Let me say this about that:
I realize now that the new car I purchased in January is a GM (even though under the hood it's a Toyota!).
I sure hope President Obama knows how to run a car company!
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
Gay Marriage
Let me say this about that:
I think whoever put gay marriage on the so-called "agenda" got it wrong. Not the idea - the idea is a good one: equal civil rights for gay couples and families. No, the problem is use of the word "marriage." Using that particular word moved the issue away from equal rights and opened us up for accusations that gays were trying to redefine the institution of marriage.
This was clarified for me as I listened to a radio call in program where a woman from the Heartland very passionately declared that "Jesus doesn't recognize these marriages." I realize then that the answer to that statement was missing from the gay side of this debate. It is Uncle Sam, not Jesus (or any other religious authority) we want to recognize our families. I can't help but think if that had been the message, we might have gotten a little further with this process.
Saturday, May 16, 2009
Watching the Crackberry Addicts
Let me say this about that:
I've just spent a week in New Orleans running a meeting attended by more than 500 people. My organization charged them $895 per head for registration. The cost of the conference itself combined with airfare and hotel likely ran most companies upwards of $1600 per person.
In every meeting room (and this is not a sweeping generality - I mean every) , at any point during a session I could look around and see roughly 50% of the audience diddling with their Crackberries. When these devices started to gain wider use, people would at least do their business under the table. Now the device is above the table receiving the attention due a speaker. Why spend all that money to go to another city, attend a meeting that is supposed to be educational and then ignore the proceedings most of the time?
I don't like those gadgets. I think they're rude and the behavior developing around them antisocial. I can walk past a conference room in my office and see the same thing - all the people down one side of the table are sending messages or reading - oblivious to the action and the people in the room. I have co-workers who can't be bothered to say hello as they move through the halls involved with their little portable piece of cyberspace.
This is, I suspect, one of the great paradoxes of this age - who can we be so connected yet so utterly disconnected?
My boss mentioned to me that for our next on-site meeting, I should get one of these toys from the IT folks. And she's right - it'll help us communicate better when we're out of the office. However, I made it clear to her that it is only for when I travel. My attention span is shrinking fast enough as it is.
Thursday, April 30, 2009
Observations
In observing my fellow humans, I wonder.
And I wonder.
How has communication turned into a solo function?
Do tinted car windows create more assholes than untinted car windows?
Has the public square been usurped by Crackberries, iPods, and other self-isolating devices?
Is the wave dead? (the wave is what you get when you do something nice in traffic and the person in front of you waves in thanks).
Is there really a "they" out there? Rich, powerful, setting all the rules?
Let me say this about that.
drawing
And I wonder.
How has communication turned into a solo function?
Do tinted car windows create more assholes than untinted car windows?
Has the public square been usurped by Crackberries, iPods, and other self-isolating devices?
Is the wave dead? (the wave is what you get when you do something nice in traffic and the person in front of you waves in thanks).
Is there really a "they" out there? Rich, powerful, setting all the rules?
Let me say this about that.
drawing
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