Monday, December 28, 2020

Did Scientific Method in the Bible Come Up Short?

 December 26, 2020

 

I was looking at various instances of scientific method in the Bible (like Jacob’s selective breeding program, shown to him in a vision by the Lord), to counteract the snarky people who say that the Lord, not science, will protect them from the coronavirus. Because the Lord seemed to have a pretty good handle on science, so maybe people could reconcile the two.

I read Leviticus 13, which talks about isolating lepers. “Aha!” I thought. “Isolation. That’s the ticket. Let the anti-scientists gripe about isolating NOW!” 

But then I read modern articles that say that leprosy is most likely transmitted by coughing and sneezing, and is not really that contagious after all. (Although, in a crowded camp, things may have been dicier.) So why didn’t the Lord say, “Make them wear masks!” instead of making them outcasts?


Now it’s starting to really bug me.

 

Sunday, December 27, 2020

Dressing Down

 

December 27, 2020

 

Since it’s the weekend, I’m staying in my pajamas today,

Because wearing sweats seemed too much like dressing for work.

 


Did She Fail Those Classes?

December 26, 2020

 

An article about how holiday travel may spread the virus mentions a young woman from Missouri who traveled to Texas over the holiday to help her cousin, who is getting married next November, choose a wedding dress.

That would be bad enough.

But this young woman is a nursing student.

If the school doesn’t kick her out outright, because she clearly doesn’t understand basic science and nursing concepts of disease transmission,

 

I hope that they make her retake some classes until the concepts sink in.



Saturday, December 26, 2020

Woulda, Shoulda, Coulda? Don't Kid Yourself.

 December 23, 2020

 

If you needed further proof that “The best laid plans of mice and men gang aft agley” (Burns), or “Man proposes, but God disposes” (Thomas a Kempis), consider the following story.


I have a friend who shares my love of exploring parks. Unfortunately, she likes parks that are closer to her, and I, with my horrible experiences with St. Louis traffic, would rather not go there every time.

So the other day, I chose a park near me: 15-minute drive, NO highway time, almost no traffic.

And got rear-ended while I was sitting at the stop sign waiting to leave the park.

So the next time you say, “I should have planned it better…”

 

Forget it. You never had a chance.

 

Thursday, December 24, 2020

Christmas Wishes

 

December 24, 2020


Christmas Blessings to All. May you get whatever you need, and little extra.



 

Wednesday, December 23, 2020

The Receivers Gave Back

 

December 23, 2020

 

Residents of a St. Louis neighborhood surprised a UPS driver with a check for her new roof.

The driver is a favorite, because she goes above and beyond for the neighbors, like bringing groceries to a person whose arm was broken.

When she mentioned that she was going to get a new roof in the spring, neighbors got an estimate and set up a GoFundMe account, and several thousand dollars were raised in two days.

They faked a service call to bring her back to the neighborhood, and the neighbors presented her with the check.

It wasn’t just the neighbors who showed their appreciation. Some co-workers covered her shift during the event, and some came to watch the presentation.

 

I love a feel-good story.



Tuesday, December 22, 2020

His Pep Talk Needs Work

 

December 21, 2020

 

More than 340 schoolboys were abducted in Nigeria because Boko Haram rebels believed that the Western education they were receiving was anti-Islam. After a week of forced marching with minimal food and water, and death threats if they returned to the school, the boys were released.

After their release, they met with the Nigerian president. Apparently not wanting the boys’ lives to be stopped in their tracks as a result of the abduction, the president told the boys that they should not be deterred in life by “this little difficulty.”

It’s nice that he had such faith in their ability to overcome obstacles.

 

But as a motivational speech, it left something to be desired. 


Monday, December 21, 2020

I'm Not Cut Out For Dealing With Stupidity

 

December 21, 2020

 

I just attended a virtual job fair through the DOL website. First, I had to determine which state Zone I live in. The website’s information booth gave me no help, so I called the local job center. The first woman had no idea, and referred me to another one, who was able to help.

I visited several sites and I found a job that sounded promising, so I uploaded my resume, as required, and started to fill out the application. I was doing well until they asked for my job history.

I typed in “See Resume,” and filled out the rest of the application. The “See Resume” section requested a phone number, dates, etc. In other words, they wanted me to type in exactly what was on the resume that they had had me upload.

I was also intrigued to know that “voluntary” information of gender and race was marked with an asterisk, meaning the field must be filled in.

 

I am NOT cut out for this nonsense.

 

 

Sunday, December 20, 2020

Hope Springs Eternal

 

December 17, 2020

 

Apparently, people are looking forward to having a lot more to do in 2021.

 

The dollar store is already out of calendars.



Friday, December 18, 2020

He's Got Skin in the Game

 

December 17, 2020

 

Some officials and restaurant owners in San Diego County are confused by a judge’s ruling that strip clubs are exempt from rules closing restaurants due to COVID-19.

Two strip clubs sued the county and state about the restrictions, and the judge ruled in their favor.


One restaurant owner asked if the ruling meant that restaurants could open, as long as someone was stripping. If so, he was willing to go the extra mile to keep his place open.

 

 

How Many Syllables?

 

December 16, 2020

 

Does anybody else get tickled by the irony of the word “Monosyllabic”?

 

 

Tuesday, December 15, 2020

The Good Parts of 2020

 

December 15, 2020


OK, I admit it! I enjoyed 2020.

I enjoyed not having to commute to work every day. I enjoyed not having to work with the 2 people who stressed me out so much; since we all took turns going into the office, I saw them much less, and enjoyed every minute of not seeing them.

I enjoyed not having to worry about my family commuting, since they worked from home.

I enjoyed being able to visit places without having to wait for weekends and deal with crowds. I visited new parks, and took pictures, and was able to take walks in the middle of the day, or nap if I needed to. 

I took virtual trips and enjoyed virtual culture. I even took two virtual yoga classes.

Prior to the lockdown, I had met some new people and I was going places with them, so my social life was starting to look up. I was sad that that changed, but…

Since there was no place to go after the lockdown, I didn’t get as frustrated with my family for not going out and doing things; I didn’t feel resentful about only being able to spend time with them if I stayed home, or about having to go to fun places alone. Kind of a weird thing to be positive about, but there it is.

I actually saw my distant family members much more this year because we got so used to chatting virtually. (Although, to be honest, we had already planned and started doing that before the pandemic hit, so that’s kind of a null value.)

I polished my book, known variously as CEOing for Dummies, The Corporate Culture and Other Business Blunders, and, ultimately, The Troubleshooter’s Handbook for CEOs. Thanks to online library programs, I learned more about what it takes to find an agent and publish a book. (I have done neither of those things, although I have tried.)

I attended a virtual networking event—much nicer than standing around looking awkward, trying to make conversation.

In fact, in the week before Thanksgiving, I actually told someone that I had Survivor’s Guilt, because my family hadn’t been struggling.


The next day I was told that I had four more days at my job, then it was over. So that was kind of a bummer.

And my husband’s salary took a hit, too.

So now, like a lot of people, I walk around with that sick feeling in the pit of my stomach, hoping that I can turn things around financially. 

I’m also hoping that, since the rest of the year was so good, the job loss just means that something better, job-wise, is coming.


I know that 2020 was hard on millions of people. But I’d be lying if I said that I hated it. Because I didn’t.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Monday, December 14, 2020

I Wanna Be Like These Kids

 

December 13, 2020

 

The latest child philanthropist/entrepreneur is a 7-year-old who has raised nearly $20,000 for protective gear for a children’s hospital.

Hayley Orlinsky isn’t the first child to raise money for a good cause; nor is she the first child to start her own business. In fact, there are many kids all over the world who have had the imagination, the drive, and the generosity to create something, make it pay, and use the proceeds for good.


I wanna be like them.

 

 

Sunday, December 13, 2020

We Can ALL Be John Doe

 

December 13, 2020

 

I just watched “Meet John Doe”, a 1941 movie.

 

If you’re feeling discouraged about life, or people, watch the speech John gives about 50 minutes in. It really highlights how much ordinary people contribute to making the world work, and will make you feel good about your role in life.

 

Thursday, December 10, 2020

I've Got Class, and I Can Prove It

 

December 9, 2020

 

I have frequently been self-conscious that I don’t exactly ooze class. I look respectable, but nobody would ever take me for a member of the Upper Crust.

However: Since I donated to the Metropolitan Opera’s virtual fundraiser last Spring, I’ve been getting letters from them, asking for donations. (No good deed goes unpunished…) So I’m debating:

Once we start having visitors again, should I just leave an envelope from the Met lying casually on the counter? Or put that magnet they sent on the refrigerator?


Because nothing says Class like a fridge magnet, right?

 

 

Tuesday, December 8, 2020

Simple Solutions that Haven't Gone Viral (as far as I know)



December 7, 2020



I just saw an article where somebody was all excited to discover that it makes more sense to string your Christmas tree lights vertically than around the tree. Sometimes I would do that, when I didn’t feel like fooling around with wrapping them, but my fellow tree-decorator didn’t approve on the grounds that it was lazy. (And it is. But not annoying, which is more important.)


The thing is, we all do things out of sheer common sense, then somebody else goes viral with it, and suddenly it’s a big production. So let me tell you some other ways to make your life easier, so you don’t have to wait for somebody else to figure it out:



1. Instead of paint stirrers, use a plastic cooking spoon that’s shaped like the old-fashioned wooden spoons. They come in sets for about $2.00, so you can use whatever size works for the size of the paint can. Not only is it easier to stir the paint with them, but they clean easily and are re-usable.

2. If you’re wearing a long-sleeved shirt when you brush your teeth or wash your face, water may run down your arms and either get the sleeves wet or go under the sleeves and get your arm wet. Wear those wide hair scrunchies around your wrists to catch the water. $1.00 at the Dollar Tree.

3. If you have bushes planted in a rock garden, cleaning up the trimmings can be a nightmare. Buy a couple of cheap hairdresser capes ($2.50 each) and put them around the bushes to catch whatever falls when you trim. Then just empty the “bib” into the trash, and put it with the trimming shears for next time.

4. Thread a string or ribbon through the spring in a clothespin and tie it to your oven door. You can hang dishtowels from the clothespins.

5. Put a magnetic chip clip on your dishwasher, and write “Clean” on one side of a piece of paper and “Dirty” on the other; switch sides as needed. (I make my signs seasonal: Christmas tree, spring flower, etc.) Or

    5a. Put the dishwashing pill into the detergent compartment and close it. If the compartment is still closed, the dishes are dirty. If it’s opened, the dishwasher has been run. (This one came from my sister-in-law.)

6. If you like good artwork, check out the stamps at the post office. There are mini-frames that you can use to display them. Perfect for your desk. (Tip: Most of the stamps look better against the yellow envelopes than the white ones.)

7. Cardboard boxes make great standing desks; they’re inexpensive, and easy to set up on your regular desk top. Just take the box off the desk when you’re ready to sit down again.

8. When I was pregnant, it got to be hard to see my feet, or bend over to get shoes from the closet floor. So I put a tall cardboard box in the closet and put my shoes on it. No more bending over to grab the shoes.

9. I hate taping for painting, so for small jobs I grab a flat piece of cardboard and hold it at an angle to protect the wall or floor while I paint baseboards.

10. Decorate the Christmas tree from the bottom up. It’s easier to keep ornaments out of each other’s way.

11. Practicing martial arts kicks is easier when you have something to connect with. Our old friend the tall cardboard box is great for this.

 

 


Monday, December 7, 2020

Wanted: People Who Can Fill Out Job-Site Surveys

 December 1, 2020


I spent the morning looking at various career websites, and filling out skills surveys.

I was amused to note that, while one determined that I had only 9 of the 18 skills necessary to be a file clerk, another thought that I might have a future in nuclear medicine, as I scored 10 out of 16 in that field. (I texted my niece, who actually is in nuclear medicine, and she laughed and said that perhaps I should consider a career change.) 

After I joined the St. Louis Networking group (through LinkedIn), I was matched for a job as a psychologist for the FBI. That would be a heck of stretch, 

but maybe I could apply for a job as a file clerk there.

 



Sunday, December 6, 2020

Keep That Common Sense Coming!

 

December 6, 2020

 

I read today that airlines are taking some common-sense measures to reduce the risk of infection during the pandemic. One of the changes is to board the planes starting with the back seats, to limit exposure from people continually passing the front-end passengers who are already seated.

In “A Shrewd Move” (August 14, 2012) I wrote,

I asked “Why don’t you [the flight attendants] let the people who don’t tie up traffic by using the overhead bins off the plane first?”

 The gate attendants just smiled and said, “Oh, we can’t do that.”

 

I hereby renew my plea to the airlines to let people with NO carry-on luggage deplane first, to limit the amount of time standing in the aisles, waiting for people to get their luggage out of the overhead bins.

 

 

Friday, December 4, 2020

Have They Tried Dropping Leaflets?

 

December 2, 2020

 

I was intrigued when an article in the Post-Dispatch ("In rural Missouri, doctors treat friends and family" Dec. 2, 2020) quoted a man in rural Missouri who had contracted COVID-19 and was still suffering the effects of it. He said that he hadn't been overly cautious about not contracting the virus. He said, “I really wasn’t aware of the fact that it could get ahold of you and not let go.”

Health officials have warned in print, on TV, on radio, and online about the risks associated with contracting COVID.

Short of hog-tying people and making them watch any one of the numerous cautionary videos made by people who have contracted the disease, 


WHAT ELSE CAN THE HEALTH OFFICIALS DO TO GET THE MESSAGE ACROSS?



Thursday, December 3, 2020

Venues Come and Go, But Ticketing Fees Are Forever

 

December 2, 2020

 

I just got notified of a series of virtual concerts.

The prices are the same as if we were going to see the event live. Even better,

 

Even though we wouldn’t be setting foot near the place, there are still ticketing fees.


I remember writing several years ago about having to pay $2 extra per ticket if I had them printed at a local outlet instead of picking them up or having them mailed to me.

Sad to know that some things remain constant.

 

(And yes, I know that the agency that handles the ticketing still has its costs to cover; but there’s no printing, no shipping, no handling…No nothin’. Come on! Cut people some slack.)


Wednesday, December 2, 2020

They've Got It COVID

 

November 30, 2020

 

The Missouri legislature was supposed to have a special legislative session dealing in part with limiting lawsuits related to COVID-19.

The plans got derailed when several members tested positive for the virus after a retreat near Branson. According to a picture, most of the Senate GOP caucus members weren’t masked.

Well, this should give them some special insight into the matter.

At any rate, the legislative bus tour, which was going to feature one “mask-optional” bus, has been postponed.

 

 

 

Tuesday, December 1, 2020

Rediscover the Joy

 

November 29, 2020

 

I think that for Christmas this year, I’ll just have my family look around the house for something I haven’t read or listened to or watched or worn for a while,

And wrap it up

And put it under the tree for me.

Chances are I can rediscover the pleasure I had in it before.

 

And it won’t cost nothin’.

 

 

Monday, November 30, 2020

Do As They Say, Not As They Do

 

November 28, 2020

 

Well, well, well. After yelling about incompetent leadership during the pandemic, and pushing guidelines about social distancing and masking and not traveling for the holidays,

Three high-profile government leaders decided that the rules didn’t apply to them.

  • The governor of California attended a birthday party/fundraiser in November.
  • The governor of New York was going to have Thanksgiving dinner with his mother and daughters, who were going to fly in for the occasion. Public outcry changed his mind.
  • The mayor of Denver “deeply regrets” traveling for Thanksgiving, after urging others to stay home.

                                  

Why do you suppose that people don’t think that their elected leaders really have a clue as to how the pandemic is affecting them?

 

Why do you suppose that people think their elected leaders look down on them as lesser beings?

 

Why do you suppose that people don’t really trust their elected leaders?

 

Well?

 

If We Believed in Ourselves Like We Believe in Each Other

November 20, 2020

 

Sometimes we look at other people and say, “You’re so good at [whatever]. Why don’t you capitalize on that?” But we don’t look at ourselves and say the same thing.

I think the reason that most people don’t is that it’s easier to believe in other people than it is in ourselves. And it’s a shame.

We just need somebody to help us, step by step. If we just set up groups for ourselves, of people who believed in us, we could do wonders. Most projects are daunting because they have so many steps. If we had somebody to say, “Have you finished Step 1? Good. Now we’ll work on Step 2,” we could probably move mountains.


Maybe there is a program somewhere called “Self-Doubters Anonymous.” If there isn’t, there should be.

 

 

Sunday, November 29, 2020

We Could Have Been Great

 

November 20, 2020

 

I feel sad when I see the opportunity America wasted during the pandemic.

This was when we could have shone. We could have pulled together and displayed that “Can Do” spirit that everyone associates with two world wars and the Depression. People in other countries could have thought that we were still a force to be reckoned with, a country that overcame obstacles and worked together for the common good; leaders in searching for a worldwide solution. Undefeatable.

Instead we fought against wearing masks, and made ourselves looked like a nation of whiners; too spoiled to wear a mask while we went out shopping or partying, too faithless to realize that God can still reach us, even if we’re watching a service online instead of at our place of worship. 

I’m sure that people worldwide are thinking that we’re weaklings who can’t lead in anything; who couldn’t fight off an attack if we wanted to, because we’re too busy arguing about our “rights” to work together to repel invaders. I hope that they don’t take advantage of that (any more than they already have, with cyber-attacks and whatnot) and decide that now would be a great time to invade us. Because honestly, how would we react?

 

We could have been great. But we blew it.

 


Saturday, November 21, 2020

Have a Holly, Jolly Pothole

 

November 19, 2020

 

A man in Massachusetts was on his way to pick up dinner one evening, and encountered a series of potholes on Route 1. He had previously complained to the town and state governments about them, but gotten no action. This time, all 4 tires on his car were flattened.

So he picked up some dirt and some small Christmas trees and planted the trees in the potholes on his way to work on Monday morning.

 

On Monday afternoon, the potholes were fixed.

 

 

 

 

Friday, November 20, 2020

Maybe They Can Lead Sister Cities

 

November 19, 2020                                      

 

The mayor of the Japanese town of Yamoto, Kumamoto prefecture, wondered why his name was trending on social media.


Then, family members pointed out to him that the characters in his name (which is actually Yutaka Umeda) spelled out “Jo Baiden.”

 

 


Thursday, November 19, 2020

Data-Driven Nitpicking

 

November 14, 2020

 

As you know, I’m a grammar freak.

But I’m wondering if it isn’t time to give the data debate a rest.

It’s a plural noun; but the use of “data” as a singular noun is so widespread that continually correcting it is exhausting; and besides, everybody knows what you mean, and isn’t that the point of language?

I’ll even cave on pronunciation. (Correct: day-ta; Incorrect: datta)

Does that mean I’m sacrificing my principles for convenience?

 

Or am I bowing to the inevitable evolution of language?




Wednesday, November 18, 2020

NOW He's Done It

 

November 14, 2020

 

In the same Post-Dispatch article cited in “If You’re Sure…”, a man says that the media have blown the pandemic out of proportion. According to the article, the man had recently visited with a member of an Amish community, “‘Nobody got it,’ [the man], half-joking, said the [Amish] man told him. ‘We don’t watch TV.’”

 

Now that the Amish man has been in contact with the unmasked man, I wonder if that will be true for long.



Tuesday, November 17, 2020

If You're Sure...

 

November 14, 2020


An article in today’s Post-Dispatch is talking about why rural residents in Missouri don’t think that wearing masks during the pandemic is necessary. It quotes a woman from Cuba, Missouri saying, “I am 89 years old. I am going to die of something at some point.”

And I’m thinking, “That’s great. But if you get sick, are you going to refuse medical treatment so that you don’t divert resources from people who actually took steps to slow the pandemic but got sick anyway?”

 

Her name is in the article. Maybe hospitals can flag it so that, if she gets sick enough to need treatment, they can make sure she puts her money where her mouth is, and be told to stay home.

 


Monday, November 16, 2020

Why Bother?

 

November 15, 2020

 

I read in the paper that people demonstrating in support of President Trump are clashing with counterprotesters.

I’m thinking, “Why bother counter-protesting? It just seems like a waste time and energy. The vote has already been decided.”

In fact, getting into fights just brings more attention to the demonstrations.

 

So, let the police make sure that the demonstrations stay calm. Everybody else, stay home.

 

 


And You Thought It Was 42

 

November 13, 2020

 

I was having a bit of trouble with my computer at work, and the IT guy advised me, “With Windows, the answer to almost any problem is a Restart.”


I thought that would make a nice cross-stitch sampler: “The Answer is a Restart.”

 

 

 

(If you don’t get the title of the post, read The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.)


Sunday, November 15, 2020

Darwinism and Political Selection

 

November 11, 2020

 

Missouri has a tradition of taking newly-elected legislators on a statewide tour by bus.

This year, there will 2 buses: One mask-mandatory and one mask-optional.

 

Seeing who picks which bus may impact my future election choices.


Saturday, November 14, 2020

About That Cognitive Dissonance Thing...

 

November 14, 2020

 

In another stunning example of cognitive dissonance (the holding of two opposite beliefs at once)…

A St. Louis couple made and distributed a greeting card with a UPI photo of themselves standing in their yard holding guns; apparently they were pleased to be thought of as heroes standing up for their rights.

But now they’re suing UPI for taking the photo in the first place because it has it has garnered “significant national recognition and infamy.” In other words, it made them look bad.


But it can’t have looked too bad, because they used it on their greeting cards.

 

Aaanddd, the search for logic continues.

 


Cognitive Dissonance Is Not A New Phenomenon

 

November 8, 2020

 

Many of us have been stunned during the past four years at how people can hold onto a conviction in the face of completely contradictory facts. But it’s not a new phenomenon.

In “Love is a Many Splendored Thing”, which takes place in 1950, a Chinese doctor and a Eurasian doctor doing her residency in Hong Kong both plan to return to Mainland China to practice medicine. Eventually, the resident decides to stay in Hong Kong. The Chinese doctor insists that, now that the Communists are in power, life in China is going to be wonderful for the common man, and that she should return and practice medicine there.

She points out that 3,000 people a day are arriving in Hong Kong, fleeing Communist China, so that it can’t be that great. He keeps insisting that it is, that they just don’t realize it.

 

Sound familiar?


Friday, November 13, 2020

Amazing, Adaptable Humans

 

November 11, 2020

 

There’s a saying about making lemons into lemonade. If you look at the history of the human race, we’ve pretty much done that.

Here we are in Fall. Fall can be dreary, with cold rain and trees going bare. But people cozy up with cups of cider and they bake pies; they go on leaf viewings and have bonfires. These things not only make what could be a depressing season bearable, but something to look forward to.

And then there’s Winter. The days get darker and colder. So what do we do? Most cultures have a celebration of light at the heart of the dark time. They’ve made it so that people actually look forward to that period, and even wax nostalgic about it. Cold and dark—good times? Apparently.

There are also snowball fights and sledding and, for some lucky folks, skiing and skating. We took what we were given and turned it into something good.


I think that’s pretty darned amazing. I hope we can adapt to the restrictions of coronavirus with the same spirit.



Thursday, November 12, 2020

A D-Lightful Side Effect?

 

November 9, 2020

 

It’s been speculated that low levels of Vitamin D can make a person more susceptible to catching COVID-19.

Well, much of the country has been experiencing an unexpected warm spell this past week, which has encouraged people to spend more time outdoors than is normal for this time of year.

 

Maybe it will help get those Vitamin D levels up, and keep people healthier. At least we can hope.




Is COVID Time the New Thing?

 

November 12, 2020

 

Ever since the pandemic started, my newspaper delivery is getting later and later.

 

With so many people in lockdown, I can understand the carrier not dragging him- or herself out of bed before dawn to deliver a paper to people with no place to go, since they wouldn’t need to read the news before leaving for work.

But people are working again, and the paper delivery still gets later.

I’ve heard of Southern Time, and Indian Time (from both Native Americans and Indian Americans), and Smith Time (a pseudonym for my family’s chronic lateness), all ways to describe a relaxed approach to starting times. 


I wonder if my carrier is working on COVID Time.



Behind the Times

 

November 12, 2020

 

An intoxicated Utah man was arrested for driving 130 mph. He said he was going to Missouri to kill former senator Claire McCaskill.

Since McCaskill lost her reelection bid in 2018, I’m not sure what he hoped to accomplish.

 

Maybe he’s behind on his news-reading.



Do They Really Want to Know?

 

November 12, 2020

 

I got an email asking me to fill out a survey about my experience at a medical facility. So I did.

 

I arrived for a scheduled COVID test, as required for a procedure I’m having next week, and called from the parking lot as directed. Not knowing where to go, I left a message with my phone number and waited for a response. A few minutes later I walked to the building to see where I should go.

At the door, I saw a sign saying that COVID appointments were done in the rear of the building. As there was no indication whether that meant inside or outside, I went in. A staff member directed me to park behind the building in one of the numbered spots, and mentioned that people had been waiting for a while.

I thought that a sign as one entered the parking lot would have been more helpful than one at the door.

I parked in a numbered slot, then called, then called again, always getting an answering machine. I saw staff members walking back and forth with testing gear, but 40 minutes later, I was still waiting. A car pulled up next to me and was seen immediately, so I asked the nurse why I was still waiting. She asked if I'd tried the number, and told me to keep trying. 4 calls later, I called my doctor's office and asked them to notify someone at the clinic that things were not going as they should. As I was pacing outside while talking on the phone, I noticed several other people dialing and redialing—apparently they were having the same experience I was. The nurse put me next in line, and said that she would notify someone that she had done my test.

I don't have any real confidence that the information will actually be processed properly, so I hope that I don't have COVID, and won't spread it, because I may never find out from your facility.

The staff that I DID interact with was wonderful.

 

At the end of the survey, the last slide said, “We value your feedback.” I wonder if they’ll even read it.


Wednesday, November 11, 2020

Can You Smell the Difference?

 

November 9, 2020

 

Several years ago it was discovered that certain dogs that smelled a person’s breath or stool samples were almost as accurate at predicting colon cancer as standard tests were.

 

I wonder if they can do the same thing for COVID-19?



December 14, 2020


According to some articles I looked at today, yes they can.


January 13, 2021


https://www.huffpost.com/entry/covid-19-sniffing-dogs-santiago-airport_n_5fe4c13cc5b6e1ce8338f206

Sunday, November 8, 2020

Cook the Chicken at Home

 

November 7, 2020

 

In August of this year, rangers at Yellowstone National Park were notified of a group carrying cooking gear toward a hot spring.

The rangers arrived to find two chickens in a burlap bag cooking in the spring.

 

Lest you get inspired to try it, know that fines and jail time ensued.

 

 


Saturday, November 7, 2020

The Terms of the Contract

 

November 5, 2020

 

Jack Wilson and a friend applied for a job with the Blonde-Headed League. The ad for the job specified that applicants must have blonde hair. Jack got the job. His friend, who was brown-haired, sued the League for discrimination.

Catholic Social Services wants to contract with the City of Philadelphia to find foster homes for children. Philadelphia says that it requires the foster care agencies it works with not to discriminate as part of their contract.

Catholic Social Services, which will not place children with same-sex couples because of its religious views, is suing because they are not being considered for the contract.

 

My ruling: If you don’t meet the conditions of the contract, don’t apply for the job.


Post-Campaign Strategy

 

November 5, 2020

 

Nicole Galloway, Missouri State Auditor, ran against incumbent governor Mike Parson. She has demonstrated fairness and good business sense. She lost the rural vote—not because rural citizens are against fairness and good sense, but because Mike Parson was one of their own, and her campaign didn’t point out the obvious: their economies are in the toilet because of current bad political practices.

Joe Biden may be elected president of the United States. If he wins, he will have to deal with a Congress that includes the likes of Roy Blunt, Josh Hawley, and the woman from QAnon; individuals whose actions indicate that they wouldn’t understand the concept of Public Good if it came up and introduced itself.

My advice to them both is: Spend less energy appealing to people who already support you; give the people who voted against you concrete reasons to work with you from now on. 

It won’t be easy—if this election has demonstrated nothing else, it is that FACTS DO NOT MATTER when a person’s mind is made up.

 

Biden should start working the states who voted against him RIGHT NOW. He should give voters reasons to support his policies and to make sure that their representatives vote accordingly during his presidency.  He should be strategizing already about what will shake people’s confidence in hucksters and conspiracy theorists. He should get people out there on the ground, talking to citizens in ways that they can relate to. His biggest opponents are comfortable, middle-class people who have not yet been damaged economically or personally by the destructive policies or complete indifference of the current administration. (When current policies do start to backfire on them, they will blame him, because he’ll be holding office, so he should prepare for that, too.) He should figure out how to morph their current complacency into a long-term awareness of what their actions can lead to.

Galloway should frame her campaign in terms of dollars and cents. How have current tax policies (i.e. tax breaks for corporations in the cities, tariff wars on farm goods) negatively affected the rural communities and economies? In this case, demonstrable facts will matter somewhat more than they will to the comfortable urbanites; being able to point to reasons why rural areas are losing economic ground will hit closer to home. However, she should also find people that can make the case in the same grass-roots fashion that I suggested for Biden.


Short version: While you should never neglect the people who support you, find ways to relate to the people who don’t. Don’t wait until the next election; start now.

 


Friday, November 6, 2020

Cooking Up Some Radio Astronomy

 

November 5, 2020

 

A radio burst lasting only milliseconds was spotted by two radically different telescopes in April of this year. One was a $20 million Canadian observatory;

 

the other one was a California doctoral student’s set of hand-made antennas, which included actual cake pans.


Thursday, November 5, 2020

It’s a Good Thing Other People Aren’t in Charge, Either

 

November 5, 2020

 

Boy, I thought I was being tough yesterday as a hypothetical Runner of the Universe, when I said that if I were in charge of it, only the people who refused to take basic precautions would be adversely affected by the coronavirus.

A letter-writer to the Post-Dispatch took it a step further.

Now that urban hospitals are being overrun by patients from rural areas, where mask-wearing is pooh-poohed and not widely practiced, this person says that urban hospitals should refuse to treat patients from areas that don’t have a mask mandate. He’s pretty sure that that would spur mask mandates in those areas.

I understand the frustration, believe me. But I’d hate to be the person from a rural area that did follow safety protocols and still got sick, and then got denied treatment.

 

Guess it’s a good thing that NEITHER of us is in charge.

January 9, 2020


Carolyn Hax has a humane answer to this question:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/advice/carolyn-hax-heres-why-denying-treatment-to-anti-maskers-is-a-bad-idea/2021/01/07/d8c5ec14-479f-11eb-b0e4-0f182923a025_story.html

Wednesday, November 4, 2020

Update on "Let's Liven This Place Up"

 December 24, 2018



I was driving through some really flat, brown, barren landscape for hours. I thought, “Wouldn’t it be swell if there were a device that would let drivers see holograms of interesting sights, without bothering the people who actually lived in the area?”

Someone pointed out that it might be nice at night, but that daylight would make seeing the holograms tricky.

I still think it’s worth pursuing, though.




October 30, 2020

 

Apparently it wasn’t such a far-fetched idea after all.

 VAN MCELWEE: TIME FORK

https://www.laumeiersculpturepark.org/current-exhibition-mcelwee


Who Deserves It?

 November 4, 2020


“Alleluia, Noel, be it heaven or hell, the Christmas we get we deserve.” (Greg Lake, “I Believe in Father Christmas”)

I’ve never believed that.

I don’t believe it now. I don’t believe that people who tried to do the right thing deserve to get a life-altering illness or a death sentence because other people chose for them, by not wearing masks or keeping their distance or staying away from crowds.

It’s a good thing that I’m not in charge of the universe, because I would make sure that the only people who suffered were the ones who willfully disregarded the rules that could have kept everyone safe; and the ones who spurred on the disregard for public safety by knowingly propagating false information.

 

End of story.


November 5, 2020

 

A letter in today’s Post-Dispatch likens the refusal to wear a mask to manslaughter. I really can’t disagree.


January 9, 2020

Carolyn Hax has a humane answer to this question.


https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/advice/carolyn-hax-heres-why-denying-treatment-to-anti-maskers-is-a-bad-idea/2021/01/07/d8c5ec14-479f-11eb-b0e4-0f182923a025_story.html

You Don’t Mind Being Uncomfortable If It Makes You Look Good

 

November 4, 2020

 

The next time you complain about wearing a mask, look at yourself.

 

Are you wearing a necktie? High heels? Tight jeans?

 

If you’ve done any of these things on a regular basis, either because of a work dress code or because of the dictates of fashion (yes, the dictates—you DO behave the way other people tell you to),

 

WEAR THE DAMNED MASK.

               


Monday, November 2, 2020

Election Day Prayers

November 2, 2020

 

As Election Day approaches, can’t you just hear people thinking the following?

 

 1. Lord, I’m praying for the country, not the candidate.

 

 2. I hope everybody who votes my way turns out, and that everybody else stays home.

 

 

Saturday, October 31, 2020

"The Queen's Gambit" Is Not Just For Chess Players

 

October 31, 2020

 

As I was scrolling through Netflix offerings, I saw the trailer for a show called “The Queen’s Gambit”, about a young woman chess player in the 1950s. I skipped through a lot of scenes until I found the scene from the trailer (which was actually in episode 2), taking care to watch all the chess scenes in the meantime. I don’t even play chess, which is why it’s remarkable that I got so caught up in the game scenes.

During action scenes, or the occasional scary scene, in most movies, I can disconnect and get my heart rate down, telling myself that it’s all just for show. Well, the chess scenes in this show were SO GRIPPING that I never did disconnect. That’s how good it is. Also, I never knew how caught up in chess real people get; the spectator scenes were as mesmerizing as the playing scenes.

 

So, even if you skip the rest of the story (and I did), watch the chess scenes of “The Queen’s Gambit.” The last episode is pure joy.

 

 

 


Friday, October 23, 2020

On Respecting Safety, and Keeping Your Word

 

October 21, 2020

 

Teachers in the West Ada School District in Idaho were told that when coronavirus levels in the area were in the Red Zone, school would be conducted virtually.

Unfortunately, when the district was declared a Red Zone, officials “were still acting like it was a yellow,” and holding in-person classes. This was a hazard for both students and teachers.

So the teachers took steps. They called in sick for two days. Now district officials are touring the schools and looking at rooms that are deemed to be hazardous in terms of improper setup, etc. Not only should that have been done before school ever started, but—

 

Why couldn’t school officials keep their word?

 

 


Thursday, October 22, 2020

Now THAT'S Confidence

 

October 18, 2020

 

Although airline food has a bad reputation, one airline is actually marketing its food to people who miss the taste of airline food. 

Finnair has plans to sell its business-class meals at a supermarket chain across Finland.

“We want to offer the opportunity for a Finnair experience and everyday luxury at home, now that travel has been restricted in many ways,” the Finnair Kitchens director of operations said.

I’ve never imagined people missing the taste of airline food, but you have to admire their confidence in their product. Maybe someday I’ll have an opportunity to fly Finnair and test the food myself.

 

Wednesday, October 21, 2020

Emergency Services

 October 18, 2020

 

Fort Lauderdale Fire Rescue was called to the home of a man who was suffering from heat exhaustion as he mowed his lawn.

After they treated the man, the crew finished mowing his lawn for him.


Tuesday, October 20, 2020

It’s Never Too Early

 

October 18, 2020

Jackson Oswalt of Memphis, Tennessee was recognized by Guinness World Records as being the youngest person to achieve nuclear fusion. He built his own nuclear fusion reactor, and successfully used it when he was 12. (He was a few hours from turning 13, according to UPI.)

 

Eat your heart out, Sheldon Cooper.


Monday, October 19, 2020

Update to “It’s Never Too Late—Part 3”

 

October 18, 2020


On October 12th it was reported that a book was returned 58 years after its due date. Like the ones we previously reported, it was also in Britain.