Archive | September 2008

What Would An Intelligent Woman Say? – Part II

This week (Thursday September 25, 2008), CBS News anchor Katie Couric met with Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin at the United Nations for Part II of her interview. Much of the discussion focused on foreign policy, which some say could be Palin’s weakness.

 

Once again, I could answer these questions better than Palin.  What follows is Part II of an exclusive interview with Gov. Palin and my responses to Katie’s questions just to prove the point that I could answer these more intelligently than a person who stands second in line to the Oval Office.

Continue reading

This entry was posted on September 28, 2008, in Politics.

NFL Week 3

First a recap of Week 3:

Week 3

My predictions:

Away Home Away Home Favorite Line O/U
Kansas City Atlanta 17 21 Atlanta 4 38
Oakland Buffalo 17 20 Buffalo 3 37
Tampa Bay Chicago 17 24 Chicago 7 41
Carolina Minnesota 20 20 Carolina 0 40
Miami New England 19 24 New England 5 43
Cincinnati NY Giants 26 17 Cincinnati 9 43
Houston Tennessee 17 24 Tennessee 7 41
Arizona Washington 20 2A6 Washington 6 46
New Orleans Denver 23 20 New Orleans 3 43
Detroit San Francisco 20 26 San Francisco 6 46
St. Louis Seattle 20 27 Seattle 7 47
Cleveland Baltimore 20 20 Baltimore 0 40
Jacksonville Indianapolis 17 24 Indianapolis 7 41
Pittsburgh Philadelphia 17 20 Philadelphia 3 37
Dallas Green Bay 23 17 Dallas 6 40
NY Jets San Diego 17 27 San Diego 10 44

Continue reading

This entry was posted on September 28, 2008, in Sports - NFL.

Die Hard D.C.

A play by me. Well, plagiarized by me…

The scene: Hans Gruber, played by Secretary Paulson, has hatched a scheme to steal $700 billion dollars from the Federal Reserve. He’s chatting with his evil genius kid Theo, played by Ben Bernanke, who has just informed Gruber that he’s in place, he can move the money, but he can’t get it out of the bank, the last seal is impenetrable.

Continue reading

What Would An Intelligent Woman Say?

(CBS) When CBS News anchor Katie Couric sat down for an exclusive interview with vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin Wednesday (September 24, 2008), she focused on the economy, the campaign and foreign affairs. The second part of the interview (the foreign affairs) will air September 25, 2008.

Her answers, in my view were lacking in thought and substance for someone who might lead the United States as President. I could answer these questions better than she did. Of course I’m considering myself to be an Intelligent Woman. Which got me thinking, what would I say if I was running for the position and interviewed by Couric?

 

Here’s the first part of the interview and the answers to Katie’s questions. 

 

Now some of this isn’t easy for me to answer, as I don’t support McCain. But even so, there were better ways for Palin to answer these questions. Some of the questions have been deleted because they were based on the bad answers given by Palin and since I wouldn’t have answered those questions in the same way, the follow up doesn’t make sense.

Continue reading

This entry was posted on September 26, 2008, in Politics.

Thoughts on Enron… er… AIG

I saw the President’s speech last night. Sounded a lot like he said, “The sky is falling!” This morning, I saw Senator McCain say he came back to Washington because this is a situation for “all hands on deck.” Soon as I heard that, I switched from CNN to C-Span to see what “all hands on deck” looks like. What I saw was a Representative in a nearly empty chamber, discussing the pardon of some guy who was wrongfully convicted due to race, followed by later a discussion of forests in the Pacific west. Maybe it’s just me, but it didn’t look like there were any emergencies happening. Unfortunately, I don’t get the other C-Span channels thanks to local county politics giving Comcast a monopoly here.

Continue reading

Taking America Back From Wall Street!

So we’re in a financial crisis. Financial analysts on TV are giving their insight and assumptions. Americans are fed up and scared.  But what can be done about it? Well the first thing is to write to your senator or congressman. Instead of just blogging, instead of just complaining, take action and 10 minutes and write your representatives.

 

Email Your Representative:

Contact Your Elected Officials:

http://www.usa.gov/Contact/Elected.shtml

This site will link you to the various contact pages for Fed and State representatives. It’s ok if you don’t know the names of your representatives, the contact pages will help you find them.

 

Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee:

http://baucus.senate.gov/contact/emailForm.cfm?subj=issue

Contact House Financial Services Committee:

http://financialservices.house.gov/contact.html

 

I’ll even help and make it easier for you and give you an example. This is what I sent to my Senators Warner & Web, my Congressman Cantor and to both the Senate and House Finance Committees:

Continue reading

This entry was posted on September 24, 2008, in Politics.

Great Teachers

Thank You To My Great Teachers

While I’m thinking about it, I want to list the great teachers in my life:

1st Grade: Mrs. Countess – I don’t remember a whole lot about first grade, I remember my best friend was Shane, the only boy in the class with long hair, the rest of us having crew cuts. But I remember that Mrs. Countess was nice, even when I got in trouble.

3rd Grade: Mrs. Teague (formerly Ms. Seacrest, she got married while I was in her class.) – Instead of letting me be bored in class while they learned long division, she gave me more advanced math lessons personally.

21 years later I was picking up my oldest son from that very same school and passed by an open classroom to see one Mrs. Teague standing there teaching a new 3rd grade class. I stood in the doorway to watch and wondered if she would even remember me. She stopped her lecture to ask me, “Can I help you?” I told her that I had been a 3rd grader in her class many years ago and was glad to see her. She told me that she didn’t remember me. Oh well, a couple decades is a long time…

The next afternoon, as I walked by her door, she snatched my arm and pulled me into her classroom. “I’m sorry about that yesterday, I had those damn teacher evaluation people in here and I needed to get rid of you quick! Of course I remember you Gary! No one would forget the best student they ever had!”

I can’t believe I was the “best student ever”. I do recall her locking me out of her classroom to keep me from beating my nemesis, Tommy, to death once… We talked for a long time, I found out that she was retiring after that year and that my oldest son’s teacher was her assistant from the year before. I also found out that Mr. Teague had died earlier that year.

Every kid should get at least one Mrs. Teague in their life.

4th Grade Mathematics: Mrs Wilson – Not only did she have really hot legs (4th grade was about the time I discovered girls were great…) she also recognized that I already knew what she was teaching the class. So instead of mathematics, she taught me electronics.

7th Grade Advanced Algebra/Geometry: Mrs Aldridge – She had a short class of about a dozen super geek math students. She also didn’t send us packing when we pulled our weekly pranks on her, like turning the entire classroom backward while she was out…

10th Grade Advanced Biology: Mrs. Franklin – Yet another teacher who could handle pranks. One of these was elaborate enough to deserve a separate posting, more on that later. Mid year, catalogs selling geek teeshirts went around, one of which contained pretty much the entire answer key for one of her upcoming exams on the internal organs of a bull frog. When she said she would make us remove those shirts on exam day, someone asked, “What if it’s a girl wearing it?” She decided wearing the shirt was an automatic D then. We were hoping for the other option… Sadly the shirts didn’t arrive in time anyway.

10th Grade Analysis / Precalculus: Mr. Bruhwel – This is an odd one, because he truly hated me. Seriously, hated me. But he was a good teacher and his class was a good one, and backed up by what I think was the best math textbook I’ve ever seen, which (since I stole it…) is sitting right behind me on my desk, more than a quarter century later: Modern Introductory Analysis by Dolciani, Beckenbach, Donnelly, Jurgensen and Wooton. I’m convinced I can teach six year olds algebra via the lessons in this book. I’m working on the Munchkin with it already.

10th Grade Latin: Ms Rogers – Yet another teacher I was hot for… which may be the main reason I remember her. However, I did learn a little Latin… Te amo.

11th Grade Advanced Chemistry: Mr. Pascal – He also had a great textbook, sadly I didn’t steal it so I don’t remember what the name was or who wrote it. He was also VERY understanding. His class was at 7:30 AM and at the time I was not a morning person. (Oddly enough I’m like a fricken farmer now, I get up at 6:30 AM and I’m working by 6:50 AM every morning…) I showed up for the first 4 days of his class. He announced that our entire semester grade would come from the exam at the end of the semester. So, I went home, slept in, and read the book.

I showed up for the exam, four months later. At first I thought he didn’t notice me in the class, since he didn’t send me packing to the office. The exam was 10 questions, which at first glance didn’t seem like much to grade an entire semester. I barely finished the exam in the alloted 70 minutes. It was the most intense exam short of some college exams that I had ever taken. In short, yes, I’m a geek, I loved it.

I showed up the next day to see my grade. He handed the graded tests back to us so he could go over them with the class. I got a 98, not perfect due to a small math error. I had time to check the math on less than half the test before time was up, I was a little surprised that was the only math error. Again he seemed to take no notice of me in his class.

The bell rang and as he usually did, stood up, “Class dismissed. All except you Mr. H.” Oh crap, he did notice me… What followed was one of the most interesting conversations I’d had in my short school life.

“Have a seat,” he says and I sat in the chair by his desk. “Do you know that I currently have 180 plus students this year taking my course?” I shook my head no, and he continued, “All those students took the same exam yesterday. Of all those students, two of them scored the highest score, you and Mr. M” (Mr. M. was my best friend and sat right beside me in the class.) “Had I not been closely watching you, I would have bet that you had been copying from Mr. M. However, I know that you didn’t. Certainly you both worked out the problems differently and his little math error was in an entirely different place.”

I guess I was grinning, cause he seemed appropriately annoyed as he went on, “Clearly, you have a strong interest in chemistry, since the last time I saw you was in September, it would seem that someone else has done an excellent job teaching you the subject. I would like to know who that was.”

I wasn’t sure how to answer that question, cause no one had actually taught me, the book was fairly self explanatory. “Um no one taught me, well, I guess technically it was you, but all I did was take the book home and read it.”

“You read the whole book?” He seemed shocked.

“Yes.”

“And you understood it all?”

“Yes.”

He then asked me a question, or rather asked me how I would go about solving what would have been an exam question from the back of the book, I don’t remember the question, but I do remember it had to do with nuclear chemistry. He seemed pleased with my answer. “That’s amazing. We wouldn’t cover half this book in the whole school year. And no one helped you?… Ok, now I want to know why you haven’t showed up for my class? Is it that it’s too boring? Too old for what you clearly already know?”

By default, I’m a fairly honest (some would say brutally) guy so I pretty much laid it out, “Well, you told us that our entire grade came from the final exam, so I figured if I could read the book I could just take the test. And I don’t like getting up early in the morning.”

He thought about that for a minute and said, “Well, I wish you would have told me that before. I’m going to give you a B for the semester. It would have been an A, but I can’t reward you for skipping class. In fact, if anyone finds out that you skipped that many classes I’ll get in trouble for having graded you at all. Now about showing up for my class, there is more to chemistry than there is in that book, suppose I get you transferred to a later class? It would have to be one of the 12th grade classes, but I’m sure I can talk them into it.”

The hair stood up on the back of my neck. Seeing as how, due to some computer error in scheduling (did I mention that I learned Fortran the year earlier?…), I had both lunch periods, I really didn’t want anyone from the head office mucking around looking too closely at my schedule. So I politely declined the offer.

It didn’t matter, I dropped out entirely, opting for work over school, later that year. All this sounds like bragging and it is (“It ain’t braggin’ if you done it.” – Will Rogers) but it is nothing to brag about. The simple fact is, I made some of the most incredibly stupid decisions of my life at that time, this was one one of them. Here was a great teacher, willing to take a bullet for me, and I declined the offer because I wanted to sleep in and eat lunch for two hours. Stupid is as stupid does… and I was always doing things.

College – Advanced Business Programming in COBOL: Alan Sizemore – It’s not so much that he did anything truly great for me, because for me, like most college classes, I just did the work and got graded in his class. But he was memorable because he was a brutally honest guy and had the guts to say something that no one else would say. In those college classes there were a pair of Indian women who were dumber than a sack of hammers. Everyone learned to avoid them when they came looking for help after trying to help them once, because it was impossible. For me I tried several times, thinking that language was a barrier here, but sadly, I became convinced they were just not bright enough to do this kind of work. After yet another wasted hour of in-class lecture time trying to explain something to them that they should have already known and were obviously never going to understand, only to find out that they had both failed, three times, the prerequisite courses for his class, he told them quite bluntly, they should seek education in another field. Despite that, I do know that he spent MANY hours after classes trying to teach those women programming, though I doubt he was ever successful.

E.W.

It occurred to me while I was writing about this. Mr. Pascal graded all 180 of those exams overnight. It must have taken all night to pull that off, those exams were not multiple choice and I recall my answers spanning at least three pages. That’s dedication.

© 2012 Evil Wordsmith. Evilwordsmith.com. All Rights Reserved.

NFL Week 3

First a recap of Week 2:

Week 2

My predictions:

 

Away Home Away Home Favorite Line O/U
Chicago Carolina 20 17 Chicago 3 37
Tennessee Cincinnati 20 27 Cincinnati 7 47
Green Bay Detroit 26 20 Green Bay 6 46
Buffalo Jacksonville 10 27 Jacksonville 17 37
Oakland Kansas City 19 26 Kansas City 7 45
Indianapolis Minnesota 20 23 Minnesota 3 43
NY Giants St. Louis 27 17 NY Giants 10 44
New Orleans Washington 17 23 Washington 6 40
San Francisco Seattle 17 27 Seattle 10 44
Atlanta Tampa Bay 17 17 Tampa Bay 0 34
Miami Arizona 20 27 Arizona 7 47
San Diego Denver 23 17 San Diego 6 40
Baltimore Houston 20 20 Houston 0 40
New England NY Jets 24 20 New England 4 44
Pittsburgh Cleveland 17 17 Pittsburgh 0 34
Philadelphia Dallas 23 27 Dallas 4 50

Continue reading

This entry was posted on September 20, 2008, in Sports - NFL.

NFL Week 2

First a recap of Preseason Week 4 and Regular Season Week 1:

Preseason Week 4

My predictions:

 

Away Home Away Home Favorite Line O/U
Detroit Buffalo 17 24 Buffalo 7 41
NY Jets Philadelphia 17 20 Philadelphia 3 37
Atlanta Baltimore 20 20 Baltimore 0 40
St. Louis Kansas City 20 26 Kansas City 6 46
New England NY Giants 24 17 New England 7 41
Cincinnati Indianapolis 20 27 Indianapolis 7 47
Jacksonville Washington 17 24 Washington 7 41
Carolina Pittsburgh 17 23 Pittsburgh 6 40
Tennessee Green Bay 20 20 Green Bay 0 40
Chicago Cleveland 20 17 Chicago 3 37
Minnesota Dallas 17 24 Dallas 7 41
Miami New Orleans 20 17 Miami 3 37
Tampa Bay Houston 20 23 Houston 3 43
Denver Arizona 26 27 Arizona 1 53
San Diego San Francisco 27 17 San Diego 10 44
Oakland Seattle 16 27 Seattle 11 43

Continue reading

This entry was posted on September 14, 2008, in Sports - NFL.

The Design Guy in Marketing

We’re all sick here. My Queen, the Prince and me, not so much, thank you Linus Pauling and your massive dose of vitamin C idea. We are also about out of Dimetap for kids, so off to the store I went yesterday to get some. As I picked up the box of it, I was reminded of something that I saw about a year ago.

Parents all know that the hardest part of getting a kid to take medicine is the taste of it. That’s why our particular cough medicine works, it doesn’t taste bad. Last time I was shopping for it though, I came upon a mother and her sick kid in the grocery store. I saw her scratch the box with her fingernail and sniff it and then offer it for her kid to smell as well. A marketing genius, you guessed it, our nemesis the Design Guy, put a scratch and sniff patch on the box so people could see what it smelled like.

I warned the mother, even though it was too late for her and her kid, “You do realize that every sick kid in the county has probably already stuck their nose to that little patch?”

With widened eyes, she said, “I didn’t think of that.”

I bought the bottle that was in the very back, the one with no scratch marks on it. I’m pretty cynical in general and especially about marketing types, but this seems too evil even for marketing types. It has to be the work of the Design Guy.

E.W.

Speaking of the taste of medicine, why can’t someone make me some toothpaste that tastes like steak. Maybe Japanese steakhouse flavor with a little wasabi kicker…