Wednesday, December 27, 2006

Post-yuletide Bliss

Okay...it has been a while. Work has become a localized area of extreme low pressure (a vacuum) and boy does it ever SUCK! It is bad when the team (well, those who are doing most of the work) disagree with the direction the middle management wants to go. To use an analogy (as I am apt to do), it is like being told to drive a train (going about 100 MPH) to a certain location, but you are being made to go on a track that happens to be on is going the wrong direction, and over a cliff. You know that failure lies ahead, you and others have voiced this fact multiple times, but no one (that has the power to change tracks) is willing to listen. Did I say that I LOVE going to work in the mornings?

Now that I got that out of my system, let's talk about the holiday: Christmas/Xmas/Kwanza/Hanukkah/Festivus/whatever you choose to celebrate or not.

I am not going to waste my time or yours venting about the idiocy regarding whose holiday can be celebrated/what decorations (or not) can be placed where. I wanna talk about the real meaning of the season (in today's day and age)...presents! Well, one of them anyway.

2 years ago, I bought the "Smile" album/CD that Brian Wilson released after 35 years. I was blown away and moved as no music had moved me before. I listened to it over and over, in the car, at home with the headphones. I had listened to it enough to identify that a 5-note section in one track is the basis for another track toward the end of the CD. It is truly a modern symphony, 3-related movements, each telling an individual story, but together the three comprise a grander vision. Yes, I think the album is great. I thought it would take a an equivalent genius to come up with any work that is on the same level and I thought it would be years before that genius came along.

Well, that work has been released and the genius behind it, like the esteemable Mr. Wilson, has been around a while. This genius of course is Sir George Martin and the work is the new compilation of Beatles' work "Love". Like "Smile" before it, "Love" begs to be listened to in it's entirety, in one sitting. The trip is one and half hours long, but covers much ground...primarily the middle-late era ("Rubber Soul" and later) during which Sir George was the producer. The juxtaposition of bass line of one song and the lead riffs from different song, overlayed with the vocal tracks from yet again another song are in almost all instances wonderful. In my opinion, track 14 "Within You Without You/Tomorrow Never Knows" and it's seamless flow into "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds" and then further into "Octopus's Garden" is the best segment of a totally enjoyable disc. The best track, when taken by itself is definitely "Strawberry Fields Forever" which starts with an acoustic version (similar to that on Beatles' Anthology 2) and slowly transitions to the full orchestra version before your very ears. If you couldn't tell, I am a huge Beatles' fan. But this wondrous album is a perfect illustration of how the lads' music transcends time and generations.

Friday, October 27, 2006

When is a dunk in the water not a dunk in the water?

The White House said Friday that Vice President Dick Cheney was not talking about a torture technique known as "water boarding" when he said dunking terrorism suspects in water during questioning was a "no-brainer." In an interview Tuesday with WDAY of Fargo, North Dakota, Cheney was asked if "a dunk in water is a no-brainer if it can save lives."

The administration has repeatedly refused to say which techniques they believe are permitted under the new law. Asked to define a dunk in water, [Press Secretary Tony] Snow said, "It's a dunk in the water."

Link Here

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

You need help with your medical bills? Sure, as long as you don't drink, smoke, have lustful thoughts, etc...

Check out this wonderful cost-sharing program.

One of the benefits of the Medi-Share program?

You Will Not Be Subsidizing Unbiblical Lifestyles

Our Medi-Share members and their healthcare dollars do not subsidize abortions, drug addictions, or any other unbiblical lifestyles that inevitably lead to the premature destruction of the body, mind, and spirit.


I never thought that "Christian charity" was meant only for Christians. I guess "Do unto others..." was a mis-translation. Maybe it is better translated as "Do unto others (but only those like yourself)..."

But believe it or not, the very "red" state of Kentucky is moving to ban the group. It must be the work of those damn "activists" judges again!

Monday, October 23, 2006

Weird Al hits top 10

'Weird Al' Yankovic finally hits the top 10

NEW YORK (Billboard) -- Now this is weird. "Weird Al" Yankovic's new album, "Straight Outta Lynwood," has scored the enduring song parodist his biggest chart successes in a career that spans nearly three decades.

"Lynwood," Yankovic's 12th album, debuted this month at No. 10 on the Billboard 200, his first top 10 album ever. Meanwhile, the Chamillionaire parody "White and Nerdy," reached No. 9 on the Billboard Hot 100, besting his previous high of No. 12 with "Eat It" in 1984.


You can check the video out on YouTube Wierd(sic) Al - White and Nerdy

Thursday, October 19, 2006

Gotta love it!

A recent incident that upset social conservatives involved remarks by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice last week. With First Lady Laura Bush looking on, Rice swore in Mark R. Dybul as U.S. global AIDS coordinator while his partner, Jason Claire, held the Bible. Claire's mother was in the audience, and Rice referred to her as Dybul's "mother-in-law."

"The Republican Party is taking pro-family conservatives for granted," said Mike Mears, executive director of the political action committee of Concerned Women for America, which promotes biblical values. "What Secretary Rice did just the other day is going to anger quite a few people."
just a few?

Thursday, October 12, 2006

Moral relativism

As much as the right in this country pushes the idea that they are the only ones with any morality and that the problem with the left is moral relativism, it just surprises me how much the republicans are always comparing their actions to those of former/current democrats...but only when pointing out that they are not as bad as the democrats..you never see them pointing out that the democrats did something better.

One example is the tried-and-true "Well, look at what happened under the Clinton administration" as the recent John McCain blaming N. Korea's nuclear test on the former president...not the one that has been in the White House for 6 years.

But today's quote takes the cake...

Shays on Foley handling: At least no one died

HARTFORD, Connecticut (AP) -- Republican Rep. Christopher Shays defended the House speaker's handling of a congressional page scandal, saying no one died like during the 1969 Chappaquiddick incident involving Democratic Sen. Ted Kennedy.

"I know the speaker didn't go over a bridge and leave a young person in the water, and then have a press conference the next day," the embattled Connecticut congressman told The Hartford Courant in remarks published Wednesday.

"Dennis Hastert didn't kill anybody," he added.


Okay so what is the moral here? Don't get in a car with Ted Kennedy? Or is it Don't trust the right to do what is right?

Monday, September 25, 2006

New kid on the block

How much more of a mess can the Middle East become?

Egypt to Begin Nuclear Programme

Egypt has said it will re-launch its nuclear energy
programme after a 20-year freeze as it announced plans
to build a nuclear power station on the Mediterranean coast.


...and the ticks on the doomsday clock just keep coming faster and faster...

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Well said!

From a blog I frequent...

Puppy Training Supplies Courtesy the WSJ
by soccerdad

From the Opinion Journal The Liberals' War: Why is the left afraid to face up to the threat of radical Islam? By Brett Stephens

Usually I try and just let this kind of nonsense pass realizing that it panders to a certain unthinking crowd that will just accept it without giving it a second thought. But for some, as yet, unexplainable masochistic impulse I decided to take a closer look.

Here's a puzzle: Why is it so frequently the case that the people who have the most at stake in the battle against Islamic extremism and the most to lose when Islamism gains--namely, liberals--are typically the most reluctant to fight it?

This opening paragraph left me going WTF. Why do liberals have more at stake? Certainly liberals don’t enjoy any more freedoms than anyone else. Islamic extremists have shown no proclivity of attacking liberals as opposed to conservatives. So what’s the point? Is it a strawman? I’ll take a stab at this in a moment.

This may be reading too much into Ms. Newman's essay.

I love this kind of nonsense, since it’s basically saying “yeah we are interpreting this in a self-serving way, out of context, but we’re going ahead anyway”.

Yet after 9/11 at least a few old-time voices on the left--Christopher Hitchens, Bruce Bawer, Paul Berman and Ron Rosenbaum, among others--understood that what Islamism most threatened wasn't just America generally, but precisely the values that modern liberalism had done so much to promote and protect for the past 40 years: civil rights, gay rights, feminism, privacy rights, reproductive choice, sexual freedom, the right to worship as one chooses, the right not to worship at all.

Lets look at the second part of this quote. Here I see some progress for the right. They are finally admitting in public and in writing that it is liberals who fight for personal freedom. And by implication, it is the right who doesn’t or does so with much less enthusiasm.

Now lets get to the crux.

An instinct for pacifism surely goes some way toward explaining the left's curious unwillingness to sign up for a war to defend its core values.

This statement is breathtaking in the magnitude of the logical jump one has to make to accept this at face value. Exactly how are the Islamic extremists going to undo the freedoms that the liberals have fought for? Exactly how are they going to force us to re-segregate the south, or impinge on the other rights that Mr Stephens listed? The irony in him mentioning privacy rights is priceless, although I suspect it was lost on him. Certainly for the Islamic extremists to actually and directly cause an abrogation of the liberties, would imply that they would somehow take over the US government. Clearly this is ludicrous on its face. What the Islamic extremists are capable of doing is to inflict fear, by the threat of more terrorist attacks. But the Bush administration has assured us we are now safer than we were.

Since Mr. Stephens as admitted to his relatively diminished interest in promoting liberties, I would like to offer an alternative explanation. The liberals, who are much savvier with respect to liberties, realize full well that the threat to our liberties and, in particular, to those mentioned by Mr. Stephens are not from Islamic extremists, but to the right wing administration whose leader sees the Constitution as a damn piece of paper. I mean how can we take seriously the musing on liberties by someone who admits that his side isn’t that interested in them. Just maybe the liberals who have fought the hardest for personal liberties have it right. It is the so-called “conservatives” who are exploiting the fear of future terrorist attack to restrict the liberties of Americans, employ torture, and spy on Americans. So unless the Islamic extremists hijack our government how will we lose the personal freedoms Mr Stephens lists? Is he suggesting that they are capable of defeating the US on its own soil?

From there, Mr Stephens article degenerates into a piece unworthy of a mid-level Conservative blog. We have the perfunctory reference to appeasement that is so last week. And of course what would a conservative based article on liberals be without a thinly veiled attempt to equate Islamism [having already made it clear that Islam is evil] and liberalism.

This is thin gruel indeed. Unfortunately I don’t have a puppy to train.

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

I love it!

Top evangelical: Don't believe our ads

A full-page advertisement in this month's Christianity Today warns that America's evangelicals may soon be on the endangered species list...along with spotted owls.

But the ad, which is endorsed by the National Association of Evangelicals, is a false alarm -- or at least an exaggeration -- according to the group's president -- Pastor Ted Haggard.

"We're church people. We always use fear and guilt to motivate people," Haggard told Bible Belt Blogger, punctuating the quip with hearty laughter.

The ad, which promotes the Battlecry Leadership Summit, a national series of meetings for youth pastors, contains the following warning. "Christianity in America won't survive another decade. Unless we do something now." It warns that young people are rejecting the faith in droves and that "current trends show that only 4% (of teens) will be evangelical believers by the time they become adults."

Reality, Haggard said, isn't nearly so dire. "Evangelicalism is exploding worldwide. We're growing rapidly in the southern hemisphere. We're growing moderately in the United States. We're declining in Europe... In the United States, there are some difficulties and I'm not going to get into that now, but we're trying to encourage people to solve these problems before they are created too severe."

It's unclear how the four percent figure was calculated. That number originally appeared in a book that was written nine years ago by former Southern Baptist Theological Seminary dean Thom S. Rainer.

The ad isn't confined just to Christianity Today. "Those ads all ran in Christian magazines in order to motivate NAE churches and others to do a better job at building youth groups," Haggard said.

But American Christianity will survive another decade -- even if the summit is a flop, Haggard suggests. "Right now, modern American evangelicalism is very healthy, very helpful and very thoughtful," he added.

So what ever happened to "Thou shalt not bear false witness"? Maybe it went away with the whole "love thy neighbor" thing...

Wednesday, July 05, 2006

Thank God we're free...for now

Okay, after a hiatus I am back. I guess I stopped posting in honor of Beav's journey south. Now that he made it out alive...on with the post.

Today's stories I find interesting...

CIA closed it's bin Laden unit

CIA analysis was that bin Laden's video released just before the election had the purpose of helping Bush get elected

Air Force officer's thoughts about how much America care/worries about what goes on in Iraq

And don't get me going about the recent flag burning amendment push...

Thursday, June 15, 2006

I wanna see how they (GOP) handle this...

(emphasis mine)

BAGHDAD, June 14 -- Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki (who Bush visited and said was doing a great job this week) on Wednesday proposed a limited amnesty to help end the Sunni Arab insurgency as part of a national reconciliation plan that Maliki said would be released within days. The plan is likely to include pardons for those who had attacked only U.S. troops, a top adviser said.

Maliki's declaration of openness to talks with some members of Sunni armed factions, and the prospect of pardons, are concessions that previous, interim governments had avoided. The statements marked the first time a leader from Iraq's governing Shiite religious parties has publicly embraced national reconciliation, welcomed dialogue with armed groups and proposed a limited amnesty.

Reconciliation could include an amnesty for those "who weren't involved in the shedding of Iraqi blood," Maliki told reporters at a Baghdad news conference. "Also, it includes talks with the armed men who opposed the political process and now want to turn back to political activity."


1) If Bush is telling you you are doing a great job (a la former FEMA director Brown), odds are you are getting ready to do something stupid.

2) Okay, so let's get this straight...the Iraqi gov't that the adminstration supports, will basically be saying it is okay if you killed only American soldiers. Isn't that saying that it is an acceptable response to our presence there? So we are occupiers?

If the GOP goes along with this then we won't offer amnesty to illegal immigrants but we would support amnesty for those that kill our soldiers. Talking about your land of confusion! Where's the puppet of Ronald Reagan to press the launch button when you need him?!

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Blonde Geometry

Okay...I have never been a big fan of blonde jokes...the whole making fun of someone based on a genetic variation never made sense to me. Don't get me wrong, I am not saying I am a saint or anything...I enjoy people watching and making fun of people...but only for things that are within their control (actions, words, etc...)

Anyway...

After careful scrutiny, it is our understanding that the blonde
student was given credit for the answer, but the board of education
has warned math teachers to be more explicit in the future.


Thursday, May 18, 2006

The times they are a changin'

Okay, I know that polls don't mean whole heckuva lot...but this is so heartening...


This graphic represents county-by-county results of the 2004 presidential election, red counties voted for Bush, blue for Kerry.



And this graphic shows the results of a May 15, 2006 presidential approval poll. Red counties have net favorable poll results, blue net negative.




"As the present now
Will later be past
The order is rapidly fadin'.
And the first one now
Will later be last
For the times they are a-changin'."

--Bob Dylan

Wednesday, May 03, 2006

I want off this rock!

In my daily read of the left-leaning blogs I frequent, I came across an article that simply blows my mind. Here is a snippet:

Certainly since Vietnam, America has increasingly practiced a policy of minimalism and restraint in war. And now this unacknowledged policy, which always makes a space for the enemy, has us in another long and rather passionless war against a weak enemy.

Why this new minimalism in war?
It began, I believe, in a late-20th-century event that transformed the world more profoundly than the collapse of communism: the world-wide collapse of white supremacy as a source of moral authority, political legitimacy and even sovereignty.


I guess I was just brainwashed by the lib'rul edukashun system and even lib'ruler media that those things are(were) a product of our constitution, the wonderful 3 branches of government with their checks and balances and what-not. I never thought the American moral authority, political legitimacy and sovereignty was a product of the KKK and neo-nazi skinheads. If you want, you can read the rest of the article here. But I think the excerpt above says it all.

Monday, May 01, 2006

It's nice to be employed

Well, here it is May 1st. I was almost out in the street marching with the illegal immigrants today. Not becuase I am an illegal, but becuase I almost didn't have a job. Long story, here it comes....

September 2005, I left a job after 7 months for one that paid better and has actually in my field. The selling point for the job was that there was a 1- year "Feasibility Study" period and then a 3-year "Test and Evaluation" period. Well, come this past February, we found out that the 3-year period (which had originally been slated to be conducted in the local area) was moving to a location 2+ hours from home.

In March, the conversation went something like this--

Company: Your position is moving.

Jim: Well, I ain't moving.

Company: Well, we need you to move.

Jim: I'm sorry, but I ain't moving.

Company: Well, what about moving there temporarily for 6 months.

Jim: Are you freakin' crazy?

Company: Okay how about doing a geo-bachelor arrangement where you live up there during the week and go back home on weekends, starting April 1st?

Jim: For how long? I get custody of my kids the first of June.

Company: Six months.

Jim: (dumbfounded stare)

Company: Okay how about 2 months.

Jim: And what about after the 2 months?

Company: Well, we don't really have anything open for you on the horizon, but we can work something out.

Jim: And how much am I going to be compensated for this living away from my family during the week?

Company: Well, we will pay your actual living expenses (food and hotel).

Jim: That's it?

Company: Well, find the average cost per hotel in the area and we will pay you that amount.

Jim: (Thinking...well it is a military area and the average will be the local per diem rate...I can get a hotel for a lot cheaper than that.) Okay.


So...April 1 rolls around. They aren't ready for us to move becuase there are contract negotiation issues. It is not until April 15th that we hear anything about the contract. Okay...new start date is May 1. I remind them that my kids are coming June 1 so they will only get 1 month from me...And still no word on any other position for me. I make the arrangements for a hotel May 1 - May 4th (I plan on working 10-hour days and leaving there Thursday night). Friday April 28th I get an email that I am not to go to this other location on May 1st. But that is all the e-mail said. An hour later I get another e-mail saying that they "found" a position for me here, but the details are not arranged yet so on or about the first week of May, the position might be available. So basically on or about May 1st, I may or may not get paid? I got a call that afternoon telling me to show up Monday, and hopefully all will be worked out ove the weekend. I got no word of anything this weekend, so not knowing if I had a job or not, I got dressed and went in. I waited until about 8:30 before I got any official word...I am employed! And this time it is for 3 years and the position isn't moving anywhere!

And I was looking forward to the "No Gringo" Day.

Tuesday, April 11, 2006

Advertising Slogans

Okay...I't not going off on a rant against Madison Avenue. If you want that, see Beav's post.

Every wonder what the slogan would be if you were a product? Well, here's mine:

Grab Life by the Jim.

I guess just make sure you wash your hands afterwards?

What's your slogan?

Thursday, March 30, 2006

Poor little monkey



It looks like he lost his cymbals. Just wind him up and watch him go!

Monday, March 27, 2006

Decision making

In my current job (as in life) there are lots of decisions that need to be made. Many of these decisions must be made rather quickly and without the supporting information one would desire in order to feel comfortable said decisions. We have used all kinds of tools - flowcharts, analytical hierarchy process, stop-light charts, etc. The problem is that as a vestige of the "quality" movement in the military during the early 1990s, the process seems more important than the decision. If you make a decision withou using a "process" then the decision is considered suspect and you have to go through the motions of an accepted process anyway. Okay, enough of my rant. In the course of researching a process modeling tool called UML (Unified Modeling Language), I came across this flowchart. If only all decisions could be this simple...

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Following in Beav's Blog-steps...

I had to post one of my perosnality test results.


You Are Scooter

Brainy and knowledgable, you are the perfect sidekick.
You're always willing to lend a helping hand.
In any big event or party, you're the one who keeps things going.
"15 seconds to showtime!"

Childhood personalities and future political leanings

Found this interesting article about a 20-year study...very interesting...

How to spot a baby conservative
Whiny children, claims a new study, tend to grow up rigid and traditional. Future liberals, on the other hand ...

Mar. 19, 2006. 10:45 AM
KURT KLEINER
SPECIAL TO THE TORONTO STAR

Remember the whiny, insecure kid in nursery school, the one who always thought everyone was out to get him, and was always running to the teacher with complaints? Chances are he grew up to be a conservative.

At least, he did if he was one of 95 kids from the Berkeley area that social scientists have been tracking for the last 20 years. The confident, resilient, self-reliant kids mostly grew up to be liberals.

The study from the Journal of Research Into Personality isn't going to make the UC Berkeley professor who published it any friends on the right. Similar conclusions a few years ago from another academic saw him excoriated on right-wing blogs, and even led to a Congressional investigation into his research funding.

But the new results are worth a look. In the 1960s Jack Block and his wife and fellow professor Jeanne Block (now deceased) began tracking more than 100 nursery school kids as part of a general study of personality. The kids' personalities were rated at the time by teachers and assistants who had known them for months. There's no reason to think political bias skewed the ratings — the investigators were not looking at political orientation back then. Even if they had been, it's unlikely that 3- and 4-year-olds would have had much idea about their political leanings.

A few decades later, Block followed up with more surveys, looking again at personality, and this time at politics, too. The whiny kids tended to grow up conservative, and turned into rigid young adults who hewed closely to traditional gender roles and were uncomfortable with ambiguity.

The confident kids turned out liberal and were still hanging loose, turning into bright, non-conforming adults with wide interests. The girls were still outgoing, but the young men tended to turn a little introspective.

Block admits in his paper that liberal Berkeley is not representative of the whole country. But within his sample, he says, the results hold. He reasons that insecure kids look for the reassurance provided by tradition and authority, and find it in conservative politics. The more confident kids are eager to explore alternatives to the way things are, and find liberal politics more congenial.

In a society that values self-confidence and out-goingness, it's a mostly flattering picture for liberals. It also runs contrary to the American stereotype of wimpy liberals and strong conservatives.

And yes, I was a self-confident, independent child.

Monday, March 20, 2006

I'm back...

Okay...I've been gone the past 3 weeks. One week of crazy work, one week was my annual spring-break/anniversary vacation (to get away from crazy work...This year it was Punta Cana, Dominican Republic...Not as great as Aruba, but a close runner-up to heaven on Earth) and then another week at work, doing the work that didn't get done the week I was gone.

Here's your daily dose of stripping...

Friday, February 24, 2006

Why is it so hot? And what is America doing in a handbasket?

I just love the direction this country has taken. First, the President's "public" speeches are by invitation only. Then, private citizens are having their phones tapped without court order. Okay, the President says he has that power in time of war.

First, when did Congress issue a declaration of war? Since they didn't, and as I understand the Constitution, Article 1, Section 8 - "The Congress shall have the power...to declare war, grant letters of marque and reprisal, and make rules concerning captures on land and water" - we are not "at war". Also, this Article would also seem to imply the thte President doesn't have the power to determine what happens to those prisoners of war/enemy combatants/terrorist/brown-skinned-guys-we-don't-know-if-they-are-a-threat-but-we-will-detain-them-anyway.

Second, following the administration's resoning, what isn't within the President's power during a time of war? Reading your 1st class domestic mail? What if you are suspected of being a terrorist/terrorist supporter/terrorist sympathizer/anti-Bush administration. (They are the same, right?) How about the assasination/targeted killing/murder of a suspected terrorist/et al.? Anything to keep us safe, right? All it takes is being suspected...no longer innocent until proven guilty? We can't take the chance that they might not be guilty, right? The ends justify the means?

How about he rise of the secret police?

"And I'm proud to be an American,
where at least I think I'm free..."

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

New hobby/pastime/activity

Okay...I know. How many "hobbies" have I gotten all excited about, rushed out and bought the requisite equipment, only to use it once and move on to something else? Rock Climbing, Astronomy, etc. But this is different, I promise.

My new thing is Geocaching. Basically, its modern-day treasure hunting with a GPS device. Somoene hides a container (maybe big, maybe small) in a public place. Inside is at least a log, usually there are items inside as well. Then the "hider" posts general coordinates on the above website and hints as to the cache's location/how it is hidden/etc. Your job is to find the cache, sign the log, take an item and leave an item. Then you post back to the website when you found the cache-what your experience was like (did you like the hunt, was it hidden well, etc.), what item you took, what item you left, etc.

It is a great family activity...kids love it. You get outdoors, get to walk/hike, enjoy the thrill of the hunt. Then later you hide your own and enjoy that side of it as well...how well can you hide something/how good are your hints?

Okay, so I haven't yet actively hunted a cache. I know where there are a few located very near my house and I did obtain the requiste equipment. My lovely wife got me a GPS device for Valentine's Day. Nothing says I love you like a nifty electronic toy! Either that or she has forever negated the wonderful excuse of "I got lost."

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

Down boy!




















The result of abstinence?

Monday, February 06, 2006

Good Boy!

For you pet lovers out there...

Wednesday, January 25, 2006

Go Granny Go!

Ya just gotta love Grannies that are still going strong. And you wonder why the batteries are missing from your PSP when you leave it at her house!


Tuesday, January 24, 2006

Monday, January 23, 2006

Stripping

Okay... I have found my calling--stripping. No, no...keep your loose $1s and $5s in your pocket. Stripping is replacing the text of a comic strip with text that is usually funnier, more satirical or even lewd.

So, here is one of my first...this one was begging for it!









More to come in the days ahead...

Thursday, January 12, 2006

Back in the saddle (and no, that is not a reference to Brokeback Mountain)

Well, I am back in the blogosphere after over a year in reality.

I have a new job (well, since last posting, I have had 2 new jobs.) I actually get to use some of the skills and degree I paid good money for. It is good being the only "critically thinking" person on a team trying to solve a problem...all those years playing "Devil's Advocate" just to annoy people is finally paying off!

Will post more later...