddlers live only in the present, or do they plan for the future — anticipate events — like adults do? The answer actually has real consequences on how a parent interacts with their child. How you teach them, especially when regards to learning from their mistakes, is impacted. One of Amazon’s many blogs is on the case with this, linking to some research at the University of Colorado at Boulder:

Pretty much every parent has experienced–or in the case of new or soon to be parents, will experience–the frustration resulting from what appears to be their child not listening to them. Of course, while true that children sometimes do not listen to their parents, research recently released from University of Colorado at Boulder claims that there may be something else going on inside your child. In a nutshell that she/he may be “storing information away for later.”


Amazon’s entry has the embedded video, so I’m not going to bother. It’s pretty interesting. I’ll try to remember this with my own toddler.

Economic Survivalists Take Root

Great little story about a family pushed by increasing economic challenges to make some radical changes to their lives to live more self-sufficiently. Here’s the thing: even if the really bad predictions that you sometimes hear from the doomsayers only have a 5% chance of coming true, isn’t it wise to do some preparations for it? You know, just in case? These people aren’t about stockpiling guns and bullets and living in the mountains in a compound — they’re just about lessening the utter reliance upon the extremely interconnected system most of Americans find themselves having. That’s a great thing, in my book.

When the economy started to squeeze the Wojtowicz family, they gave up vacation cruises, restaurant meals, new clothes and high-tech toys to become 21st-century homesteaders.

Economic survivalists take root – USATODAY.com