Tuesday, April 01, 2008
don't even start it up
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finally cool enough for rails.
Tuesday, April 01, 2008
don't even start it up
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Tuesday, April 08, 2008
eight years prior
as i didn't have a job, and had only recently turned nineteen, my freshman-year lawsuit threat felt, at the time, a bit more than a thorn in my side, even though it never amounted to anything.
times were a little different back then. i remember reading the copyright laws on the library of congress gopher site. i wish i had saved those pages somewhere, but they seem to have finally made the transition to the www.
in other news, i'm on day 22 of my training program. i've run each of the last 21 days (since returning from SF), which is, by a long shot, a new record for me. my reward? hill repeats. at least this program doesn't go up to 10 hills like the other one, and after measuring the hill on google earth, i only need to run half of it. at least this week.
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Wednesday, April 09, 2008
playoffs.
well, it is playoff time! i'm going to every game here ing boston again this year. wish we had home ice; sunday seems so far away...
since i don't have cable anymore, i've been listening to the radio feed from calgary this evening. this is just what my faux-canadian accent needs.
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Tuesday, April 15, 2008
day twenty-eight
today was my twenty-eighth straight day running, and it was a good one. my streak won't last another week, as i have a well-deserved day off on patriots' day, after a 16 mile run coming up this sunday.
when i first tried this new training program, i spent the track days at the MIT track, as i couldn't find any tracks that looked open to the public and closer. last night, i found downes field. it's about two miles away, which is a good warmup/cooldown distance, and my knees enjoyed its more rubbery surface, when compared to mit's track. i realized that i've already run past it twice before as it's on the BAA half marathon course.
anyway, today's workout was 4xMile, and i did them all around 6:45 without too much trouble. i'd like to bring that down to 6:30, but it looks like the latter workouts are 6xMile, and that might be tough. either way, next week is back to hills instead.
tonight's game was not quite as fun as sunday nights, but it wasn't the habs blowout that i was a bit worried about. the difference tonight was one lucky bounce, and as we saw in 2004, it's the fourth win that's the important one. i'm still looking forward to seeing game six at the garden saturday!
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Wednesday, April 16, 2008
it seems like everyone else came up with mccainonomics too but i refuse to be deterred
i seem to still be grumpy about last night's hockey game, so hold on.
John McCain Believes We Should Institute A Summer Gas Tax Holiday. Hard-working American families are suffering from higher gasoline prices. John McCain calls on Congress to suspend the 18.4 cent federal gas tax and 24.4 cent diesel tax from Memorial Day to Labor Day.
i will let the url speak for itself, in its full UUID glory: http://www.johnmccain.com/Informing/Issues/4dbd2cc7-890e-47f1-882f-b8fc4cfecc78.htm.
you can also tell he's serious about cutting down on government waste, and showing his connectedness with hard working america with his use of the less-technical three letter html extension.
anyway, i don't know why mccain thinks that removing an 18 cent-per-gallon gas tax is going to result in anything other than an increase of 18 cents per gallon going to the oil companies. the market is already bearing... whatever the current price of gas is. i'm going to take a page out of robert's friend[1] mitt romney's book:
Jacob Berkman Believes We Should Double The Gas Tax.
Or Triple It.
the cost of gas is only one of the many costs of car-obsessed life. while electric cars and the hydrogen economy crack pipe may solve the gasoline problem, they do not in any way address many of the other problems, some of which are listed at the wonderful carfree site.
while i cannot (publicly) suggest car free cities would solve all of modern society's ills, a lot of our nation's problems are greatly exacerbated, or caused outright, by the shift to care-based cities. since it's these taxes that supposedly pay for our governments subsidizing truck-based shipping (as opposed to rail or ship), removing these taxes distorts the playing field even more. and while i'm all for suspending maintenance of the federal highway system, i don't quite think that's what mccain has in mind here. i saw no explanation of what would be done to offset the lost tax revenue.
in addition, we will never break our addiction to foreign oil if the government continues to come to the "rescue" of the automative and petroleum interests at every turn. the only way we're going to make progress is if people start to see the true costs of their cars, and start seeking alternatives.
John McCain Will End Policies That Contribute To Higher Transportation And Food Costs. Ethanol subsidies, tariff barriers and sugar quotas drive up food prices and hurt Americans.
long-time readers are already familiar with my views on corn-based ethanol, so it should be obvious that i support this measure.
unfortunately there is no mention of, say, farm policies that "entitle" ranchers "to up to $40,000 in disaster compensation from the federal government, even though the nearest debris[, from the columbia explosion,] landed 10 to 20 miles from his cattle."
you should really go read that last article there, i'll wait.
[1] see clarification: http://wednesdaynight.org/diary/2008/4/17
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Wednesday, April 16, 2008
he said what?
some of my friends today thought i was making this up, but here it is, on the web, so it must be true:
In a world where some no longer believe that we can distinguish between simple right and wrong, we need your message to reject this "dictatorship of relativism," and embrace a culture of justice and truth.
-- pres. bush, welcoming the pope to the whitehouse
never in my life could i imagine someone putting those two words together; five seconds worth of research shows that it was from a mass given by the pope three years ago:
We are building a dictatorship of relativism that does not recognize anything as definitive and whose ultimate goal consists solely of one's own ego and desires.
i will leave it at that.
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Thursday, April 17, 2008
a proportional response
yesterday's posts seem to have resonated quite strongly with my readership. i received both an email and an instant message about them, and from different people no less. this is unprecedented.
first, i'd like to issue a clarification on one matter. it comes to my attention that perhaps not everyone might see the absurdity in mitt romney being someone's friend, let alone someone that i may even know. with that in mind, i offer you the following two interpretations; feel free to come up with your own as well:
i am trying to move on with my life from bush's comments yesterday, as otherwise i'll get nothing done today due to stress and freaking out, but wanted to point out that i don't see secularism and relativism, as i understand them, as leading directly to hedonism; i like to think that they recognize that there are slippery slopes on both sides of a hill.
instead, i leave you with the following headline from cnn:
CNNMoney: U.S. currency sinks to new low
the article goes on to cite a youtube video that surfaced over the weekend, showing the Dollar at a party, quite inebriated, making out with some girl of, if the comments are to be believed, considerably ill repute:
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Friday, April 18, 2008
i figured it out
sometimes, when i'm on the T listening to my iPod, i sing a little too loudly and get strange looks.
the ghosts are here,
the ghosts are here.
bleu, blanc et rouge,
bleu, blanc et rouge.
we're gonna win this!
we're gonna win this!
we're gonna win!
game six, saturday night.
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the game last night was amazing. i am simply not accustomed to teams i like coming back repeatedly, giving up a lead, and then still winning. especially not in elimination games.
i had to watch a full hour of bill moyers journal before i was calm enough to fall asleep.
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Tuesday, April 22, 2008
back to day one
i'm now 25% of the way through my training, and at hills day number two. these are "long" hills, and take about two minutes. i run them just about as hard as i can, trying to keep the same pace for the whole workout, and try to finish strong. it's tough.
but the one nice thing is that i run them on heartbreak, where, yesterday, some twenty-five thousand people ran it, including lance armstrong. i saw him run by my neighborhood, and i wish i could say it was an amazing thing, but it was just a guy running by in a yellow shirt. ok, he won seven tours, so, yes. it was pretty exciting. anyway he had this to say after the race:
so today i wake up early, struggle to get out of bed, and feel a little tired and pretty stiff. my sunday run was amazing - still buzzing from saturday's game, full of energy from my pasta dinner the night before, and the two short runs in the previous days - it was perhaps the easiest sixteen miles i've ever run. today was not going to be like that.
on my fifth trip up the hill, someone was biking up on the other side of the former comm. ave. street railway median. he yelled out to me, "you shoulda been here yesterday!" initially, a groan was the only sort of response i could muster, but then after thinking about it for a couple of paces, i yelled back, "next year!" without looking back, he raised his arm, and gave me a thumbs up.
the last two hills a little bit easier this week.
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Tuesday, April 29, 2008
more like it
i have become increasingly uncomfortable over the past few weeks. one sunny, warm day after another. this was not the april in boston i remember from my youth. where were the soaked trousers, the sidewalks full of disintegrating worms, the flooded T stops?
i still don't know where they were, but they are here now. as unpleasant as this weather is (it's the only new england weather i don't enoy any part of), it is at least reassuring.
congratulations canada for finally getting iPhones.
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