Friday, March 30, 2012

Not Maru, Part 4

I'll close out this posting week with something that doesn't involve anything more than possible feline humiliation with the paw warmers & headband:

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Mandela archives

Here’s something by way of antidote to helicopter parents fighting each other over plastic eggs & political wangles over who should have access to the quality of life that decent healthcare coverage brings: Nelson Mandela’s papers have been digitized, & are now (as of Tuesday) available online.

The archive is a joint project of the Google Cultural Institute & the Nelson Mandela Centre of Memory. Letters, photographs, manuscripts, church membership cards videos—all available to anyone with Internet access.

Here’s one, a letter to his daughter, Zeni, from his prison cell; blue ink on ruled paper, dated 1 March 1979, remembering Zeni’s birth:

“Your birth was a great relief to us. Only three months before this, Mummy had spent fifteen days in jail under circumstances that were dangerous for a person in her condition. We did not know what harm might have been done to you and to her health, and were happy indeed to be blessed with a healthy and lovely daughter. Do you understand that you were nearly born in prison? Not many people have had your experience of having been in jail before they were born. You were only 25 months old when I left home and, though I met you frequently thereafter until January 1962 when I left the country for a short period, we never lived together again.”

It’s always amazing to sift through archives, to go to the primary source. To have these materials, on this man, available at the click of a mouse is…well, where I come from, that would be called a real mitzvah.  





Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Smells like rotten eggs to me...

You know, every time you think you’ve reached the absolute pinnacle of parents behaving badly, you find that you’re only at the base camp & still have 6500 feet to climb.

I’m referring, this time, to the cancellation of this year’s Colorado Springs, Colo., Easter egg hunt primarily because last year there was basically a parental riot.

There was a roped-off area with little plastic eggs scattered over the grass of a local park. But the Lexus Louts apparently swarmed over the ropes to scoop up the bunny booty for little Brittany & Harley.

It’s not like the eggs were hidden—the biggest danger to the little ones would be stepping on the eggs. & it’s not like the eggs had any intrinsic worth—they were stuffed with candies & coupons from local businesses.

It’s all to do with the adults’ unbelievably skewed view of what’s owed to them & their spawn, & their determination to make it happen, regardless of how reprehensible their actions may be or how cringeworthy they look.

I never got that whole “Baby on Board” sign thing—that proclamation that the greater world should somehow cede right-of-way because your Range Rover is transporting a child. It was immediately clear to me that the “baby” involved was behind the wheel.

& now, apparently, they’re spilling out onto the fields of plastic eggs.

I suppose people should feel relieved that they weren’t armed with lacrosse sticks.




Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Supreme health care

Can I be the only person who finds the juxtaposition over the case currently before the Supreme Court & the news that Dick Cheney had a heart transplant Saturday…well, a little cherce?

I mean—three days of argument around whether all Americans should have access to health care, even if it means government stepping in, versus a 70-year-old guy having no problem getting his health insurance to foot the bill (around $250K for the procedure alone; tens of thousands to follow) for a heart.

Doesn’t it seem like the argument for having universal health care is made by that surgery right there?

I’m leaving aside the issue of why Cheney needs the heart now, since he’s obviously managed to survive 70 years without one.



Monday, March 26, 2012

Whorls & wars

Okay, now I'm starting to wonder about the Discovery Channel franchise's hiring practices. I was surfing the other day and was struck by this caption as I was passing by the Military Channel:



"Worl War II" is certainly in the same sloppy bucket as "Beast of the Bulkens".

Can it be possible that they've off-shored the task of writing up programming information?