Saturday, November 24, 2007

Thanksgiving Festivities

This past Thursday was Thanksgiving in the USA. Dave, Joshua and I drove up to Pennsylvania to spend the day with Mom and Paul. This was a special celebration because it was the first time in seven years that my sister, brother, mother and I have all been able to get together in one place. It was also nice because most of the kids, grandkids and great-grandkids were there. The only two people who didn't make it were Jonathan and Elaine. Jonathan was playing with the Fairfax corps band at their Thanksgiving dinner for the homeless. Elaine was home preparing to start their kettle campaign in Christian's absence. She graciously encouraged him to come to the family festivities. A big thank you to Elaine! We wish you could have been with us. The rest of us gathered from Maine, Connecticut, Kentucky and Virginia to meet in Pennsylvania. Thank heavens for GPS!

Naturally, since gatherings of this magnitude are rare events in my family, people had to pose for photos after dinner. We begin with a pic of Dennis, Erma, Tracy, Christian and his two kids, Samantha and James. Samantha is the one with the attitude.



Next up is Dotti's family: Dotti, Steve, Krista, her husband Adam and the newest member of the clan, Campbell. Adam, by the way, was the principal cook. He made a fabulous meal and is welcome to come to my house and cook anytime the mood to do so strikes him.


Next up is a photo of four generations of Olley women. My mother, Dorothy, my sister, Dotti (she detests her given name, Dorothy), my niece, Krista and my grand-niece, Campbell.


Moving right along, we have my mother with most of her grandchildren and great-grandchildren: Joshua and Tracy are holding up the sofa in the back, Samantha and Krista are seated to one side of Mom and Campbell, and Christian and James are on the other side.


Finally, we have the people who opened up their home, took us all in for a day, and fed us too! Mom and Paul.

The Family Friendly Blog

You will all be relieved to know that this blog has been evaluated and rated suitable for audiences of all ages (although I did use the word "sex" once). Just in case you were wondering.



BTW: Lady Book Notes was rated PG. Apparently, I used the word "sex" twice on that one, and "hell" once.

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Speechless and Nauseated

Initial Post: November 21, 2007
My vocabulary is too limited to express my disgust with the American military establishment. You will not believe this report from a very reliable political blog. The Canadians among you may not realize that military recruiters routinely offer "signing bonuses" to new enlistees. What the recruiters don't tell the recruits is that they will only get to keep the bonuses if they complete their tours of duty. If they are seriously wounded and discharged early, they are expected to return a portion of their bonuses to the government.

Are you *$%@!%ing me?

Last month, a Congressman from Pennsylvania introduced a bill in Congress to change this policy, but the bill has not been passed yet. The current policy is outrageous, immoral and despicable! To what new depths will the American government sink next? Can it possibly get any worse? I'm having an Alice in Wonderland moment. I also think I'm going to throw up.

**********

Update: November 22, 2007
The US military has responded to the national news coverage regarding attempts to recoup bonus money from wounded soldiers. Check my initial post above, including the link, then check the link in this update.

Obviously, the US military has egg and other vile substances on its face over this issue. Dave and I speculated that the difficulty could lie in a decades-old policy that was unclear and which has, in a number of cases, been applied inappropriately. I read another plausible explanation by a government employee on how it could be a computer glitch. He suggested that a poorly structured program may search for all soldiers who have not finished their tours of duty, then automatically generate the same letter for all of them. Obviously, the step that's missing, if this is the case, is to uncover why people have left early, then either ignore the names of the wounded, or generate the letters for people who have gone AWOL, been dishonorably discharged, etc. I believe the legal, policy and technical changes required to correct this will be made quickly. My heart goes out to all those veterans who have been caught up in this horrible snafu.

I disagree with the Iraq War, but I want our active soldiers and vets to be treated with the respect, honor and decency they deserve. If the government wants to raise my taxes to pay for newer, bigger, more devastating war toys, they're going to have to work really hard to sell me on that priority. If they want to raise my taxes so that military personnel can have decent wages, living accommodations and benefits, all they have to do is show me where to sign. The establishment can start regaining my confidence by fixing the current signing bonus fiasco.

Monday, November 19, 2007

You're All Geniuses!

cash advance

This is highly amusing. Evidently, my blog content is so erudite, or perhaps it's merely that my vocabulary is so sophisticated, that only geniuses can comprehend the wisdom that is imparted herein. (BTW, Lady Book Notes got the same rating - at least I'm consistently profound, or should that read incomprehensible?)

If you want to find out what reading level your blog requires, click on the graphic link. LOL!

Sunday, November 18, 2007

How to Charge an iPod in the Woods

Imagine you are camping deep in the woods of northern Ontario. You canoed in to your camp site. You don't have electricity. And your iPod battery died. Never fear! If you have gatorade, an onion, a screwdriver, your iPod and USB cable, you can be happily listening to your music in less than an hour. This video from a site called Household Hacker shows you how to do it. Don't say I never include practical content on my blog!

Friday, November 16, 2007

What Are We Doing?

You may recall that, about a month ago, I linked to a story about Mountain Top Removal coal mining. Today, I came across a story written by a lady who lives in Wise County, Virginia, in the midst of this desolation. She tells her story plainly, yet its stark simplicity and understatement are powerfully eloquent.

Stories like this make me sick at heart. They make me weep for what the USA is becoming. In the past seven years, under the policies developed by the current federal government, the land of the free and the home of the brave has become the land of the destructive and the home of the morally bankrupt. We used to sing about purple mountains' majesty. Now we're leaving dust, rock and grime where awe-inspiring mountains once stood. We talk about being an honorable nation founded on Christian principles, yet we condone the torture of "enemy combatants," a term defined so broadly that it has included pre-pubescent boys. We brag about being the world's richest nation and allegedly having its highest standard of living, yet nearly 50 million of our people have no health insurance, and millions sink into poverty, homelessness and bankruptcy every year. The rich in the USA are very rich, obscenely so, and the poor in the USA are very poor, outrageously so. The American government caters to energy companies that despoil our habitat and to pharmaceutical companies that want us to believe that their pills are the answer to our every ailment. Perhaps most tragically, rather than leading Americans in developing more environmentally sound lifestyles, the government has enabled our wastefulness by instigating and prolonging an unjustified, immoral war against an oil-rich country that, contrary to the Administration's assertions, posed no threat to us.

Well, here's a news flash: the USA is less secure than it was four years ago. Iraq has become a breeding ground for terrorists. It wasn't such before the war, but it is now. We invaded and devastated a country that once had a sound infrastructure and a good education system. Is it any wonder that the USA is the most hated country in the world? Yet, too many of us ignorantly respond to that contempt with disdain, assuring ourselves that non-Americans are just jealous of our culture and freedoms, that we're always right and they're always wrong, and that God is certainly on our side rather than theirs. And, of course, we go right on squandering resources and blowing up mountains, and denying global warming, evolution and the value of stem cell research. Moreover, our president continues to require hundreds of billions of dollars for war expenditures, and vetoes bills that would allocate tens of billions of dollars for health care, education, scientific research and the development of alternative energy sources.

I guess I should be fair here. The USA's current circumstances are not solely the responsibility of our government, since its shenanigans are enabled by an apathetic populace. Too many Americans are more interested in American Idol and Deal or No Deal than in volunteering in their communities, or voting, or simply educating themselves about critical issues. According to Alexis de Tocqueville, in a democracy, the government that people get is the government they deserve. Heaven help us if that's true. What a damning indictment against the American people! The good thing is this: just because a situation exists now, that's not the way it has to be in the future. We can take action to change the course of events by advocating for insisting upon changes in our foreign, energy and environmental policies. In the USA, we, the people, must take action, or we will surely doom ourselves, and, quite possibly, the rest of the world with us.

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Fall Colors

I haven't had many opportunities to get fall photos this year. This is the second in a set of four that I am featuring at Through Evie's Lens this week. Head over there and check them out.

Monday, November 12, 2007

The REAL Story Behind the Ten Commandments

Every now and then, not very often (NOT!), a new school prayer or Ten Commandments case finds its way into the American courts and news media. When I read Shopping for God a couple of weeks ago, I came across this interesting tidbit regarding two of those cases.

As Cecil B. DeMille readied his costly Paramount production of The Ten Commandments for release, he happened on an ingenious publicity scheme. In partnership with the Fraternal Order of Eagles, a nationwide association of civic-minded clubs founded by theater owners, he sponsored the construction of several thousand Ten Commandments monuments throughout the country. DeMille, a Jew, was interested in plugging the film, not Christianity.

A generation later, two of these DeMille-inspired granite monuments, first in Alabama and then on the grounds of the Texas capital in Austin, became the focus of the Ten Commandments case before the U.S. Supreme Court. What was essentially an advertisement for an entertainment had become a deadly seriously pronouncement of in-your-face faith (Twitchell, 2007, p.5).

This is a photo (courtesy of Wikipedia) of the monument that still stands on the grounds of the Texas state capital:


Is this hilarious or what? Religious Right fanatics, who don't or won't acknowledge that their freedom of worship entails that they allow the same privilege to folks of other faiths, and that folks of no faith must be free not to worship, tied themselves in legal knots over a couple of elaborate movie ads. I must admit, though, granite monuments are far more impressive than posters.

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Analog vs. Digital Recordings

The music lovers among you may find the video below interesting. Before you watch it, I'll warm you up to the subject with some questions.

1. Do you remember and did you ever own 78rpm records?
2. Do you remember and did you ever own 45 single records?
3. Do you remember and did you ever own 331/3 long play records?
4. Do you still own any vinyl records?
5. Do you own a record-player? If so, do you ever use it?
6. Do you remember and did you ever own own 8-track tapes and an 8-track player?
7. Do you currently own any cassette tapes?
8. How many cassette players, if any, do you have in your house?
9. Do you currently own a CD player (and CDs)?
10. How many CD players do you have in your household [including the one(s) in your car(s)]?
11. Do you own an iPod?
12. How many iPods do you have in your household?
13. What do you listen to the most: CDs, iPod, vinyl records, cassettes?

Okay, those were the warm-up questions, now we'll move to the next level.

14. First big question: Do you think digitally recorded music is superior to analog music, or vice versa, or is there no difference?
15. Second big question: If you think there is a difference in quality between the two technologies, can you hear it?
16. Final big question: If you answered question #15 affirmatively, would you be willing to put your abilities to the test?

Some musicians and recording engineers recently discussed questions 14 & 15, and tried #16. If you're interested in their discussion and the results of their test, check out this video.


Monday, November 05, 2007

Dave's Career as an Arabian Tent

Dave, Joshua and I traveled to Cary, North Carolina this past weekend for a marching band competition. It was the band's final marching performance of the season. Joshua's career as a high school marcher is now over.

We arrived at the school at 7:00 a.m. on Saturday morning to have a brief chaperon meeting, inspect students' luggage and pack the buses. There were about 200 of us in all: 173 students, 22 chaperons, and 4 teachers + 2 teacher's kids. After 5.5 hours on our four buses, we arrived in Cary. We had a couple of hours to lounge around at our hotel, a very nice Embassy Suites inn, before departing for the competition venue.

After the band performed in the evening, we returned to the hotel, where we let the kids hang out until midnight. After conducting room checks and head counts, the chaperons hung around in the hallways to make sure that nobody tried to sneak out of their rooms and get into places they didn't belong. Most of the adults, therefore, finally got to bed between 1:30 and 2:00 a.m. on Sunday morning. After a short sleep, we were up around 6:30 a.m. to start eating breakfast in shifts, make sure our students had gathered all of their luggage, and pack the buses. We left Cary at about 8:30 a.m. and arrived at back at the school around 2:00 p.m. The chaperons had to make sure the students a) checked in their uniforms, b) put their instruments away and c) cleaned their trash out of the buses. When it was determined all was in order, everyone went home and crashed.

If you've checked this blog (and Dave's) over the past couple of months, you've seen some photos of the band and our show props. With only 22 chaperons on the trip, our pit crew was short 6 people. Dave had to fill in at the back pit by hoisting and supporting one of the large tents. Some astute observers noticed that, when the wind blew, the people inside the tents were exposed to everyone's view, a circumstance that detracted from the ambiance of the show. In order to ameliorate this effect, some seamstresses assembled gowns to match the tents. That way, if the wind blew, the person inside would fit the decor. I shot a couple of photos of Dave and the other tent people on Saturday night and promised the chaperons that I would post these for all of you to see!

This is a shot of Dave and Jim, the other large tent supporter. Jim is my fellow vice-president in the band boosters. He has an excellent mind for business and financial details. He also played a large role in designing and constructing the tents. It sort of makes me wonder why the group elected me to be the other vice president. I'm lousy at math, I can't sew and I certainly can't build anything. On the other hand, I'm really good at spending money.



Here we have Jim, Kathleen, Barb and Dave. Barb is a freshman mom, so we've been initiating her into the boosters. Kathleen has been active for several years.


There you have it: documentary, photographic evidence of Dave's short-lived career as a tent. Next week, we will be backstage snapping photos of the fall concert.

Thursday, November 01, 2007

Lady Book Notes: Book Review - Shopping for God

I recently read a fascinating book about the relationship between American Protestantism and consumer culture. Check out my review at:

Lady Book Notes: Book Review - Shopping for God