Monthly Archives: August 2010

Spinning Your Wheels

Salon has a great interview with the author of a new book:  “Were You Born on the Wrong Continent?”: America’s misguided culture of overwork.
Here is a great quote:

Can we adopt this German working life in the U.S.? Is it even feasible?
We do things that are more socialist than Europe does, but we don’t call it that. We have some things left over from the New Deal that a lot of European social democracies aren’t even close to, like time-and-a-half for overtime and social security. The single biggest single-payer socialist medical system in the world is in the United States: Medicare. Untouchable. Defended by Republicans. But it’s more socialist than the German health care system. The problem with it is that it coexists with several other systems that are not socialist at all and just pay scandalous windfalls to private vendors.

The whole system is just grossly inefficient. All of those European countries have one system. There’s cost control. There’s no cost control here; there are four or five systems competing simultaneously. To get cost controls, we’re going to have to have one system of payments for everybody. Now either we go to a free market system or a German insurance system or a single payer system. Although I don’t understand how it could happen at the moment, I just see no alternative in the long run except that the U.S. goes single payer across the board. Not because I believe in single payer over these other systems but just because of the facts on the ground. You’ve got to have one system and we aren’t going to trash Medicare. That will never happen.

Yes, let’s keep in mind that just because you are sitting at a desk does not mean you are working.  Just because you put in 12 hours doesn’t mean anything got done or anything became better.  Just because you never see your family doesn’t mean you are a productive hero of a beast.  And let’s also not forget that the United States has quite a few socialist policies that the most conservative of us cling to like a life raft.  

Friday Lust List

Here are some pretty things to tempt you with. Happy Friday!

Animal House

Sharon Montrose has finally opened an online shop where her prints go for only $25!! These are amazing and I want to buy all of them. The baby animals would be perfect for a kids’ room. :)

Vinyl Coat

And, in more home decorating news, Emma Jeffs creates the most beautiful light-diffusing decals that also provide nice privacy for your windows.  I think the Lace is my favorite.

To all lucky Salt Lake City residents

Shabby Apple is having a sale this Saturday.  An enormous, dresses-as-cheap-as-5-bucks sale.  Dresses from Shabby Apple!  That look like this!!

The pertinent details:
What: Shabby Apple Garden Party dress sale
When: THIS SATURDAY, August 28th, from 8a.m. to 12 noon. (The early bird gets the worm and all of that)
Where: 2485 Haven Lane, Salt Lake City, UT
Why: Are you even asking me that question?

If you are in Utah, not currently pregnant (although they do have some maternity styles) and love to dress like a girl, then cancel all your Saturday plans and go!

News from around the web

Stand up and be Counted
Newsweek has a cool infographic about the quality of life rankings of countries around the world.  The US came in 11th overall, behind every single Nordic country, behind Japan, behind Australia, behind Canada.  Shame, shame.

Play with the rankings on the Newsweek website.

Sacred Places

Charlie Brooker from the Guardian has a funny and thoughtful article on the suggested Muslim Cultural Center in the Financial District of NYC.  It’s near Ground Zero.  Sort of.  I mean, it’s closer to Ground Zero than, say, Macy’s, but it’s not right there or anything.
 

The “Ground Zero mosque” is a genuine proposal, but it’s slightly less provocative than its critics’ nickname makes it sound. For one thing, it’s not at Ground Zero. Also, it isn’t a mosque.

Wait, it gets duller. It’s not being built by extremists either. Cordoba House, as it’s known, is a proposed Islamic cultural centre, which, in addition to a prayer room, will include a basketball court, restaurant, and swimming pool. Its aim is to improve inter-faith relations. It’ll probably also have comfy chairs and people who smile at you when you walk in, the monsters.

To get to the Cordoba Centre from Ground Zero, you’d have to walk in the opposite direction for two blocks, before turning a corner and walking a bit more. The journey should take roughly two minutes, or possibly slightly longer if you’re heading an angry mob who can’t hear your directions over the sound of their own enraged bellowing.
Perhaps spatial reality functions differently on the other side of the Atlantic, but here in London, something that is “two minutes’ walk and round a corner” from something else isn’t actually “in” the same place at all. I once had a poo in a pub about two minutes’ walk from Buckingham Palace. I was not subsequently arrested and charged with crapping directly onto the Queen’s pillow. That’s how “distance” works in Britain. It’s also how distance works in America, of course, but some people are currently pretending it doesn’t, for daft political ends.

New York being a densely populated city, there are lots of other buildings and businesses within two blocks of Ground Zero, including a McDonald’s and a Burger King, neither of which has yet been accused of serving milkshakes and fries on hallowed ground. Regardless, for the opponents of Cordoba House, two blocks is too close, period. Frustratingly, they haven’t produced a map pinpointing precisely how close is OK.

It’s well-written and you should read the whole thing. 

I’m not sure how to feel about this, honestly.  As a former Brooklynite, I am somehow not comfortable with the idea of any muslim/islamic cultural center being created anywhere near anything on Manhattan.  “Near” being defined as “on the American continent”. 

Logically, I understand that the feeling is irrational.  That people behind 9/11 were part of  a small, extremist and possibly insane group of individuals. More of such extremist and possibly insane individuals are being stamped out at other mosques in other places in the US, and that it would be nice to have a cultural Islamic center with open doors and transparent activities counteracting those lunatics.  (We can’t know what happens inside mosques, even those suspected of extremist leanings, because just like churches or synagogues they are protected by freedom of religion and can deny entry to whomever they feel like.  They feel like denying entry to a lot of people.  But then again, so do the Mormans and they are quite nice.  Most of the time.).  Not to mention that there were Muslim passengers on those planes and they are just as American, as heroic and as no longer alive as the people in the towers.

And, logically, and as Charlies Brooker points out, it’s really some distance away from Ground Zero.  The argument that this is “hollowed ground” falls, in my opinion, flat on its face.  I mean, there are adult video stores and McDonalds and thieves selling forgeries much closer to Ground Zero than the proposed cultural center.  There are tourists snapping pictures of themselves in front of Ground Zero.  There are observation platforms.  There are souvenirs.  All these things make New Yorkers cringe much, much more than any cultural building.

(Note to some Ground Zero visitors: when you come to a site of recent disaster, please keep in mind that you are not at a civil war re-enactment.  This is recent.  This was very very real.  You may not think that New York is in real America, but this disaster is still real and recent.  People affected by this are all around you, trying to go about their daily business.  When you snap pictures of yourself or the site, pose in front of it, chew gum, and generally treat is as some sort of Universal Studios attraction, you are being a rude dumb-ass.  FYI.).

So while I have my feeling of unease about the new Islamic center, and while I feel that at least people practicing Islam should somehow coordinate an outreach effort to make sure their religion is not hijacked again (as it continues to be around the world), I’m not comfortable joining the outcry against building the thing.  I can’t join that outcry because it is led by the same people who go to Ground Zero and pose in front of it for group photos (?!!!), who buy crap with pictures of the towers on it, who are loud, obnoxious and morbidly curious about the site.  These people disturb me much, much more than the practitioners of Islam building a center a few blocks away.   

Choooo Choooo!

We are going to the Toy Train Show this weekend, and if you are in the DC area, you should come too!!  There should be loads of model trains, with steam and real honks and train noise and complicated tracks.  And there will be a real train the kiddies can ride.  And it’s only $7 per adult, and kids are free.  It really can’t get better!

The Largest Train and Toy Show in the Northeast!
Dulles Expo Center
4368 Chantilly Shopping Center, Chantilly, VA 20153
*** FREE PARKING ***
August 28-29, 2010
10:00a – 4:00p
Kids Under 12: FREE!
Adults Still Only $7.00 (good for both days)
Show Features
400+ Tables of Trains for Sale
100+ Exhibitors from Across the Country
Operating Model Train Displays
WVM Garden Railway Society – 30′ x 50′ G Gauge Layout
Piedmont Railroaders – 36′ x 36′ HO Scale Layout
Potomac Module Crew – 30′ x 40′ HO Scale Layout
National Capital Trackers – 24′ x 48′ O Gauge Layout
W&OD S Gaugers – 22′ x 32′ S Gauge Layout
Northern Virginia N-Trak – 16′ x 28′ N Scale Layout
Free Workshops and Demonstrations
Train on Time – Riding Train for Kids!
Hourly Door Prize Giveaways
Plus Much, Much More!

And while you are waiting for the show doors to open, ticket in your hand and impatient toddler at the ready, check out these cool train track demandments and designs on Wired’s Geek Dad.  I think this one is my favorite:
“It’s an ode to what got you into this predicament in the first place”.

What you can’t have

Lately, fashion blogs have been teeming with these pictures. Pictures of gamine and effortlessly chic women and stylish men who have elegance about them that I can never hope to achieve. They probably roll out of bed looking this way. I just have to come to terms with the fact that no little black dress will ever make me look like Audrey Hepburn.  Sigh.

But, at least, Mad Men is back again and Christina and I can certainly fill out all those dresses.  My head is dreaming about Audrey, and the rest of me looks like Marylin.  Or, in my case, Sophia.  Or Anita.   I can’t help it. :)

Oh well.  We do look great when in Italy. :)

Two cool videos

Even though I gave birth to a kid, and am expecting to have another one soon, I honestly have no clue how these kids come about.  I mean, I logically understand it.  I can recite the process of cell division, specialization, the whole thing, I get it.  But I just don’t REALLY get it.  I mean, how can that be? How does something come from what used to be nothing?  It’s all just cells dividing, really?  For a while, cells divide, and then you get a little person saying “ffffff-uck teeee-ruck”? WOW. 

I don’t get it.  It’s like a sci-fi movie plot.  So cool it can’t possibly be true.

That’s why this video of cell division is so awesome.  It’s only zebrafish (no insult to zebrafish), and look how crazy complicated it is!  They were able to capture the first cell divisions for the first time ever…. you can watch the little zebra fish in the making!  And, our babies start out the same way.  Amazing.  It’s awesome, but still doesn’t make it more believable.

And, of course, when the thing gets built and gets bigger it can do all sorts of cool stuff. Like chasing after butterflies. Oh, and “the thing” happens to be a penguin.

How cool is that?