Apparently, this is it

My system has been subjected to ever-increasing blue screen of death episodes.  Despite our best efforts, we have been unable as yet to isolate and eliminate the cause.  This weekend while we are in Detroit, Darin plans to switch my hard drive to another machine while he attempts to find the problem.

On Wednesday, we were driving home from T0-Shin Do in the midst of a horrendous downpour when suddenly an amber alert lamp lit on the dashboard.  A quick check of the manual revealed this was the VW version of a “do not screw around, contact your repair shop NOW!” light.

On Thursday, the car went in to VW and we were told that the problem was a sensor which was going out.  They ordered a part and it was to be overnighted to them.  Meanwhile, they set us up with a rental vehicle at their expense …  The rental turned out to be a full size, dual-cab Dodge Ram pickup.  This behemoth is only slightly shorter in height than a school bus (I know, because at one point we parked right next to one) and although it was a nice vehicle, I wasn’t overly impressed — the biggest flaw was the floor in the damn thing was at waist height when I was standing beside it and there were no running boards.  The other thing that sucked like a Hoover™ was fuel consumption.  According to the real-time display, we were averaging 17.6 miles per gallon.  Whoo hoo?

Today, VW called and let us know that although the part had arrived as promised, it had not arrived unscathed.  A new one would have to be ordered, they wouldn’t be able to get it till Monday, and they would extend our rental.  Well, this was all fine and dandy, but I did not want to drive that tank to Detroit — I especially didn’t want to have to pay for the fuel to drive it to Detroit.   So, they traded us for a “smaller, more fuel-efficient” vehicle … this turned out to be a pretty much stripped-down Chrysler Town & Country mini-van.  Swell.  Once again, I’m not impressed — although it was a lot bigger, the pickup was also a lot nicer than the van.  Hopefully, though, we’ll at least get better than 17½ miles to the gallon!

Which segues right into … Tomorrow, it’s off to Detroit with Missy and I.  We’ll be leaving about 6:00 a.m.  She will be dancing in *seven* dances — this Feis offers an Open Jig — and if she should wind up getting a first in her set dance, she’ll be dancing an eighth dance for a perpetual trophy.

No new alterations , but I did tinker with the dress a bit this week — affixed some snaps to stop the belt from creeping up while she’s dancing, affixed two gems that had become loose last week in Akron, added an additional piece of velcro to the sash — and it’s ready to go.  Yes, I remembered pictures!  They’re in the gallery as we speak.

In other news, Missy completed her school year this week!

Despite all the little snags and hiccups — and a blog stalker meltdown notwithstanding — it’s all good.  More is right than wrong and I’m not going to let it get to me.  I remain confident that ultimately balance will be restored and things will right themselves.

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… a veritable cornucopia of things to piss you off …

Serving up the latest in Zero Tolerance and Obama fare … mmm, mmm, good!

Appetizer

Five California high school students were told they could either turn their t-shirts inside out or go home on May 5th for wearing t-shirts with US flags on them.  The Vice Principal said he was afraid for the boys’ safety since they were wearing these “incendiary” shirts on the “only day” that Mexican students can express their national pride.  When the boys refused to turn the shirts inside out – pointing out, among other things that the shirts are not a violation of the school dress code, that they each have several different US flag shirts which they wear all the time without challenge, that the Mexican students wear Mexican flag shirts any time they feel like wearing them, and that they felt that turning the shirts inside out was disrespectful to the flag, to them and a violation of their first amendment rights — they were sent home.  On Tuesday, May 11, following a school board meeting in which multiple parents expressed their displeasure at the situation, Superintendent Wesley Smith said, “They have a right to wear those shirts on school campus, on all of our campuses, they shouldn’t have been asked to take them off.” The superintendent also said an investigation into how administrators handled everything on Cinco de Mayo is still underway and should be complete by June, after which they’ll decide if any disciplinary action should be taken.  [FOX News, ABC News]

Wine

Remember when Joe the Plumber asked Obama exactly what he wanted to do if elected, and Obama, speaking off the cuff, said that “it’s not that I want to punish your success. I just want to make sure that everybody who is behind you, that they’ve got a chance at success, too.  I think when you spread the wealth around it’s good for everybody.” Remember when people said that sounded an awful lot like Socialism if not full blown Communism and his supporters accused them of over-reacting and blowing things out of proportion?  Well, on April 28, Obama went off the teleprompter and tried to paraphrase while speaking in Quincy, Illinois.  Here’s part of what he said:  “We’re not, we’re not trying to push financial reform because we begrudge success that’s fairly earned. I mean, I do think at a certain point you’ve made enough money. But, you know, part of the American way is, you know, you can just keep on making it if you’re providing a good product or providing good service. We don’t want people to stop, ah, fulfilling the core responsibilities of the financial system to help grow the economy.” Silly me, and here I had no idea that Obama gets to decide when we’ve “made enough money” — or whether or not my success was “fairly earned” providing a good product or a good service.  Furthermore, I must admit that I didn’t have a clue that it was my responsibility to “grow our economy,” core or otherwise.  All these years, I thought I was supposed to be growing my own economy so as to support my family.  [Google It™ or you can *watch* him say it under the fold]

Entreé

Ten-year old Leighann came home from her Texas elementary school in tears, afraid to tell her parents that (for the first time in her life) she had gotten in trouble at school.  Leighann and her friend were under orders to serve a week’s detention during lunch and recess, and they had to write an essay about what they did and why it was wrong.  What had they done? Leighann’s friend gave her a single Jolly Rancher candy.  Leighann’s parents say the punishment was extreme, but school officials insist it was not.  Jack Ellis, superintendent for the school district,  says it’s a matter of following state guidelines to limit the amount of junk food in schools. “Whether or not I agree with the guidelines, we have to follow the rules.” The state Department of Agriculture does in fact mandate that school lunch foods need to be baked rather than fried, nutritious rather than loaded with empty calories and things like that.  But a department spokesman says that there is absolutely nothing in the rules that compels a school to punish a student for bringing his own junk food to school, that their policy does not prohibit friends from sharing a Jolly Rancher candy, and that if a parent wants to pack candy in the child’s lunch, they can.   The department even sent a letter to the school reminding staff that state policy doesn’t outline such punishments but the school is not backing down.  Leighann’s parents say the school routinely goes too far in punishing students:  Students at the school are required to wear a belt.  A few months ago Leighann’s younger brother was given an in-school suspension for failing to wear one even though his father called the school secretary to explain that their new puppy chewed up the boy’s only belt that morning.  The boy was made to “sit in a room all day and stare at a wall.” Leighann’s parents say that they’re pulling their kids out of the school at the end of the school year; if necessary, they say they’ll send them to private school.  [FOX News]

On the Side

Speaking at Hampton University in Virginia, President Obama suggested that “less is more” when it comes to absorbing news content and urged graduates to take a skeptical eye toward news from blogs, cable television and radio as well as modern gadgets like iPods and PlayStations.  Obama told graduates that the class of 2010 is “coming of age in a 24/7 media environment that bombards us with all kinds of content and exposes us to all kinds of arguments, some of which don’t always rank that high on the truth meter. And with iPods and iPads; and Xboxes and PlayStations — none of which I know how to work — information becomes a distraction, a diversion, a form of entertainment, rather than a tool of empowerment, rather than the means of emancipation. So all of this is not only putting pressure on you; it’s putting new pressure on our country and on our democracy. With so many voices clamoring for attention on blogs, and on cable, on talk radio, it can be difficult, at times, to sift through it all — to know what to believe, to figure out who’s telling the truth and who’s not. Let’s face it, even some of the craziest claims can quickly gain traction. I’ve had some experience in that regard.” You will no doubt recall that last September, the president used a string of major network and cable interviews to scold the media for playing up “outrageous” political comments.  Then Obama and his administration spent much of last fall criticizing Fox News in specific. It’s now starting to seem that targeting cable and blogs has become something of a hobby: In February, he urged Democratic senators to turn off their televisions. He singled out FOX, CNN, MSNBC and blogs, urging the lawmakers to get out of the “echo chamber.” In March an e-mail was sent to Senate staffers warning them not to visit The Drudge Report out of concern for a non-existent virus.  Pointing out that nobody has used the media more masterfully than Obama, Brent Bozell, president of Media Research Center, says that in order to prove his “sincerity” about media and technology gripes, Obama should delete his massive e-mail list and take his staff off TV.  “It’s just posturing on his part. He is trying to put himself in opposition to those forces to improve his status with the public.”  [FOX News]

Dessert

Two years ago, 5-year old Ryan lost part of his left leg in a lawnmower accident.  His leg was amputated below the knee, and he wears a prosthetic limb.  Ryan is a kindergarten student, and the bus ride from his home to the school is about an hour long.  He and his 7-year old sister used to ride the bus to and from school every day, but that stopped earlier this month because the school has informed Ryan’s parents that they must transport Ryan and his sister from now on.  Why?  Kids on the school bus — older kids, some as old as 13 — have been bullying Ryan, calling him names and taunting him.  They’ve stolen Ryan’s backpack.  They’ve tried to pull off his prosthetic leg.  Ryan’s dad spoke with the parents of  the kids involved and he thought the matter was resolved, until May 4th, when Ryan was given a black eye after being punched on the bus by a 13-year old who is one of the biggest kids on the bus.  After talking to the boy’s parents and getting nowhere, Ryan’s dad asked the bus driver and the school principal to do something about it, because “He’s young, he’s five, he’s disabled. I can’t ride the bus and stand up for him, you know. He can’t defend himself, so who easier to pick on than a kid who gets punched in the eye and sits quietly in the corner.  I asked for the child to be disciplined. I asked for him to be suspended from school to teach him a lesson because there’s a zero tolerance for bullying.  Instead we were told Ryan will no longer be on the bus, that it’s not safe for him or my daughter and that we have to drive them the round trip.” When Ryan’s dad complained, the school district offered to pay for the gas to make the trip each day.  [CBC News]

You’ll find that video under the fold, as promised. Think of it as the after-dinner mint.


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An over-reactive jerk

Reason #12384 to Home School:

A 12-year-old Queens girl was hauled out of school in handcuffs for an artless offense – doodling her name on her desk in erasable marker, the Daily News has learned.

Alexa Gonzalez was scribbling a few words on her desk Monday while waiting for her Spanish teacher to pass out homework at Junior High School 190 in Forest Hills, she said.

“I love my friends Abby and Faith,” the girl wrote, adding the phrases “Lex was here. 2/1/10″ and a smiley face.

But instead of simply cleaning off the doodles after class, Alexa landed in some adult-sized trouble for using her lime-green magic marker.

She was led out of school in cuffs and walked to the precinct across the street, where she was detained for several hours.

In addition to her arrest, Alexa (who had a stellar attendance record) has been suspended, she and her mom went to family court on Tuesday, where Alexa was assigned eight hours of community service, a book report and an essay on what she learned from the experience.

Says Alexa: “I definitely learned not to ever draw on a desk. They told me even with a pencil this could still happen.”

City Education Department spokesman David Cantor acknowledged Alexa’s arrest was a mistake: “We’re looking at the facts. Based on what we’ve seen so far, this shouldn’t have happened.”

The Police acknowledge that it shouldn’t have happened: “Even when we’re asked to make an arrest, common sense should prevail, and discretion used in deciding whether an arrest or handcuffs are really necessary.”

Alexa is the latest in a string of city students who have been cuffed for minor infractions. In 2007, 13-year-old Chelsea Fraser was placed under arrest for writing “okay” on her desk at Intermediate School 201. And in 2008, 5-year-old Dennis Rivera was cuffed and sent to a psych ward after throwing a fit in his kindergarten.

A class action lawsuit was filed by the New York Civil Liberties Union last month against the city for using “excessive force” in middle school and high schools. A 12-year-old sixth-grader, identified in the lawsuit as M.M., was arrested in March 2009 for doodling on her desk at the Hunts Point School.

Even under “zero tolerance” standards this is lunacy.

NY Daily News, FOX News

Missy’s graduating!

I just had to force Missy off her computer where she was – unbelievably! – working on a math assignment. Willingly — enthusiastically, even! She’s got to get ready to go though because we’re on our way out the door: she’s graduating to her yellow belt at To-Shin Do and tonight is the graduation ceremony. She’s so excited — I’m not sure which of us is more proud of her accomplishment!

After her graduation, Maggie is picking her up and whisking her to Cincinnati for the weekend. She’ll have her back home on Sunday in time for her music lesson and in-between now and then the little shit gets to go to Olive Garden and who knows where else Maggie will take her. Ahh well, she’s earned it!

Sorry for the silence!

Got a lot going on, not much time for blogging.  I’m hoping things will somewhat settle back down to a more normal pace after the end of the month.

A few quick highlights … I twittered (& facebooked!) but didn’t blog yet about Missy’s Lansing results:  11th in reel, 9th in slip jig, 6th in treble jig, 7th in hornpipe and 4th (with a medal and trophy) in treble reel.  She’s a bit irritated that she didn’t do better, but geez, this is just her second feis after 10 months of not dancing!  I think she’s doing fantastic and her TCRG is pleased as well.  I swear, she’s her own worst critic.

Missy and I have sketched out some solo dress ideas, the plan is to start the new season with a new dress.  This time we’re going to try something a little different, see if we can’t start a new trend!  I think we’ll be going with a traditional three panel skirt, though.  She wants a one-piece, I’m leaning toward a two-piece.  We’ll see what happens.  We’re both thinking blues this time around, something deep and rich.  We’re broke as hell though, so whatever it is will be from something I already have on hand unless I can get one of the three we have on hand sold.

I had a doctor’s appointment last week Monday with all the usual lab work.  Everything must be okay because I haven’t gotten a phone call saying come back in.  The bruise on my inner arm has *finally* started fading.  Take my advice and don’t get diabetes.  Next appointment isn’t till October and that’ll be the flu shot appointment.  Missy’s already grousing about it.

I’d say that next week we start back up the homeschooling and she’s starting 9th grade, but if the truth be told, she’s never really taken much of a break this summer.  She kept right on working and has gotten about 1/4 of the 9th grade work done already; she’s trying to get herself ahead enough to test out and graduate early.  She wants to take off a few years to work and save up some money and then go to college later on.  She has goals in both dancing and To-Shin Do that she wants to attain before she moves on to college work; she’s got plans!

On the To-Shin Do front, she’s graduating next Friday (a week from today) and getting her yellow belt.  (She’s planning on going for the black belt, and she has no intention of stopping there.  She’s decided that she wants to make this lifelong, she says that there’s more than just the belts to mastering it and her intention at this point in time is to just keep going.)  She’s done so well so far and I’m of course bursting with pride!  As promised, she’s gotten her tabi.  She tried to tell me she hadn’t officially earned them yet, since she doesn’t get the belt till the end of the month, but I told her to go ahead and start wearing them — and Mr. Norris concurred so she gave in.

She’s got a party tonight with some friends, the annual 4-H party.  And another one coming up – September 9 is An-Shu’s 60th birthday and there’s a potluck and party at the dojo that night.  She’s got a wall hanging planned for him, I told her I’d help her digitize it and then stitch it out for her.

The gerbils (Danny and Chouko) have another litter of babies — four of ‘em.  That brings our total gerbil count to 11.  The big hamsters (Houdini and Bess) have just had a litter of babies as well, our first set of babies from them!  We’re not sure how many there are, about 7 or 8 it looks like, but it could be more.  Bess is being very protective.  So our large hamster count is 2 plus however many babies there are.  Maggie’s already requested a set (boy and girl) as soon as they’re big enough to give away.  All of our small hamsters are past their fertile stage (for the most part, the females are only fertile the first year of their life) so we won’t have any from any of them.   Our dwarf hamster count is thus holding at 8 (well, 7 dwarves and 1 roborovski to be precise).

The doggies are *not* going forth and multiplying, because all three of them are fixed, and thank God for that.  I do not need puppies too!

I have a stack of articles bookmarked that I plan on blogging about — including one about the various Czars that have been appointed by The One, and of course there’s plenty going on in the world, I’ve just been too damn busy to write about it!

Bear with me and things will hopefully be back to normal soon!

Both of these women need fired

I wouldn’t even waste a cluebat on either of them.  Fire them both and be done with it.

The first one would be the substitute teacher who couldn’t control the class of seven year olds who were excitedly talking about what they wanted Santa to bring them for Christmas this year.  So, she told them there isn’t a Santa Claus and that their parents were the ones who left the presents under the tree.

Thanks, Mrs. Scrooge.  FOX News.

The second one would be the idiot who wrote this letter:

“…observed one of my students with a group of other children gathered around his laptop. Upon looking at his computer, I saw he was giving a demonstration of some sort. The student was showing the ability of the laptop and handing out Linux disks. After confiscating the disks I called a confrence with the student and that is how I came to discover you and your organization. Mr. Starks, I am sure you strongly believe in what you are doing but I cannot either support your efforts or allow them to happen in my classroom. At this point, I am not sure what you are doing is legal. No software is free and spreading that misconception is harmful. These children look up to adults for guidance and discipline. I will research this as time allows and I want to assure you, if you are doing anything illegal, I will pursue charges as the law allows. Mr. Starks, I along with many others tried Linux during college and I assure you, the claims you make are grossly over-stated and hinge on falsehoods. I admire your attempts in getting computers in the hands of disadvantaged people but putting linux on these machines is holding our kids back.

This is a world where Windows runs on virtually every computer and putting on a carnival show for an operating system is not helping these children at all. I am sure if you contacted Microsoft, they would be more than happy to supply you with copies of an older verison of Windows and that way, your computers would actually be of service to those receiving them…”

Karen xxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxx Middle School
AISD

You can go here to read Ken Starks’ reply.

Than to harass a couple of women and little girls out looking at Christmas lights

I mean, seriously, don’t you have some actual criminals to go arrest?  Traffic violators to cite?  Donuts to eat? Sixteen year old girls to bang?  Something?

Cindy and I, along with Missy and Crystal (and up till 1:00 a.m., Caleb as well, for that matter) went out looking at Christmas lights tonight.  Just driving around through Oakwood, Kettering and of course Beavercreek.  Heavy on Beavercreek, because that’s where we all live.


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Not even CLOSE to age appropriate

And to be perfectly honest, I have no problem with kids being exposed to homosexuals.  Nor do I have any problem with them being told (and taught by example) that it’s wrong to hate someone based on their sexual preference, just like it’s wrong to hate them because they’re black, or Jewish or Catholic or Mexican or female or male or whatever.

But this is WAY over the top, IMNSHO.

These cards were passed out to kindergarten students, who were made to sign them.  How do you explain this “pledge” to a child without explaining a whole lot more than they need to know at that age?  How do you justify doing it without their parents’ consent — or even knowledge?  No, sorry, not at all acceptable, even in California.

The school hasn’t yet decided if they’re going to take any action against the teacher, and the administration has now decided to deny all requests for interviews or commentary.

Interestingly, California will be voting this week on whether or not to overturn gay marriage in the state.  How can a parent explain to their kindergarten student that they’re voting against gay marriage while the student is being forced to sign a pledge saying it’s okay to be gay and you’re not allowed to harass them? How can a parent explain their reasoning and rationale to a child who isn’t even old enough to grasp the concept of sexual behavior yet?  Nope, this one is too far over the line to overlook.

FOX News