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Month: August 2009

Heat Chills

Posted on August 30, 2009 in Fact-Dropping Weather

square599Strange thing about the heat. When it passes the temperature of the human body outside, you start feeling chills. It’s like wearing a raincoat, but at the same time you feel hot.

Back in high school, we conducted an experiment that explained this. You put a pin in ice water, then touched the head to various parts of the skin. In some places you felt cold. In others nothing at all.

You have both cold receptors and warmth receptors in your skin. The interesting thing is that when you get hot enough, the cold receptors start sending messages to your brain. Hence you get heat chills.

It’s 102 F (39 C) at the moment. Even with air conditioning, I can feel the frigid blast of the heat wave coming through my window.

Nazis and Liberals

Posted on August 29, 2009 in Falsehoods History Liberals & Progressives

If Nazis were like liberals, why did they specifically oppose liberalism and democracy?

Another Version of Events at Chappaquidick

Posted on August 26, 2009 in Strange

square597I’d heard all kinds of rumors about Chappaquidick over the years. The most common one was that Mary Jo Kopeckne was pregnant so Kennedy deliberately killed her. But the strangest tale, alledgedly one step from the source, was delivered in a private message to me in an IRC chat room many years ago.

This person does not dispute that Kennedy was drunk out of his mind. So were the aides who were having a time with him. According to my source, Mary Jo Kopechne got drunk very fast and left the party early. Kennedy and another female aide got into his car and drove off. A few minutes later, they came back, laughing hard. “Can you believe it?” Kennedy said. “She was so blasted she drove the car off of the bridge.” Everyone had one good laugh and the Senator said he would deal with it in the morning.

What they didn’t know was Mary Jo Kopechne was sleeping in the back seat.

Kennedy was surprised when the police woke him to tell him that they’d found the car with the body of Kopeckne in it, but to protect his aide, he told police that he had driven the car. The name of the other aide was kept out of the report. He was, after all, a United States Senator and senators had big shoulders. Her life would be ruined if the story came out, but he would find a way to move on if they blamed him.

I can’t tell you if this story is true or not. Such tales float around the Net, carried on the lips of conspiracy theorists. But this one is unusual for two reasons: it partly exonerates the-liberal-senator-who-the-reactionaries-could-never-kill. And I only heard it whispered to me once.

Comments for this article are off. If you post any comments on it to other articles, your remarks will be deleted.

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The Secret Lives of Bloggers and their Bosses

Posted on August 21, 2009 in Privacy The InterNet

square596Among the blogging crowd I associate myself with most strongly, hiding one’s identity is almost a given. Few of us — unless our lives have already been ruined — want the world to know that we suffer from bipolar disorder. It’s the kiss of death for employers, a reason for social ostracism.

Outside the clan of the mentally ill, I confess I have had problems with those who conceal their identity. But that reticense is on the decline as I read more and more stories about people getting screwed because of things that they say on their blog. The most recent victim is Pittgirl who was fired on Thursday after abandoning her anonymity.

The obsession of employers to know everything about their employees was fiercely underlined when the City of Bozeman, Montana asked applicants to give the account names and passwords for all of their social media accounts. This kind of paranoia is only mildly unusual. The tendency for employers to sweep the web for anything employees have said online is well-established and has cost some people their jobs. I feel for any of the other Joel Saxes out there who might find co-workers giving them the evil eye because they suspect their Joel Sax to be me.

Willingly we who blog give up a piece of our privacy. It does not follow, however, that it is fair play to fire people for the things they say on their blogs (except when giving away trade secrets as stipulated in a contract) or to out them without their permission. Some of the Founding Fathers (see the Federalist Papers for example) chose to write from behind the mask of anonymity. We should respect them for who they are except when a clear and present danger to society can be demonstrated. Being someone’s boss or political representative does not suffice as clear and present danger.

For a discussion of the pitfalls of anonymity, click here.

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Destroyed by Lack of Insurance

Posted on August 17, 2009 in Bipolar Disorder Insurance

*REVISED* 8/23/2009

square595Twenty years ago, a young man was in serious difficulties. Waves of depression paralyzed him at a terrible job in a declining small business. He had difficulty sleeping at night. He had unexplainable chest pains and dizzy spells. When he went to the trailer in a warehouse that served as the personnel office, he learned that his insurance covered next to nothing. Mental health was a joke and therefore an unnecessary expense, so he could not get help for the anxiety that drove his life into goo. The mood disorder distorted his perspective: he did not believe he could find a job elsewhere.

The decade before his employment with the tiny plastic injection molding company, he had gone from job to job, never finding a place where he had health insurance. He did work, but mostly in temporary and part time jobs which didn’t offer an insurance package ((It is often said that the people who lack health insurance in this country are lazy. It’s the opposite — they often hold down more than one job to pay the bills, working hours that squeeze their hearts with stress and wear down their brains)) . His bizarre behavior sometimes cost him positions. He held on to the lousy job because, driven by his undiagnosed conditions, he believed that he could not reach for sanity. There was no money for it.

When the company finally folded after an unionization attempt, he was a nervous wreck. Using his wife’s insurance after she received a raise, he finally sought help and was diagnosed with major depression. Prozac was still not enough. He got into frequent fights on the Net, sometimes waking his wife up at impossible hours to watch them. Using his credit card, he pushed his family $40,000 in the red ((Excessive spending is a hallmark of mania)) . Video and online games were his self-medication ((I don’t believe video games make you crazy. I think they are a magnet, however, for people limping along with obsessions.)) .

Ten years later, doctors discovered a congenital heart condition and eleven years later, he was diagnosed with bipolar disorder. He held no job during this time.

I believe that the life of this young man — who was me — would have been different if he had had insurance. I know that if I could have afforded reasonable care during my twenties, I would not be a house-husband today. I could have worked. I could have taken out loans and gone back to school. But my mind was a swamp and I panicked at every thought.

The current plan proposed by a Blue Dog-Republican coalition will not guarantee insurance to all nor bring down insurance premiums. How many other lives will be wrecked by lack of insurance? Give it to them.

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Dream

Posted on August 16, 2009 in Dreams

square594I’m at the beach. There’s a deep, V-shaped trough between the actual beach and the mainland. People who sit in the trough are overcome by the waves and sometimes drown, so I scramble out of it and sit on the crest of the sand dunes. Feeling smug, I look out to sea. A gigantic blue wave forms. I can see sperm whales, pilot whales, dolphins, giant squid, and large fish being carried up by it. It smashes against the beach, covering me several feet deep in the tide. I catch my breath before it hits, though, and am able to hold it until the water subsides.

My anxiety is, strangely, minimal.

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Mystery of the Moved Monitors

Posted on August 7, 2009 in Anxiety

Yesterday morning, the void returned.

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Do Crazy People Exist for Entertainment?

Posted on August 5, 2009 in Stigma

square592There are a lot of yuckety-yuck sites around the Internet that celebrate failure among other things. They ask visitors to give a thumbs-up or a thumbs-down on submissions from readers or give them a numerical rating. I confess that I visit a few of such sites for laughs, but I was stopped cold by emails from crazy people which is dedicated to making fun of the mentally ill.

efcp follows the usual format of showing the example and then opening it up for public ridicule. A recent entry showed the letter of an obviously distressed man who used some rather creepy Star Wars metaphors to woo a woman. The comments laughed at the note or debated its authenticity, but except for me, no one raised the question of how to help the writer of the note or its recipient.

I find myself facing a puzzlement. Do I make this site part of my weekly visitations now — reminding people that mental illness is no laughing matter and needs help — or do I just write it and its goth owners off as hopeless causes?

To their credit, they did post my comment. Maybe some links to NAMI would be appropriate as well.

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Anti-Health Care Thugs

Posted on August 4, 2009 in Culture Wars Hatred Insurance

Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy

square591The name of the game is intimidation. The evidence is in: lobbyists for the health care industry are promoting disruption in an attempt to stop us from enjoying the same quality of health care insurance as is enjoyed by millions in other civiilized countries. Their goal is to prevent any kind of conversation from occurring because they know that they are losing the arguments!

What can we do? One thing is to track the lobbyists back to their lairs and hector them at every turn. Shake them up like they are shaking up elected officials. The scenes you have seen from around the country are not spontaneous: they are organized and their leaders PAID. Expose them at every turn. Demand that the media stop covering their protests. Turn the cameras back to us.

Second, use disorderly conduct laws to throw a few of these loons into jail. Let their friends in the lobbying firms pay to have them released. Enough fines might be incentive for them to stop.

And stand up for health care at every turn. Shout back. Point out that they are the victims of RACISM: the corporatists think they are a bunch of gullible hacks who will do anything they ask for nothing. When they go to the country clubs, the race-baiters and disruptors LAUGH at these white people. Remind them of that.

Remember that these people aren’t just out to stop health care: they are out to steal America after decisively losing an election. Appeal to the silent majority of whites, blacks, Asians, Latinos, men, and women to not let these hypocrites — the ones who gloated when Bush stole the 2000 election — destroy our commons, the commons of free speech and intelligent debate.

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