Friday, September 11, 2015

License to drive

In California, more than anywhere else I’ve lived, you are what you drive. I noticed that big time when I was working in the film industry in LA back in the last century, and it hasn’t changed for the Valley They Call Silicon here in the future.

I confess to getting a bit of a kick out of seeing how people project themselves via various configurations of metal and means of propulsion. (Twenty years ago I would have specified internal combustion types; but that’s so last-millenium. There’s literally a Tesla dealership down the street from me, and maybe 20% of cars around here are either all-electric or hybrid.)

So imagine my take on this particular 7-series BMW:


I mean, is it someone with multiple personalities or someone who can't fit his/her head into the vehicle?

Well, they don’t call them vanity plates for nothing.



Thursday, September 10, 2015

Pain relief

I’ve found it very interesting to undergo a series of hyaluronate injections in an attempt to keep my tibias and femurs from grinding each other to shreds at the knees. This is an alternative treatment to cortisone, with supposedly longer relief and fewer negative side effects.

Both of which I support.

This is a new therapy, and so far it comes pre-packed in individual syringes, rather than in bottles, like other things that go in syringes. I suspect it’s a big-pharma thing, both to keep the physician out of the dosing cycle and to mark up the pricing margin. You know, like bubble-packing tablets.

With cortisone, the physician will typically draw some lidocaine into the hypo, and then add in the steroid, so it all goes into you in one merry swoop. For hyaluronate, you get a dose of lido and then the pre-dosed goods.

Well, I’m here to tell you that in all my years of getting injections of one sort or another, I have never had anything hurt like these shots, not even when I got a double dose of cholera vaccine.

So I finally mentioned this to the orthopod, and asked if there was something special about the needle for this stuff. He blinked a couple of times and replied, “Well, could be. Hyaluronate is a gel, so you need a big needle to push it through.” Then he said he’d double down on the lidocaine dose and see if that helped.

Usually he tries to keep the syringe out of sight when giving the injection, but since I obviously had skin in the game, this time he didn’t bother. Let me just say that that needle was the biggest mo-fo I have ever seen. I mean, you could push spaghetti through that sucker. Maybe even linguine. No wonder it hurts like bloody hell, and always leaves a bruise afterward.

But this time, with the double dose of lido, they went down a treat. Man—I did not feel anything. He could have drilled for oil, and I would have been fine.

So—if you have hyaluronate in your future, save yourself some tsuris. Just tell the medico you need extra lidocaine. You’re welcome.



Wednesday, September 9, 2015

How long is that in dog years?

Queen Elizabeth II is having a special day. As of today, she has become the longest-reigning monarch in British history. She surpasses the record held by her great-great-grandmamma, Queen Victoria.

(I’m assuming that she makes it through to H-Hour, which is apparently calculated to be at 1730 BST.)

There’s going to be a flotilla on the Thames, and Members of Parliament will wax servile. My friend MLD will ring peals at two church towers in Berkshire, and I hope there will be a couple of toasts drunk to the old gir…I mean, to HM.

The monarch in question is evidently not taking time off from her day job, which today is in Scotland, opening a railway and sucking up to the semi-country’s First Minister. (If you’ve forgotten about their attempt at bonsai independence last summer, you can refresh your memory. Or not.) Let no one say this woman does not know how to take a hit for Team Britain.

Look—if you’re going to have a hereditary monarchy, Elizabeth II would be as good an example of how to do it as any. She shows up on time, hits her marks and knows her lines. She has been the One Fixed Point in a Changing Age for more than 63 years, which encompasses a lot of ages; milk bars, the Beatles, Thatcherism... She’s been polite to a string of prime ministers that run the gamut from Winston Churchill to Gordon Brown, and she’s carried on in the face the excruciatingly well-publicized antics of her children and grandchildren well into the distressing era of smartphones and social media.

And as far as we know, she hasn’t resorted to drink.

So, hip-hip and mazel tov, ma’am. You go, girl.



Tuesday, September 8, 2015

A sorry display

I was walking past a stretch of El Camino Real not too far from home the other morning—it’s a strip mall with Thai, Japanese, Indian and Chinese restaurants, a UPS outlet, an Indian snack place and an Asian market. There’s also a sari shop; one of perhaps several dozen in Sunnyvale.

The window display was what stopped me:


Just wondering if there are no mannequins that don’t look like the Brady Family. I mean, what do they use in Mumbai?



Monday, September 7, 2015

Gratitude Monday: The golden goose

I’m trying to think when, exactly, it became Received Wisdom that anyone whose income is derived from salary or wages instead of from investments is a chump. Possibly that started during the Reagan administration, but it certainly has achieved wide circulation in the past 15 years.

We see it all the time in the commoditization of labor in all forms, from bus boys to software engineers, who across the board put in work weeks that would have sent unions out howling on picket lines just 50 years ago. At the lower end, they work two or three jobs to earn a subsistence living; at the upper they risk being replaced by offshored equivalents if they don’t chalk up 60-hour weeks on a regular basis to meet ludicrous schedules.

And all along the way they are ridiculed and demonized as being, at heart, slackers, moochers and unimaginative losers. Because if they had any gumption at all, we’re told, they’d have either inherited some wealth, managed hedge funds for obscene fees, or come up with the Next Great Thing (“the Google/Uber/iPhone of [whatever]”) and sold it just after some overhyped IPO and moved on to something else.

I mean, here in the Valley They Call Silicon, the big dogs all call themselves Serial Entrepreneurs, and venture capitalists fall all over themselves to throw money at them for their next big cookie-cutter thing. The people who do the actual building may or may not make a couple hundred large if they happen to be there when lightning strikes; but they can equally find themselves looking for another job if the serial entrepreneur in a neighboring building’s cookie-cutter thing goes IPO first.

(As for the people who clean the offices, deliver the snacks in the stocked kitchens and drive the corporate commuter buses—they’re all contractors, working for a series of interchangeable vendors with no concern for health, safety or proper accounting practices. The vendors don’t care who the contractors are; the client companies don’t care who the vendors are. All that matters is who’s going to cost the least.)

Because it’s all about the short-term big payoff, not about long-term growth. Only slackers, moochers and unimaginative losers think about long-term commitments; winners aim to take it all. Now.

This being Labor Day, the serial entrepreneurs, investment bankers and trust fund babies are doing whatever they do in their substantial cushion of comfort. The workers are marking the official end of summer, maybe barbecuing or hitting the retail sales. I’m thinking about the generations of men and women who literally put their lives, their subsistence (no fortunes for these folks) and their sacred honor on the line so that workers could receive fair wages for their labor, so that they could perform that labor under safe working conditions and so that they could build pension plans that meant they wouldn’t have to work literally to death.

These were radical notions 150 years ago—the very idea that sharing out some of the proceeds of productivity with its producers was just cray-cray. But those radical notions—and the radical men and women who fought for them—brought the United States to its zenith of innovation and prosperity. When the labor tide rose, so did everyone’s boat.

Sadly, that tide has receded. We are continually being told that American companies cannot compete in the world economy if they have to think about the welfare of their employees. In their minds (as always), welfare = unearned largesse, AKA the dole. No, every penny that doesn’t go to executive compensation must be pinched to the limit by longer hours, tighter budgets and lower taxes.

I think we’ve hit a situation where a small percentage (say, one percent) of the people have been eying that goose that lays such beautiful golden eggs, and they’re convinced that there’s a simple way to release an immediate gush of gold by applying this cleaver to its neck…

And I’m probably just being contrary when I say that I perceive something flawed in that strategy.

In the meantime, I am (as always) grateful to the people who fought for the value of labor in real life-and-death struggles for decades in the 19th and 20th Centuries, and for those who continue that fight in these gig economy times. Mother Jones, Wobblies, all of you—thank you.