We are Americans

We did not come here to fear the future. We came here to shape it. I still believe we can act even when it’s hard. I still believe we can replace acrimony with civility, and gridlock with progress. I still believe we can do great things, and that here and now we will meet history’s test.

Because that is who we are.

President Barack Obama
Address to Congress
September 9 2009

Labor Day Post: Personal Observation on Socialism & Slurs

Lately in American political discourse, there’s been an increasing tendency to use the word “Socialist” as a bogey-man threat around policies people don’t like, or even as a slur against people.

This rampant fear-mongering would be bad enough, but using the word “Socialist” as if it were the worst thing you could ever call a person makes me even more annoyed.

My late grandfather, Harold Luxemburg, was a Socialist. In fact, one of the earliest mentions of his name in the New York Times was June 2, 1934, when he and some of his fellow Socialists got arrested for forming a picket line in front of a Brooklyn bakery they were trying to unionize.

Scary stuff, right? Um, no.

Grandpa worked all his life for the rights of people who didn’t have many. He could have had an easier time of it had he chosen some less contentious profession, but instead he saw poverty and discrimination and unfairness all around him and decided to do something about it. He worked to improve the lives of milkmen and restaurant workers and janitors, and he always rooted for the underdog.

In his private life he was a kind, intelligent, and caring man with a strong work ethic who valued education and cultural literacy extremely highly, and loved spending time with his family. And sadly, he left us in 1990. To this day I miss him and am proud of him.

So to the Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh loving troglodytes who think that “Socialist” and “Socialism” are a slur and gleefully hurl those words around as if they actually had the power to hurt (if any of you should happen to find your way to this little corner of the Internet) — with all due respect I say, you don’t have a clue. My grandfather the Socialist was a better man than any of you.

The Lion Sleeps

Ted Kennedy

Sad news of Ted Kennedy’s passing.

An imperfect man, whose life was marked by tragedy. And yet he managed to take it all in and transmute those flaws into the energy to drive a historic Senate career with a far-ranging legacy.

I like to think that finally he is reunited with his martyred brothers, and that they greeted him with a welcoming hug and told him, “well done”.

Photo Credit: jonathanpberger on Flickr.

What a Week!

It’s been more than a month since my last post. Sorry about that. It’s been hectic lately. Getting promoted tends to do that. 🙂

Last week, though, was even crazier than usual. Here’s a rundown:

A week ago Saturday: wake up to the news that Scott’s grandmother had died. Cancel all plans for next few days, book flights, get emergency petsitting in gear, frantic packing. 6 hours later, on a plane to NYC. (NB: flying United is just no fun when compared to Virgin America or even JetBlue.)

Sunday & Monday: Long Island / Brooklyn. Lots of time with the in-laws, the funeral, sitting shiva.

Tuesday: Bid farewell to the in-laws, head into Manhattan for a fast visit and lunch with my mother. Then book it back out to JFK for a flight to Dulles. (NB: the JetBlue terminal at JFK is really nice.)

Wednesday – Friday: Attend CF United, meet with as many community people as possible, spend time in the Adobe booth handing out t-shirts, participate in the Community / User Group BoF, talk, talk, and talk some more. Exhausting, but had a fantastic time. The CF community rocks and the venue was excellent.

Friday: fly home (United still thoroughly uninspiring). Walk off airplane with a massive head cold and a 102-degree fever. Stagger home, climb into bed. Stay there.

Saturday & Sunday: head cold hell. Sleep a lot, load up on drugs, pray for fever to break.

Sunday night: finally starting to feel human again. Still have not unpacked from the trip (wrote this blog post instead).

Hopefully next week will be a little calmer.

Time, Tools, and Tomatoes

There’s an old saying that “only a poor craftsman blames his tools”. And it’s true. That said, having decent tools absolutely matters. Case in point: these two photos of roasted tomatoes.

Last summer:

Pre-Roasted Tomatos

This summer:

Roasted Summer Tomatoes

The D40 and a decent lens have absolutely helped me take better photos. I know I’m at best an enthusiastic amateur with a minimal grasp of what I’m doing, but at least now I can say a little more of what I want to say with my camera.