JPH3’s Blog-o-Rama

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Archive for the ‘Freedom’ Category

Question: Is Indecision a Good Thing or a Bad Thing? I Can’t Decide . . .

Posted by jph3 on October 30, 2008

I remember thinking earlier this year how excited I was to get into this presidential election.  You know, “take hold of the issues” and really “make my vote count” yada yada.  But, after all the rhetoric, spin, and misdirection, multiplied by the blame and flame associated with every angle of every debate, to be honest, I’m just really, really . . . tired.  Tired might be the wrong word, I’m not really sure. 

So, with 5 days left until the Republicrats decide our next leader, I have absolutely no idea what I am going to do with my vote.  Seriously: I am completely and totally undecided.  And FYI: YIKES.

This is new territory for me.  Looking back, I’ve always known who to pick, and I haven’t really doubted much before or after election night.  And I’ve always seen the last-minute polls with the ‘Undecided’ percentages and thought, kinda like this guy, “sheesh, who are these undecided losers and why can’t they make up their puny little minds?!?!”  Well, I guess I’m the loser now. 

I suppose I feel a little stifled, like these people – all comedy aside. 

But then again, so what?  So I’m ‘undecided’?  Big deal.  Maybe that just means I’m re-prioritizing?  Maybe that means this political season is just plain lousy?  Maybe both?  Maybe neither?  Maybe it’s ok to be undecided this late such an important game.  Again, I don’t know.  I can’t make up my mind on that either.

So, I suppose the point of this post is to solicit ideas via comments, email, phone, telepathy, smoke signal, carrier pigeon, etc.  Whatever, just please help somehow, because this is a big deal to me.

I won’t bore you with all the gory details of WHY I am undecided – i.e. all the pros and cons of each party’s candidates – because that is the line of thinking that has failed me thus far.  I just think I need an approach or decision-making model that is outside of that standard pro/con box.  I need to reframe the decision entirely, or something, maybe.  So, I’d appreciate any advice, particularly as it relates to a time when you have been undecided about something important, and how you worked through it – political or otherwise.

The only option that is off the table for me at this point is simply not voting.  I’m going to vote, I just want to feel good about it.  Is that too much to ask?!?!

Cheers.

Posted in Freaky, Freedom | Tagged: , , | 21 Comments »

So, How Hot Is It, Really? And Other Loaded Questions . . .

Posted by jph3 on May 3, 2008

Calvin learns of the Greenhouse EffectMy kids don’t like riding in the car very much these days. Since our van has one seat they ALL want to sit in, trips to wherever always begin with a lively bout of full contact musical chairs. For this and many other reasons, I continually offer thanks to the Minivan gods for any and all types of attention-grabbing gadgets or gizmos.  Distraction d’Jour: the built-in thermometer. 

As LA hopped into the 90s for a bit last week, the kids took a brief break from the madness and analyzed the temp data.  They noted on one trip: 93° in our driveway, 91° down the street, 96° at Costco, 89° near the school, 87° at the park, etc and so forth.  And then came the question, “Dad, so how hot is it, really??”  Good question, and I have been pondering the answer for a while now.

Nowadays a thousand different scientists, institutes, panels, politicians, pundits, newscasters, bloggers, etc, all chatter a thousand different opinions on the definitions and theories of climate change vs. global warming, vs. man made global warming.  Pop culture is weighing in, green is the new black, Al Gore is the (very well compensated) hero, and CO2 is the villain (not mass consumption or urbanization).  Oh, and let’s not forget, the venture capitalists are drooling, markets are emerging, supply chains are linking, and it’s like Christmas year-round at the patent office.  It’s truly amazing to watch. But for all this amazing reactivity, the fact of the matter is that nobody can really answer that fundamental question my kids asked the other day. 

Here’s why: In 1997, the USNRC convened a panel of scientists to study the policies, processes and systems used to gather and report actual (not modeled) temperatures, with the simple idea that a flaw in these mechanisms could greatly skew the data.  The report can be found here, but their basic conclusion is that “. . . the global capacity to observe the Earth’s climate system is inadequate and is deteriorating worldwide [and] without action to reverse this decline . . . the ability to characterize climate change and variations over the next 25 years will be even less than during the past quarter century.” 

The stations studied by the USNRC produced at the time nearly ALL the underlying data feeding the chatter and the amazing reactivity noted above, and simply stated, they concluded the data coming from these stations are not sound.   So, how hot is it really?   We cannot answer that question with any reasonable degree (har har) of certainty.   If the stations are flawed, the data are flawed.  If the data are flawed, the chatter is nothing more than a bunch of noise.

So, how bad can it be?  Check out surfacestations.org and wattsupwiththat.com.  These sites document the numerous errors, omissions, anomalies, and policy violations found at climate monitoring stations across the US.  As an example, the following images show two different stations - the first appropriately follows the rules.  In contrast, the second has located its sensor in a parking lot, next to a cell tower and several AC exhaust outlets.  (This is like placing the thermostat of your house directly above your stove.  DUH!)  For fun, note the temperature decline of the former and the incline of the latter:

Consider the following comparison: IF my employer released financial statements declaring to the world our businesses made $341 centillion dollars last quarter, what would happen?  Our stock price would soar 100,000% (and I would retire), competitors’ stock would soar, broader market indicators would rise, bond markets would likely fall, other equity/debt markets would scatter, speculators would jump, etc, and then eventually arbitrage would thin things.  In short, lots of chatter and lots of amazing reactivity.

Then, after all that, what if my employer said, “Whoops.  Did we say $341 centillion???  Uh, we really meant just $3.41.  Sorry.  Turns out our computers told us that 2+2 was actually 4 billion, and we believed them.  Our bad.”  Imagine that.  Enron all over again: panic and pan-duh-monium ad nauseum

Fact: The business world now spends billions of dollars every year protecting the integrity of financial data in order to prevent that pan-duh-monium from happening again.  But despite all the chatter and reactivity associated with climate change – the opinions, the new markets, the supply chains, the inventions, the predictions, the alarmism, and of course, the MONEY – not much has been done to ensure the integrity of the temperature data that drives it all.  As a result, everybody takes a different read of the thermometer, and it’s usually the read that most closely resembles the reader’s financial or political self-interest. 

Ideally, at the end of the day, I believe the true principles of resource conservation and responsible stewardship should always be the motivation for the chatter and the reactivity.  We should treat this wonderful Earth with the respect and reverence it deserves, regardless of what Sir Gore the Great Green Bard sings.  There will always be marketers looking to capitalize on going green, and if that alone helps drive awareness of true principles, then so be it.  But as long as temperature - not true principles - continues to be the fundamental basis for the chatter and reactivity, it just seems to me we ought to actually figure out how hot it really is before we identify our targets and cast our stones. 

Ok, I’m done with my soap box for now.  But, FYI, LA is back down into the 70s, or, um, the 80s, depending on your read of the thermometer. 

Cheers.

PS:  In case you didn’t know, I am fascinated by the global warming debate.  So I will probably continue to study it, and maybe write about its various angles.  Please let me know what you think . . . I’d appreciate any and all perspectives.

Posted in Fake, Freaky, Freedom, Frivolous | Tagged: , , | 10 Comments »

Musings of a Modern-day Mormon . . . Moderate??

Posted by jph3 on March 25, 2008

I’m all about online quizzes these days for some reason.  Last time it was religion, this time politics, next time . . . who knows.  Anyway, for anyone remotely interested in politics, please visit ThePoliticalCompass.org and have a go at their online test.  Of all the rate-yourself-on-the-political-spectrum quizzes out there, this one gave me pause for a couple of reasons:

1.  This quiz rates political views on a two-dimensional* scale, as opposed to the standard left/right only spectrum.  Specifically, the X-Axis represents your economic** position, and the Y-Axis represents your social** position.  It then maps the results on the X/Y grid and allows you to compare your location to (their interpretation of) various world leaders, politicians, economists, etc.

2.  As you can see below, the results place me almost dead on center of both spectrums.  Wh-wh-what?!?!?  (Aren’t all Mormons supposed to be right-wing whackos?)  Sheesh, talk about an identity crisis.

Anyway, my official coordinates are (note the decimal places): Economic Left/Right: 0.75 and Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: 0.51.  In other words, I am just barely a fraction to the right of center, and even less of a fraction above center . . . which is shocking to this card-carrying Republican, to say the least. 

For the record, I know the common responses to this silly little exercise are probably the correct responses (who cares about labeling, it’s the issues that matter, etc).  But suppose for a second this is an accurate and meaningful way to compare some elements of human ideology.  My questions, then, would be: Is it ok to use the M-Word when describing oneself??  Can I grant myself permission to be a M-m-m-moderate?!?!?  Or, should I stick to my conservative guns (pun intended) come heck or high-water?  And more importantly, is it possible to be truly informed and passionate about a social or economic issue whist maintaining a position in the center?

It’s that last question that has me really scratching my bald head.  Is it possible to be passionate and moderate at the same time?  Or does information and/or passion tend to move one toward the outskirts of the spectra over time?

To be honest, I’m not sure.  I’m going to noodle on this for a while, and I’d appreciate your thoughts . . .

Cheers,
jph3

*  FYI – The authors of this website are clearly not physicists, as they describe the “categories of ‘right’ and ‘left’” as a one- (not two-) dimensional scale.  But in their terms, a ‘Dimension’ refers to a political spectrum, not a plane of time and space.  So, to them, a grid with an X and Y axis is two- (not three-) dimensional. 

** Be sure to read the analysis and other explanatory info on the site to understand their definitions.  The FAQs are helpful as well.

Posted in Fearless, Freedom | 13 Comments »

What Would You Do With 2 Cows??

Posted by jph3 on December 7, 2007

  • SOCIALISM: You have two cows. State takes one and gives it to someone else.
  • COMMUNISM: You have two cows. State takes both of them and gives you milk.
  • FASCISM: You have two cows. State takes both of them and sells you the milk.
  • NAZISM: You have two cows. State takes both of them and shoots you.
  • FEUDALISM: You have two cows. Your lord takes the milk and by his grace lets you live.
  • TOTALITARIANISM:You have two cows. The government takes them and denies they ever existed. Milk is banned.
  • MILITARIANISM: You have two cows. The government takes both and drafts you.
  • CAPITALISM: You have two cows. You sell one and buy a bull.
  • AMERICAN CAPITALISM: You have two cows. You sell one, buy a bull and open a successful local dairy. Then you have to close down cuz Wal-Mart comes to town.
  • POLYNESIAN CAPITALISM: You have 8 cows and are happy to spend them all for Mahana.
  • ENVIRONMENTALISM: You have two cows. Al Gore convinces you to pay him money because their farts increase the greenhouse effect.
  • VEGETARIANISM: Cows are people too.  So if you own two cows you own two people, and that’s slavery, so you’re evil.
  • ANARCHY:You have two cows. Your neighbors kill you, spray-paint anarchy signs on the cows, and pierce themselves in various places.
  • DEMOCRACY: You have two cows and everybody votes on how to divvy up the milk.
  • REPRESENTATIVE DEMOCRACY: You have two cows. Your neighbors pick someone to tell you who gets the milk.
  • BRITISH DEMOCRACY: You have two cows. You feed them sheep’s brains and they go mad.
  • JAPANESE DEMOCRACY: You have two cows. You give the milk to gangsters so you don’t loose face. The gangsters drop the milk on the way back to the hideout and then have to cut their pinky fingers off.
  • AMERICAN DEMOCRACY: A politician from the heartland promises to give you two cows if you vote for him. After the election he is impeached for speculating in cow futures. The press dubs the affair “Cowgate”.
  • POLITICAL CORRECTNESS: You are associated* with two differently-aged, but no less valuable to society, bovines of a non-specified gender. (* = the concept of “ownership” is a symbol of the phallo-centric, war-mongering, intolerant past.)
  • COUNTER CULTURE: Dude, you got to have some of this milk and write about it on your blog. And don’t forget to fight the power cuz it’s all our parent’s fault.

Posted in Freedom, Frivolous, Funny | Tagged: , , , | 2 Comments »

A Bit o’ Wisdom

Posted by jph3 on December 6, 2007

We have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion. Avarice, ambition, revenge or gallantry would break the strongest cords of our Constitution as a whale goes through a net. Our Constitution is designed only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate for any other.

         John Adams – US President, 1797-1801

Posted in Faith, Freedom | 2 Comments »