monday’s meals
just so everyone doesn’t worry too much about an imminent heart attack
monday lunch: bulgur, wheatberry, and apple salad
monday dinner: mixed green greek salad with chicken
only 47 more days of vegetables to cleanse my body
a blinding flash of the obvious
just so everyone doesn’t worry too much about an imminent heart attack
monday lunch: bulgur, wheatberry, and apple salad
monday dinner: mixed green greek salad with chicken
only 47 more days of vegetables to cleanse my body
friday dinner – hamburger with bacon
saturday breakfast – nothing
saturday lunch – hamburger with bacon
saturday afternoon – beef jerky
saturday early evening – beef jerky
saturday dinner – steak, bratwurst patty
saturday after dinner snack – beef jerky
saturday pre-storm snack – bratwurst patty
sunday breakfast – chorizo (and eggs)
sunday brunch – ham
sunday afternoon snack – hamburger
sunday dinner – hamburger
it’s safe to say that i don’t need any meat in my diet for the next 2-3 months
if you’ve read my site, you probably have a fairly good read on my politics. i consider myself to be a fairly open-minded person though, and if a good idea comes along, regardless of party or platform, i’m willing to support it.
and so, after watching this inspiring video, i would hearby like to announce:
apparently not too many people know this:
you can subscribe to specific authors from the New York Times using RSS.
According to my Google Reader “Feed Details”, 2.1 million people subscribe to the Times’ home page.
but only 22 specifically subscribe to Thomas Friedman’s column.
I like information. But the Times homepage posts an average of 335 posts a week. That’s a lot of posts. I often can’t keep up.
But, zooming in a bit gets me exactly to what I am interested in.
i had the great opportunity to see thomas friedman speak on friday in downtown mpls. a few of our students won an essay contest, giving them the opportunity to go, and i lucked out and got to go along for the ride. i figured that i had a pretty good angle in going, besides my admiration for mr. friedman‘s work, he has a lot of good and interesting things to say about education and the internet.
how do you live and act in a horizontal world? information, facts and opinions galore can be downloaded from the internet. what can’t be dowloaded though is your values and judgement. your “internal software” as mr. friedman puts it. that internal software is written by you and you alone. your parents, your teachers, and your spirtual leaders will help you write that software (and maybe even try and write it for you) but in the end, only you can write that software.
mr. friedman states this far more elegantly than my “grandma rule”, but I think the concept is the same. in the dark corner of the internet, what will you do? stripped of any external social, parental, or educational guidance, how will you act?
most people reading this will not jump up and down in unison at this moment and yell “like a numbskull! we’re going to act like numbskulls!” but that is in fact how a lot of people act when they get behind the false anonymity of the internet.
take a public space like the wikipedia. it is one of the greatest experiments of our time. but, hand a fifteen-year-old point a can of electronic spray paint and watch what happens. in a public, physical space, (the mall for example), teenagers are (mostly) able to keep themselves in check. head to the internet, get behind the screen and it’s not only teenagers that can’t keep it together.
so the internal software becomes more important. a closer relationship with your parents becomes more important. good teachers that teach the love of learning are more important. moral and ethical guidance is more important today than it ever was.
in the places where no one is watching, how will you act?
sorry, I couldn’t resist:
Just one more link about the gas tax, and then I’ll stop. I promise. This comes from Robert Reich:
Hillary Clinton Doesn’t Listen to Economists
When asked this morning by ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos if she could name a single economist who backs her call for a gas tax holiday this summer, HRC said “I’m not going to put my lot in with economists.â€
I know several of the economists who have been advising Senator Clinton, so I phoned them right after I heard this. I reached two of them. One hadn’t heard her remark and said he couldn’t believe she’d say it. The other had heard it and shrugged it off as “politics as usual.â€
I think the important take-away is that this is “politics as usual”. Hillary is running an ad about how this will save you (well, not you, but the royal you) $9 billion dollars. “Barack Obama says this is pennies.” Sorry, Hillary, but split that out to all the people who buy fuel in this country, it’ll save you (the actual you, not the royal you) about $30.
I think bridges that function, upgrading transit, and smooth roads and highways are more important than $30 in my pocket.