1/31/2008

These are some cathedrals I can get behind.

1/26/2008

NHL all star-break. I hardly noticed. Ten years ago, the all-star game was sort of fun. Now, everyone considers it a joke. This is what I would do:

1. Shorten the NHL season and ditch the all-star game completely. There are too many low intensity games. There’s nothing like playoff hockey. Especially playoff overtime hockey. We could do with 60 or even fewer regular season games.

2. After the NHL season, have a yearly international tournament. A round robin season for seeding, and a best-of-seven elimination tournament. Screw the all-star game, how about an all-star playoffs? Imagine Russia & Czech Republic going at each other for seven games.

1/14/2008

A question on slashdot today asked: what would you do if you were POTUS?

I’m amazed that, among supposed nerds (i.e., smart people), so many (a) have no idea what the POTUS can/is supposed to do and (b) think that saying “I will fix X” is a plan of action for fixing X.

As an experiment, I’d like to

1) Ban political parties, i.e., any financial entity whose purpose is to get someone elected. This would probably be difficult, since they seem to always arise spontaneously. The only way to do it is to design an electoral system that makes them obsolete.

2) Eliminate the presidency. Divide the USA into a half dozen or so regions (northeast, mid-atlantic, etc), and have each set of states elect an executive representative to serve on the federal executive cabinet.

3) Put prerequisites on almost all political offices: only state governors or senators can run for the executive cabinet, only county EO’s can run for governor, only mayors can run for county EO, etc. Work your way up.

4) Mandatory political content on public airwaves. Take the money out of politics by giving candidates enough air time they don’t need to buy any.

Not to mention, our voting system of plurality is mathematically demonstrable to be the worst of all seriously considered voting systems. I would recommend approval voting: it’s not quite the best, but any further improvement in performance requires a lot more complexity.

1/6/2008

Reading: Lone Survivor by Marcus Luttrell, written by a Navy SEAL, principally about a misadventure in Afghanistan. A real conservative Texas cowboy. The story of his early life sure confirms Lakoff’s “strict father” interpretation. Generally a good read, but with some things like this:

For me, it began in Iraq, the first murmurings from the liberal part of the U.S.A. that we were somehow in the wrong, brutal killers, bullying other countries; that we who put our lives on the line for our nation at the behest of our government should somehow be charged with murder for shooting at our enemy… It’s been an insidious progression, the criticisms of the U.S. Armed Forces from politicians and from the liberal media, which knows nothing of combat…

Disappointing, but enlightening. I read liberal bloggers & watch the Daily Show all the time, and never have I seen so much as an insinuation that a soldier should be charged with murder for doing their job. I can hardly pay attention to politics at all anymore because it’s become professional wrestling: choose a side, and have a shouting match. Mr. Luttrell clearly only knows what “liberals” say by what talking heads on “his” side tell him. For the record, there is not much politics in the book, although there is some strange praise of W, noting his equally studly SEAL bother calls him a “real man.” It’s sad a real Texan can’t see past the veneer, to the prissy Maine Yale boy who spent most of his adult life getting drunk, snorting coke, avoiding military service, fucking up everything he touched, and having daddy’s Saudi friends bail him out. Why? Because he’s on “his” team. I’d be a little miffed if my commander-in-chief couldn’t look me in the eye and say, really, why he sent me and my comrades into harm’s way.

I’ve got tickets to see Henry Rollins in a few months. I love his attitude on America’s military misadventures. He always displays proper awe for people in uniform, while being very, very pissed off about the greedy old cowards who are so cavalier with their lives.

1/3/2008

This time of year the house is never warm. Poor insulation, and a worse heating system.

Nothing like waking to a cold house, and following some groggy motions, slapping an icepack on your foot. It took several inspections to convince me it wasn’t broken.

Clutch foot disabled, I read some more Forgetfulness. It turned out to be the penultimate chapter, not the last, and…a huge blunder! The billiards table suddenly becomes a pocket billiards table. A monumental oversight. I wonder how it could have possibly slipped through.

I guess it doesn’t say definitively that it wasn’t a pocket billiards table before, but it is certainly intimated by previous references to three-cushion. I can’t see anyone familiar with the game seeing it any other way.

Some fiction.

I read Tree of Smoke over the course of fall. I remember looking for it in Chicago, at the Borders across from the Aragon, but I think my copy was ultimately mail-ordered. I loved Johnson’s spare, smooth style. I found the story of the grunt most compelling. The book lost momentum about 2/3 in, but I will definitely look to his other books when I have the chance.

Presently almost finished with Just’s Forgetfulness. I read An Unfinished Season a few summers ago, liking the writing but not being engrossed by the story. I am with this one. Forgetfulness is just about a perfect novel for my taste (with the last chapter to go). The first chapter had some rather contrived character development (picture a big flashing neon sign reading: insert childhood flashback here!), but since then has been an aesthetic bliss. And a perfect length. A short story stretched with perfect vivid detail into a Novel.

I’ve ordered Diaz’s novel for the next read.

Nonfiction: During one of my final exams, I perused by office bookshelf for something to skim during lulls in my proctoring duties, and picked up Prime Obsession. I ended up re-reading it over the next few days. I’ve read a few chapters into Ubiquity, which is a popularized account of a scientific field I work in. I skim and skip some paragraphs that go into details, but I like to see how the field is presented, and perhaps pick up some personal anecdotes. I’ve spent more time engrossed with Starr’s A History of the Ancient World (4th Ed.). There was a brief comment early on that made me wonder about his impartialities, but so far it’s been a smooth and informative read. This would be a follow up to Antiquity I read some months ago, when my reading was done outside.

I’ve also been reading some of Gauge Fields, Knots, and Gravity, and referring to some of my other differential geometry books, as I write about these topics myself. I try to write the tutorials I wished I has had as an upper level undergrad or green graduate student. We’ll see if they come to anything.

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