Police Power

Friend of mine seems to be in trouble with the law, although he’s not sure why. Apparently the FBI just showed up at the door and displayed a warrant and took away his computers (yes, plural, he’s a programmer). They left his ipod but kept the cable. Word from friends who have had the same treatment is that you’ll never get the machines back, so you might as well just write them off and buy new ones. All I have is questions.

Does insurance pay for things that the government impounds for investigation? I mean, what about a rental for while you’re waiting for the old one back? How do you get to work if your car is impounded and there’s no bus? Is this how police departments get their IT equipment? Maybe they were just crooks impersonating FBI agents? I’d have wanted proof– maybe you could call 911 and ask. Is there an FBI hotline for things like this? “What the fuck do you want from me?” I mean, do you need to file a FOIA request just to find out why you’re being arrested? Can you file such a request from prison? Can you it up online once they’ve taken away your internet access?

I guess this really is a police state after all. Maybe I should really reconsider that Canada thing. Montreal can’t be much colder than this, and condos are cheaper there by a long shot anyway. On the other hand, freedom of speech in Canada is badly broken.

Blogs and Real Life

I find out occasionally that people read this, and am always amazed by it. Apparently someone from NPR read my post about quirkyalones and how much
Bookdwarf finds the whole concept repugnant, and looked her up at Harvard Bookstore, and now my beautiful Bookdwarf might get a chance to be on the radio! She’s supposed to call the NPR person back this Monday.

The NPR person is apparently doing research on quirkyalone-ness. I hope she’s trying to debunk the whole phenomenon. Because, really, not only is this a book and a website and a quiz, but it’s a fraud. When did being weird and single suddenly become a movement? Was it when people began to fear for the sanctity of marriage that others began to fear for the sanctity of singlehood? Look, I’m glad you have an identity, but did you need to make it a club?

For crying out loud, the quirkyalone thing is just like Metrosexual Guide to Style and the Official Preppy Handbook and all the other pseudo-guides-to-life out there: annoying almost-funny impulse-buy crap you get as a gift for someone you don’t actually like that much.

Look Out

Look out, Mom and Dad, I could still move back home any day now. It’s hard enough thinking you’re done full-time parenting after eighteen years, and done with financial support after another five or ten, but thirty-some-odd years of living with the kids at home? Damn, in my day, if they were alive after five years we counted it a success.

Oh wait, that wasn’t my day, that was an episode of The Cosby Show.

To whoever posted that comment

Thank you for posting a comment. Most of the comments I get are spam, which is why I’m turning comments off for all new posts.

In response, note that Saddam did not attack us. Note that he gave tax refunds to those who needed them least. Note that he failed to aggressively pursue Osama, and allowed Saudi royalty, allied with his family oil interests, out of the country on 9/11 and 9/12 2001. The medicare reform is a joke– it makes medicare even less supportable. His economic policy is a disaster, even if it is giving us a ‘sugar high’ of a boost right now. And the AIDS program is actually OK — provided that he actually funds it, and except that it fails to teach the #1 prevention method (condoms), because his religion has become our foreign policy. The Kyoto treaty might or might not have been any good, but he’s gutted enough other environmental protections that I know he’s basically in favor of putting mercury into my dinner.

He didn’t win last time, I don’t think he’ll win this time either.

Family, Prayer, Snow

I woke up late and hungover today, and Nat called me and asked if I could come to the funeral home to meet Ettore’s family. So, I went. He was there at the door and said the family was inside, and so was Ettore. I was glad he warned me, because I’d never been to a funeral home or seen a body laid out before. I was sure there was some sort of set of rules or a protocol but I didn’t know it, so I just walked in and looked over at him and at the people sitting around the room staring blankly at their hands or the floor or the ceiling. He was there at the front. That is, his body was there; he wasn’t exactly there. They’d shaved his face, and he looked gaunt and incredibly sad. His family was sitting opposite the body, and then his friends were seated along the wall.

I wasn’t sure what to say to the family, but I guess they wouldn’t have understood it anyway, since they don’t speak much English, so I just shook their hands and mumbled. Later, Tim Ney showed up he went up to the body first and kneeled before it and crossed himself and then went to the family and said he was very sad for their loss, and so I guess I was pretty close to the expected action.

People kept getting up and going outside to smoke, and the room got cold, waht with the door being open and shut so much. Some people looked blank, or nervous, or awkward, but mostly people looked defeated. Larry looked absolutely shattered. I can’t imagine I looked great either, sniffling and wiping my nose on my scarf. I would have expected a funeral home to have more tissues around, but there was just one box, and it was in the far corner, and it was empty. In the parlor there was a picture of a young man who I guessed was the funeral home owner’s son, labeled with his name and the years 1960-1980. The picture looked like a high-school portrait. I wondered if his death had been a factor in their starting the business, or if they’d already been in the funeral business beforehand. There was a dish of individually wrapped mints with the name of the funeral home printed on them, and I thought about the HBO show “Six Feet Under” and about how mints were probably pretty useful to have around, because there would be a lot of hugging, and people would want to make sure their breath would smell OK.

The funeral director spoke with Nat and David Patrick and Ettore’s family about arranging to send the body back to Italy, and getting in touch with the consulate, and what would have to be done for that. They arranged to meet up tomorrow, with a translator, to go over the paperwork. At about that point I figured it was almost time to head out.

The sky got greyer and greyer and then it started snowing. I got up and went up to the body and said goodbye to Ettore and nearly started crying again. I felt that if I stayed I’d get more upset so I said goodbye to everyone and went down the street to the Town Diner and had jonny cakes and coffee. It was warm in the diner and despite the sign saying “Best Coffee In Town” the coffee was bitter. I went outside to take the 71 bus back to Harvard. It was cold and so I started walking to keep warm, and I figured I’d walk along Mt. Auburn St. until the bus caught up with me, but I ended up walking all the way back to Harvard Square, where I bought some yellow lillies.

I’m going to miss him, but I don’t feel angry at him any more, and I am beginning to understand that he’s gone– for the most part I’ve stopped wanting to warn him, or ask him the odd software or Italian cooking question, and I’ve stopped expecting to see him at work Monday.

I still think Faggas Funeral Home is an awful name.

Grrr

I’m so mad at you right now for leaving us. For not calling. You had my number, dude. I can’t even begin to express this, because you can’t hear me. You’re never coming back. Not “never coming back” like you’re still out there and maybe think of us once in awhile. Gone.

No more arm-wavingly informative lectures, no more maniacal grins, no more beautiful snapshots. You and your guitar and your code and your funny haircut and your collection of recipes and god damn it. You were supposed to call. You still owed me money for the December phone bill, motherfucker! Come back here! You can keep the money, I don’t care about that. Just come back.

God I miss you. Nobody else better fucking die on me. You hear? No dying.

Dean Dean?

Well, if Al Gore is doing it, I guess I’ll back Dean too. It seems like he’s got a lot of support: Foodies, for example, and Geeks, and, encouragingly, groups that you might expect to side with Republicans: Economists, Libertarians, Mormons (actually, several groups of Mormons for Dean), even Republicans.

Honestly, I’d vote for almost anybody against Dubya, but I think Dean has what’s necessary to win: money, cultlike grassroots support, and a clear, moderate platform. Yes, moderate– he’s certainly further to the right than I am on the drug war, and his economic policies are of a piece with critique of, rather than blind hatred for, NAFTA.

Dean’s got my vote. I guess it matters most in the primary ’round here though– Massachussets went 70% for Gore in the last election.

Conservatives, Cranks, etc.

Note from a former conservative about his change of heart and the neocon kleptocracy.

Now, I don’t want to sound like a crank, but the New Yorker had a great article about the redistricting system, in which it described an “unholy alliance” between various electoral groups. But really– is it an alliance between the rich and the stupid, as some suggest? Are we really moving toward fascism? Is Krugman right that we’re undermining the foundations of democracy in our own nation?

I don’t think things are all that bad, but it’s true that our voting machines are owned by Republicans. Our registration systems are owned by Republicans. The districts are owned by Republicans. There oughta be a fair fight. Districting ought to create fair fights and reasonable electoral groupings… things like a neighborhood, a city, a region. Maybe not– maybe it needs to be all in squares, no matter what.