Unknown knowns

weather-flagAm I too cantankerous here? Well, today reminds us that good surprises do come up too.

Morning photo walk didn’t look promising at 8AM. Gray skies every which-way, with a forecast promising wind and showers. Imagine my surprise when, halfway across the Brooklyn bridge, patches of blue sky appeared. By the time I reached my usual photo haunts, half the sky was clear and the sun was shining enough to cause glare on my unshaded lens.

The afternoon would have been a standard (dull) affair of reading and classwork, save for the fact that scarcely an hour after I’d begun being productive, visibility dopped to a few hundred feet and a substantial amount of snow was on the ground.

Finally, it pains me to say this, but I’d like to thank (some) Republicans. Namely, a big shout out to those in Kansas, Louisiana and Washington for their ringing endorsement of John McCain who lost 2 of the 3 outright. His sole (apparent) victory? Washington, where 70% of Republicans voted against him (and 10% missed the memo about Mitt Romney quitting). Now that’s what I call momentum.

New Eyes

oceans-11Saturday mornings are notoriously slow. Why then did I wake up at 6:30AM? No idea, really. So I spent a few more hours than I might otherwise have immersed in books. What books you ask? Oh the usual ones. My reading speed is inversely proportional to the importance of the literature in question.

Afternoon walk led to Central Park, where I discovered the overcast necessitated ISO 1600 when using the telephoto lens. Daylight is a bit of a misnomer for many of the late afternoons here. I also got myself somewhat lost, discovering the Belvedere Castle (good vistas of much of the park) and inexplicably leaving the park at Columbus Circle, instead of 5th Ave. which I’d been aiming for.

For the evening, I finally managed to watch Ocean’s Eleven (2001 edition) in its entirety, uninterrupted. Vastly better than the fun but vacuous Ocean’s Thirteen. The plot, the pacing, even the dialog was just smoother. And the ending? The snappy banter between Clooney, Robert and Pitt largely made up for its annoying predictability.

Fouled out

foulReturned from the grandparents in the morning by train. The roommate is keeping later and later hours. Not a problem since his sleeping hardly impedes my research or Arabic.

Took off for Battery Park in the afternoon, arriving just as the sun was disappearing. Still haven’t worked out the perfect ingredients for a photogenic sunset, but this did really satisfy.

Returning, I figured I’d pop by campus to see if anything was happening. Women’s basketball match at the gym, v. Case Western. Came in just before half-time. Looked like they really wanted spectators given the free admission, t-shirt and food that they had. Fun game to watch, even if NYU went from a 9 point lead to a losing by 10 in the end. Took the opportunity to exercise the camera to the tune of 400 shots. ISO 1600, wide-open, and most of the shots still came out blurred. Time for a camera upgrade? Hmm.

Brief detours

pauseScheduling is a tricky thing. What to maximize? The first hours of the day had very little tangible to show for them – thinking and brainstorming is like that. Then after class, a number of very tangible things happened – cleaned desk, did laundry, caught up on correspondence, payed bills, dealt with healthcare bureaucracy, and discovered Sigma Photo Corp.’s warranty ‘service’ isn’t.

Lunch with my grandmother at the typical spot. Managed to drop off a bunch of books, read a couple of articles and see the Apple Store’s newest occupant – the MacBook Air – after that. For the record, the MBA was surprisingly appealing, but not terribly small or light. Thus no sale (well, that and no money).

Returned with my grandparents to Westchester in the evening. Gradually adjusting to driving in New York, but my ineptness at parking is still a problem (picking up Indian take-out for my grandfather proved an ordeal, though not just for that reason). Quiet evening.

As my grandmother’s put together a bunch of albums of photos from the last few decades, we did some looking. Most of the pictures I’d seen before, but seeing them arranged together was different. Still, I’d recommend selectivity and discretion when selecting photos – not all things require reminders, and quantity can overwhelm as much as elucidate.

Wacky Wednesday

blankStayed up waaay too late waiting for primary results. Paid for that by being very nearly incoherent during Arabic. Although I’m still not sure why our readings have to tend to the esoteric (medieval universities?).

Obviously, what I needed was some dynamic positive thinking plus sleep. Muddled through a number of semiproductive hours at the library, then at home.

Bright spots? The latest two episodes of House MD have stepped things up, so perhaps the reshuffling at the end of season 3 doesn’t spell disaster and shark-jumping as previously feared.

Oh, and a quick suggestion to the world’s movers and shakers: how about not putting several weeks worth of noteworthy events on the same day? Spread out the fun. Sticking Mardi Gras, the quasi-national primary, the parade for the Giants’ Superbowl victory and a tornado in the southern US is just asking for trouble.

The Politics Post

bitternessSince the American people, in their infinite wisdom, have decided to postpone for at least a month or two, the final decision on which two crooks we get to choose from in November, I think a few comments are in order.

First, our wonderful Democratic prospects. If you want a summary, just look at the war in Iraq:

Hillary Clinton supported the war in 2003, and still thinks it was a good idea. So good in fact that she’s itching for action against Iran, backing a bill labeling that country’s military a ‘terrorist organization.’ We’ve seen this movie before.

The alternative? Barack Obama. A man who will explain how he opposed the war from the start and believes we should leave. By 2010. Assuming the conditions are right. And by ‘leave’ he means there’d still be up to 50,000 troops there. Amazing how flexible the definition of ‘anti-war’ is, isn’t it?

Admittedly, neither of these fine folks quite measures up to John McCain whose proposal for a 100-year occupation suggests that aggressive militarism and near-senility is perhaps not the best combination for our next ‘Commander-in-Chief’

Still, there is something strange about this game of ‘let’s pretend’ that the media has been conducting around the Democratic primary contest. Barack Obama is not the second coming of Jesus Christ (or if he is, that suggests nothing much positive about Christ). He’s got a good biography, and he gives a decent speech. That’s it. Hillary Clinton is no more manipulative and calculating than most of her senate colleagues. Both in the end are establishment candidates – a fact that their fundraising attests to. Both offer the possibility of competent but not transformative administrations. Nothing more.

In the end, neither Clinton nor Obama sees anything fundamentally wrong with the current state of affairs. Obama wants nicer rhetoric (technically, ‘a less divisive politics’). Clinton wants a few nicer laws (healthcare, etc.). Laudable goals, all. But something is missing.

What?

Well… For seven years, we’ve been ruled by a gang of thugs who have repeatedly insisted that they are above the law. And they’ve been proven right. Key provisions of the US Constitution are trampled upon. Rules are ignored. Treaties violated. Century-old precedents upended. Much of the federal government today operate as a rogue organization whose secret activities lie solely under the watch and control of one man.

At a time when anybody, even an American citizen, can be locked up indefinitely on the say so of the president, we need a candidate who will say: “Enough!” We need a candidate who remembers that government exists to serve its citizens, not to be served by them. We need a candidate who understands that secrecy and democracy are incompatible, that government operating in a constant state of emergency is anathema, and that freedom is more than a slick slogan to be trotted out on national holidays and at campaign rallies: it is a lived reality that cannot survive in a fear-ridden police-state where a few hold near-absolute power.

Of course, we need other things too. A candidate who recognizes the twin threats of economic and environmental catastrophe. A candidate willing to tackle the deep inequities rampant in society today. A candidate who sees poor education and concentrated power for what they are – the sure enemies of stable democracy.

To be sure, one can’t have everything. Most of the disastrous changes of the last seven years were prefigured by actions under earlier presidents. The concentration of presidential power has been a long process, spanning decades if not centuries. Advances in technology have only made new mechanisms of surveillance and control cheaper and easier to implement. If the Bush administration have done one good thing, it is to demonstrate precisely where our current path leads.

Against this backdrop, the current presidential contest is an obscene joke, a pathetic mockery of the idea of democratic self-government. While Rome burns, these would-be Neros quarrel over where the next palace is to be built, and how many gladiators will be needed for the next spectacle. We’re presented the exciting choice between those who see no flames, and those who wish to add fuel to the fire: between the dangerously incompetent and the simply dangerous.

There is of course a simpler alternate explanation: the candidates know their true constituents (contributors) and don’t really give a damn about what happens to the rest of us, so long as their bottom line stays in the black. Certainly, a good chunk of the political establishment does a nice business lining its pockets.

To be clear, I don’t expect anybody to emerge who offers to deal meaningfully with any of these issues. The political system isn’t designed to produce such candidates. Come November, I’ll probably vote resignedly for the lesser evil, and hope thing don’t get too much worse, too fast. But I’ll also remember the bastards who lead us down this road to perdition, and if the opportunity arises, I’ll be happy to slip them a knife in the ribs should the opportunity arise (metaphorically speaking of course – political criminals deserve long slow humiliation and punishment – nothing quick or mostly painless).

And that, hopefully, is all that need be said on the topics of politics. Back to more rewarding pursuits…

Undecided Tuesday

indecisionThis is like a bad result on Groundhog Day – six more weeks of campaigning (and so much for Tsunami Tuesday). True, the horse-race can be fun. But this is a roach-race, and it runs ’til November.

There was some sort of parade celebrating the NY Giants’ Super Bowl win. Had class then, so that’s all I know.

I’ve run out of snarky comments about Arabic grammar. Sadly, I don’t think I’ll run out of obscenely strange grammar topics for a long time to come. Thanks for nothing, diptotes.

History seminar turned into half-lecture, half-seminar. Made for a somewhat limited discussion. Of course, it’s not actually a history course, according to the prof., so my limited expertise is of even more limited use.

Finally, when stretching out the old legs downtown, decided to try out a P&S digital camera I picked up quite some time back. Substantial noise at ISO 80 (base ISO) with 1/10 second exposure. DSLRs have me spoiled. Expensive habit I guess (amusingly, the P&S was more expensive when I got it than a number of DSLRs are now).

Pre Super-Tuesday

mondayThat would be unsuper-Monday for those keeping track.

Rather than attempt to explain the Freud-1940s Baghdad connection alluded to earlier (something to do with memory), or why I’m partially translating a Wikipedia entry on an Iranian revolutionary for Arabic language class (needed an interesting biography that could use this chapter’s vocab., thanks Mirza Jahangir Khan), I’ll just say that today started late and ended later, and the stuff that was supposed to happen in between largely did.

I’d complain about the weather, but since the next week will be the same dreary gray with rain (for the variety, I’d be happier with snow at this point), I need to save some irritation for later on.

Also there’s some sort of election to-do tomorrow. County screwed up, so I can’t vote in the primary. With Clinton v. Obama, I don’t mind that so much. Both are fundamentally flawed. Neither is as likely to get people killed in pointless wars or sent to the gulag as the opposing party’s leaders (Republicans). Based on that admittedly low standard, I’ll take Obama over Clinton, and either one over any Republican, but without much enthusiasm.

(For enthusiasm, I’d need a candidate who’d promise to pursue each and every one of the Bush administration’s criminals with the same single-mindedness and creativity that said administration has applied to destroying the Constitution and rule of law in this country.)

New York Daze

NY GiantsWeather forecast finally comes through. Mostly. Sunny. Rather clear. Lots of folks out enjoying the rarity of blue skies and over-40 degree temperatures. Clouds arrived just in time to spoil the sunset.

More reading about Baghdad in the ’40s. Author (native) writes of his argument (then) with a friend over whether Iraqis are (were) ready for democracy. Sound familiar?

Congrats, NY Giants. Not really a football fan, but I do support upsets on principle. Now the newspapers can go back to pontificating about (not-so-)Super Tuesday.

Whether Weather

weatherNot to be overly critical, but this is the 3rd day in a row that the weather forecast (thanks weather.com) has been substantially inaccurate. Mostly sunny? Yeah right. So much for afternoon and sunset photos.

My vast and interesting life? Limited to reading excerpts of Freud and various other unreadable articles.

Desultory search for better lenses has ended. Fast glass is big, heavy and expensive. Oddly enough, I’d be willing to pay more for smaller, but hey, I’m weird. Meanwhile my unfocusable fast normal Sigma prime lens is with service (conveniently located in Ronkonkoma NY?). Yay?