Political thoughts from the past are surprisingly apropos

Posted By on February 24, 2013

Every once in a while, actually a lot lately, someone will include something from the past in their books, articles or blog which reminds me of the challenges we face in becoming independent thinkers. A couple sailing friends of mine who have and are currently living a life out of the mainstream and shared a few thoughts back when they left the “hierarchical system” and headed down a different path (they are a few years older and wiser than me, but our thinking was very similar). Come to think about it, some of Mark’s political thoughts from the late 60’s and early 70’s seem very fitting for today?

markjudyhandleywhoweare 

Written in December 1973

“When a political and an economic system become corrupted, there are four possible sources of action available to a person. If the person is unaware of the corruption s/he will either be an open supporter of the system or will feel no need to criticize it, and, by implication, support it. On the other hand, if the person is aware of the corruption of the system s/he will either become an opponent of the system or will fall into cynicism with the attitude that ‘nothing can be done.’

In this day, those who fall into the first category of being ‘un-aware’ are few and far between. During the past ten years one would have had to a hermit in order not to know that our government, and indeed our whole economic system, is suffering from rather great faults. Ever since Roosevelt put a socialist cast on the failing legs of capitalism, the economy has needed one operation after another to keep it going. Every operation has helped to weaken the total system. Every organ replaced by an artificial one has meant a further restriction of our freedoms. There is little similarity between the aging monopolistic, centralist system of today and the small, decentralist, free enterprise system that was given birth by our ancestors.

. . . It is my belief that political power is in the hands of the people – whenever they choose to use it. Once the people refuse to support a political system, it dies. When workers refuse to give their lives and consumers refuse to do their purchasing according to the demands of an economic system, it dies. The ultimate in political opposition to an oppressive and unjust system is not to fight it (which only tends to make it stronger), but to refuse to recognize its existence, to totally withdraw support from it. Such a course of action makes it necessary for one to become almost entirely self-sufficient. All of those things which are produced by the organized society must either be produced by oneself, obtained through cooperative effort with one’s peers, or done without.

It is this course of thinking that has led me to the decision that I must terminate my position …” MORE from Tis a Gift to be Simple

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Read the rest from Judy and Mark Handley’s recent blog posting.

Home repair and wedding projects continue this weekend

Posted By on February 23, 2013

kichenplumbingrepairAlthough I’m not really accomplishing much this Saturday morning, I am working on a few projects. Little things like setting the type and printing the dinner menus (PDF) for Katelyn and Drew’s wedding and creating the type mask for a sign project are going ok, but without the basement workshop being back together, it is difficult to get some “real” work done.

One of the priority projects is to reframe and drywall the “hole” over the refrigerator. A plumber helped me find the cause of a drip. When we built the house 17 years ago, a framing nail used to add nailers for kitchen cabinets up a hole in the elbow. Eventually it leaked and the drip made its way down the wall and damaged the ceiling in the basement workshop. There wasn’t enough water to cause concern, but the s-l-o-w drip made it challenging to find the cause.

workshopceiling2013m

Nice camping display at the local Honda dealer

Posted By on February 22, 2013


After enduring a month of idiot lights flashing on and off on my Honda Pilot and having my local mechanic shrug his shoulders, it was time to pay the $45 to have the dealer check it out. So this afternoon I diligently waited at the local Honda dealership while they pondered the problem. A couple hours later I'm no closer to knowing the cause of the lights, but for now the codes have been cleared and I was advised to take note of any irregularities if they appear again. Maybe it was a bad tank of fuel?

The “Miracle on Ice” happened 33 years ago

Posted By on February 22, 2013

This was a great Olympic hockey memory from 33 years ago, but really I was just curious to see how the WordPress Postie plugin handles a YouTube video.
http://youtu.be/qYscemhnf88

EDIT: Obviously it doesn’t handle video all that well … just a link. 🙁  (but I’ll embed below)

Postie test number four after tweaking HTML

Posted By on February 22, 2013

There was a glitch in the HTML settings in the previous post, so am making an added Postie plugin test to be sure all is running correctly.

The image I’m adding is an ad from a Popular Science magazine that I sorted and tossed after our basement flooding. It is state-of-the-art 1970s technology (answering machine) and are reminder to me of TV’s Rockford Files theme song opening.

Edit: moved image to bottom of post.

 

Tech Friday – Adding the Postie plugin to WordPress

Posted By on February 22, 2013

After using Posterous to post by email to my blog I’ve grown use to being able to simply email a quick post with attachments on occasion. Now that Twitter is shutting down the Posterous blogging platform, I’m looking into new ways to do this. WordPress offers a simple “text only” posting, but there are a couple options using plugins that permit photos, video links, etc.

I’m trying Postie, which is a bit more complex, but offers all of the above without an outside server for content and cross posting. It makes the most sense and looks like it will work if I can remember how to code a few things. This post will be #3 by Postie and should include a full width photo, a link as well as a paragraph break and italics.

The VW Golf GTD performance diesel may be headed to the U.S.

Posted By on February 21, 2013

2014VWGolfGTDa

According to Car and Driver, American VW buyers have a shot at getting the 2014 turbocharged 2.0 liter diesel powered Volkswagen Golf GTD. The new performance model will resemble the gas GTI, but offer a 184 horsepower and 280 lb-ft of torque diesel. Revs for this performance are incredibly low at not much above an idle — 1750 RPMs. Transmission choices should be what is offered in Europe — the six-speed manual and a six-speed dual-clutch automatic transmission — but who knows .

2014VWGolfGTD_interior 2014VWGolfGTDb

(Thanks for the link Tim)

It is embarrassing that they work for us

Posted By on February 21, 2013

barbershop10centsReally … something has to change in Washington DC. We’re borrowing TRILLIONS, yet the President jets around playing golf while the first lady and family heads to Colorado on vacation. Sure it only MILLIONS …

In the another branch of our govenment, they pass reams of laws, bicker about raising more revenue (taxing us), pretend to discuss cutting spending (only slowing the rate of “growing government”) and haven’t even manage to pay for their own haircuts without the Senate barbershop running a deficit.

Most people probably don’t even know that the Senate Hair Care shop exists, but since 1997 it has been running deficits of about $340,000 annually. For the fiscal year 2012 taxpayers picked up the $401,000 difference. We are paying for senators’ haircuts, even though their annual salary is $174,000.

The Senate Hair Care shop only makes up a small part of the $4.3 billion budget to run the legislative branch, but what’s maddening is the fact that no one has considered cutting it. “While trimming the Senate salon will do little to balance the budget, allowing it to run such a large deficit indicates a lack of seriousness at best, and immorality at worst …”  MORE

It makes the email being forwarded around all that more thought provoking!

A driver was stuck in a traffic jam on the highway outside Washington, DC. Nothing was moving. Suddenly, a man knocks on the window. The driver rolls down the window and asks, "What’s going on?"

"Terrorists have kidnapped the entire US Congress, and they’re asking for a $100 million dollar ransom. Otherwise, they are going to douse them all in gasoline and set them on fire. We are going from car to car, collecting donations."

"How much is everyone giving, on an average?" the driver asks.

The man replies, "Roughly a gallon."

Hmm … even at the uncomfortable $3.79 (I paid today), I’d probably be willing to donate a least a couple gallons.

Let the basement repairs begin!

Posted By on February 20, 2013

Photo

I arrived home tonight to progress in repairing our finished basement.
It was great to see such a speedy response from both my insurance
company (Liberty Mutual) and the re-construction company (Paul Davis).
Who knows, at this speed we may be back to normal by March?

Snow sculpture: a final Posterous post

Posted By on February 19, 2013

Photo

A few more photos are on my WordPress.com AliasMyDesultoryBlog

Posted via email from closed blogging site Posterous

Desultory - des-uhl-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee

  1. lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
  2. digressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random: a desultory remark.
My Desultory Blog