Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Rev Bob and the Balrog Two: There and Back Again

THE MADNESS CONTINUED:


Viverrine on August 24, 2015 at 1:01 pm said:
I, for one, am very glad to see fandom standing fast upon this bridge, facing the Balrog with those immortal words that nobody here needs me to repeat.

“I have had it with these m***-f*** Balrogs in these m***-f*** mines!”

NickPheas on August 24, 2015 at 1:02 pm said:
I, for one, am very glad to see fandom standing fast upon this bridge, facing the Balrog with those immortal words that nobody here needs me to repeat.

Hello clouds, hello sky, hello pile of severed human heads.

Tenar Darell on August 24, 2015 at 1:05 pm said:
I, for one, am very glad to see fandom standing fast upon this bridge, facing the Balrog with those immortal words that nobody here needs me to repeat.

On your left.

I, for one, am very glad to see fandom standing fast upon this bridge, facing the Balrog with those immortal words that nobody here needs me to repeat.

Won’t you be my neighbor?

Mart on August 24, 2015 at 1:16 pm said:
I, for one, am very glad to see fandom standing fast upon this bridge, facing the Balrog with those immortal words that nobody here needs me to repeat.

“The line must be drawn HERE!”

Monday, August 24, 2015

Rev. Bob and the Balrog: The Desolation Of Brad*

*Thanks to Nigel for the addition to the title*

It all began here, on File 770, that hive of scum:


Rev. Bob on August 23, 2015 at 1:25 pm said:

(Yes, I’m catching up. Please to forgive any temporal anomalies.)
[snip]

I, for one, am very glad to see fandom standing fast upon this bridge, facing the Balrog with those immortal words that nobody here needs me to repeat.

The answers soon followed: 

Nigel on August 23, 2015 at 1:38 pm said:
I, for one, am very glad to see fandom standing fast upon this bridge, facing the Balrog with those immortal words that nobody here needs me to repeat.

‘THERE AIN’T NO FLIES ON US!’

I, for one, am very glad to see fandom standing fast upon this bridge, facing the Balrog with those immortal words…

“Chu for President!”

Or if Silverbob is Gandalf:
“Hare Krishna!”

Or the words of power
“E Pluribus Hugo!”

CPaca on August 23, 2015 at 2:38 pm said:
Rev Bob : I, for one, am very glad to see fandom standing fast upon this bridge, facing the Balrog with those immortal words that nobody here needs me to repeat.

“Yngvi is a louse”?

Cassy B. on August 23, 2015 at 2:50 pm said:
Rev Bob : I, for one, am very glad to see fandom standing fast upon this bridge, facing the Balrog with those immortal words that nobody here needs me to repeat.

My hovercraft is full of eels…?

CPaca on August 23, 2015 at 3:09 pm said:
Rev Bob : I, for one, am very glad to see fandom standing fast upon this bridge, facing the Balrog with those immortal words that nobody here needs me to repeat.

“Your place or mine, big boy”?

Ginger on August 23, 2015 at 4:05 pm said:
Rev Bob : I, for one, am very glad to see fandom standing fast upon this bridge, facing the Balrog with those immortal words that nobody here needs me to repeat.

Nie mój cyrk, nie moje małpy?


Teemu Leisti on August 23, 2015 at 6:45 pm said:
I, for one, am very glad to see fandom standing fast upon this bridge, facing the Balrog with those immortal words that nobody here needs me to repeat.

“I say, dear sir, would you be awfully put out if I just asked you to wait here for two minutes? Much obliged.”

Vicki Rosenzweig on August 23, 2015 at 6:48 pm said:
“I am just going outside. I may be some time”?

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Brian Francis Birmingham, 12-26-1962 to 5-10-2013

My Semi Colon Story
Today we buried my cousin, in a joint Christian-Judaic ceremony of life and love. Over the course of three hours, people spoke of their love and friendship with him. Someone quoted Bruce Springsteen (being a fellow graduate of Freehold High School), and I remembered listening to the Bruce on my drive up to the ceremonies.

I had started with the Bruce, and let my iPod randomly shuffle through music. It picked some bagpipes (the real stuff as well as the Red Hot Chili Pipers), some classical, one of my son's screamo songs, and then Enya cued up with "Long Long Journey", which seemed entirely appropriate and reminded me of another song.

Years ago, I'd listened to the Flirtations -- a gay acapella group that had started in the late 70s, was ravaged by AIDS, and ended with the last two men adding a jazz singer/trumpeter for the final tour and album. That was called "Three", and it included the song "Everything Is Possible", which contains the refrain that I thought fit Brian's life.

"The only measure of your words and your deeds will be the love you leave behind when you're gone"*

It was clear to all of us just how many people loved Brian, and why. We should all be so lucky in our lives to have that much left behind -- and not just lucky, but determined to leave behind that kind of memory and love. Brian lived life to the fullest, even when fighting cancer; we should try to do the same in his honor.

So, to Brian's memory: let us promise to share good times with family and friends, to make more friends wherever possible, and leave this world a better place.





*(My ex liked this song so much that she made me promise to play it at her funeral, and so I shall.)

Friday, March 8, 2013

Eulogy, or "good words"

My cousin Brian (My Semi Colon Story) has been fighting colon cancer for nearly five years, which is a helluva lot longer than his odds were at the time of his diagnosis.

As his time grows shorter, I find myself thinking of my earliest memories of him.

When we were little kids -- 5, 6, something in that range -- at our grandmother's apartment, he took full advantage of his lofty superior age to tell me that he remembered when I was born, because there had been a horrible, terrible, many-headed dragon that had appeared, eating everything up, that turned into me.

He was more than a little full of himself then, in sharp contrast to his quieter older brother. Brian was a little pudgy then, round-faced and red-haired; pugnacious in a humorous way -- quick-witted. He was a huge pain to play any board games with, because he was (at that age) a sore loser.

His parents divorced, and my aunt married George a few years later. It was around that age that the boys stayed with us for a weekend or two.  One summer evening, we were at my grandparents' house -- my other grandparents -- and my grandfather took us down to the dock to fish. Granpa loved to fish, and it was a lovely summer evening. I don't remember how long we were fishing, because time is irrelevant when you're fishing, but eventually we understood it was time to finish. It was at this moment that Brian hooked something fierce, in our quiet, placid lake. He pulled it up onto the dock, and we stared at this creature. For the first time in my life, I looked upon an eel.

It was wriggling and swaying on the line, trying to free itself. It thrashed so wildly we couldn't get a hand on the fish to unhook it.

So, Brian took matters into his own hands.


He pounced on that eel, as if tackling his brother, and wrestled it to the dock. Boy and fish thrashed about wildly as we watched, astonished. Eventually, somehow, the eel was freed, and it slithered over the side of the dock as fast as its nonexistent legs could move it.

Brian stood up, with a huge grin on his face. He'd won. He had successfully wrestled an eel, and freed it from the hook.

The best part came next.

You see, an eel is not just a fish with a fine skin that can be made into slippery wallets and shoes. No, it is much more than that.

Eels have not just a slippery skin, but also a slippery exudate that covers the delicate skin. Recall, too, that eels swim along the bottoms of the estuaries, in close contact with what we scientists refer to as "benthic sediment" and the layman as "mud".

They have slime.

Stinky, muddy, slimy exudate. It covered him from nose to knees. He exuded the eau d'anguille about him.

It was summertime, and cars back then did not come with air conditioning. He rode in the middle, as his rightful place, between his brother and me.

He rode back to our house with a huge grin on his face, because not only  had he won a wrestling match with an eel, he reeked of it the whole way. His clothing was stiffening with drying exudate by the time it was peeled from him. I don't recall when he stopped grinning. It was a win-win for him.

Forty years later, he remembered wrestling the eel, and chuckled.

It turns out that eels have a fascinating life history. All eels, North American and European, begin in the same spot: the Sargasso Sea. Their lives span years of travel, from the salt water Sargasso, to the fresh water streams and lakes (where we met with one), and then back out to the Sargasso to mate. The next generation is born in the Sargasso, and travels apparently to the same streams its predecessors lived in. The young eels are transparent, and are named "glass eels"; as they mature into yellow and then in to silver eels, they grow quite large -- up to 5 feet long. Being born in the ocean, growing in the fresh water, and returning to the ocean to spawn makes them the only catadromous fish in North America.  Eels have been farmed and harvested for centuries, and yet their populations are drastically decreased. Someday the famous phrase "my hovercraft is full of eels*" will be just nonsense instead of amusing.

Eels can spin up to 14 rotations per second -- contrast this with Olympic ice skaters, who spin only five times per second, and you understand why we couldn't reach this eel.

In recent years, Brian's been wrestling his cancer with just as much energy as he did that eel. Only now the eel is winning. Still, every time I think of Brian, I remember that summer day when he wrestled and won. I hope that someday, some cancer patient will wrestle and win, and defeat colon cancer just as he did that eel.

For those of you who have been thinking fondly of sushi throughout this post, please -- enjoy your eel. I've never eaten it. I have never wanted to, perhaps remembering the ride home with Brian a la anguille. I must, however, point out that "when he bites on your thumb, takes a chunk of your bum, that's a moray ", because eels are everywhere.



*A very important phrase, and one that we all should commit to memory. In as many languages as possible. For example, "моє судно на повітряній подушці повно вугрів". "mon aéroglisseur est plein des anguilles". "הרחפת שלי מלאה בצלופחים". "a légpárnás tele van angolnák". "Is é mo sciorrárthach iomlán na n-eascann". "מיין כאַווערקראַפט איז פול פון ילז". 

Saturday, December 29, 2012



"Statistically, the United States is not a particularly violent society. Although gun proponents like to compare this country with hot spots like Colombia, Mexico, and Estonia (making America appear a truly peaceable kingdom), a more relevant comparison is against other high-income, industrialized nations. The percentage of the U.S. population victimized in 2000 by crimes like assault, car theft, burglary, robbery, and sexual incidents is about average for 17 industrialized countries, and lower on many indices than Canada, Australia, or New Zealand.
"The only thing that jumps out is lethal violence," Hemenway says. Violence, pace H. Rap Brown, is not "as American as cherry pie," but American violence does tend to end in death. The reason, plain and simple, is guns. We own more guns per capita than any other high-income country—maybe even more than one gun for every man, woman, and child in the country. A 1994 survey numbered the U.S. gun supply at more than 200 million in a population then numbered at 262 million, and currently about 35 percent of American households have guns. (These figures count only civilian guns; Switzerland, for example, has plenty of military weapons per capita.)
[...]
In general, guns don’t induce people to commit crimes. "What guns do is make crimes lethal," says Hemenway. They also make suicide attempts lethal: about 60 percent of suicides in America involve guns. "If you try to kill yourself with drugs, there’s a 2 to 3 percent chance of dying," he explains. "With guns, the chance is 90 percent."

That's a lot of preventable deaths. Suicide has been repeatedly shown to be an impulsive act; prevent the completion of the impulse, and the individual rarely tries again. Putting up fencing at bridges, along with phone numbers for crisis hotlines, reduced the number of jumpers without a corresponding increase. When Israel restricted its soldiers from taking home their weapons on the weekends, it saw a decrease in weekend suicides, without a corresponding increase during weekdays. The key point: guns make crimes and suicides more lethal. 

One argument a lot of anti-control gun activists use is the figure of 1-2 million crimes prevented by responsible gun owners. There's one problem with that figure: it's a lie. [See http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/research/hicrc/firearms-research/gun-threats-and-self-defense-gun-use/index.html ], which is excerpted here: 
Guns are not used millions of times each year in self-defense
We use epidemiological theory to explain why the "false positive" problem for rare events can lead to large overestimates of the incidence of rare diseases or rare phenomena such as self-defense gun use. We then try to validate the claims of many millions of annual self-defense uses against available evidence. We find that the claim of many millions of annual self-defense gun uses by American citizens is invalid. 
Where did this come from? Apparently, Gary Kleck is the man behind the invalid numbers. David Hemenway and his coworkers have refuted his claims several times: http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/faculty/david-hemenway/files/Review_of_Gary_Kleck_2004.pdf (note: this is a pdf file.)
Indeed, as Adam Gopnik pointed out in his blog [http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/comment/2012/12/the-simple-truth-about-gun-control.html], in countries like Scotland (after Dunblane); Australia (after Port Arthur), and Canada (after Ecole Poly), strict gun control laws enacted after each incident resulted in a profound reduction in gun deaths. 
Isn't it time the US did the same?



Friday, December 10, 2010

Horrified!

How could anyone even think of allowing this to be posted on the open internets?

For background information, see the relevant Wiki and be suitably enraged. Or not.

Friday, November 26, 2010

KD Lang - Constant Craving

kd lang sings one of my favorites, "Constant Craving" -- her lyrics make no sense, but damn, she can sing!