Monday, September 11, 2006

Weekend Assignment: Remembering September 11th

Weekend Assignment #128:(ed: this link no longer goes anywhere) Share your thoughts about 9/11. You can remember back on what you were doing on the day or give some thought to how we think about it today. Thoughts personal, political or philosophical are all up for consideration. Tell us all what you think about when you think about September 11, 2001.
A year ago I wrote this about 9/11 (numbers shown current as of September 11, 2005)
Total death toll in World Trade Center disaster-2752
Total American Death toll in Iraq War to date-1896 (if you add other coalition troops, that number reaches 2093)
Estimated Iraqi death toll-somewhere between 24,680 and 27,930
Amount of credible evidence that Iraq had anything at all to do with the September 11th terrorist attacks-

...

...

::sigh::
Almost exactly one year later, these are the headlines: No al-Qaeda tie.
Globe and Mail - Saddam Hussein regarded al-Qaeda as a threat rather than a possible ally, a U.S. Senate report says, contradicting assertions President George W. Bush used to build support for the war in Iraq that he launched to counter a threat of weapons of mass destruction that were never found.

The report discloses for the first time an October, 2005, CIA assessment that before the war, Mr. Hussein's government "did not have a relationship" with al-Qaeda operative Abu Musab al-Zarqawi or his associates.
When the United States first went to war in Iraq, there was much disillusionment and anger on the part of the American Government and people that Canada declined to join them in that endeavour. Our government's position has always been that the war in Iraq was never connected to the "war on terror." Five years later, I am as proud now as I was then to be a Canadian whose government is not participating in what has clearly been shown to be nothing more that a personal vendetta of George W. Bush.

But that's all completely off topic. The weekend assignment was to recount our personal reminiscences of what we were doing on the day of the terrorist attacks against the people of the United States of America.


I was driving to work that morning when the radio announcers made some comment about a plane flying into the World Trade Center in New York. They had heard early unconfirmed reports of the incident, with no details available. I don't think they believed it had really happened, or perhaps thought it was some kind of light plane, and were making jokes about it; pilot of the plane deserves a Darwin award kind of thing. Then they went to a commercial.
As I was pulling into the parking lot at work, they came back from commercial in a much more sombre mood. Apologising for making light of the situation earlier, they indicated that it seemed to be much more serious, and suggested that anyone who was listening might want to get to a TV.
I sprinted into the store.

At the time I was working at an independent home electronics retail store selling upper end home theater systems, so I was surrounded by televisions all day long. I flipped on the double row of breakers in the back room to fire up the store, ran straight to the big-screen SONY in the front window, and turned it to CNN.It was less than ten minutes later that I saw, live, as it happened, the second plane fly into the second tower of the World Trade Center. I remember thinking that Hollywood special effects of planes and buildings blowing up were amazingly realistic after now having seen the real thing. I remember thinking that was a bizarre, and probably unsympathetic thing to be thinking. I remember having a tough time putting together solid, coherent thoughts for a while.
I thought back to the morning, fifteen years earlier, that I had stumbled groggily out of my bedroom and turned on the TV just in time to watch the Space Shuttle Challenger explode seventy-three seconds into its tenth lift off. Except that was an accident, and this, clearly, was not.

It was like the day the Earth stood still. For some reason I was alone that morning. The co-worker I usually shared the shop with on Tuesday mornings was late, or off, I don't seem to remember. [Edit: He just replied to the e-mail I sent him yesterday. Apparently, he was there that morning, but I have no memory of him. I was in a bubble.] The boss wasn't in either. I assume he had flipped on the TV before he left the house, and got caught watching there.
I pulled a chair out from the lunch table in the back room, and plopped it in the middle of the showroom floor, in front of the big TV. I stretched a phone cord as far as it would go, and put the phone out where I could answer it without running behind the counter. The phone didn't ring. No customers came into the store. There were no deliveries. For long stretches of time, there was no one else in the world but me and a fifty inch view of CNN. The world had suddenly become an unfamiliar place.

From time to time an employee from one of the other stores in the plaza would pop in during their break. They knew where to go to find a TV. For ten minutes we would silently share each other's company, and then they would go back to their jobs. As the door closed behind them it became as if they hadn't really existed; as if I had imagined them, like I was imagining the horrible things I was seeing on the television screen.
As the morning wore on, we started to see new footage, as it trickled into the news services from camera men in the field. Among the most dramatic was the shot of the first plane roaring overhead and smashing into the North Tower, caught by a cameraman filming a documentary about firefighters.
It seemed like hours of watching replays of the second plane slamming into the South Tower, and long range shots of people at windows begging for help, and , once or twice, those people giving up and leaping to their deaths rather than face the nightmare of smoke and fire behind them. In reality it was only about fifty-eight minutes before the steel reinforcing beams between the seventy-seventh and eight-fifth floors of the South Tower, weakened by the intense heat, gave out,and the entire building fell straight down, burying itself in its own basements. Twenty-nine minutes later, the North Tower suffered the same fate, and the world, which was already stranger than it had been when I got out of bed, became virtually unrecognisable. Like the new New York City skyline.

That skyline today, irrevocably altered by the events of less than two hours five years ago, is a metaphor for this new world we live in. You see it, and at first glance it looks the same, but something, something you almost cannot put your finger on, is missing. I look at that skyline, and there is a hole in it. I know there should be those two, iconic towers thrusting skyward, but I can't see where they are supposed to go.
There's a hole in the world, and the air is leaking out. I'm watching the news around the world, and it's hard to breathe sometimes. Can a new World Trade Center on the site plug the hole, and fix the world. Somehow I doubt it.

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Sunday, September 10, 2006

What, I have a savage breast?

   Kate, over at An Analysis of Life, has listed her top ten favourite songs, and asked others to list theirs. Anyone who knows me, and my relationship with music, knows how difficult a task I find that to be. I might answer that question differently every time I am asked. Here's the list I came up with today (note that these are in no particular order):
John Barleycorn Must Die - Traffic
The Last Resort - Eagles
Thunder Road - Bruce Springsteen
Brothers in Arms - Dire Straits
Dante's Prayer - Loreena McKennitt
Blinding Light Show - Triumph
Epitaph - King Crimson
Last Rendezvous ("Ron's Piece") - Jean Michel Jarre
The Peacocks - Branford Marsalis
Hoop Dancer - Bruce Cockburn
   Kate also asked how strongly influenced our choices were by the music of our youth. I think an examination of the above list answers that question pretty conclusively. There isn't a song there that was released in the last decade, and nine of the ten are more than twenty years old. Heck, five of them are more than thirty years old, and two of those songs were released before I turned five.
   Note that if you were to ask me to list my favourite albums, or bands, the list would look significantly different. For example, Pink Floyd is probably in the top three of my favourite all time bands, based on their comprehensive body of work, but I can't think of a single song of thiers that I would even consider putting on the above list. My favourite albums of all time would definitely include In The Court Of The Crimson King, the album Epitaph is from, but I don't think any other song on that list would be represented.
   What are your favourite songs?

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Dog house

   Almost done. 



   It's all sided with 1x12 rough sawn pine boards. Now I just have to let it weather for a few weeks before I stain it and put the battens on. I'll post another picture when it's all done.

   Here's what it looked like last time.


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Saturday, September 9, 2006

Curse your sudden but inevitable betrayal!

   In an interview with William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy about the 40th anniversary of Star Trek, they talk about The Man Trap; not intended to be the first episode in the series, but the one NBC executives chose to air first. Says Nimoy:
"NBC decided that this series would be most successful if we had sort of a monster of the week to sell. What's the monster this week? And so they put a monster show on the air the first episode, and I think it was a terrible mistake, because it was really not what we were about.''
   Sound familiar, Firefly fans?

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Friday, September 8, 2006

In a nutshell

   AOL journals editor Joe has posted an entry called The Ultimate Blog Post?, in which he mentions an article at Wired News about blogging. The article satires some of the big name blogs by describing "the ultimate perfect blog entries" for them. For example, "the ultimate perfect blog entry" for Cute Overload is described as, "a kitten licking a puppy while the puppy licks a bunny." Awww, so cute!

   So, here's the game. In the comments thread here, post your version of the quintessential Aurora Walking Vacation blog post. If there was something you could write that everyone who saw it would say, "hey, that's an AWV blog entry," what would it be?

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"Beliefs"

   I have come across xkcd.com a few times during my travels through the web. Finally, last week, I added it to the RSS feeds on my reader (right now, I'm using Sage, because it is an extension of Firefox, which is my main web browser). Today, we are offered this little gem.
   Some of the comics at xkcd.com are nothing more than silly, non-sequiter humour. Then, occasionally, they come up with something so topical it hurts.

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Thursday, September 7, 2006

Feed your mind

   There has been some distress recently in J-Land (AOL's blogging community) over non-delivery of new update e-mail alerts via AOL's alert system. AOL members, reading AOL blogs, can click on a link that says "alert me as entries are posted" and they will receive an e-mail notification of new posts to that blog. At least, that's the way it's supposed to work.
   In practice, e-mail alerts are intermittent, at best. While I still subscribe to e-mail alerts to inform me when new comments are posted in my blogs, I long ago gave up on reliably receiving new entry alerts for the AOL journals I read.
   Not that that was the only problem I had with reading blogs. Only about a third of the blogs I read are AOL journals, so AOL's e-mail alerts did not cover two thirds of my daily reading list. At first, I simply bookmarked all my regular haunts in my favourite places folder, and checked them all every day.
   How often do you update your blog? Every day? I know I certainly don't, and with a few exceptions, most of my reading list do not either. Clicking into every single blog on the list every day, when a significant proportion of them are not updated struck me as a huge waste of my time. As the number of blogs I read approached triple figures, that waste of time became significant enough for me to want to do something about it.
   Enter the RSS aggregator, or feed reader.

   Most blogs (certainly all AOL journals) publish a syndication feed along with the regular web page. The syndication feed carries a simplified version of each entry a blogger makes: the basic text, and sometimes images, without the more complicated html coding. So, for example, a blog's colour scheme, or other fancy formatting doesn't come through on the RSS feed.
   A feed reader, or aggregator, is a piece of software that will save your list of feeds (blogs) and check them all for you, whenever you want, and tell you which ones have been updated since last you checked. It is then often possible to read those updated entries right in the feed reader, without clicking through to the blog itself. If you read a lot of blogs, this is an invaluable tool that will save you hours every week.

   A year ago, feed readers were a somewhat esoteric luxury enjoyed only by the most geeky among us. It was a big deal when the new version of Safari, the Mac Internet browser, came with one built in. Being somewhat cautious about downloading new software, I went looking for an online solution, and found
bloglines.com. Bloglines offers the ability to create a list of feeds, organise them into various categories, and check them regularly, by simply visiting, and logging into the website.
   You can see what my list looks like by clicking on the link called
My complete blogroll in the right sidebar of my main page. What you will see is a column on the left side of the screen with five main categories listed. Clicking on the little plus symbol beside a category name will expand the list to show the feeds in each one. Clicking on one of the blog titles will bring up the available feeds for that blog in the larger window on the right. Cool, huh?
   You'll notice that some of the feeds are not blogs. I have subscribed to several web comics. As well, all of the online news services publish RSS feeds which you can subscribe to. I even receive updates of any new activity at
Meanderingly, an online writing project I contribute to, which is a Wiki.

   Some recent glitches at bloglines prompted me to go out and investigate other feed reading options, such as
Mozilla Firefox extensions like NewsFox and Sage, and stand alone readers, like Feed Demon. Then, in researching this article, I discovered that most major web portals have now incorporated feed reading into their web pages. For example, if you visit your favourite AOL journal, and click on the link at the top called 'Get the feed.' you will see a box pop up offering to help you subscribe via one of six online feed reader options, including My AOL, Google, and My Yahoo!
   Out of curiosity, I click on the Google reader link, and was immediately taken to a page that offered to let me use either Google Homepage, or Google Reader to subscribe. I clicked Google reader, went through a brief registration process, and boom, I was reading my favourite blog in an RSS aggregator. Neato!

   Try it, you'll like it.

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Tuesday, September 5, 2006

Tuesday stuff

   The newest edition of CarnivAOL has been published, and it is chock full of haiku-y goodness. Well, it's full of something, anyway. Check out this week's offerings.


   We had a particularly old-world Italian style dinner last night. The wife cooked up some fresh tomato sauce from tomatoes straight off the vine. Added that to some homemade pasta. Also, battered, fried, Sicilian pumpkin, and speducci (BBQed lamb skewers). Mmm.
   Aperitif was some home made fortified wine made by my wife's uncle Mario that we brought home from Italy with us last year. It's a year old now, so we decided to open a bottle and try it. Yum!


   First day of school, and Matt's off to Grade 7 this year. Although he won't admit it, he's looking forward to the year. His teacher this year is also the music teacher, and he's looking forward to joining the intermediate band. He started playing the saxophone at school last year, and has expressed interest in a local music enrichment program offered for grade six, seven, and eight students at the local high school.

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Sunday, September 3, 2006

Out of context quote of the week

"...we were rehearsing and I pissed in my pants!"
   --Kevin Federline

Friday, September 1, 2006

CarnivAOL

   Now soliciting and accepting submissions for the next edition of CarnivAOL, to be published Tuesday, September 5th. Send me your submissions via e-mail as soon as possible.