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Regime Change Begins at Home

Regime change within the United States is probably the most important undertaking we’ll have in the coming year (2004). The national news media is inadequately covering the race for the office of President, but they are not mentioning the equally important need to replace our corrupt, inept, and right-wing congress (both houses) with progressive, open-minded, fresh representatives of the people. Therefore I am resolving to work very hard in my own districts to get some change happening.

The last few years have held little or no choice in the U.S. Congressional district where I live, Virginia’s 10th. Congressman Frank Wolf has been effectively unopposed for a long time, and he is not only a member of the GOP, but he is also unresponsive to his constituents (which I am sadly now one of). Letters to his office go unanswered, appeals to his humanitarianism are ignored. Mr Wolf represents corporate greed and fundamentalist “Christian” more than he represents the people of Virginia. It is time for a change. Today, on my umpteenth search for someone, ANYONE, to run against him, I discovered that Sam Kubba (http://www.kubbaforcongress.com/, is running against our incumbent. I do not know much about Sam Kubba yet, but I intend to listen, find out more and let folks know about him.

If you live in Virginia’s 10th district, find out more about Sam (or let me know if there are other choices), and vote. If you do not, find out if your so-called representative has really been representing you the laast few years. Ask him/her what they have done for the people living around you lately. No matter where you live, figure out which of your U.S. Senators is up for re-election (Project Vote-Smart will have the information), and see if they have been representing you, or perhaps a large corporation or rich person who does not need representation. If they have been fairly representing you, kudos. You are one of the luck few. Most of these so-called representatives need to be replaced though – with fresh minds, fresh ideas, and at least an attempt at honestly representing their voters back home. Get involved, if we do not – more and more of our money and land and rights will vanish.

A democracy is only as good as the education and critical thinking skills of it’s voters. Certain powers want ours to be a nation of illiterate TV addicts who are easy to manipulate and easy to lull into complacency. It is time to invest in our future, and really teach people to think for themselves.

Saddam Hussein captured

The capture of Saddam Hussein is a victory for the Iraqi people and a victory for American Corporate Adventurism, but it is not a victory for the American people. Mr. Bush will try to pretend that it is a victory in the alleged “War on Terrorism” and that American’s will be safer somehow, but that pretense fails to acknowledge that Saddam had nothing to do with the terrorist attacks of 2001 and that Bush’s “War on Terrorism” is more appropriately called a War of Terrorism and Exploitation wherein American Defense Contractors and Arms Manufacturers are fleecing the American taxpayer wholesale.

Go ahead and cheer for the capture of a brutal tyrant, but do not give undue credit to Mr. Bush; for he represents (very shrewdly and very meticulously) exactly the sorts of people who helped put Saddam in power and keep him there for years and years and years. Lets all hope that the Iraqi people can try Saddam in their own courts with full public access. I doubt the American adventurers will allow that to happen, but the people of Iraq deserve at least that much. Let’s also pray that Mr. Bush does not lose focus on the real terrorism that is still out there: his own, and that of Osama bin Laden. Let us also pray that Mr. Bush finally decides to open up full participation in the rebuilding of Iraq to all of the international community.

Arizona Trip

Erci and I just got back from a wonderful trip to sunny Arizona to visit my Aunt Kay, Uncle John, Aunt Vicki, Uncle Darl, and cousins Kyle, Kurt and Sarah. Erci and I fell in love with Flagstaff. It is a beautiful small city with about a hundred years of history, gorgeous vistas of the San Fransisco Peaks (“the Peaks” to all the locals), lovely old houses and buildings, a university and the corresponding vibrant and lively crowd of students. Kyle took us hawking with Red October, his passage red tailed hawk. She is beautiful, and very attentive to Kyle. Riordan Mansion is fascinating, Meteor Crater was awesome, and Walnut Canyon was spectacular. We learned a little about Sinagua and Anasazi Native American pre-history and culture. The Museum of Northern Arizona is a must see for any one interested in Native American studies. Sedona, Oak Creek, and Jerome are over-rated, over-crowded, and over-developed. The limestone bluffs and red-rock bluffs are pretty, but the traffic and the freaky people are just too much. Bookmans used bookstores are awesome, the one in Flagstaff is only the first one we saw and already we were impressed. Lowell Observatory was spectacular. A much better observatory to visit than most because it is more accessible to the public and has an excellent astronomy sciences museum. We saw Andromeda through the big Clark telescope, Pliades/Subaru through a 10″ reflector, and Mars through a 4″ refractor.

We drove down to Taliesen West, Frank Lloyd Wright’s Winter home and school. It was an impressive place to visit, beautiful and fascinating for it’s thoughtful engineering developments and architecture. Then we hit the Bookman’s in Mesa, which is even larger and more amazing than the one in Flagstaff. That was pretty much all of the Phoenix area we wanted to see, so we headed for Tucson. While the drive from Flagstaff to Scottsdale/Mesa was pretty (we went by Lake Mormon, which is nearly dry now, and Payson), the drive from Phoenix to Tucson along I-10 is absolutely boring.

Tucson is a charm! An old (for the Western Hemisphere anyway) city with lots of diversity. Tucson has the University of Arizona and Pima County Community College to draw lively young minds. There is a rich heritage of Mexican-Sonoran culture and cuisine in Tucson and we found it easy to get fabulous food. We briefly visited Ajo Bikes and met up with Milt Turner of Turner Recumbent. Turner’s new T-N-T bike is awesome! The T-Lite is also very good, but the show was stolen by the T-N-T. Amazing machine, I may have to replace my StreetMachine with one. If you are in the market for a recumbent bicycle, I strongly urge you to try out a Turner. Mr Turner has spent most of his life tinkering and perfecting bicycles, and that vast experience is really paying off. The Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum is a really awesome zoo and ecology museum where we got to see some Harris Hawks flying as a group and lots of hummingbirds up close (one kept buzzing by Erci’s ear). Kitt Peak was an interesting visit as well, though not as impressive a visit as Lowell was because most of Kitt Peak’s telescopes are reserved for real research.

South of Tucson near the Mexican border is where by Aunt lives and we thoroughly enjoyed the Mesquite Tree, Bisbee, Ramsey Canyon, and the San Pedro House. The bumber stickers in Bisbee made us feel right at home. The border surveilance and large number of border patrol vehicles made us feel uneasy. I sure wish we’d fix the problem of illegal border crossers at the source rather than at the symptom. We should be helping our nation’s neighbors rather than exploiting them then turning away their starving masses. We are also no longer entitled to display the Statue of Liberty, at least not while our borders are so closed.

Plucker for PalmOS

I just descovered a really useful new (to me at least) application for my PalmOS PDA. It is called Plucker (http://www.plkr.org/), and it has a desktop component (Mac OS, Windoze, Linux) and a PalmOS component. The desktop can be configured to routinely fetch website content, RSS feeds, Usenet News feeds, and files and set them up for compressed HotSync to the PDA. Then you read them when convenient on your PDA with the PDA portion. The is similar to AvantGo, but completely open source. No recurring fees. Very useful.

Shrub the Lessor

My cousin Kyle sent me this awesome Presidential Confession which is floating around the email chain letter style lists at his university, and I just had to publish it. It is an mock confession from our mock president, but it really makes you think about what Shrub the lessor has done for our country. Think before you vote people. Please! Oh, yeah – and read and enjoy.

Carol Mosely Braun

Wow, Diane Rehm has Carol Mosely Braun on her radio show today and she (Ambassador Braun) sounds awesome. She actually has a plan for healing the damages done by the Reagan, Bush, and Bush administrations. That puts her several steps ahead of Howard Dean and Wesley Clark, at least in my opinion. I like Dean, but he has been reluctant to express a real plan (though he’s great at tearing into Bush’s lies and rhetoric). Ambassador Braun is less adept at tearing into Bush’s lies and rhetoric, but she has really good ideas and plans about what to do to fix the predicament Bush has us in and she is willing to talk about her ideas and plans.

So, can she get enough attention to run against Bush in the general election? I am not sure, but I really hope she shakes things up a bit this winter. Even if she does not make the primary, I hope she becomes enough of a force that her ideas get adopted by the winner of the Democratic Primary. You can read more about her campaign for president at
http://www.carolforpresident.com/.

Politics: MoveOn.org

Well I have just contributed to MoveOn.org and volunteered. I have no idea how my skills or help can be used by MoveOn to bring about change, but I am willing to try almost anything. The federal government is no longer my government; it does not represent me, it fights wars I do no support, it’s leadership deliberately misleads the voting public as a matter of policy, and it protects the interests of the extraordinarily wealthy over the interests of ordinary working class Americans. It is time for a change, and hopefully that change will happen before a revolution does, though I am no longer sure our political system will allow that.

Politics: Ballots

If you live in Virginia, here is a state government run website that will tell you what your ballot will look like so you have time to research your choices before going to the polls:

Polling_Place_Lookup

Please vote smart – know your choices, check the voting records of any candidates with experience in office.

Project Vote-Smart will take your nine digit zip code (which you can get from usps.gov) and tell you a little about your elected officials and their voting records.

This has been a non-partisan public service announcement.

Get your nine-digit postal code:
Plu4 Lookup Site

Check what your ballot will look like (if you are in Virginia):
Virginia Polling_Place_Lookup

Check the voting records of anyone in office already (see if they are really representing YOU):
http://www.vote-smart.org

Virginia Vineyards

On Saturday, October 25th, we took my brother, his girlfriend, and my mother out to Stillhouse Vineyards in Hume, Virginia, to taste a little wine and see the Autumn foliage. The foliage was disappointing, but the Cabernet Franc was awesome. I normally dislike Chardonnay, but Stillhouse and Naked Mountain both have Chardonnay wines that are actually pretty good. It is an interesting argument for the effects of terroir on a grape, as these two vineyards are effectively neighbors; both are just off exit 18 from I-66 and only an hour or a little more outside the Washington beltway in some really pretty country.

We developed a flat tire on the way back, so we pulled over in front of the “Cowboy Mercantile” in Hume to install the spare, and before we had all gotten out of the car a resident appeared with tools in hand to help. I was sufficiently well prepared that I actually did not need his help, so he entertained everyone with local jokes while I changed the tire. What a friendly place, we must go back for some country bicycle riding.

October 18th

Anniversary Dinner:
Erci and I went to Tuscarora Mill restaurant in Leesburg, Virginia for our 10th wedding anniversary. The food and service were both extraordinary, and the atmosphere was romantic and rustic. I had a beef tenderloin entree that was worth writing home about. Dinner for two will set you back around a hundred dollars, but it is worth it for special occasions. I must get back and walk around old Leesburg, I had no idea it was so interesting a place to visit. The part of Leesburg I usally see (along the U.S. highway 15 bypass) is a horrid collection of strip malls and is completely indistinguishable from any other strip mall in America. Lucky for us, we read about Tuscarora Mill online, and actually drove into Leesburg for dinner, and the heart of the town is full of little tourist trap stores and interesting architecture, a place where parking is scarce and everything is actually within walking distance. Nice, must go shopping the next time my Mom visits Virginia.

October 11th and 12th

La Belle Compagnie:
Had a fantastic weekend photography session with the folks of La Belle Compagnie and a few auxilliaries recruited for the weekend. We shot bits of the faire, Sir Geoffrey and family sitting to dinner, and some cook and cooking shots. La Belle Compagnie is well on it’s way to having a “coffea table picture book” of life in late 14th century Hampshire, England. The project has turned out a bit bigger than many of us first imagined, but also a lot of fun. November will be time to shoot the main parts of the big medieval faire.

Spam and Telemarketing

A federal judge has ruled that the FTC overstepped it’s authority by creating a national “do-not-call” list. The chief arguments of the lawyers arguing the case on behalf of the marketing associations are insanely ludicrous. This has absolutely nothing to do with the first amendment, and everything to do with control over the phone line that you and I lease from the phone company. Simply put, if you pay the bill on a leased phone number, no one should be allowed to call that number without your permission, period. Not telemarketing weenies, not politicians, not charitable organizations, not religious organizations, not public television stations, not even the local paper. No one, unless you – the paying subscriber agrees. First amendment my ass. This is insane. All Americans should simply disconnect their telephones in response. Then who will the idiots sell their junk to?

Likewise, the person who pays the monthly charges to maintain an internet presence and who is therefore paying for an email address should have exclusive rights over who can send that email address a message. If an address is provided for by an employer, then the employer should have control. If the address is provided for by an individual, no one should bug that person without their permission. Why is all this so difficult to understand?

People, please boycott the companies that call you and send you unsolicited commercial email. Please vote against the politicians that flood your mail boxes with their campaign fliers. Make them pay for the mistake of abusing YOUR paid for access.