Preliminary report on the presidential campaign

So…Watched the Republican convention this week. I have long felt leanings toward the republican party, but I’ve not been inspired to pay that much attention.

Until now.

So I watched, and I was duly inspired. And then I hit the internet hard to see what other people thought. I read the columnists and the head bloggers.

And then I read the comments.

“Chris, everyone keeps saying that the candidates didn’t talk about the issues. But both McCain and Palin did bring up a bunch of issues!”

He is more jaded, having been in tune with politics for longer than I. “People hear what they want to hear. They have an issue in mind, and if the speech doesn’t mention their issue, they say ‘they’re not talking about issues!'”

Hmm…Good point.

But a speech is only so long. And everyone wants the speeches to be full of energy and dynamism. I’m sorry, but issues are not that interesting to listen to. Percentages and statistics make people go for a bathroom break.

So it’s not fair to criticize a candidate for not talking about issues in a speech. Speeches are not the medium for that.

What is?

THE WEB.

So I hit their respective websites. Oh LORD, there is a lot of information there. Both Obama and McCain have put up a ton of positions on various topics. It would take a week to sift through all these.

Knowing that the mention of a topic does not indicate a pro or con position, only that the topic deserved some attention, I made a list of what these guys listed on their websites.

These are taken from McCain’s website and Obama’s website

 Overlapping issues
Economy
Education
Energy (Energy & Environment per Obama)
Ethics (Ethics Reform per Mccain)
Healthcare
Immigration
Iraq
Rural (Agricultural Politics per Mccain)
Technology
Veterans
National Security (Defense per Obama)

Obama unique
Disability
Faith
Family
Fiscal
Foreign Policy
Homeland Security
Poverty
Rural
Service
Seniors and Social Security
Urban Policy
Women
Additional Issues

Mccain unique
Climate Change
2nd Amendment
Judicial Philosophy
Fighting Crime
Natural Heritage
Sanctity of Life
Space Program

There is good overlap, but the differences are interesting. The amount of information on these is staggering. It’s a LOT of reading, and I am somewhat ashamed of neglecting my duty as a citizen because I didn’t start researching this sooner.

The “Faith” issue on Obama’s side was interesting, so I clicked on that. Disappointing. 2 quotes from other people about the importance of a speech he gave, and then a YouTube of the speech.

I believe this is atypical of Obama’s entries, though.

McCain’s National Heritage this was also intrigueing, since Chris and I just got back from Yosemite National Park. He and I want to visit all the National parks in our life together. McCain says he thinks national parks are important, and he also brought up Fish&Game as a tool for conservation. Wetlands and Open Space are something he wants to preserve. Nice.

And the Space Program! Mccain specifically mentioned the Space Program! Exciting, since I will never forget the year I worked for NASA.  McCain is pro space program. For two purposes: advancing reseatch and to keep national pride. huh. I wouldn’t have been so sentimental about national pride, but perhaps as a military guy, he has a keen eye for the practical usefulness of high morale. But as far as the research part, i am SO for that. Two things that came from the space program, without which our lives would be unthinkably poorer:

Microwave ovens

The internet

I started to read their respective takes on the economy, but it was complicated. That will take more time. I’ll report next week what I find.

 

 

Alaska – dinner at the Trout House (30)

The Trout House, or Windbreak Cafe, was exactly the sort of place I was hoping to have dinner. It was not a chain, like the kind I had too many where I live now.
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Pretty fancy fish, and pretty homey kind of cafe.

I hadn’t seen Ray in a very long time. I am terrible with faces, so I was a little nervous.

But Chris and I walked in, and I saw a classic computer nerd type sitting there, his back to me and his pony tail far down his back.

That was Ray.

He and his wife Sherry were there, very happy to see us, and we scooted into the chairs around the table to catch up. Of course I had to tell them about the massively long day we’d just had.

Chris, who’d never met these two, was able to chime in at various points. I’d never had a chance to get to know Sherry very well. I think the only time I her was when I crashed their wedding.

I was hanging out on the UAA campus visiting some other people that day, and someone said they had to go to his wedding. I’d known he was getting married, but I didn’t know it was that day. The two guys (another friend from that first year of college and a guy who happened to have been my neighbor in Wasilla) encouraged me to come even though I’d not been invited.

It was a great party. They were very happy and I was welcome to take part of it.

Anyway, Sherry (by reputation) was super cool. Getting her PhD in English Literature, which is way cool to begin with, and in addition, Ray had never said a single negative thing about her ever. That’s got to be a very good sign.

She was a smart and charming as my expectations had led me to believe.

We talked about the changes that had happened. All the stores and restaurants there. The demolishing of the mall, which I regretted. And the installtion of more stoplights and–god forbid!–overpasses.

“It’s starting to look like Los Angeles!” Sherry said.

Before I could visibly roll my eyes at such incongruous comparison, Ray told us that Sherry had done her undergrad work at UC Riverside. So she actually DID know a little about what LA looked like.

The difference was stark to me. But if you equate overpasses with LA, that’s not far from the truth. And when Wasilla (the Mat-Su Valley, really) goes from zero overpasses to three…..

okay…i guess…I’ll give it to you.

Ray told Chris how we’d met. “I was a nodie at the computer labs at Mat-Su college..”

I’d forgotten he was a nodie. The tech guys who answered questions at the various computer labs were called Nodies. Each computer lab was associated with a “node” and therefore the guys called themselves…oh…nevermind…it was a super nerd thing to be.

But it was hard to tell who was nodie and who was just a lab rat. I was a labrat, because of the tremendous joy that email communication brought to my soul. I didn’t know anything though. So when I had a question, I turned to whoever was handy and asked for help. That might be a more experienced labrat…or it might be a nodie…I couldn’t tell. And the nodies hung out in the lab even when they weren’t working.

I thought nodie was a very cool job. I wished I could be a nodie. I think there was one girl nodie…In Anchorage…but I knew I wasn’t good enough. They seemed all-knowing to me.

Ray went on “..and this ray of sunshine appeared in the lab.”

who, me?

I had no idea.

It was great to see Ray after so many years. He was very much the same. We were done around 9:30, settled the bill and took our leave.

The sun shone like late afternoon, and we’d had a good nap.

“Where do you want to go now?” Chris asked.

THIS was the Alaskan summer sunlight I remembered.

“Let’s go back to Hatcher’s Pass!”

DRIPPING with disdain…My town and Sarah Palin’s: Wasilla

This is why I was first horrified by Palin’s nomination. Wasilla is not a lovely town.

But hey, it IS a town, and not every town is cute. Slate has this tour of the town of my teen years.

I approve of her choice to invest in a sports complex. I believe I’ve read an enormous portion of the books lining that library’s shelves, and I love the Wasilla public library dearly. But lets be real. Wasilla has a teen population that may or may not graduate from high school. Education is not so valued in the woods.

A sports complex for the community is a lot more practical.

Oh yeah…I have a new handy catchphrase from this  post “hipster douchebag.” The post is long but worth reading.

Palin has me hooked

A choice that was intended to shake up the race did so with more ferocity than McCain ever intended. The mother of five — with one pregnant teenage daughter and an infant son with Down syndrome — has joined a parade of personalities from Anita Hill to O.J. Simpson to Monica Lewinsky to become a cultural flash point.

Um….yeah. I watched the convention last night with an intensity that I’ve never felt about any campaign before. I have never joined a party, but last night, I was ready to go join the Republican party. I know it was stagecraft, but the fact that they were trying to portray themselves as a party that is for small businesspeople and for the right of individuals to make what they want of themselves is very appealing.

THAT is what I want in a government.

So back to Palin. I’ve been researching her like mad. I am delving deep into the online archives of the Anchorage Daily News and searching blog comments just to see what people are bringing up against her.

I’ve been watching TV and listening to the radio, both sides of the middle, to see what people are saying.  There are a lot of accusations and allegations.

But what also amazes me is how wrong people are getting it. I have a good memory for weird facts sometimes. When I’m paying attention (and sometimes even when I’m not) I remember exact figures. And these reporters….getting it wrong…

For example: NO ONE has reported the same number (even rounded) for the total population of the town of Wasilla in the last week. 6,000 and 9,000 and 10,000 are all numbers I’ve heard. Get it right! How hard is that?  Wikipedia  can give you a number.

And then there is all that sexism. Wow. WOW.

I’m off the media.

The current negative rumors I know about Palin:

1. She is a member of the Alaska Independence Party (video)

2. She tried to ban books from the Wasilla Library

3. She really always has been for the Bridge to Nowhere

4. Her baby Trig is really the child of her eldest daughter

5.  She demanded that her sister’s ex-husband  be fired from his State Trooper position, and when that didn’t happen she fired the official who wouldn’t fire the trooper

6. She had an affair with her husband’s business partner (real post)

 Now, that’s what I know so far. The media seems to be rabid about consuming this fresh female meat. There will probably be more things coming out.

Thing is, I’ve looked into these things and made my peace with them. Some of them seem more serious than others. But the fact is, I have come to realize that the people who volunteer to do the hard job of holding political office are people too. And they make mistakes.

I have to be okay with that. It’s juvenile to expect perfection.

I’m still totally inspired by this woman. Not just politically, but for so many things. She gets up in teh morning and lives her life like she has a purpose.

I’d like to be more like her, and when my daughter is born, I can point to Sarh Palin as a role model.

 

 

Miss WASILLA for Vice President

Sarah Palin…I must say I was first shocked. I didnt’ think it would happen.

I knew she was under consideration.

But the more I think about it and the more I learn and listen to her…her gubernatorial acceptance speech was incredible

I AM PSYCHED!

THIS CHICK ROCKS!

So, okay. That’s the word.

More to come.

Alaska- supper (29)

I had told Ray that we would meet for dessert at 7.

At the time, I thought that we would be in our hotel and done taking a nap. I thought that we would have gotten up earlier and gone out to explore the town and have had dinner already.

Things had not turned out the way I expected.

I woke up about 6, and Chris was still fast asleep. I read some to let him keep sleeping. But I was concerned about being late. And we were supposed to eat dinner FIRST.

But Chris was tired, and still sleeping.

I woke him up at 6:30. It took a good long time to pry ourselves out of bed and get out to get over to the appointed meeting place:

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This seemed like a cool place. Naturally, it wasn’t there when I lived there.

Although the restaurant was new, the view across the highway was as familiar as the back of my hand:

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I know those mountains. They are what mean mountain to me. I live next to mountains. This is what the mountains look like near me:
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They look like they belong in the desert. Because they do. Of course, in deep and rare winters, they have snow on them, and they look like real mountains then:

2007 2008 027

That photo is from deep January, and they never look like that.

The one thing Alaska is good at, that Wasilla is really good at, is mountains.
IMG_8241

But it was time for dinner.

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Alaska – social engagement (28)

So, the one thing I had actually planned for a time on this trip was to meet a friend from college.

I’ve been talking about all the things I remember from when I lived in Alaska. And you might well imagine that there were people involved in some of these memories. But these people, on the whole, were not people I wanted to see again.

I moved (back) to Alaska with my parents when I was 11. Yes, I had been born there. And I lived there until I was 7. At that point, my parents joined a group of people who felt ‘called’ to establish a church in Humbolt County, California. So we moved down to Hippie Central, California and established a church for four years. But then, things didn’t work out, in a way that was unfortunately painful to my parents.

And their impulse, when thinking of where to hole up and lick their wounds, was Alaska. So, they packed up us kids into a VW van and drove up the Al-Can to re-establish their family in the 49th state.

Which led me to re-experience Alaska anew as an 11-year-old. And eventually led to my parents’ decision to live in the city of Alaskan strip mall, Wasilla.  And it was there that the personal tragedy of Home Schooling took hold.

However, I do remember being really really pleased with my first year of college. First semester of college, 1990, in Mat-Su Community College.

Now, I can see I was a rank Noob about the whole thing. I had found high school to be thoughtlessly easy. Yeah, I had to study, but nothing that required any more attention than I usually gave to whatever novel I was reading. And homeschool was an entirely part-time endeavor. Start at 9, done at noon.

COLLEGE, though, that was the desired and feared obstacle at the end of the prison of homeschooled high school. I had the impression that college was hard and that it was serious and that I would have to work at it. And that if I screwed up in college it would be unsalvageable. On my permanent record.

After all, not only was college work supposedly harder than anything I’d done in High School, it was also the den of Satan where I would fall into the clutches of secular humanists and Evolutionists. I had my doubts about  that, but that idea had been expounded from so many sides for so long, I couldn’t entirely dismiss it.

So, in cautious preparation, I informed my mother that I would be taking the minimum of courses the first semester. The math went like this: 12 credits was technically a full-time student for the purposes of the Pell Grant, my educational sponsor. But for the first time, I wanted to make sure I wouldn’t screw it up. I wasn’t going to go full-time. Just 9 units for me, and I would fully fund it.

“Mom, I don’t know how well I’m going to do in School. Maybe College will be really hard. I’m just going to take it easy for the first semester and only take 9 units.”

“I don’t think that’s a good idea.”

“WHY?”

and none of the answers satisfied me. I remember the classes I took:

English  (composition)

Computers

Typing

Here is me, at the start of my first college semester:
mat-su student ID

Note the tufts of curly hair sticking out of my quasi-fro. It’s as if I were a fledgling bird moulting the last baby feathers.

Just for some perspective, the next semester, barely 3 months later, I had acquired a better polish:

uaastudentid

Those were simpler times. The blurred-out section in these college IDs was where the authorities had put my social security number. The WHOLE THING!

Anyway, the first semester of college was fantastic. I learned things, I spent time around other people and life was exciting.

I honestly do not remember meeting or befriending any females at the time. You would think that typing class in particular would have been rife with possibility for female friendship. It certainly was overwhelmingly attended by women. There was only one guy in the class:

Ray

Fact was, Ray was super cool. He was simply too much fun to talk to. The females in the class terrified me. They seemed to be blonde, eyelinered, and hairsprayed within an inch of the planets ozone depletion.

And Ray was interesting, full of dry humor and snarky comments. Truly, now that I think about it, he may have been the very first guy to introduce me to my life-long preference for the companionship of smart nerdy men.

Girls I can take or leave, but put me next to a smart nerdy guy, and I’m immediately charmed.

So Ray and I hung out and talked during the breaks of typing class. And often, after class was over, we’d walk together to the computer lab. I was taking a computer class too. The computer class was definitely the most challenging class.

I wish I had worked harder at it. But the nice men in the computer lab were so helpful I left that class having turned in very little of my own work. I wanted to understand what the class was teaching, but  the guys explained the concepts by showing me how to do it, and before I knew it they had DONE the work and were saying “See?” Only I didn’t really. But the homework was done and I got an A.

Personal nerdom was yet to come.

Anyway, Ray and I kept in touch over the years through email and IMming. I hadn’t really kept in touch with anybody else from college.  So, this first night, I wanted to see Ray again face to face and catch up–holy god, EIGHTEEN YEARS after we first met.

We’d arranged to meet at the Trout House, a cafe that had not existed when I lived in Wasilla. He’d bring along his wife, and Chris would get to come too.

As long as we woke up on time.

Alaska -home sweet hotel (27)

Back to Bogard road and our hotel and pending BED.

We got in and the young lady who was running the hotel was behind. But she kindly gave us a room that was ready to be occupied instead of the one the computer had assigned us.

A key…metal and on a chain…was given to us and we entered our room rolling our bags behind us.

The room was better than I would have thought. We had a whole little kitchen, fridge, oven and all.

“Look!” I said to Chris. “We have three closets!”

“Why would you need three closets?” he wondered.

“Well, you need a place to hang your moose!”

Chris, my clean-cat husband, went to shower after the world’s longest day. I collapsed on the bed. The joy of soft horizontality seeped into my muscles and bones for a good ten minutes. Then I realized my skin needed a rest too, and I hoisted my weary bones up to find my satin jammies.

THEN, approximately 30 hours since I last slept in a bed, I fell wholly asleep.

nesting

So, I feel like cooking.

They say that pregnancy makes you feel like nesting, and that may have something to do with it. But pregnancy is a great guilt reliever when it comes to dieting or discipline with food moderation.

I get to eat! My huge hips are GOOD all of a sudden.

So, I now would like too cook all those forbidden things that I normally avoid on my usual constant diet.

Popovers!

Waffles!

Pies!

Cakes and brownies!

Perhaps I should venture into homemade macaroni and cheese. I could get really good at that in the next few months. Who DOESN”T like mac ‘n’ cheese? and for the next couple months, it is a permitted food.

But here’s the thing:

1. It’s hot

2. Our oven is broken

The oven has been temperamental since we moved in here. Mostly, we use the oven to reconstitute frozen pizza, so it hasn’t hampered our lifestyle too much. It gets in the way if we ever want to host a meal here. So, mostly we don’t.

But! I want to cook, already.

I should just call a repair man and have him fix it. I’d LOVE to have some popovers.

Alaska – lunch (26)

“So where do you want to eat?” Chris asked.

After the longest day of my life, spent mostly in the rain, all I wanted was a bowl of chicken soup. But i knew Chris would want a hamburger.

“Why don’t you get a soup from the deli here, and then meet me at the Carl’s Jr.?”

Freaky thought that Wasilla has a Carl’s Jr. But that was a good idea. He could have his hamburger and I could join him with the soup.

“Can you make it across the parking lot?” He was makign sure I was okay.

“I think so.”

So I got a big bowl full of soup and ventured across the parking lot. It was larger than it looked. But I made it there before Chris had his burger.

11:30 and we still had a half hour to go. We cooled our heels until we could finally get into the hotel.