Archive for July, 2008

Sleep, I Remember Those Days

// July 30th, 2008 // No Comments » // Life

Been up late a lot lately working on projects. You know, the kind with deadlines. Hoping to catch up on sleep soon. We’re finally all moved and the house painting is almost completed. Will be nice to unpack and actually start living in the new place. Splitting my time between my day job and three clients all needing a lot of my attention — all at the same time — has been tough.

My family has been amazing, especially Sunshine, who single-handedly packed 99% of our entire house and handled everything with the move, and who will likely do most of the unpacking and making the new house a home. Thanks Sunshine, I owe you a ton!

Better days ahead. It’s inevitable now, the fortune cookie I got today told me so…

“You will soon emerge victorious from the maze you’ve been traveling in.”

Amen to that.

The TSA Wants You Naked

// July 11th, 2008 // No Comments » // Security & Privacy

Rivaling only the IRS in the public’s collective derision, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) now has a new gadget through which to extend their reign of Orwellian coercion on we, the throngs of presumed-terrorists boarding U.S. flights every day.

The new “millimeter wave scanners” rolling out in some U.S. airports — and used as part of the “secondary screening” on selected passengers — photograph the human body through the clothing with a high-degree of photo-realistic accuracy.

From the article:

“These machines, which show detailed images of a person’s naked body, are equivalent to a ‘virtual strip search,’ ” says the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC). “The image resolution … is high so the picture of the body presented to screeners is detailed enough to show genitalia.”

…and…

Barry Steinhardt of the American Civil Liberties Union marvels at the government’s double standard: “If Playboy published them, there would be politicians out there saying they’re pornographic.”

The TSA has also begun handing out cracker-jack-box badges to it’s workforce and outfitting them in blue, police-looking uniforms. Real law enforcement officers are none to happy being cast in the same lot with the TSA workers.

Now … they want to see us naked. Are we ready yet to say enough is enough, or will we, as we have since 9/11, simply march like lemmings through the nudie-portal and continue to let the TSA and their policies run amok, awash in excessive power and limited, ineffective oversight?

The TSA itself likely represents the greatest threat to aviation safety and the long-term economic viability of the airline industry. In so poorly executing their mission, they create a very thin illusion of security when in fact it could be argued the aviation safety record of the last 7 years was achieved in spite of them, rather than because of them.

A serious, thoughtful discussion needs to occur about how best to understand and guard against whatever the real threat to airline safety is, and shape new policies and, if necessary, organizations around the outcomes of that discussion. The TSA was hastily conceived during a period of fear and sorrow and since inception the divergence between real threats and their ill-conceived policies has only grown. 5 ounces of shampoo and a butter knife do not a terrorist make. Folks, It’s time to start over with this one.

New Hoos

// July 1st, 2008 // No Comments » // Life

New HoosAfter 18 months on the market, we finally got an offer on our house two weeks ago. Tomorrow is the end of the option period for our buyer … so far, so good.

We’ve also put a contract on our next house. We’re giving up 1/3 of the space for 1/3 less payment — a reasonable exchange given the our little nuclear family dynamics. The latter of those 1/3 buys more than meets the eye in terms of peace of mind and free time. With it comes an end to my 7-day-a-week work schedule. More than anything I hope it represents 1/3 fewer times I have to tell my kids I can’t play because I’m working.

I hear the phrase “work-life balance” thrown about in my very HR-savvy “day” job and I laugh. What balance is there even in a 40 hour week when you spend the best hours of your day away from your family, much less when you have to shoehorn “family-time” somewhere between the comment lines in your code. It’s not much of a life, and I’m hoping that kind of life will soon be a thing of the past. Thin-slicing my life has kept me from giving any one thing the proper attention it deserves.

Anyway, the new place combines some of the best features of all the homes we’ve had, plus it’s a 1-story!! Can I get an “Amen” to that? We’re going to blitz it with new paint and a few key things to make it our place. I’m happy with the price and we may go for a 15-year note like we had on our first house and try to build equity faster.

I’ll be happier after we’re closed and funded and I know it’s all real but it’s a positive development to say the least.