Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Reunion

"How do I say goodbye to what we had?
The good times that made us laugh,
outweigh the bad.
I thought we'd get to see forever,
but forever's gone away.
It's so hard to say goodbye to yesterday.

I don't know where this road is going to lead.
All I know is where we've been, and what we've been through.
If we get to see tomorrow, I hope it's worth all the wait.
It's so hard to say goodbye to yesterday.

And I'll take with me the memories
to be my sunshine after the rain.
It's so hard to say goodbye to yesterday.
                                            Jason Mraz

         Nothing says "yesterday" quite the way that a class reunion does; more, especially a fifty-fifth class of '59 college reunion.
         Your scribe spent a scant one-and-a-half years at Willamette University, across the street from the state capitol grounds in Salem. 
         Fresh from high school, and flexing wings of independence for the first-ever time, old W.U. proved  to be this guy's Neverland State College.    Everywhere there were exciting diversions;  fraternities, the Old Mill Stream, evening serenades, touch football on the green, the Elsinore Theatre, the A&W drive-in, and of course, a Certain Lady.  Class assignments had to compete for attention with A): all the above.   All too often,  A)  prevailed. 
         This Certain Lady became an almost all-consuming object of my attention and of course, affection.  "My name is Ann Rees", she averred to our English Comp. prof on the first day of class; an instructor who turned out to be a more effective sedative than melatonin.  But she said it in such an elegantly demure fashion, that she had me locked-in, from the first time I beheld her countenance.  Suffice to say, Romance was not the college major my... financiers had in mind.
         The handwriting on the wall of academic achievement should have been evident following my first (but hardly last) collegiate prank.  The above-mentioned prof had a bust of a Neanderthal man positioned directly in front of his lectern.  On the second day of class, your scribe placed a freshly-lit cigarette between the lips of the ancient one.  Good for at least a modest guffaw; or so went the expectation.  "Murco" entered the classroom.  He immediately spotted the burning cigarette, grabbed it, extinguished it, and summarily tossed it out the window; all performed without comment, or the slightest reaction; as if he were dispassionately flicking away a fly.   (As an aside:For every last lecture, his variety of vocal inflections were a perfect 1:1  match for his facial expressions.) I digress.  As the demon weed left his fingers, one could hear the sound of air escaping from someone's balloon.
          Somehow, "M" must have deduced the identity of the culprit.  Following that fiasco,  no matter how sparkling the syntax, nor finely-tuned the footnotes, every piece of written work submitted was returned with a grade of "C".  This ploy was not the portal one should have chosen to access the honor roll, or even scholastic respectability.  But then, there was always this Serene Charmer to keep one concentrating on more pleasant pursuits. 
         For times without her, there were always fraternity brothers and other classmates.  Almost 400 of us were enrolled for our freshman year; the largest ever at the school.  Attrition of one kind or another reduced that number to 128 graduating seniors. Because of the semi-cloistered nature of our community, virtually everyone on campus had at least a nodding familiarity with everyone else.  A word of explanation about that "cloister":
       The university, founded in 1842 by Jason Lee, a Methodist minister, had several  "quaint regulations" imposed on its students.  To mention but a few, ~students of opposite sexes could not share the same blanket, even while sitting in a park. ~Folded newspaper was madataory on a boy's lap before a girl could alight atop.  ~The seating plan for the first football game of the year required male and female students to sit on opposite sides of a rope; extending from top row to bottom on the stadium bleachers.  This scheme was designed to heighten the rah-rah level in the cheering section.  ~Co-eds were allowed to wear jeans or pedal-pushers only in their dorm rooms on Saturday mornings.  ~Attendance at weekly chapel was obligatory: six un-excused absences per semester placed the guilty party on social probation.  ~11:00 pm on week nights was mandatory campus-wide lights-out.   ~All freshman were required to wear 'beanies" when walking about the campus. ~ Alcohol?  Surely you jest! Less than half the aforementioned regulations was ever taken seriously.
        Unbeknownst to this writer, several life-long friendships were being forged during those halcyon days.  My spring semester roomie remains in constant touch, and we make it a point to get together at least once a year to reminisce, talk baseball and politics.  Several others exchange notes and phone calls.  The tiny blip that a year and a half creates on a time-line of over eight decades doesn't seem to matter.  What does matter is that the blip is there. 
            As I gazed around the hotel dining room where we gathered on that mid-September evening, three thoughts became prominent.  The first was that it was startling to see all that silver hair on heads which were once covered by cardinal and gold beanies; almost yesterday, in fact. 
                   Second:  Though my tenure at Willamette was relatively brief,  classmates recalled, with smiles, many occasions and episodes in which our paths crossed.  This prompts a disclaimer:  There is no truth to the rumor that this writer was part of a conspiracy to "lift" the cheer king's VW Beetle, and deposit it during the night on the main floor of the administration building. 
                     Finally, it's abundantly clear that our class has graduated again; to the extent that we no longer feel obliged to assume airs or pretense.  There is, after all, nothing left to prove.  Every last one of us appears downright comfortable in his own skin; wrinkled, as it may be. 
                    Our class president gave us a parting charge:  "Unless you're in heaven, be there for fifty-seven."  As we bade our fond farewells, we picked up our celebratory wine glasses.  Had he but known, the Rev. Mr. Lee would have done a 180 in his grave.  See you guys in two years!
              
"
"Bright college days, o' carefree
days gone by;
to thee we sing with our glasses
raised on high.
As we now go our
sordid, separate ways,
We will ne'er forget thee -
thou golden college days."
~Tom Lehrer~

            
          





          
         

Monday, August 18, 2014

Adrienne's Sacrament

~He took the bread, and after giving thanks, He broke it, saying, "This is my body which is given for you.  Take this in remembrance of me."~

       We are loved.  We are forgiven.
          
          Several years ago, during the course of a mens' retreat, a  short film was shown, entitled "Communion."
          The story opens as a young girl, scarcely nine years of age,  enters a reception room in a convalescent facility.   With a basketful of posies, she proceeds to waltz about the room; giving each of the patients one of her prized picks, and unhesitatingly offering a hug to every last one of the assembled.  Neither their age nor infirmity made her hesitate in pirouetting from one chair to the next.  Every last one of them was deemed worthy of her gifts;  given with selfless, unabashed gusto!
Was this offering art imitating life?
Or........
Was it life imitating art?
         Some days ago, the neighbors' daughter appeared at our front door, unbidden and unannounced.  Adrienne is about to enter the fourth grade.  She's a girl without guile or pretense.  In a very refreshing sense, what you see is what you get with her. The genuine article.  At times, during the early spring, I've seen her practicing her pitcher's "windmill wind-up" in an adjacent field with her mom, in preparation for an upcoming softball season.   To this point in our relationship, she has made a few brief visits to our home on the hill; usually for the exchange of Christmas goodies, or to solicit a sale of candy or cookie dough for a school fund-raiser.  For these visits, she is almost always accompanied by her mom.  This day, it was different. Very different.  She was making a pastoral call......a sacramental visitation.....all by herself.
 
        She brought with her a bouquet of flowers; all of her selection, accompanied by a card of her design.   One could tell by the earnest look in her eyes that this sacramental offering was prompted by her own, personal calling.
        Much is made of the time, preparation and sacrifice required to receive ordination.  The respect and admiration accorded those who receive holy orders is richly deserved.
        Just as deserving of praise are those un-ordained among us who offer sacraments; at times oblivious of the resounding  joy and release they leave in the afterglow. 
         It is doubtful that Adrienne was fully aware of the impact on those who received this special sacrament.  She probably performed her rite simply out of the need to do good.  That makes her act all the more beautiful.....and just as valid as those things a priest does while wearing a stole, and bearing Host and chalice.

                                                            We are loved.  Amen


 
           
 
        
         
 
 



                          

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Where Have All the Flowers Gone?

When our first color television set lit up the living room, "Star Trek" quickly became our favorite series to watch....and watch....and watch.  We became so familiar with the dialogue that we could actually parrot the words many of the characters spoke.
           To this writer, the most memorable episode was and is, "Let This Be Your Last Battlefield" (v.1969).  The plot involves two solitary inhabitants of a planet far, far away.  At first glance, the characters look like identical, "monochromatic" twins.  But then, as they both are quick to tell the crew of the Starship Enterprise, they are decidedly dissimilar. 
           One,  you see, is white on the right side of his body, while the other is white on the left.  That makes not just a world, but a galaxy of difference, and is at the roots of an immortal conflict.   They absolutely abhor one another.  Call it sibbling rivalry, run amuck.  Despite repeated efforts by Captain Kirk to establish a truce, the duelists continue to inflict punishing, painful cosmic zaps to each other.  The realization by both combatants  that neither has the power to dispatch the other does nothing to dissuade them from trying; trying throughout all eternity.  As first officer Spock observes, "To expect sense from two mentalities of such extreme view points is not logical."
                 Gene Rodenberry, the executive producer of the series, was a visionary.  Doubtless, he saw in Last Battlefield a parable of huge dimension and implication for this troubled star-base of ours.  Every passing day, for the last two weeks, has been riddled with lead stories about the conflict along the Gaza Strip.  The Israelies (white on the right) have every right to protect what is theirs.  Meanwhile Hamas (white on the left...bank?) wants to protect the sovereignty of the Palestinian state.  Both sides are showing a "no quarter given" approach to on-again-off-again negotiations. Both sides have inflicted huge pain and suffering on the other.  While the leaders of both countries talk the good talk, there is far less willingness to walk the good walk.  Each accuses the other of breaking treaties and accords.
                  Since it achieved independent statehood in 1988, Palestine has been an irritant, at best, to its neighbor, and the feeling is mutual.  The two opposing sides can't seem to acknowledge that way back when, they were of the same ancestry.  Both Jews and the Muslims can trace their lineage to Abraham, Isaac and Ishmael, so the bible says.  They have occupied the same corner of the cosmos for a couple of mileniums;  veritable brothers under the skin.  Yet today, much of Jerusalem has been reduced to rubble by a conflict without end. Dead and wounded bring mounting measures of grief.  Sadly,  cease-fires have the life expectancy of wind-gusts. 
               In the final scene of Last Battefield, the Enterprise departs the far-away planet; leaving the two adversaries to continue their titanic mano-a-mano tussle.  Unfortunately, we are all confined to Starbase Earth, and for this country and these circumstances there is no place, but home.  We are morally obliged to stay the course,  and provide diplomatic help whenever it's requested..... even by mentalities of extreme viewpoints. There should be nothing more offered, as long as the principle players insist on re-enacting this episode.

                
                                                 


                 
                     

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Spinning 45's

A prologue for those too young to know:  There was a time in history, after the age of the Cro-Magnon man, but before that of pop tarts.  It was the age of saddle shoes, black and white television sets and Ford Edsels.  It was also the era when the latest craze in sound reproduction hit the music market; more specifically the youth music market.  It was compact, fairly inexpensive, relatively light, and who cared in those days if the the listening quality was just one notch above "tolerable"?  This was the time of the 45 player.


"45" was a designation for the discs which turned on the machine at a rate of forty-five revolutions per minute.  (R.P.M.'s referred to things beside car engines in those days.)  45's were considered an advance over those ancient 78's, which were heavy and brittle enough to crack under the impact of scarcely more than a poorly placed elbow.  The 45 was engineered for survival, and pliable enough to withstand the weight of an adult male sitting on it, if it wasn't for a very long period of time, and the male in question wasn't over-indulging on pop tarts.  In size and weight,  they are what a cd on steroids would look like.
           
            The playing device adorned many a bookcase of high school and college kids; yours truly included, of course. The fact that they were high maintenance, requiring repeated disk replacement for every four minutes-worth of music, did nothing to dissuade the afficionado of his day... or even the would-be afficionado. I remember, as a high school freshman,  the first time I ventured into West Portal Music in San Francisco and asked for a 45 of a certain tune that was given a lot of play on the radio.  Knowing my parents, as well as their old school 78 equipment, the clerk asked, "Why do you want to buy that?"  He received the most lame of justifications, "Because."

             It is a point of pride with this writer that he is able to associate almost every song, every disc he has collected with a time and place when it was first heard.  Some might call that a trivial pursuit, but anything that deters a septuagenarian's aging is not trivial.  Pat Boone: the prince of the pop charts, the "April Love" movie, and Yale University.  What more does a guy need?!  Boone provided the only incentive necessary to buy my first pair of white buck shoes.  "Don't Forbid Me" was a tune which defined the last days in the age of naivete, when a beau worried about negative reactions of his intended to "the whisperings of sweet nothings in her ear."  That age ended around the time of the McCarthy Hearings in the U.S. Senate.
       Patience and Prudence was a female duet whose monikers defied, dare we say,  "credence".   What are the odds, after all, that these two girls would discover each other's names before entering into a recording contract?   As things turned out, "Tonight You Belong to Me" was their only big hit, but in the fall of 1955 it was well worth a buy.  
           The disc was played countless times in my room at the Phi Delt fraternity where I pined over the girl who captivated me.  The result was that academic pursuits were pushed into mañana status.   Bye-bye, four- year degree, and hello, girl of my dreams!  It was not all that difficult to dismiss the consequences of his deeds for a young and reckless soul.
               Comes September of 1958 and the approach of matrimonial bliss. My two closest and dearest high school  friends, "Deacon", and "The Mule Skinner" accompanied this writer on a ride up highway 99E from Palo Alto, California to Portland in a newly purchased, but not-nearly-so-new 1953 Ford Customline four-door sedan; equipped with four partially-bald tires.  The ultimate destination was a chapel with a priest and lady in white rainment. As we sped along the highway, I felt a tell-tale wobble from one of the front tires.  Deacon told me that if my car was like his, once we passed 50 mph, the wobble would go away.  It did,  just as he said it would.  What a guy, and what a best man!! The three of us continued our northward journey;  interspersed at junctures with moments of personal, voiceless prayer whenever the critical speed was approached.  
                 The music on the car radio filled the air, and provided brief respites

from anxiety and road-exhaustion.  One of the songs we heard was Don Gibson's "It's been a blue, blue day.  I feel like running away.  I feel like running away from it all."  That song drew rounds of guffaws each time we heard it.
            But for your scribe, the most memorable of tunes was composed and produced by another  virtual unknown,  Peter De Angelis, called, "The Happy Mandolin."  The station we were listening to must have played that at least a half-dozen times altogether on the round-trip.
           It is indeed a happy song, but it also carried with it a "coded" message that everything was going to turn out well.  So far, it has.  Upon my return to the work-a-day world at St. Paul Insurance Co., I bought two copies of that song.  There was the distinct chance that this guy's gem might never come my way again.  There was no sense in taking a chance with something so special.  As it turned out, it's now available on I-Tunes.  Whenever I play it on the car cd player, I have to ask the Bride if she remembers when she first heard it.  She smiles, but has grown tired of answering the question. 
             Finally, there is Joe Dowell who recorded a handful of hits that grossed a million dollars, including "Little Red Rented Rowboat," and, "Wooden Heart", which Elvis made popular in Europe.  However, in our house, he is best remembered for "Bridge of Love", which was oft-played on the air while yours truly was stocking Safeway Store shelves after hours in the early '60's when our children were very young.

      When I hear it play, it brings back memories of the first home that we were able to call "our own".  The house was situated in a working-class neighborhood in s.e. Portland.  Almost all the neighbors were good friends, and were actively, but respectfully engaged in each other's lives.  Fast forward now to 2014, and a hill in Boring.  Here, we can honestly classify but one pair of neighbors as good friends.  Times change, and not necessarily for the better.
         This collection of 45's was lost for well over a decade, and was "unearthed" during the course of an archaelogical expedition, conducted by the Bride,  into the deepest, most remote reaches of basement storage room #2.  This "cavern" allows for inspection in an upright position, but still, it is not a place where the feint of heart nor weak of knees should ever venture.  That cavern-caveat notwithstanding, if the reader has such a burial ground, it would be adviseable to explore it more often than once every ten years.  Who knows what riches might be rediscovered?!
          

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Another Day In Paradise

May 9, 2014: 6:50 am
As I roll out of the feathers, I pause to clear out the cobwebs in my mind.  Next,
I run a quick systems check on my Swedish chassis.  The user advisory has been laid out: one cannot be too careful when operating vintage 1937 equipment.   Warranties are no longer in effect.
               Everything seems to be working as it did yesterday.  As I stand, I feel no pain, and I am well aware of date, time, and location.  Thank you, Lord.  Put this day in the "win" column.  Before heading to the bathroom for morning ablutions, I walk to the starboard side of the bed to give the Bride a buss on the cheek.  She is battling a cold, and despite the fact that we share the same bed, and breathe the same air, she insists on no lip-to-lip contact for its duration.  Go figure.

7:01 am
Chica paws at her crate in anticipation of her release to answer nature's call.  She regularly ignores the canine code of conduct, ie:  thou shalt not do one's business on home turf.  She turns a blind eye to the acres of green lawns and pasture that surround our house on the hill.  Hilario, our "2nd son" and gardener, playfully chides us by saying that he is going to start tacking on a poop-scoop surcharge to the monthly bill. While fetching the morning newspaper (now only 4 days of hard copy-3 days digital), the boss observes that his "White Shadow" has done the deed again.  With a grimace, the pooper-scooper tool is fetched.  There will be no-surcharges here, by gum.
7:15 am
The morning ritual continues.  This involves yours truly getting "down on all fours" to get as close to Chica's level as possible for two minutes-worth of "schmoozing".  This means all manner of belly scratching, head-rubbing, and nonsense-talking.  Then, of course, it's on to the same breakfast of which, year after year, she never tires.  The more hard and fast the routine that dogs have in their lives, the better they seem to like it.  Before the food is set before her, she performs her one and only "patented" trick: a four-legged pirouette.
7:22 am
The news in the morning paper is rather on the innocuous side.  Putin says he's withdrawing troops on Russia's border with Ukraine.  Drone surveillance says otherwise.  A tea-party candidate for Oregon senator is trying to buy her way into the ballot box in November.  Eight-tenths of an inch of rain were recorded yesterday in our local area.  One uplifting piece of news comes from the sports page.  My beloved San Francisco Giants have taken the measure of their arch-enemy, the Los Angeles Dodgers (aka: "Doggers"), 3-1!
8:35 am
Time to head down the hill to meet with the delivery man from the shop where our church has had repairs and maintenance performed on its riding lawn-mower.  As I drive, I wonder and worry.  With  the exception of five Anglos, we are an all-Latino parish, and have been for years.  This writer is the last of the grey beards; the guy who tends to the work around the church when nobody else is available.  That means Monday through Friday.  When I am no longer able to carry the torch, who is going to be there to pick it up?  For today, everything worked out fine, but tomorrow?  God only knows.  The priest tells me, "Hal, you take too much on yourself!"  Right, Padre, but who else is there?  Ysidro?  (Inside joke:  At Holy Cross/Santa Cruz, there is nobody named "Ysidro")
9:05 am
"Rich", the deliveryman unloads the tractor, and since the skies have yet to rain, I make the decision to parade around the front lawn.  Before starting, I accidentally pour about 1/2 gallon of oil mix gasoline into the tank.  This is used for 2-cycle engines like weed-eaters and leaf-blowers; not tactors!  Panic-stricken, I call the shop, whereupon the foreman tells me that the tractor engine might belch some small, black clouds, but not to worry.  Today, one "oops-moment" will go undetected.
10:15 am
After having made about a dozen circuits of the lawn in the "front forty" of the church, the clouds opened  up.  As singer Kenny Rogers once sang, "You gotta know when to hold 'em; know when to fold 'em."   Skies are supposed to be clearing tomorrow afternoon. Hope springs eternal.  Maybe somebody not named "Ysidro" will show up during the day to finish the job.  The Y-guy cannot be counted on. 
11:20 am
This journal entry continues apace.  While trying to update and transfer materials from laptop to desktop computer, I am besieged by an irritating "RegCleanPro" popup which refuses to take "no" for an answer.  Purging it and all of its relatives from my hard drive doesn't seem to thwart this pesky beastie.  But the grace of persistence ultimately prevails. and one nemesis has been sent down the tube.
12:05 pm
There is no need of a time piece with Chica in the house.  Her internal clock tells her unerringly when the noon hour has arrived.  That is chow time.  It is one of several instances during the course of a day when she absolutely refuses to be ignored.  In situations where push comes to shove, she will push her paw against my ankle...repeatedly...until I cave into her persistence.  Chica is always fed before the boss prepares his sandwich of the day, which is accompanied by a Gatorade "chaser".   
12:20 pm                                                                                                                                          As Annie and I finish our noon-time repast, it is twenty minutes into our favorite news program on television.  Amazingly, there have been no private, body-function commercials, and therefore, no need to hit the mute button on the remote.  Will wonders never cease?!
12:57 pm                                                                                                                                     Back to the basement, and what passes for my office; or, what I regularly refer to as "The Dungeon". It is time to research and provide some questions for my weekly trivia contest on amateur radio.  Ostensibly, the 7:30 to 8:00 pm hour on a designated frequency is given over to emergency preparedness, and relaying of various pieces of relevant information, called "traffic".  There are usually between twenty and thirty operators who "check-in" to this network of a Friday.  Things invariably begin to lag, mid-way through the half-hour.  That is when I launch into my trivia questions to fill in the time, and restore a comfort level.  Hams hate "dead air" when nothing seems to be happening,  Some operators, during a stretch such as this,  Most seem to enjoy the departure from the regular business of the net.  Looking outside,  the sun has been playing hide and seek with the rain clouds all-morning long.  Now it's choosing to show itself once again.
5.09 pm                                                                                                                               Received a phone call from Fr. Roberto, our priest, who has his feet in two camps.  One of these is in Boring, the other in L.A.  Our guy is a political animal, very steeped in moves and counter-moves when it comes to matters in our diocese.  Once monthly, he flies to the sunny southland to touch base with his daughter and former parishoners.  But he always manages to make it back to Boring for mass on Sunday.  The majority of our chat time was spent discussing an upcoming meeting of five churches in the eastern reaches of our convocation; all of which have Latino constituencies.  He suspects that this will become a discussion of attrition.  Bottom line: one flock will be told that, because of financial necessity,  they have to "fold their tent", and merge with another parish.  In that case, both he and I won't hesitate to tell the bishop that "ain't necessarily so". 
7:15 pm
Trouble in Dungeon-Paradise.  In queuing up the transceiver and computer for the Friday night amateur radio net, I discovered to my dismay, that all my roster files for operators checking-in had been corrupted, and none could be coaxed into restoring themselves.  This resulted in the same process I started with, over fifteen years ago, to wit: doing all data in Neanderthal-ish long-hand. (They don't even teach penmanship in grade schools, these days!)  Then, as if that weren't enough adversity, almost all the early check-ins told me that there was a lot of "white noise" with my transmissions, making for a "rough copy". 
           What a blow to the old ego!  The clarion call of Clackamas County........ with a poor signal?!  Unheard of.....until this evening.  Switching from one antenna to the other avails nothing significant.  One ham friend tells me, on air, that it's not my problem, but one created by the atmosphere.  Thank you, sir.  Then, another ham chimes in that the atmospheric conditions have nothing to do with the case.  (The hissing sound I next heard was air escaping from my balloon.)  I chose to abide with my friend's diagnosis.
             The rest of the session went fairly well. There were twenty-six operators who checked in, and five of the fifteen questions were answered correctly. (There are no prizes, but think of the prestige!)    Looking ahead to next Friday, very few of life's mechanical and electrical problems are self-correcting.  It can be hoped that this data base crisis will be one.
9:00 pm
TV time in this house takes place in the family room; family consisting of the Bride, Chica, and yours truly.  Things proceed normally for the first hour.  Our doggie has chilled between my knees on the recliner, and  the Bride and I are engrossed in Grimm.  This series marks the one and only time when Annie regularly watches a program where a human morphs into something hideous.  She insisted on keeping a light on in the hall after watching Lon Chaney Jr. in "The Wolf Man" on a rented tv in the fall of '58; right after our wedding.  I am sure she would tell you that now, it's all due to "character development". 
10:00 pm
"Blue Bloods", the program which I point to all week long, is showing the opening sequence.   It is the on-going story of four generations of family; two of whom are actively involved in law-enforcement.  There is no on-screen violence; pretty much "after the fact" revelations of capital crimes. 
       "Danny", a hot-headed detective with a penchant for putting himself in tight scrapes" is the character that I gravitate toward. Grandpa Reagan is a retired police chief.  He customarily presides at the head of table for the weekly clan meal, which is always preceded by a blessing.  This one scene bonds family, and is, to this writer,  the most endearing and compelling of every Friday night's story. Will Chica give me a free pass, at least until the first commercials, before asserting herself?  Well, of course not. 
                     Naturally, it's  more than just the "I've got to go to the bathroom, Daddy."  Kids aren't the only ones to ply this ploy.  The exotic scents which didn't rate a second sniff during daylight hours now merit serious scrutiny.  Back in the den, N.Y.P.D. chief Frank (Tom Selleck) Reagan is undoubtedly finding son Danny in another vat of procedural hot water, while Chica is still scanning the territory;  no doubt thinking of ways to prolong her escapade.  This lack of focus (teacher word) on the task at hand prompts two tugs on the leash.  Awe, come on, doggie!  Two more tugs and she finally gets serious about the original objective....my (teacher) objective. But she still has one trump card left to play; the obligatory ball-toss from the family room to the hallway. Six or seven lobs later, Chica contentedly curls up on her pad; satisfied that she has played the boss like a violin, yet again.
                    Upon returning to the recliner, The Bride tolerantly and dutifully gives me a summation of what I've missed.  Fortunately, it was nothing flow-changing.  The familial gathering  sequence follows, one commercial-break later.  Danny has extricated himself from another mess,  Frank manages to stay above the political fray, and all is almost well with the world. However,  in tv series as in real life, there are no absolutes until the final episode.  It is the next item on the agenda, and that unresolved plot twist that propel us onward and upward.  I think.
11:05 pm
                 My "finny friends, piscine pals" are about to get their daily ration of frozen blood worms and daphnia.  Five minutes ago, all the inhabitants of my 29 gallon water world were docile and demure....if indeed those are apt descriptors of tropical fish emotion.  It could be that they are devious and were game-playing their provider.  But now that he is up-close-and-personal, there are a dozen pairs of pectoral fins, pressing on glass.  Gee guys,  you're
always so glad to see me!  What an ego-trip!
11:10 pm
Chica trundles down the hall with me to the bedroom for the last of our daily rituals.  While hoisting her up on the "feathers", I murmur sweet nothings in her ear, like how much of a winner she is in the eyes of her boss.  Then, after another round of bathroom ablutions,  it's another spate of scratches and pats for the doggie, during which the Bride repairs and prepares for sack-time.  This is Chica's clue to vacate the premisis,  which she does willingly.  During our walk down the hall to her crate, she is advised of what the morning will bring, and what excitement awaits her.  After ten years of one-way conversation, she listens, and doubtlessly intuits all the subtleties of meaning.
11:28
Late Night with Jimmy Fallon on the tube in our boudoir.  With tv parked on her night stand, I snuggle and buss The Bride on the cheek, while we watch Jimmy write his every-Friday "Thank You notes" to people both real and imaginary.  One particular note is written to people who wear "W.W.J.D." bracelets. Translation: "What Would Jesus Do?" He writes, "Thank you for wearing those bracelets while doing things that Jesus would  never do". This was a definite jab at Christian hypocrisy.  It fetches at least one and a half laughs out of his Boring audience.  
           The lights then go out, and another morning, afternoon, and evening are entered in the books. This writer's last waking words: "Love you, Babes."  The last waking thought:  Providence had smiled on this writer again; just as it had countless times before.  Just another day in paradise.
         
                                 
               
               
              

     

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Voter Fraud and the Straw Man

           

According to a Department of Justice analysis, out of 197,000,000 votes cast in federal elections between 2002 and 2005. only 40 voters have been indicted for fraud.  With a calculator and some basic number-crunching the fraud rate turns out to be a sub-microscopic .00002%.
          Yet despite this rather trifling tally, one political party has chosen to make voter fraud an issue, big enough to engage entire states and, beyond that, regions of states. To one school of thought, it is an insidious phenomenon, capable of enveloping huge portions of the electorate, and corrupting a primary privilege of citizenship.  Enter the Straw Man.
             The Straw Man,in reality is an argument; an argument that requires the reader or listener to suspend recollection and belief of the original premise.  It has been used for ages in debate; particularly with regards to emotionally-charged issues.  The tactic makes use of exaggeration, misrepresentation. and, if all else fails,  total fabrication.  An example might be, candidate Dick believes that more county tax revenue should be allocated to restoration of highways and roads.  Candidate Jane responds that she is sorry to hear that Dick is opposed to funding for the sheriff's patrols.  In the case of voter fraud, one particular party has become rather, shall we say "cozy" with the Straw Man.
             For our purposes,  we'll refrain from naming political parties in this post.  Instead, we will refer to them by their color of preference.  The party which espouses the existence of this "grainy guy" we'll call the "Party of Red".  The party which considers him a myth we'll designate as the "Party of Blue".  As to the those who sniff the prevailing winds of sentiment during election years, and fluctuate between Red and Blue will be referred to as "Purple People".
                                                            ~Back to the chase~
             The Straw Man is "an undocumented" who takes advantage of alleged lax voter regulations.  To allow such an abuse to continue, so the thinking goes, is to jeopardize the integrity of the entire electoral process.  An organization which calls itself "True the Vote" cites a statistic that there are "1.8 million dead voters still eligible on the rolls across the country."  And if there are that many, as the reasoning seems to lead, there are 1.8 million potential abuses.  This publication states further that "2.75 million voters are registered in more than one state". 
          In both of these arguments, post hoc, ergo propter hoc, comes into play.  Translated: after this, because of this.  In other words, if this  is caused then this can be the only possible effect.  It is a fallacy introduced to this writer in Logic 101, many moons ago.  These statistics are used to lead the reader to conclude that there are four and a half million votes out there, ready to be grabbed, like so much low-hanging fruit.
          The Straw Man, in this voter fraud scenario is a person without valid documentation who exercises a right of citizenship which is not legitimately his.  He lacks a birth certificate ($10-$45), or a passport ($85), or certified naturalization papers ($19.95).  He might also lack other resources (transportation, language skills, advice) to acquire any of these documents.  As this scenario plays out, the only asset he may have working for him is the cunning to leverage the system and score a vote to which he is not entitled.
         Another tenet of Logic 101 that has stood the test of time is that it's impossible to prove, beyond a shadow of doubt, that something does not exist.  That is a rock which theologically has stood the test of time.So, it is impossible to argue the non-existence of straw men, but in the real world those most affected by more stringent voting regulations are not those who vote on behalf of dead people, or those who fly from state to state to tilt election outcomes. Rather, they are those who number amongst the poor, the elderly, the minorities, the students. Those without a powerful advocate to speak on their behalf.
           The reality is that twelve percent of voting age people have no form of valid voter identification.  The reality is that voter id laws are seen by some as a modern form of poll tax, as many of the country's poorest will not be able to vote due to a lack of proper state-issued identification.  The reality is that in states governed by "Purple People", the "Party of Red"has sanctioned voter id laws to prevent the "Party of Blue" from gaining control of state legislatures.
             The reality for your scribe is that the last six words of our nation's pledge to the flag sound rather hollow, at the moment.

           
          
            

Sunday, March 30, 2014

Cosmic Questions, One More Time



Is Texas part of the "old south" (democrat, secessionist),new south (republican), or part of the Tea Party (secessionist, again)?
            Chuck R.- Columbia, MD

What good are fleas?
             Tyler C.-  Vancouver, WA

Is there such a thing as absolute space?
                               Anna K. - Houston,TX

Jesus has come.  Why is everything still so incomplete?
                      Elizabeth R-H. - Alexandria VA

Is it likely that humankind will ever be free of the masks it wears?
                         David C. - Sao Paolo, Brazil

What is love?
                          Paula R. - Columbia, MD


Why are some people so resilient while others are so
devastated by similar events?
                           Nicole C. - Portland, OR
 
 
Will there ever be another ice age?
                           Joetta D. - Seattle, WA

Why on earth do we let anyone buy a gun?
                           Diana F. - Eugene, OR

What is normal?
                          Ellen K. - Houston, TX

How come we (collectively, not individually) are still racist?
                           Steven M. - Portland, OR

As a train passes cows in the field, why are the cows always facing the train?
                          Charles H. - Portland, OR

What prevents management from following the suggestions made by employees?
                          Betsy H. - Richmond, VA

Why is it that whenever you have to make a connecting flight, with an impossibly short layover, the connecting flight is always at the other end of the airport?
                  Mike L. - Portland, OR

(ed. note - This ends the trifecta of those questions posed by readers for which they have never received a satisfactory answer; aka: cosmic questions.  Next year's reader input will address the question: If you were in congress, and could write one piece of legislation which would be passed by both houses, what would it be?)