Archive for the ‘politics’ Category

Obama’s Inaugural Address: One for the Ages?

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

At first I felt let down by Obama’s inaugural address. I showed it live in my Physics class and was overly concerned about the technical details like volume and lighting levels. It lacked the practiced rhythms of a stump speech which Obama would have had the chance to refine. He talked way too fast for my slow ears to hear what the author of this article was able to discern. That’s how history gets made. The significant ones, like the Gettysburg address, are lost on most listeners. After the speech my class discussed a solar energy physics problem. Everyone agreed that green collar jobs would help get our economy on track.

Imagine

Please take the time to read and discuss, before attending to those necessary “matters of consequence” which fill up our years.

The speech analysis:
http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2009/1/21/195515/922

Text and video of the speech:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090120/ap_on_go_pr_wh/inauguration_obama_text

Here’s one of my favorites:

For everywhere we look, there is work to be done. The state of the economy calls for action, bold and swift, and we will act — not only to create new jobs, but to lay a new foundation for growth. We will build the roads and bridges, the electric grids and digital lines that feed our commerce and bind us together. We will restore science to its rightful place, and wield technology’s wonders to raise health care’s quality and lower its cost. We will harness the sun and the winds and the soil to fuel our cars and run our factories. And we will transform our schools and colleges and universities to meet the demands of a new age. All this we can do. All this we will do.

Now, there are some who question the scale of our ambitions — who suggest that our system cannot tolerate too many big plans. Their memories are short. For they have forgotten what this country has already done; what free men and women can achieve when imagination is joined to common purpose, and necessity to courage.

Thanks from Musician’s Radio

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

This is going to be a different kind of posting. It is about a random act of caring at the crossroads of music and technology. I am a child of the sixties and count myself fortunate to have been at Woodstock at age 18 where the seeds of my activism were  planted by the likes of John Sebastian, Joe Cocker, Country Joe, Jimi, and Joni. I recently sent a note to one of my favorite podcast shows called Musician’s Radio, where I listen to interviews with survivors of the bygone era of my youth such as Graham Nash and David Crosby. Whether young or old, the guests all speak with a level of frank humility that gives the show an air of authenticity. The tagline of the show is “For Musicians, By Musicians”. I find the allusion to the Enlightenment hopes of Jefferson, Madison, and Lincoln inspired, and anything but corny or misplaced. Although I am but a rank amateur, the show inspires me to let music into my life and direct other kindred spirits in the ways of righteous musicality.

While updating my list of podcast favorites, I noticed why my podcatching software had difficulty downloading the last couple shows from Musician’s Radio. I had worried the show had fallen into hard times. As the following exchange will prove, my concern was unfounded.

Error in Musician’s Radio RSS feed

I love your show and recommend it widely. However, there has been a PHP bug in your RSS feed for at least a few months. Whenever I upgrade Ubuntu on my Desktop/Web Server, I have to remember to update the php.ini file.

I suspect the bug can be fixed by setting  output_buffering = On in your php.ini file.

I run Firefox on Ubuntu. This is what I see when I try to view your RSS feed:

A PHP Error was encountered
Severity: Warning
Message: Cannot modify header information – headers already sent by (output started at /home/musicia9/public_html/index.php:4)
Filename: controllers/rss.php
Line Number: 52

Greg Hoke

I got two very kind responses. This one came from the web developer, and, yes, I got a kick out of it. Can you tell?

Musician’s Radio RSS Feed

Hi Greg,
I’m the original developer of the site, and wanted to thank you for emailing your suggestion to fix the RSS feed. They forwarded it on to me and I took a look, and thought you’d get a kick out of the problem if you’re a developer yourself.

[...Techno-trivia didacted...]

Anyway, thanks again for emailing them, otherwise it probably never would have come to my attention.

Rock on,
- Dylan

I also got a note from one of the frequent hosts of the show, Kevin McCormack

Thanks from Musicians Radio

Greg-
With your help we are hopefully getting to the bottom of this and some  other issues.
I really appreciate your taking the time.
Glad you like the show.
Best,
Kevin

I just checked. The Musician’s Radio RSS feed is fixed! Subscribe to it and enjoy! It is sure to please.


Voted?

Saturday, October 4th, 2008

Priceless with not a little truth in it to boot.

In 2004 the lines at my Columbus, Ohio polling place were 3 hours long. In Oberlin, Ohio, one of my son’s picks for college, students had to wait 16 7 hours. In the Columbus suburbs, lines were much shorter.

Ken Blackwell, the former Republican Secretary of State, was in charge of elections as well as the Ohio Bush-Cheney re-election committee. Blackwell was soundly beaten when he ran for governor in 2006. The CEO of Diebold, the election machine company, promised to deliver the vote to Bush. Real time election results were mirrored on GOP servers. To avoid long lines on election day, the election laws were changed to allow early voting. I just filled out my absentee ballot and will drop it by the post office. One more for Obama! Or, did I? ;)

Update: One of the problems with voting at the precinct is that it takes voters too long to fill out the ballot. This contributes to long lines. Voting from home is the right solution. Voting from home was a pleasant experience. My wife and I could discuss the issues and use the Internet to research topics, like Issue 3 which called for a constitutional amendment to guarantee private property rights under all conditions. (Voted no.)

Alaskans reacte to debate.

Civil Rights Bus Trip March 25-29

Monday, March 31st, 2008

A bus went from Columbus to Atlanta, Birmingham, Tuskegee, Selma, Montgomery, Memphis and Cincinnati to visit museums and historical sites.

Mahatma Ghandi and Martin Luther King

The participants included 4 CAHS students who learned about the courage it took for Rosa Parks to not go to the back of the bus and for Civil Rights foot soldiers to face attack dogs and water cannon wielded by uniformed members of the police. They participated in a re-enactment of a slave market. They learned about the power of forgiveness and peaceful civil disobedience. This led to the end of Jim Crow laws and the tacit acceptance of domestic terror of the KKK.

Flickr slideshow (press “i” for Captions)

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The Spirit of Dr. King Lives On, If We Let It

Monday, January 21st, 2008

P1010029aIt is a luxury to have some time off on my birthday, though it saddens me this holiday was bought by the loss of such a voice of conscience as Dr. King. We need to go much farther to achieve his dreams and vision. I detect a strange resemblance between 2008 and 1968. The war goes on as contorted logic and benign neglect conspire to continue the murder.

I know I have a lot of ideas that fall on infertile ground, but that doesn’t stop me from trying. I may seem immoderate in challenging conventional wisdom. I feel we must exercise the freedom to speak our minds without caving in to fear, or we collectively risk the verdict applied to an entire generation of “good germans”. I know I try people’s patience, but my conscience nags me, and I think that little voice filtered by a stout heart and sincere hopes is what makes our nation a wonder to behold.

So, where is the spirit of Dr. King in 2008? It’s not very elegant, but Dr. King was largely reviled by the FBI and corporate media while he was alive. I think the movie Sicko comes as close as anything else to raising our consciousness during this cold winter season.

Sicko is a terrible name for a movie, but it is really an indictment of our national consciousness on the issue of affordable health care in the US. Most people would rather not accept it, but Bush’s “ownership” constituency has taken far too much control of our lives. None of the the presidential candidates are going to stop the K-Street lobbyists unless we make it illegal for corporations to buy off our political representatives. Despite the gravity of the issues, the movie makes you laugh just a little bit more than it makes you want to cry. It is well worth the effort to watch the movie, and to act to make an affordable national health care plan a reality.

Hope Cup

Deciding Whether a Top Technical School is for You

Saturday, September 15th, 2007

The following was inspired by, 10 Lessons from an MIT Education.
The article is full of wisdom. When I was young, I was more hopeful than wise. I perceived older people’s “wisdom” as limitations on my freedom. However, I have grown to be thankful for those few threads I managed to weave into my life. My mom, my older brother Charles (place link to eventual blog here), and a guy named Garth Cate all had a big influence on me.

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Podcast Journal March 2007

Tuesday, March 20th, 2007

I have been using Google Reader to browse through RSS feeds from various sources. Antiwar.com had a great interview with Helen Caldicott who is an authority on nuclear power and nuclear weapons. It is well worth hearing. She also recommends reading the New Nuclear Danger which examines the indebtedness of the Bush administration to the arms industry.

Dr. Helen Caldicott, author of Nuclear Power is Not the Answer, War in Heaven: The Arms Race in Outer Space, discusses the incredible amount of nuclear weapons in the hands of the United States and Russia and the non-threats of Iran and North Korea, Reagan and Gorbachev’s near agreement to abolish them in 1987, the danger of Pakistani nukes falling into the hands of Taliban types, Israel’s nukes, what a 20-megaton H-bomb would do to Phoenix, Three Mile Island, the damage at the local nuclear plant, and hears from a caller – a former U.S. military nuclear missile launcher – how she changed his life.