The Best Time to Be Alive

Every once in awhile the ques­tion comes up, “If you could live at the time and place of your choos­ing, where and when”.

There are peo­ple who claim that they would rather have lived at an ear­li­er time.

My answer has always been here and now. By here I mean the US. I could eas­i­ly see myself liv­ing many oth­er places over Indiana.

TPM post­ed a video recent­ly that clear­ly explains the pri­ma­ry rea­sons why I choose here and now.

Continuing Pence for Prez

More evi­dence that Mike Pence is think­ing of run­ning for pres­i­dent. He con­tributed mon­ey to Repub­li­cans run­ning for state office in Iowa.

I think he would have a bet­ter shot at gov­er­nor of Indi­ana (since the cur­rent gov is term lim­it­ed and might run for pres him­self) than he would have at pres­i­dent. Still not get­ting my vote, though.

Legislation Fatigue

I have been con­tem­plat­ing the recent elec­tion and what the shel­lack­ing of Democ­rats by Repub­li­cans “means” if anything.

The first point is that it means it was a mid-term elec­tion. I have already point­ed this out back in Jan­u­ary.

The sec­ond point is that the econ­o­my is weak and the unem­ploy­ment rate is high. So the elec­tion result can be con­strued to reflect the vot­ers frus­tra­tion with that sit­u­a­tion. The prob­lem with this is that the elec­tion results did not give us a gov­ern­ment that is like­ly to do much, if any­thing, about the econ­o­my. So to say that the vot­ers were vot­ing the econ­o­my is to say that the vot­ers vot­ed against their own interest.

There are those who say the vot­ers deliv­ered a man­date to repeal the Patient Pro­tec­tion and Afford­able Care Act. But again, the gov­ern­ment the vot­ers cre­at­ed is not going to repeal the act (at best the House will have a vote on this), so it makes no sense to claim the elec­torate want­ed repeal when the elec­torate did­n’t come close to vot­ing for a gov­ern­ment that could deliv­er such a thing.

Some vot­ers were vot­ing for fis­cal respon­si­bil­i­ty. Most of those were vot­ing for the par­ty that was less like­ly to deliv­er that, but this is not rel­e­vant to our discussion.

Sure, there were plen­ty of indi­vid­ual vot­ers who were vot­ing the econ­o­my or vot­ing repeal of health care reform, but I am look­ing for the mean­ing of the elec­tion result, not the motives of indi­vid­ual voters.

What did the vot­ers give us? They gave (we gave our­selves) a divid­ed gov­ern­ment. It sure looks like we will have grid­lock for the next two years on every­thing but the most banal legislation.

Why did the vot­ers give us this? Leg­is­la­tion fatigue. Are we not all (those of us pay­ing any atten­tion at all) just a bit exhaust­ed from the last two years of con­gress? I was ready for more, but I con­cede that I could use a break. Now we all have a chance to catch our breath.

Umpires and Referees

A cou­ple of weeks ago I had to go to a restau­rant to watch the Pack­ers play the Red­skins since the game was not on any of the cable chan­nels I get. Dur­ing the sec­ond half a Red­skin fan sat down at the table next to mine. It was not too long before we exchanged a cou­ple of com­ments on the game. Soon after that he start­ed com­plain­ing about the offi­ci­at­ing. I about lost it (only about though). In the first place, I can’t stand it when peo­ple blame the refs. In the sec­ond place, the refs in that Packer/​Redskin game were not doing any favors for the Pack­ers any more than favors for the Redskins.

When I got home I checked the blogs and, sure enough, there was no short­age of Pack­er fans com­plain­ing about the refs.

The ref­er­ee­ing in the NFL is sim­ply bad. The only virtue it has is that all plays are called equal­ly bad­ly and all teams get their turn at being screwed over. Still, good ref­er­ee­ing would be bet­ter than bad.

Tonight I am watch­ing the Phils and Giants play for the Nation­al League penant. The game is on Fox. On replays of pitch­es, Fox has the graph­ic of the strike zone show­ing exact­ly where the pitch was locat­ed. It is amus­ing to lis­ten to the announc­er, Tim McCarv­er, when the umpire calls the pitch a strike and the graph­ic shows the pitch was clear­ly a ball. McCarv­er just ignores the graph­ic com­plete­ly and, as the replay of the pitch is shown, talks about how the pitch caught the out­side of the plate. The replay clear­ly looks like it was out­side and the graph­ic con­firms it, but we don’t want to show up the umpires.

Umpir­ing in base­ball is slight­ly bet­ter than what goes on in the NFL, but the ball and strike call­ing is a joke. The rest of the calls are usu­al­ly cor­rect, but there are still plen­ty of errors.

I won­der how long it will be before sports real­ly embraces tech­nol­o­gy to help call the games.

Now They Tell Us

Have you seen or heard Pru­den­tial’s new ad campaign?

This rock has nev­er stood still.

Although I do not recall the exact phrase that was used, I am cer­tain that once upon a time their adver­tis­ing con­veyed the idea of sta­bil­i­ty with that rock. Sol­id, nev­er changing.

Now we know bet­ter I guess.

What Can the Westboro Baptist Church be Missing?

The West­boro Bap­tist Church is the group that protest­ed at the funer­al of the Marine. The issue at hand, whether the protest is pro­tect­ed speech, seems dif­fi­cult, but I’m inclined to think that it is pro­tect­ed speech.

But that is not the sub­ject of this post. I am inter­est­ed in the log­ic of the protest mes­sage “If you want them to stop dying, stop sinning”

Seri­ous­ly?! If we became a 100% Chris­t­ian nation and sin­less then none of us would die? Or none of us would die in war? Or we would know no war?

I thought that in Chris­tian­i­ty all peo­ple are, almost by def­i­n­i­tion, sin­ners. So how could we be sinles

It is just absurd to think that our sol­diers would sud­den­ly become unkillable.

It must be that they mean we would know no war. Cer­tain­ly if we were all sin­less Chris­tians we would nev­er attack any­one and no one would ever attack us. Yeah, that must be it.

Who Puts a Value on a Life?

I am not sure (but I think so) if it made it into Health Care Reform, but there is no deny­ing that many lib­er­als want what the right referred to as “death pan­els”. Of course, not death pan­els, but a method of deter­mi­nat­ing what treat­ments are not effec­tive, includ­ing treat­ments that give lit­tle val­ue for a high price.

Con­ser­v­a­tives con­tin­ue to insist that the first Health Care Reform that should be passed is mal­prac­tice reform includ­ing lim­its on jury awards. Pre­sum­ably, such lim­its would include cas­es where death was the result.

Who wants to put a dol­lar val­ue on a life?

Straw Poll Picks Pence for Pres!!

At this week’s Val­ues Vot­er Sum­mit in Wash­ing­ton the win­ner of the straw poll for Pres­i­dent in 2012 was Mike Pence!!

This is just as I was begin­ning to think that Pence was more inter­est­ed in being Major­i­ty Leader in the House than being President.

Note that the win­ner of the Vice Pres­i­dent straw poll was also Pence, so the win goes to the sec­ond place Palin!

Yup. That’s a tick­et we can live with! Pence/​Palin!!

I Made an Appearence in xkcd!!!!

You might not notice the resem­blance (espe­cial­ly if you do not know me!), but that is me in this com­ic.

It dri­ves me NUTS when I ask for an address and I get direc­tions instead of an address. Once upon a time this might have made a bit of sense, but no more. The direc­tions I get off of the inter­net are stun­ning­ly accu­rate. I’m sure there are exam­ples of mis­takes in such direc­tions, but I’ve been vic­tim to mis­takes in the direc­tions from the per­son who lives at the des­ti­na­tion (and I usu­al­ly fail to see the hydrant paint­ed like a clown.…)

OK, the guy in the com­ic is using GPS and I do not have GPS. This is just to keep me from suing.

Besides, GPS is not always accu­rate. When my son and his wife came to vis­it at our new house, his GPS announced that they had arrived when they were still a block away. Good thing they had the address.

:)