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Me and Sylvia at the Memorial (April 2009)

READIN

Jeremy's journal

Let us not love with words or tongue but with actions and in truth.

I John 3:18


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Sunday, June 22nd, 2008

🦋 Milestones

Sylvia is getting bigger and more independent... Yesterday evening she and Kaydi (who spent the night at our house) walked without adult accompaniment to the playground, a distance of about ¾ mile and which involves crossing several minor streets and one moderately busy one. This is (I believe) Sylvia's first time taking such a walk without a grown-up. They wanted to take Pixie along but we will see about that next time. They met some young kids there named Dahlia and Shay, and claimed to be 10-year-olds.

This morning Sylvia discovered my name could be shortened to "Germ", and that I should be from "Germany". Great... Took a walk to town with girls and dog, for to buy bagels.

posted morning of June 22nd, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about Sylvia

Saturday, June 21st, 2008

🦋 The Cave

I've really enjoyed Dr. Holbo's couple of recent posts about Plato's cave allegory, and I was happy to read today that Saramago has a novel about (or "which touches on") the allegory -- it is his The Cave, translated in 2002.

posted evening of June 21st, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about The Cave

🦋 Inspiring

I find it really inspiring to read, in the preface to McGaha's Autobiographies of Orhan Pamuk (which arrived in today's post, hooray!), that McGaha was able to acquire a working reading knowledge of Turkish in about six months time. (Past the age of 60!) Granted he was living in Istanbul at the time and learning Turkish was his primary activity; still it's enough to make me think I should really work at language learning, that it will not be fruitless if I apply myself.

Sylvia and I just took a ChinesePod lesson about "My Dog" (wǒ de xiǎo gǒu, a phrase Sylvia knew well from class) and learned how to tell Pixie to "come here" (guò lai) and "sit down" (zuò xia).

posted evening of June 21st, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about Autobiographies of Orhan Pamuk

🦋 Longing for the past

This was kind of weird: as I was reading chapter 13 of Nixonland (about the buildup to the '68 convention in Chicago), toward the end of the chapter as I was reading about how New York City discontinued the use of police call boxes after one was booby-trapped -- I just got this visceral wave of "Stupid fucking hippies, depriving me of the opportunity to live an idyllic Ozzy-and-Harriet life!"

Ahistorical, yes; and about 30 years out-of-date. I have felt many times in my life, a similar sort of nostalgia-by-proxy for the 60's -- but always with the idea that I would have run in Abbie Hoffman's circles.* This was more about a desire to be square and comfortable. Not sure quite where it came from -- it is certainly not Perlstein's agenda to advance this kind of reactionary thinking.

*I don't mean to say this kind of reactionary thinking is better than the other -- just to distinguish it from what I was thinking today. I believe it draws more on romanticism than the longing-for-the-50's I'm writing about here, for whatever that's worth.

posted evening of June 21st, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about Nixonland

Friday, June 20th, 2008

🦋 Trischka

Exciting! Banjo master Tony Trischka will be leading the July jam at Menzel Violins. Here he is in Prague last month:

posted afternoon of June 20th, 2008: Respond
➳ More posts about Fiddling

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

🦋 ChinesePod

中国
I've been very occasionally looking at the Newbie lessons on ChinesePod for the past couple of months, since A White Bear recommended the site. They seem like good lessons and easy to follow. And with Sylvia's Chinese school in recess for the summer, I thought it would be a good chance for us to practice together. So I jumped in today and bought the subscription -- hopefully I will be able to keep up with the lessons. And hopefully, Sylvia will keep being interested in practicing language with me -- we've had some fun with it over the past couple of days.

When I initially checked it out, ChinesePod was not working with Firefox, so I had been using clunky Explorer to load the lessons; but as of right now I can use Firefox, which is way faster and less error-prone.

(Note: for looking up Chinese words, I have found Pristine Lexicon most useful.)

posted evening of June 18th, 2008: Respond

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

🦋 Browser

Check it out! Firefox 3.0, brand new major version of the preferred READIN browser, is available for download.

Also there is a new Vimperator, which you will need to download for it to run with Firefox 3.

posted evening of June 17th, 2008: Respond

🦋 Racists in the Republican Party

Man oh man, look what message they're wearing at the Texas Republican Party Convention. What an awful thing.

posted afternoon of June 17th, 2008: Respond

🦋 A fine day out west

Last night, the first wedding licenses under California's new law were issued. This morning, the first Modesto couple received their license -- they are members of my parents' church, which has a long record of support for gay marriage -- in the mid-80's, Diane Darling, the first out lesbian in the UCC ministry, was the pastor there, and was married to her wife in a church ceremony.

posted afternoon of June 17th, 2008: Respond

🦋 Nixonland themes

So far (as I begin reading part 2, about the election of '68), Nixonland seems to divide roughly into:

  • History of the struggle for racial equality, and how Nixon and his conspirators used the unrest to build their party.
  • History of the Vietnam War and the anti-war movement, and how Nixon used the war as a wedge against Johnson.
  • History of and speculation about the internal workings of Nixon's various campaigns and about Nixon's personal take on his opponents.

I'm pretty familiar with the Vietnam stuff and am skimming it a bit. I have (as noted below) only a passing familiarity with the racial unrest stuff and am finding that the most interesting part of the book so far. I didn't know much at all about the internal workings of Nixon's campaigns, but I'm having pretty mixed reactions to Perlstein's speculation -- some of it seems facile, some obviously true (and unnecessary), occasionally it is insightful and useful.

posted morning of June 17th, 2008: Respond
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