tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-66292543738660441492024-03-08T14:39:16.172+08:00To the Orient he flew. Again.In which Dave is back in the land of palm trees and 7-11s.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.comBlogger223125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-16030396301810642942010-05-28T15:23:00.002+08:002010-05-28T15:25:41.779+08:00On leaving and returning<blockquote>Yes, I'll be back again no matter where I go<br />For it's only love that frees the fire for burning<br />Then I'll take you in my arms and tell you all I know<br />As I sing the changing song of my returning<br />-Phil Ochs<br /></blockquote><br /><br />Those of you who find my habit of opening my posts with song-quotes pretentious will be happy to hear I texted that verse to Gyle a few weeks ago, and she replied, "Are you drunk?"<br /><br />I wasn't then and I'm not now, but I suppose it's a fair question. <br /><br />I've had a lot of practice with moving. Sometimes, it's easy to leave. I was definitely ready to get out of DC in 2004, for example. I remember walking around downtown during those last few weeks and thinking the place felt like a ghost town, with all the friends I'd made there who were now long gone, and while I was more than a bit apprehensive about going to Taiwan, I wasn't sorry about what I was leaving behind. Other times, not so much. This is one of those other times. The good news: I'm only going back to America for a few months (the exact time isn't yet determined, but I'll probably be back in Singapore by Christmas). The bad news: that's still a pretty long time to be away from someone you love. Still, I've been after the boss about getting started on the US market for quite a while now, so it's great that it's finally happening. And I do love long trips, so the longest trip I've ever been on should be an interesting experience. <br /><br />But for the moment, it's the awareness that I'll be gone soon that has my attention. Singapore feels unfinished to me, everything very familiar and yet still fresh. I'm reminded of how I felt when I moved out of the student house in DC in 1998. I really thought I was ready to say goodbye to the place at the time, but in my very last days there I ended up falling in with a group of friends so tight-knit we actually had a bad reputation when it came to house parties because we slow-danced too much. Saying goodbye to that life wasn't easy, and I was only moving six blocks or so! In any case, I remember looking around the place and feeling like I still belonged there. It's a tough feeling to put into words, but I know it when I feel it and I feel it again now. Of course, I didn't know it at the time, but I did end up moving back to the student house about five months later (at least one person who had just moved in when I'd moved out recognized me thusly: "Oh, you were one of the slow-dance gang, weren't you?"), and I ended up falling in with another very close group of friends. This time, of course, I have the benefit of knowing I will be back. <br /><br />And in the meantime, my first visit to the USA in four years is of course more than welcome. There are friends I haven't seen in at least that long to catch up with, and favorite foods to indulge in that one can't get here. And I have to try to remember that I'm there to work, of course. A lot depends on how well that goes, but early signs are that it will go well. But right now, it's the reunion in December that I'm looking forward to the most!Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-67375780564756211212010-04-23T12:58:00.000+08:002010-04-23T12:59:14.713+08:00Happy AnniversaryToday marks two years at my job. Which was orignally a 6-month internship.<br /><br />I can't decide if I'm happy about this or not. When I moved to Singapore, the plan was to do this job to keep a roof over my head until I found something I really wanted to do. As I recall, I ended up looking for about two months and - after not getting a single interview - deciding I might as well stick with the one place that had given me a chance. Then a few months after that, the Wall Street meltdown happened, and I decided I not only would never get a job at a bank, I also didn't want one. <br /><br />In other words, having sworn I wouldn't just fall into something after finishing my last degree, well, that's exactly what I did. <br /><br />On the other hand, I've stayed employed over the past two years and that's something to be grateful for. I've also gotten to travel for work quite a bit, I have experience on my resume that I didn't have before, and there have been times when this job really has been a lot of fun. But as you may have guessed, the past few weeks have not been among those times. Things are slow. That could change any time, or it may not. Such is life with a startup company: 0-60 and back again in no time.<br /><br />But I guess if things were really going to fall apart, it'd have happened by now!Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-83718520112859890812010-04-15T19:20:00.003+08:002010-04-15T19:42:18.733+08:00An ordinary couple is all we'll ever be...If you know me, you won't be surprised to hear that I have always doubted I'd ever get married. And if I did, I would never, ever get down on one knee and all that jazz. No offense to those of you who like that particular ritual - that's your choice, and more power to you. But I find it mildly insulting to both sexes. If I have to make any pretense of begging, then is it even really love anyway? I've always said if the woman in question had a problem with that, then she probably wasn't right for me anyhow.<br /><br />One out of two ain't bad, in this case anyway. <br /><br />We haven't set a date and probably won't for a while. Too much is up in the air for both of us these days. But it is at least as official as can be without a date. It happened over coffee at Starbucks a couple of weekends ago. There were no fireworks. (Just what happens with big elaborate proposals in a public place when the answer is "no", anyway? I don't think we want to know!) And, as noted, no getting down on one knee. <br /><br />Now, what I love about Gyle - and why we got this far in the first place - is that she's fine with that. She wasn't expecting me to beg her for anything, she knew I wouldn't, and she's okay with that.* She's okay with having a fiance whose most romantic gesture is reciting the second verse of Bruce's <a href="http://brucespringsteen.net/songs/IWannaMarryYou.html">I Wanna Marry You</a> as one might recite a Shakespeare sonnet**, over a dinner of spaghetti and meatballs (yes, I'd had a couple of beers, courtesy of her flatmate). How could I fail to love that? <br /><br />I don't really feel any different than I did before that day at Starbucks. And I'm pretty sure that's just the way it's supposed to feel.<br /><br />*One of her predecessors once got rather upset at me because I'd collected the wrong number of Sweet & Lows for her coffee, even as she failed to notice that I didn't take it in my coffee. <br />**Another of her predecessors once asked me "Is that Jimmy Buffett, honey?" when I was realy quoting Sylvia Plath. And yeah, I know I'm probably the only person alive who could quote both of them from memory.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-30692481236234171472010-03-15T17:32:00.002+08:002010-03-15T18:01:18.419+08:00Shanghai'd!There is at least one silver lining to having no trips for six months, and that is that all the hassles of getting a visa and arranging the tickets are that much more bearable when the time finally comes around. Such was the case with the latest trip, to Shanghai. Chinese visas are expensive with a US passport, but of course that wasn't coming out of my pocket. And since I was glad to be getting out again - especially to a new-to-me country - I didn't mind the late evening flight either. <br /><br />The Shanghai airport is a lot more modern and well-kept than I was expecting. Amusingly, the international arrivals gate was marked "International-Hong Kong-Macau-Taiwan," neatly sidestepping the question of whether or not those locations are international. (I have heard some amusingly nasty stories from my Taiwanese friends about going through immigration checks in mainland China - they stamp your passport, then shove it roughly back at you and grumble "Taiwan is not a country!" I renewed my passport back in Luxembourg in early 2008, so there was no risk of my having to explain my work visas from Taiwan.) All I saw of Shanghai that first night beyond the airport was our hotel. It was a nice hotel, though!<br /><br />We had two days in Shanghai, of which only about six hours involved actual business, so there was plenty of time for sightseeing. This was complicated a bit by the fact that it was <em>very</em> cold, and remember, I haven't been to anyplace cold in two years. That was less than pleasant. But we braved the cold to visit the main shopping district, which was pleasantly busy and colorful. I got to see a lot of Shanghai from the taxi along the way, which I always enjoy. Even if it is just a drive by view, there is something really fascinating about seeing how and where people live in a place I've never visited before. Speaking of which, besides being cold, Shanghai is huge. I believe it was the biggest city in the world at one point, and it's still one of the biggest. It definitely shows from the route we took downtown! <br /><br />Like I said, the shopping district was great. Delightfully Asian, right down to the fake Rolexes for sale everywhere and the hawkers working so hard to pawn them off on every Westerner who turns up. Speaking of "Western," there seems to be a Pizza Hut on every corner. But we stuck to more authentically Chinese food, at a local eatery. Along with the fish soup I got, we also had a round of the inimitable <a href="http://ramblindave.blogspot.com/2004/05/i-almost-ate-stinky-tofu.html">stinky tofu</a> that was the bane of every Westerner's existence back in Taiwan. Since I didn't have to smell it being prepared, it turned out to be pretty good. Nice surprise! This was accompanied by Tsing-Tao, served in cans with the old fashioned pull-tabs that come all the way off - who knew those were even still made anywhere?! (It wasn't the only time I felt a bit like I'd been sent back to America circa 1975: smoking was permitted in the hotel lobby. I'm one of those lucky non-smokers who doesn't mind smoke much, but it was pretty strange to see people lighting up indoors.) <br /><br />Despite the frigid weather, it is the end of winter and cold-weather clothes were on clearance, so I got a sweater at 80% off. It came in handy for our last day in Shanghai, which was spent entirely downtown. Like Singapore and its extremely hot weather, indoor shopping centers are your friend. I had a bit too much time to kill at one such mall downtown on Wednesday, but it was a nice enough place and there was plenty of window shopping to do. I also got to visit the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oriental_Pearl_Tower">Oriental Pearl Tower</a>, probably the biggest tourist draw in Shanghai. Even from there, seeing the end of the city is tough! Quite a view, though. The weather wasn't nearly as chilly either, though I was still very happy to head south again at the end of the day. <br /><br />I look forward to the day when our company can afford business class on planes. That would have made for the perfect ending to a great trip. Sleeping in coach is always an...interesting experience. But it was great to be back on the road! There may be another trip to India in the works soon. We'll see.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-27895042939208324152010-01-29T13:25:00.002+08:002010-01-29T13:31:41.941+08:00Comments welcome, but...In response to a rude comment from an individual who doesn't even know me (and who, like most bullies, doesn't just give up if one ignores him), I have made a change to the comment policy here. From now on, all comments will be subject to my approval before they appear on the blog. I will, of course, publish all comments that are not rude or insulting to me or to anybody else. In other words, disagree with me all you like, just take the personal insults elsewhere.<br /><br />I'm sorry to have to do this. I'm even more sorry that some people think anybody who cares deeply about much of anything is "angry". I admit that I was rather naive to write about the politics of abortion and not expect to be insulted in response. That's the Internet for you. In any case, comments are still welcome and encouraged - just play nice! Thanks.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-90560696389219994012010-01-29T12:57:00.002+08:002010-01-29T13:19:44.994+08:00A poignant but amusing reflectionI'll start by quoting myself, from the last paragraph in <a href="http://ramblindave.blogspot.com/2008/06/and-now-for-something-nonpolitical-and.html">this post</a>:<br /><br /><blockquote><strong>Rachelisms</strong> - Extremely lame excuses for not doing your homework, i.e. "I meant to do my part of the group project that's due today, but there was this party I just had to go to, and I got back at 4:00." The Rachel who inspired this one was not <strong>the one I knew in DC</strong> or the one I worked with in Taiwan, so if you knew me during either of those periods, it's not who you think. Interesting, though, that I knew these three different yet like-named women in the space of less than six years and they were all incredibly irritating in one way or another. </blockquote><br /><br />Emphasis added, because today's post does concern "the one I knew in DC". I haven't been in touch with her since 1998, so I doubt she'll stumble across this, but I'll apologize in advance if any feelings are hurt. (Apolgies as well to the numerous other women I've known by that name who were wonderful people! There have been many more than three.) <br /><br />In retrospect, "incredibly irritating" is an exaggeration about Rachel-of-DC, but she certainly had trying qualities as a friend. To make a long story short, she was one of those people you think of as a good friend at one point, only to discover before long that, despite your best efforts, she really never knew you all that well. We had (and I still do have) several mutual friends who could back me up on that. In any case, one night several of us were on our way out the door for an evening out. Another of our friends said something that amused me (regrettably I can't recall what, exactly), and I responded that he was reminding me of a character in a novel. <br /><br />Then it was Rachel's turn to speak up. "Hey Dave," she asked me, "You know what novel you remind me of?" She said it in that tone of voice people tend to use when they're sure they've come up with a witty rejoinder nobody else has thought of. <br /><br />"<em>Catcher in the Rye</em>," I responded in that tone of voice people tend to use in response to what somebody else thinks is a witty rejoinder, when in reality it's anything but that.<br /><br />"Oh, you've heard that one before, have you?"<br /><br />Why yes, yes I had. I suspect anybody who has ever felt disaffected in the past 60 years or so has. Which explains both why I had heard it before, and why people like Rachel tend to be surprised that it's not an original thought. They're also the kind of people who find that book "depressing" (a matter of opinion, to be fair; but it's anything but depressing to anyone who's been in that frame of mind before) or who think it's 200 pages of "I hate everything" (which just isn't true). I will admit that nearly everything I've heard about JD Salinger's life since he wrote it <em>does</em> sound rather depressing. But I'm guessing he didn't see it that way, since it was his choice. And hey, more power to him. <br /><br />All of which is just my anecdotal way of saying "thank you and RIP".Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-38619811728408918362010-01-22T14:26:00.020+08:002010-01-22T15:50:25.218+08:00Blog for Choice DayI have to confess to having been previously unaware of this, but today is apparently the 5th annual Blog For Choice Day. (One of the perks of living on this side of the International Date Line is that you can sometimes get away with being late on these things!) In any case, the topic of the year is "What does <em>Trust women</em> mean to you?" <br /><br />For Blog For Choice Day, I can't help thinking my entry would be about the same regardless of the exact topic at hand. It would most likely start with wanting to explain why I am as staunchly pro-choice as I am; but I can't do that, because it concerns something a close friend told me once in a moment of alcohol-addled intimacy and then openly wished he hadn't told me. <br /><br />That's right, <em>he</em>, and that brings me to what would most likely come next in any case: a rather bitter refutation of my inimitible ex's belief that no man has ever - not once, since 1973 - been there for his wife or girlfriend when she was going through the sometimes-unpleasant experience of getting an abortion. (And that would likely lead to me reciting her other greatest hits, such as "all men benefit from rape". But I digress.) <br /><br />That, in turn, would lead to my addressing the difficult, but essential, point that yes, <em>sometimes</em> the decision to get an abortion is a difficult one for a woman, and <em>sometimes</em> she will experience emotional pain in addition to the physical aftereffects. That, unfortunately, is a tough one for us pro-choicers, since it creates an easy opening for antis to accuse us of contradicting ourselves regarding whether or not abortion hurts women. Here's my response, as neatly as I can put it: sometimes it does, but 1) that is not a reason to ban it; and 2) in many cases where it does hurt women, that is only because the anti-choice movement has done such a great job of stigmatizing abortion. <br /><br />At this point, any response I make is going to have to veer into an amusing-if-it-weren't-so-pathetic recital of a few of my greatest hits from when I was escorting back in DC. (Tom Paxton said it best: "Some folks you don't have to satirize, you just quote 'em".) These included a lengthy treatise on how the abortion industry creates a demand in order to line the pockets of doctors with blood (this coming from a guy who once gave me a hard enough shove that I nearly lost my balance, and I am very proud to say I didn't hit back); "Margaret Sanger supported eugenics to rid the world of African Americans" (she didn't); "They're gonna kill your little brother!" (that one was directed at a little boy who was entering the clinic with his parents and a younger sibling in a stroller; naturally the kid looked at the stroller and started to cry); "Place of murder, place of death!" (only one time the guy slipped up and said, "Place of abortion" - I nearly spat out my coffee trying not to laugh); "Who's going to take care of you in your old age if you don't have any kids?" (I still regret that I didn't have the nerve to ask that particular woman if she'd never seen or read <em>Like Water for Chocolate</em>); and of course, the songs. Yep, they made up songs on the spot. My favorite: "The fruit of abortion is war!/Nuclear war!", roughly to the tune of "Tomorrow Belongs to Me" from <em>Cabaret</em>, which if you think about it is really pretty appropriate. <br /><br />And then I would have to admit to the rare moments of actually addressing the folks across the sidewalk as if we were both human beings. It didn't happen often, but it did happen. Of course I didn't tell them my real name; but I am somewhat embarrassed to admit that I claimed my name was something extremely unusual, which of course clued the smart ones in to the fact that I was obviously lying. I did consider using my middle name and my grandmother's maiden name - that would be far off enough from the truth that I'd be in the clear - but odds are there really is an Andrew Mayforth out there somewhere and I wouldn't want to be responsible for his hate mail. If I really wanted to get under their skin, I guess I should have told them something very Christian, like Peter. Oh well. (You'll notice I don't repeat the name here that I gave them. Call me paranoid if you like, but remember George Tiller.) In any case, there were times when we actually agreed to disagree, and even a time or two when we could joke about things like the weather. One really cold and rainy day, we joked that God was obviously on somebody's side, but which? Once just before Christmas, the antis sang "We Wish You a Merry Christmas". <br /><br />But such moments of levity were few and far between. Why? Ignorance. On their part. And that's where I'll finally get around to the question of trust. <br /><br />You see, there were two distinct types of antis. First, there were the ones who just stood on the sidewalk and prayed. They were mostly college students. We called them "the long skirt brigade," in reference to the way most of the women (and I use that term loosely - they were <em>very</em> young) dressed, no matter how cold it was. I could have done without the part they played in making patients feel guilty (or at least trying to), but at least they stayed out of the way. Then there was the other type, the aggressive ones. The ones who got in the patients' faces and yelled and screamed and waved disgusting signs and did everything they could to make a visit to the clinic as miserable as they could. <br /><br />What does that have to do with trusting women? Well, obviously, they didn't. And that their mistrust seemed to be linked to ignorance - ignorance both of what Planned Parenthood actually did, and what the patients were there for. Many of them believed - really and truly believed - that PP encouraged abortion, didn't even mention adoption as an option, and offered no other services. There were patients who were there for services that had nothing to do with abortion (exams, pills, etc.), but they made no distinction. They never even stopped to think about it. If we bothered pointing out that there were other services available, well, we were still supporting an institution that supported abortion, and they didn't approve of contraception anyway. <br /><br />And that's because they didn't trust women. (Or men either, but that's another rant.) As one anti calmly explained to me once, his beef with us was that we didn't tell the patients about adoption on our way to the clinic. How arrogant, you're probably thinking; and so did I. Out loud. His response: "Adoption isn't mentioned much as an option, and I think you're arrogant for not mentioning it!"<br /><br />The sheer stupidity of that comment was one of the things that kept me getting up at 7:00 on Saturday mornings for two years to go to the clinic. But it could be discouraging, too, when you realized that was the level of ignorance we were dealing with. They thought trusting women with their own bodies was "arrogant". How on earth do you even rationalize that? How do you put up with that week after week, along with the nasty pictures and slogans and female antis who were born long after Roe v Wade and thus don't even know what they'd be in for if they got their way? <br /><br />Well - and this would be where the big climax comes if I were writing a movie screenplay or something - the answer didn't just come to me. It's a real incident that happened one Saturday morning. One of my fellow escorts was a grad student in women's health policy (or maybe the official title of the program was just "women's health"; I forget), and she told me about it during a lull in visits. Remember the Long Skirt Brigade from several paragraphs ago? Later on that morning, while my fellow escort and I were still chatting, two of them came over to us. <br /><br />"Excuse me," one of them asked. "Did I hear you say you were studying women's health?"<br /><br />"Yes."<br /><br />"How come?" <br /><br />"To fight back against people like you, frankly," my friend said. <br /><br />The girl laughed, surprisingly politely, and went on to ask my friend what she knew about polycystic ovarian syndrome. It turned out she had several symptoms of PCOS (unexplained weight gain, irregular periods, etc) and hadn't been able to get any help for it because...well, because she lived in a world that doesn't have a place for addressing women's health problems. My friend answered her questions as best she could, and made some recommendations for how to get help. And then they were off to return to their very conservative Christian college out in Virginia somewhere, where she probably wouldn't have access to a doctor who could or would help her. <br /><br />That is what "trust women" means to me. We were (and back in the States, others still are) fighting a battle that features almost constant hate and ugliness and occasionally results in somebody getting shot, but every now and then, a young woman figures out that she needs to cross the line for her own good. Why? Because we trust women, and they don't. <br /><br />(A big shout out here to anyone from WACDTF if you happen to read this. Give my regards to 16th Street!)Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-72570711545902077462010-01-20T16:24:00.003+08:002010-01-20T16:40:34.622+08:00Not quite the solution I was looking forDo you ever get the feeling that you inadvertently caused the wrong solution to the right problem?<br /><br />Allow me to explain. Singapore has a lot of great restaurants, but for reasons I haven't quite been able to figure out, service here is the worst of any major city I've ever been to, consistently. I've thought of a number of possible explanations - it's an extension of the local culture where people tend to act like robots and not pay much attention to anybody else; some wait staff are nervous about using their English with a native; I moved here from Paris and that's an impossible act to follow - but really, it's anybody's guess why. In any case, I've never experienced more cases of waiters hearing something other than what I really ordered (as I discussed <a href="http://ramblindave.blogspot.com/2009/05/minor-complaints.html">here</a>, or waiting on some people before others who've been waiting longer, or just plain ignoring hungry patrons. Along the way, I have also discovered that "Are you ready to order?" and "Have you already ordered?" sound just about the same with a Singaporean accent. I do know one unlucky waiter who will never make that mistake again after he asked me the latter and I heard the former and answered "yes". When he walked away, I got up and followed him and made very clear what I had heard! <br /><br />But I digress. Among the numerous "good food, bad service" experiences I've had was a bratwurst place here. If you know me well, you're probably thinking I don't like bratwurst at all. And you're right, I don't. But this place also has - or at least <em>had</em> - the best pancakes in Singapore, as I discovered one morning when I was at that particular mall waiting for some store to open. Since the pancakes were terrific and that's hard to find in Singapore, I made a note to come back and have them again next time. <br /><br />And I tried to. Oh, how I tried to. <br /><br />But on my return visit, I placed my order, paid for it and went back into the seating area and waited. And waited. And waited. After about ten minutes, some other people turned up in the dining area. Ten minutes or so after that, their food came. Mine still hadn't. I asked the waiter where my food was, and he said he'd check on it. A few minutes later, he returned and said it would be out shortly. Around that time another party came in. We're now talking at least fifteen minutes after I had arrived. Next time I saw the waiter, he had their food. He once again said my pancakes were on the way. That was the last straw: I got up and went back up front, and politely asked for my money back. I got it, with apologies. That at least was nice. This is one of those places where you can see the grill right by the register, and - you guessed it - they had just poured my pancakes on the grill, after having served everybody else first! The sad thing was, I wasn't surprised. <br /><br />This is where the wrong solution comes in. Last week, I had occasion to walk by the place again, and I happened to glimpse the menu. Something wasn't quite right, so I stopped and read the whole thing. Sure enough, I hadn't misread it or overlooked anything. <br /><br />They no longer carry pancakes. <br /><br />Well, that's <em>one</em> way to avoid repeating a mistake, I guess. But it doesn't really get to the root of the problem, does it?Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-74503143790855220432010-01-20T16:17:00.003+08:002010-01-20T16:23:51.781+08:00Sorry, TeddyHere's a little something I posted on Daily Kos a few days ago:<br /><br /><blockquote>I have explained elsewhere that if I lived in Massachusetts, I wouldn't be able to bring myself to vote for Coakley. Does that mean I would vote for Brown despite his being a bigot and a shill for the insurance industry? I hope not, but...well, let's just say I'm very grateful I don't vote in the Bay State at this point.<br /><br />That said, win or lose, I'm already sick and tired of the argument that health care reform depends on this particular seat. If Brown wins (or, more accurately speaking, if Coakley loses), then the Republicans will have picked up one seat, which will be the least senior seat in the upper chamber, and they will be highly unlikely to retain it in 2012, and they'll know it. The Dems will still have 59 seats, and Harry Reid will still be making Mister Rogers look like Malcolm X when it comes to strong leadership, and Obama will still be putting way, way, way too much emphasis on achieving bipartisan consensus with a party that has no real interest in such things. That will be the reason why health care reform fails again if it does, not because the Dems nominated the wrong person to hold the Massachusetts seat, still leaving them with the biggest majority either party has had since 1978.<br /></blockquote><br /><br />My opinion hasn't changed a bit, except perhaps that Brown's extremely tasteless comment regarding what he'd like to do to Coakley with a curling iron would probably have guaranteed that I'd have voted for Snoopy if I lived in MA. I don't support him any more than I supported Coakley, and I sincerely hope he loses in 2012, but I'm not at all sorry we won't have to explain away having a senator on our side of the aisle who doesn't seem to have any qualms about destroying innocent people's lives for political gain.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-71710041695077957412010-01-15T15:41:00.003+08:002010-01-16T10:46:47.752+08:00"American Thinker" article on Martha CoakleyIf you or someone you know votes in Massachusetts, <a href="http://www.americanthinker.com/2010/01/something_about_martha.html">please read this</a> before you vote in the Senate election, and please think long and hard about the fact that even I would vote Republican in this case.<br /><br />Yes, American Thinker is a conservative site. Yes, I noticed the insulting use of "Democrat" where it should be "Democratic" and the gratuitous swipe at Barney Frank (what I wouldn't give for him to run for Senate, by the way), and the rather odd comment about Louise Woodward that seems to conclude that she was guilty. But unfortunately, it gets most of the facts right. The seat will be up again in 2012, and if Brown wins, he'd probably lose next time to just about any other Democrat. If Coakley wins, as the article says, she'll probably be senator for life. And we are talking about someone who has no qualms about destroying innocent lives for her political gain. <br /><br />Speaking of which, the 1980s daycare sex abuse witch-hunt has always been a favorite target of the "men's rights" crowd, partially because Janet Reno was behind one of the false convictions and partially because they always blame feminists when an innocent man goes to prison, as many did in this case. (A certain ex-girlfriend of mine - those of you who know me personally don't need a clue as to which one - actually told me once that a few false convictions were perfectly acceptable it it meant keeping women and girls safe from the bad guys. She probably didn't really <strong>mean</strong> to say it, but she did say it.) As I always say when this topic comes up, don't fall into the trap of guilt by association here. Smoking isn't good for you just because Hitler didn't do it, after all. Having a female senator who built her career on false convictions would only hurt our credibility against the "men's rights" crowd, if it comes to that. <br /><br />Incidentally, one thing in that article really jumps out at me: "Periodic internet polls in Massachusetts show that more than two-thirds of the respondents think the Amirault family was unjustly prosecuted and convicted." When I first started following the Amirault case back in 1998 (I worked for a polling firm whose clients included Scott Harshbarger, who helped railroad the Amiraults and then ran unsuccessfully for governor), polls showed quite the opposite. Of course, Harshbarger lost that year, and Tom Reilly (who also had his finger in the case) managed to lose to Mitt "Divorce is mandatory in France" Romney for governor in 2002, so maybe there is hope. <strong>[CORRECTION:</strong> Reilly ran in 2006, not 2002, and he lost the Democratic primary to Deval Patrick. Thank God.]Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-32411116989723230052009-12-14T13:54:00.002+08:002009-12-14T14:03:08.822+08:00The mother of all business trips, or As long as I'm moving...Friday afternoon saw the latest of a series of altercations with the boss regarding why we weren't making more of an impact. I told him for the umpteenth time that he really needed to start taking the US market more seriously, since breaking through there will give us the resources to hit the ground running in almost any other country (and we definitely don't have that yet). This time, though, he listened. I'm not sure why I got through to him this time where I was never able to before, but I did. <br /><br />He agreed with me. And then he asked me to write up an itinerary for a two month trip to the US, starting shortly after the New Year. So, in January, it's off to San Francisco for a few weeks, then Las Vegas for a conference in February, and probably at least three other cities. I don't know which cities yet, but I could be visiting as far afield as Boston. The idea of traveling with my boss for that long isn't the most appealing thing I've heard. But for reasons that aren't important here, it would have been a big mistake for either of us to try to pull this trip off alone (and I was deeply afraid he was going to try), so dealing with him will be an acceptable price. <br /><br />Whatever the drawbacks, San Francisco is one of my favorite cities, I've never been to Las Vegas, and I haven't been "home" in over three years. So this was quite the early Christmas present. Stay tuned for more details.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-11139718879094079662009-12-09T18:01:00.002+08:002009-12-09T18:22:58.188+08:00Just what are the Christmas-in-the-tropics blues?Since I got in a bit of trouble on Facebook for saying I had "the Christmas in the tropics blues" (and I truly am sorry I made my friends in Denver read that!), perhaps I should elaborate a bit here. There's a limit to how much I can do so without betraying some personal confidences, so I'll have to be circumspect. Here goes.<br /><br />I like Singapore, and I like my job. In this economy, I like just having a job at all, if it comes to that, but for the most part I really do like my job in its own right. But sometimes a job can't help but make you feel rather blah, and I've been working my way through a case of that this week. (I was quite sick the week before that, so that probably has something to do with it.) And yes, while a 30 degree C/90 degree F December is a hard thing for a guy whose other homes have included New Hampshire, Iowa, Colorado and Northern Europe to wrap his mind around, I'd rather cope with the weather here than in any of those places at the moment. My best wishes go out to those who are there now! <br /><br />Here's where the circumspection (is that a word? it should be) comes in. Since I finished Part I of my novel last week, I finally got to work on Part II this week and it's off to a great start. But I wrote a really good line the other night that made for a rather stark revelation for me. It was something a lead character said about some of the choices he's made in his work- and personal-life, and after getting it down on paper I realized I was really thinking of myself. It made me think about my job and how things have gone in Singapore and certain decisions I've made since I've been here and the results thereof. And yes, it triggered a rather bad case of the blues. When I first came here, I wasn't at all sure I'd be here long, and if I had to guess as to whether or not I'd be at this company beyond the six month internship I had initially, I'd have guessed no. <br /><br />But here I still am. For the most part, that's been all for the better. As I noted over a year ago, I'm <a href="http://ramblindave.blogspot.com/2008/09/look-out-you-might-get-what-youre-after.html">a lot better off here</a> than I'd have been at most other places I might have ended up working. The company has grown quite a bit, and things are looking very positive. Logically, I know this was about the best outcome that could have happened compared to the other places I looked into moving to. <br /><br />Of course, not all in life is logical. I have always liked Singapore and I still do, but the place can be a bit oppressive in how businesslike and button-down it is, and it's also awfully remote from most of the people I care about. That has had its share of costs, and this week I accidentally brought a reminder of that upon myself when my art imitated my life. More than anything, I wish at some point I could have my career follow my life instead of the other way around. I guess there's no reason why that can't happen at some point down the road, of course. This too shall pass.<br /><br />Yeah, I know this is one of the more self-indulgent posts I've ever put up here, and that it's also rather cryptic. Sorry about that. I just had to write it down for my own sanity at this point. And somewhat surprisingly, I do feel better!Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-83936194099486727712009-12-08T13:54:00.002+08:002009-12-08T14:06:50.680+08:00Bess Lomax Hawes, RIP...and who knew?!I'm sad to hear Bess Lomax Hawes <a href="http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/obituaries/articles/2009/12/01/bess_l_hawes_folklorist_co_wrote_the_mta/?s_campaign=8315">died last week</a> (I've been sick and also busy with other things, and hadn't kept up with the news), though I have to confess I'm a bit surprised she was still alive. Now, I know who she was, since her family is just as important to folk music as the Kennedys are to politics and because she was a member of The Almanac Singers. (That picture on the obituary, incidentally, is the only picture of them I have ever seen. It pops up every time they are mentioned. You'd think there must be at least one other one out there somewhere.) But somehow, I had no idea she wrote "Charlie on the MTA". <br /><br />Actually, I had no idea anybody wrote it, if you will. I thought I read somewhere that the original version was a wire recording by an unknown male singer sometime in the 1940s. I suppose that could be true, actually, and the account I read simply didn't bother to mention that not only was the song's authorship known even if the singer of the earliest known recording wasn't, but that said author was a member of one of the most important families in American music. Strange omission, though. <br /><br />I did know that she lived in Topanga Canyon back before it was taken over by rock stars (or even before there was such a thing as a rock star), because I've read about Woody Guthrie staying at her house on his last trip across the country, after he'd already been committed once. She apparently cut his visit short because of his habit of lounging around the backyard naked when she had little kids. How much more hip could a person be in the early fifties, huh? <br /><br />Anyhow. There are a number of people I really admire for living a truly full life even if they never become household names, and she was one already. How strange that I didn't know that key part of her life story, though!Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-81504832733865547242009-11-08T12:14:00.002+08:002009-11-08T12:17:27.637+08:00Every now and then, petitions do pay off...<a href="http://www.feministing.com/archives/018745.html">Emma Thompson will remove her name from Polanski petition</a>, and good for her! Already one of my favorite actresses...although my appreciation is tempered by the fact that she had to be talked into it. Still, great news.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-65457465265425579172009-11-06T11:41:00.002+08:002009-11-06T12:02:30.930+08:00Oh, and the elections?<a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/05/opinion/05collins.html?_r=1&ref=opinion">Gail Collins nailed it</a>. I don't have much else to add.<br /><br />I will say that I'm less than delighted with Bill Owens winning in NY-23. He's anti-choice and uncertain at best on gay rights (the official Republican nominee was actually better on both issues), and we really don't need another Democrat like that in the House. Besides that, the whole thing did start with Obama nominating a Republican to be Secretary of the Army, which is a wonderful way to reinforce the already-widespread mentality that Democrats just aren't capable of handling national defense. But at least Owens is a dependable vote on health care, and I can't deny the symbolic value of picking up a seat that includes territory last represented by a Democrat when Ulysses Grant was president, not to mention that the Republicans are now down to two districts out of 29 in New York. It wasn't that long ago that they had almost all the districts outside NYC. That brings the total Republican share of the Northeast House delegation down to 16 out of 92 if I've counted correctly. Has the mainstream media stopped clucking about how Democrats can't win in the South yet?Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-70729257308183270562009-11-06T11:26:00.002+08:002009-11-06T11:38:01.752+08:00Work updates, and an invitationI do try to keep this blog focused on my personal life (stop that laughing - travel, politics, music and occasional angst about stuff in general...that <em>is</em> my personal life), but, well, there hasn't been much of one lately, as work has been quite hectic. No complaints there, given how hard it is to find a job these days. In any case, that, coupled with the fact that my job involves spreading the word about my company's services all over the world, has gotten me thinking I should put out a plug for those services here. <br /><br />You'll notice I don't mention the company by name. Although I probably wouldn't get in any trouble for naming it here, I do want this to remain mostly a personal-issues blog, so I'd rather it not turn up on a Google search of the company name. But I can and will <a href="http://www.yarraa.com">link to it here</a>. I'd like to encourage everybody to create an account for yourselves. It is free for consumers, with no hidden costs whatsoever, and you can start saving information about your purchases (such as date of purchase, warranty expiration dates, and even saving a copy of the receipt) right away. At participating stores, they'll enter the information for you at point of sale and even register the warranty online. Odds are there are no participating stores where you are unless you live in Singapore; but if I do my job, there will be soon. Now is a great time to get in on the ground floor. <br /><br />Note we also maintain a <a href="http://blog.yarraa.com/yarraablog/">blog</a>, on which almost all the recent updates are from me, so you can see I haven't been as silent as you think on the web lately! We are <a href="http://twitter.com/YarraaAfterSale">also on Twitter</a>, and yes, all the tweets so far are from me. I hope you'll give us a try, wherever you are, as we will be reaching out to retailers near you shortly. (Next stop, the US beginning in December - I might even get a trip to San Francisco out of it, which you will of course read about here!)Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-36640704943448594192009-10-29T14:52:00.002+08:002009-10-29T14:53:57.018+08:00It's October 29...and Starbucks has its Christmas drinks out. <br /><br />I'm rejoicing at the availability of Peppermint Latte once again, of course. But still, it's not even November yet!<br /><br />It did give me a good idea for a marketing gimmick for the company. I'm going to see about setting up a registration drive at my favorite mall in the near future.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-23612458857084647262009-10-26T10:40:00.003+08:002009-10-26T10:46:19.062+08:00"Bowling" for the right to call it thatIn these lean economic times, bowling is my one extravagance. Maybe I shouldn't really call it an extravagance, actually, as it's pretty cheap compared to most other ways I could be spending my spare time. But it feels like an extravagance for whatever reason. And I <span style="font-style:italic;">will</span> bowl a 150 one of these days...but I digress. <br /><br />The last time I went bowling, there was a party of three in the next lane. University students, I think. And they were bowling very, very badly. I'm not talking about people who are just learning how to bowl and are still hitting a lot of gutter balls (that still happens to me more often than I'd like!). They weren't even really trying. They were just tossing the balls every which way and not even always rolling them hard enough to make it all the way to the end of the lane. (Yep, just like Mr. Burns.) They did seem to be having a good time, so more power to them. But I do wonder why anybody would spend money on something like that!Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-50360822361797107582009-10-15T17:09:00.002+08:002009-10-15T17:19:26.048+08:00Halloween isn't the only scary day in OctoberThe <strong>good</strong> news about October thus far:<br />1. My work visa, which was set to expire in November, was renewed for two years. There was no reason to expect that wouldn't happen, but still, that it did is obviously good news. <br />2. I may have scored a big investment in our company. Last Friday we were one of five startup companies who were invited to address a meeting of a local investors' group. (The group claims we were chosen from a few hundred applicants - sounds like an exaggeration to me, but why should I argue the point?) Each company rep was invited to give a ten-minute presentation to the group, after which we left the room for half an hour or so before being invited back for lunch. At lunch, the event organizers notified us as to whether or not any investors were interested in us, and if so, we could expect to hear from them in the next two weeks. This time around, only two of the five companies got any interest from any of the investors - and we were one of them. <br /><br />The <strong>bad</strong> news: the boss has been on a tear about something or other, and has been really ungrateful for all that has gone well as a result. I don't know just what he's upset about (I do have my theories, but it wouldn't be appropriate to post the details here), but it has made for a very unpleasant week when we should have been celebrating a job well done. The other day he actually accused me of "forgetting" to include certain information in our presentation to the investors, when in fact I had deliberately omitted it <strong>because the organizers had told me the investors wouldn't consider it relevant</strong>, meaning it would have been a waste of time. We had ten minutes, period, so it made no sense to include anything I was specifically told I didn't need!<br /><br />I explained this in what I believed was a reasonably diplomatic manner, considering how absurd his complaint was. Believe it not, his response was that "the other presenters" did include the information he had referred to. <br /><br />That's right, they did.<br /><br />Of course, they did not get any positive responses from the investors. <br /><br />We did.<br /><br />But I should have done a presentation more like theirs. <br /><br />Even Dilbert can't touch that. Geez.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-80130899215151512972009-10-12T09:30:00.002+08:002009-10-12T09:33:28.775+08:00The nobel prize<a href="http://cagle.com/working/091009/bagley.jpg">See here</a> for my favorite reaction so far. <br /><br />Since there is no Jimmy Carter or Nelson Mandela waiting in the wings this year, that reason sounds as good as any to me.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-13105874706943783792009-10-05T09:41:00.003+08:002009-10-05T09:47:17.113+08:00Generation gaps within a generationI'm used to making music-references that go over the heads of people my own age. (The all time champ was the time in France when a friend came to a party with a painted-on mole on her face..."Just like Cindy Crawford," she explained. "Yeah," I replied, "and Peggy Lee had one too." Of course, nobody else in the room knew who Peggy Lee was.) But for some reason, I never see them coming, no matter how many times things like that have happened in the past. <br /><br />So was I reminded yesterday while Gyle and I were waiting in a taxi queue outside a mall. After we'd been waiting a few minutes - which can seem a lot longer when you're outside on a Singapore afternoon and you want to go home - she commented on the cab shortage by singing. "Where have all the taxis gone...you know that song?" <br /><br />I replied that I did, but it sounded to me like she didn't have the tune quite right. It took a few minutes of comparing notes before I figured out that I was thinking of "Where Have All the Flowers Gone?" and she was thinking of "Where Have All the Cowboys Gone?" Oops.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-53689297649144730572009-09-25T14:27:00.004+08:002009-09-25T14:38:14.777+08:00LIQUOR RUINS COUNTRY, FAMILY AND LIFE<blockquote><em>Well I've been walking through this country<br />And my eyes are open wide<br />And the things I've seen and heard<br />You couldn't imagine them if you tried</em><br />-Tom Paxton, "A Rumblin' in the Land"</blockquote><br />If I am ever involved in making a movie that involves a high-speed car chase, I have decided I want my stunt drivers to be from India. Having witnessed the trifecta of Boston, Paris and Kuala Lumpur, I thought I was inoculated against shock at crazy drivers. But you ain’t seen nothing, my friend, until you’ve driven through Chennai. All the sightings of entire families on a scooter that used to frighten me in Taiwan? At least in Taiwan they all wore helmets and they didn’t take newborns on the scooters with them, with the mothers holding them while riding side-saddle. Unbelievable.<br /><br />As if to drive the point home, on one of numerous trips with the drivers my boss hired for our stay in Chennai, I actually got laughed at for fastening my seatbelt. That, of course, just strengthened my resolve to buckle up. Either life is cheap here or everybody is a much better driver than it appears. Trucks share the road with barefoot pedestrians and nobody even blinks an eye.<br /><br />By now you may have even guessed, if I were to describe Chennai in one word, it would be crowded. Very crowded. That’s not really a surprise, if you know anything about India, but you have to see it to really appreciate just how crowded it is. Definitely an eye-opener to any Westerner who hasn’t experienced the place before. If I ever bother with the Foreign Service Examination again (extremely unlikely, by the way), the experience I gained on this trip will be invaluable. <br /><br />Before I delve further into my trip to India (my first), I feel I should add a disclaimer here. I have a long history of making people think I was miserable with certain experiences that I actually enjoyed quite a bit. I think this is partially because I don’t shy away from sharing the bad as well as the good (especially on trips like this that were not for pleasure anyway), and partially because some people just don’t get that there is a lot of gray area between love and hate. Lest I sound like I’m blaming it entirely on others, though, I’ve run into this issue enough times to know that I sometimes come across as sounding gloomy when I don’t mean to. So rest assured that regardless of what you might think after reading the following, I didn’t hate India. Far from it. <br /><br />That said, Chennai is a <em>very</em> poor and crowded city. I saw an awful lot of people living and working in conditions most North Americans and Europeans (and most Singaporeans for that matter) could fathom if they wanted to, and they probably wouldn't want to. Anybody who goes to a place like Chennai and sees only nice things is probably not someone you would want to associate with, to put it bluntly. Although all our meetings were conducted in a clean and modern convention centre (and they went well enough), everything I saw from the car on the way to and from the hotel and the airport was, well, educational. That’s the most diplomatic word I can think of. Chennai is run down and badly overcrowded, and you definitely know you’re in the developing world. <br /><br />But that’s where the definitely not-gloomy part of the story comes in. As is the case with most poor places (and I really don’t know why this is the case, but it usually is), the people there are remarkably nice. I noticed this on the one and only night the boss and I and our two local escorts went out to eat at a local eatery, the quintessentially Indian type of place where you eat with your right hand – sopping up the beans and sauces up off a banana leaf with vegetable bread – and keep your left hand under the table. That took some getting used to, but I was pleasantly surprised at the locals’ reaction to having a foreigner in their midst. (The boss is originally from India, though he’s now a Singaporean citizen, so I was the only one.) They treated me exactly as any other, except that they spoke to me in English (if they addressed me at all). Back in Taiwan, eating at a place like that always got a lot of attention, though I didn’t mind most of the time, and even in Singapore it sometimes does, even though there are a lot of white people here. Not in Chennai, surprisingly. We had apples for dessert, and I finished mine in the car back to the hotel. When I was finished, I held onto the core until we got back and I could dispose of it in a trash can. Our driver laughed at this (good-naturedly, to be fair) and told me I should have just rolled the window down and tossed the core out. “This isn’t Singapore or America,” he said, “You are in INDIA!” Yes, he was probably joking – but the roadsides in Chennai do in fact look like somebody’s wastebasket. Draw your own conclusions!<br /><br />Another perk of staying in a city like Chennai is that you pretty much have to stay at a high-end hotel, since it’s either that or a flophouse. So I ate like royalty for all four days there, and had pleasant surroundings for the downtime between meetings. I finally got some work done on my novel for the first time in far too long, too. I love expense accounts. <br /><br />The trip also brought me to Bangalore, and I was prepared for more of the same. I was pleasantly surprised, though. Starting with the spare but clean airport, Bangalore proved to be a lot more modernized and affluent than Chennai (though you still definitely know what country you’re in). Fortunately, this did not make the people I met any less pleasant to deal with, and the food was just as good. There is, of course, not a lot I can say about the meetings in public except that they went pretty well. There wasn’t a lot of time for playing tourist here either, but the guy I was meeting with did make time for a night on the town for the both of us. Sports bars look pretty much the same wherever you go. The more exotic type of bars do not. At one point in the evening we found ourselves in a swanky looking place with the tables and chairs lined up against one wall. On the other side of the room were lined up, well, a dozen or so young women in traditional Indian garb who stood there and smiled at you until and unless you pulled out a wad of rupees. In that event, the one you flashed the bills at would come over and talk to you for a few minutes. Think of it as chaste prostitution, I guess. No, of course I did not partake of this, but my business contact did. It definitely made for a good scene for a story, anyhow. <br /><br />The business I was there to attend to was concluded by midafternoon on the last day, but my plane didn’t take off until quite late. That left about six hours to kill, and my contact took it upon himself to fill those with a tour of the local shopping mall (pretty lame by Singaporean standards, but hey, it’s a mall) and a welcome dinner...and, somewhat oddly from my perspective, a visit to his home to meet his family. One of those odd but pleasant cultural differences, I guess, and I am always curious about where and how people in the cities I visit actually live. It beat languishing at the airport all evening. <br /><br />If I’ve counted correctly, I believe India is the 24th country I have been to. Not bad considering the number was three (USA, Canada and Denmark) just six years ago. And it had some of the best food of the bunch thus far! <br /><br />Oh, and the rather discouraging title of this post? It was posted outside the hotel bar in Chennai, engraved on a plaque along with the bar’s license number and its opening hours. As an American, I found this perversely refreshing: my country isn’t the only one whose religious right has ridiculous pull in the government after all. The guys I asked about it in Bangalore had a similar reaction; they said their part of India was much more tolerant.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-69995387584496587502009-09-24T14:27:00.002+08:002009-09-24T14:30:08.242+08:00Sail on, Mary Travers!(I actually wrote this the day after she died, but haven't had the time to post it until now, hence the slightly out-of-date comments in the last paragraph.)<br /><br /><br />I knew this day was coming the last time I saw Peter, Paul and Mary on television, which would be about three years ago. That didn’t make the news any less sad when I heard it, of course.<br /><br />Some of my very earliest memories are of my dad singing me to sleep with “500 Miles” when I was a little kid. Nearly three decades later, I overheard one of my kids in Taiwan singing it. That shows how universal her music was, I suppose. There were plenty of other memories along the way, such as long debates with friends over whether or not “Puff the Magic Dragon” was about marijuana (it isn’t), and listening to then-new <em>LifeLines</em> all the time just before and after I graduated from college. The sentiment of “I could no more stop dreaming/than I could make them all come true” was all too fitting for that first leap out into the real world, which saw a lot of dreams go bust for over a year before I got on my feet. <br /><br />With that bittersweet memory in mind, I cued up my favorite tracks from <em>LifeLines</em> and <em>No Easy Walk to Freedom</em> last night at the hawker center to accompany my roast duck and Carlsberg. It’s a good thing I was in public, or “I’d Rather Be in Love” probably would have had me bawling. <br /><br />Thanks for the memories, Mary, and “don’t let the light go out”!Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-53704567348673324592009-08-11T09:57:00.003+08:002009-08-11T09:59:59.464+08:00Teh Stoopid! It burns!"Keep your government hands off my Medicare" is an oldie but a goodie...but is it the dumbest soundbite yet in the health care debate? <a href="http://www.ibdeditorials.com/IBDArticles.aspx?id=333933006516877">Not even close.</a> I give to you: <br /><br /><blockquote>People such as scientist Stephen Hawking wouldn't have a chance in the U.K., where the National Health Service would say the life of this brilliant man, because of his physical handicaps, is essentially worthless. </blockquote><br /><br />Words fail me.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6629254373866044149.post-21623891185914592072009-08-06T10:26:00.002+08:002009-08-06T10:32:39.120+08:00Worth every damn bit of sacrifice!As I discussed <a href="http://ramblindave.blogspot.com/2008/06/tale-of-epic-proportions.html">here</a> and later <a href="http://ramblindave.blogspot.com/2008/11/is-it-wrong-that-i-find-this-offensive.html">here</a>, getting my employment pass last year was a not-much-fun experience. (I'm currently awaiting word on a permanent residency application, but that's another rant and it really hasn't been that bad so far anyway.) At the time, the biggest saving grace I could find was that it was at least a lot easier than it was in France. But that really isn't saying much.<br /><br />Coming back from another trip to Malaysia yesterday, though, I was reminded that it really was worth all the hassle. Having the EP entitles me to enter Singapore through the locals-only booth, where there is usually a very short line or none at all. The memory of waiting at the immigration office for two hours and trying to explain to someone who doesn't speak English that "certificate" and "diploma" are the same thing? That fades away. One less line to stand in at the airport? That's a gift that keeps on giving!Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00994492118907522239noreply@blogger.com0