An American Lion

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The Frisky Mole Boy of Groton

Norman Rogers recounts the summer he spent hiding from the stern love of his father and living as the world-famous “frisky mole boy” in the Groton, Connecticut sewer system. The Frisky Mole Boy of Groton seduced the women of the town and solved crimes, all while subsisting on a steady diet of depravity and confusion.

Rampage of the Innocents is my unfinished but brilliant Historical Romance Novel (now, with more sex and violence for my teenaged readers)

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    An American Lion

    Entries in Education (38)

    Friday
    Sep032010

    We Are Putting Too Much Emphasis on Being Slick and Perfect

    I don’t know that this is a “disaster” in that there is nothing here that speaks to the idea that Governor Jan Brewer is incompetent or incapable of governing. Some people go into a kind of vapor lock under the absurd pressure of cameras and studio lights. Some people are not slick and media savvy. This is evident in that the poor woman becomes lost in thought when trying to remember what she memorized to say.

    The fault here is not so much Brewer; the fault is on her preparation, practice and coaching for the debate. Whoever prepped her should have emphasized saying things as bullets, not from rote memory. In a debate, if you tell yourself that you MUST remember to say something as a long-winded sentence, and be perfect about it, you will look like an idiot when you go to recite or regurgitate your lines. If you know that cutting taxes will create jobs, have that bullet in your head, speak intelligently and honestly about why you think that, and know some numbers. Be ready to say, “we made specific cuts and we cut x amount of money and that helped us see an increase of about y number of jobs.”

    Slick is easy to spot. People begin to distrust the slickness they see in a debater. A perfect example of this would be the heavy-handed methods used by Al Gore when debating George W. Bush in 2000. His deep, obvious sighs were a sign that he was far superior to his opponent. That’s a value judgement that your audience should be allowed to make.

    In the case of Miss Brewer, her refusal to continue debating is a mistake:

    The Arizona Daily Star reports:

    PHOENIX - Arizona voters won’t be seeing any more debates between the top gubernatorial contenders.

    Incumbent Republican Jan Brewer said Thursday she has no intention of participating in any more events with Democrat Terry Goddard. She said the only reason she debated him on Wednesday is she had to to qualify for more than $1.7 million in public funds for her campaign.

    “I certainly will take my message in a different venue out to the people of Arizona,” she said.

    This comes after her disastrous debate performance on Wednesday, when Brewer froze during the debate.

    Never run from a weakness; always try to strengthen yourself by doing hard things.

    She should admit that she did poorly and go out there and face her opponent and the voters in as many forums as possible. She should ditch whoever is prepping her and speak clearly and concisely from her recollection. Trying to memorize things is a disaster. The best zingers come from being able to command and recall information and react quickly to things on the fly. If she does not have the skill to do this, it doesn’t mean she cannot govern. It means she’s terrible in debates. It’s not the end of the world. Basing your vote on that might leave you with someone who actually is incapable of governing.

    Saturday
    Aug142010

    A Miracle in Lurgan

    An excerpt from the Lurgan Model Primary School newsletter, dated June 2010The miracle? That these children weren't more severely injured.

    The tragedy? Yet another no-warning bomb goes off in Northern Ireland, this time adjacent to a playground.

    While we are focused on other parts of the world, some things never change. More and more, I'm seeing items about violence in Northern Ireland and I still can't figure out why:

    A no-warning bomb went off in a bin at North Street in the town as police investigated reports that a device had been left at the Model Primary school.

    The bomb blew a hole in a metal fence and the children - two aged 12 and one aged two - were injured by debris, suffering cuts and shock.

    The bomb went off at a junction where police would have been expected to put up a cordon around the school.

    A number of homes had been evacuated in Brownlow Terrace due to the suspect object at the school. That alert is continuing.

    Another security alert in Kilmaine Street, centred on a builder's yard, has ended without anything untoward being found, although the area remains sealed off.

    The BBC is not really a "go to" resource for this sort of thing, but Lurgan Model Primary school is just your basic elementary school. That's right--it even has a nursery. And someone decided to make their political point about a conflict older than any living human being and they put a bomb near it so that they could injure the police who would come in and cordon off the area. Unbelievable.

    Lurgan Model Primary has this about it that I think is interesting:

    The majority of the children on the roll live in the surrounding area. We have one of each class Nursery and Year 1 to Year 7 and stay within department guidelines for class sizes.

    Lurgan Model is co-educational, non denominational and accept pupils irrespective of race or religion. The children range in age from 3 to 11 years. Presently we have children from the Eastern European Community.

    Apparently, no one has gotten that message. The school caters to students of Eastern European heritage who find themselves living in Northern Ireland. All of Europe is like this--people from all walks of life end up living in different countries, trying to find a way to have a life. And now you have the age-old Troubles cropping up and what I want to know is--what does any of that have to do with a school with a nursery in it?

    I suspect someone is about to receive a visit from some no-knock authorities. How could anyone protect the animals that did this?

    Tuesday
    Aug102010

    Journalism Majors Are Toast

    Journalism is a skill akin to buggy whip manufacturing--it's toast:

    In my previous post, I argued that the journalism job market had plunged, and then rebounded sharply over the past year.  Here’s the relevant chart again:

    The newly-released 2009 Annual Survey of Journalism & Mass Communication Graduates  from the University of Georgia completely supports this narrative. The survey discovered that the  labor market for June 2009 graduates was terrible–exactly what my chart shows.

    But then, as we went into 2010, things got better,  according to the survey–a lot better. The survey reports that:

    Of those graduates returning the survey in November, only 46.5% reported having a full-time job. In May, the rate was 62.8%.

    In fact, the survey’s chart 6 looks almost exactly like my chart above.

    I think it’s pretty clear that the journalism job market, at least up this point, is bouncing back faster than a lot of other occupations. My best guess is that journalism, broadly defined,  is quickly going to become one of the hot careers.

    The real question is, should a state school or your run-of-the-mill university out there even offer a major in Journalism?

    Is it irresponsible for a state school to have a journalism program and continually dump graduates into a job market that is, for all intents and purposes, virtually dead on arrival? 

    There are some (at that site) who believe that you can be a "liberal" arts major and survive with a journalism degree. I have run a business, and I wouldn’t take any of them. In fact, in the practical world, forget about it. Science, engineering, accounting, business or economics? Math, law, medical, computer or research? I can name ten skills that would mean a great deal more to me as a prospective employer than fine arts, creative writing, history or journalism. 

    In a global environment, I would think that you would need the research and writing skills as an aside or as a foundational set of skills AND you would HAVE to have something scientific or otherwise as a matter of practicality. If anyone thinks that a creative writing major is going to run a company that makes things or fixes things, forget about it. That’s a recipe for bankruptcy. 

    Journalism majors of the world–abandon your ridiculous course of study and get some math or engineering skills. That is all.

    Monday
    Aug092010

    Proof That Austerity is Simply Not Popular

    I think this is milk.If you were a British politician, trying to find a way to save money, would you be foolish enough to try to take milk away from little children?

    I arrived back in Britain fully rested and refreshed, and almost the first sound I heard was a whining noise emanating from the Scottish Nationalist administration north of the border. Anne Milton, a U.K. coalition health minister had suggested, in a letter to the Scottish executive, that the scheme which gives children below the age of five who attend nurseries or day care the right to a glass of milk a day might be ended in England. This development was leaked by the SNP administration to a sharp eyed Scottish political hack and dominated the Sunday morning news agenda. With all the pious pomposity that only a Scottish Executive minister can muster when explaining on the airwaves why my countrymen are supposedly intrinsically more compassionate and caring than anyone else, the SNP denounced the proposals as pretty much the end of the world as we know it. (Although I’ll wager most people pretending to be outraged didn’t know that all under fives in nurseries still get free milk from the taxpayer via the government.)

    It fell to David Willetts to defend the coalition’s proposal when he appeared on Marr on Sunday. He had been given a hosopital pass when he was booked for the show. Having defended Milton’s proposals he was then informed on air, mid-interview, that Number 10 had just that minute over-ruled the minister concerned and that free milk for the under fives would remain. Willetts had been hung out to dry on national television. Cue some hilarity.

    Of course, David Cameron was understandably determined not to be presented as the heir to “Maggie Thatcher the Milk Snatcher”. (I liked milk as a child, but like Iain Dale says hated the free stuff at school which usually tasted as though it was almost off, having been left outside in the sun). So, Cameron, or one of his communications team, spotted the danger shortly after breakfast on Sunday and moved fast to squash the Milton plan. End of story.

    The unspoken genius of this is that there were probably the British equivalent of milk-industry lobbyists, ready to raise hell with the members of parliament who refused to shut down this gripping change in public policy. Luckily, this David Cameron fellow can move with some speed to shut down bad political moves.

    I cannot remember ever giving milk to our children. I'm simply not familiar with it. I do know what cream is, and I've had yogurt, but milk is not really in my vocabulary when it comes to things that should be consumed. Should it be consumed? I hear bad things about it all the time. Well, I ignore reports about things that I don't care about--let's be honest.

    I was not part of the beverage serving regimen that required me to participate in their upbringing. I know that, there was one time, my son Byron was eleven and he asked me for a brandy snifter so that he could catch bugs on the windowsill of his room. I declined. I think Miranda asked me for water once when she came home from junior high one hot September afternoon. I declined. I did get Miranda a peach once when she was asking about fruit or something when she was fifteen. I think I may have had Peej hand it to her because I was too busy to walk across the room.

    This is not because I'm a bad parent; I'm a busy parent. There's a diffy.

    Wednesday
    Jul212010

    Cheerleading Is a Sport

    Do you want to be the one to explain to Megan Fox that cheerleading is not a sport? I didn't think so.Don't believe this nonsense:

    Competitive cheerleading is not an official sport that colleges can use to meet gender-equity requirements, a federal judge ruled Wednesday in ordering a Connecticut school to keep its women's volleyball team.

    The volleyball players had sued Quinnipiac University after it announced last year that it would eliminate the team for budgetary reasons and replace it with a competitive cheer squad.

    The school contended the cheer squad keeps it in compliance with Title IX, the 1972 federal law that mandates equal opportunities for men and women in athletics.

    "Competitive cheer may, some time in the future, qualify as a sport under Title IX," U.S. District Judge Stefan Underhill wrote in his decision. "Today, however, the activity is still too underdeveloped and disorganized to be treated as offering genuine varsity athletic participation opportunities for students."

    Quinnipiac has 60 days to come up with a plan to keep the volleyball team and comply with gender rules.

    Cheerleading is most emphatically a sport, and it has been one since I can remember. It's one of the most dangerous activities in the country. It's more dangerous than playing hockey.

    Now, I support the idea of Title IX and I want women's athletics to be supported and protected. I think it is absolutely critical to support the thousands of women's teams around the country that otherwise might not exist. You can sneer at the idea of a women's volleyball team in the middle of Iowa, but the fact remains, that team is of the utmost importance to the coach, the young ladies playing on that team, and their families. It means something.

    It also means something for the cheerleaders who cheer at the games where the volleyball team plays and it means something for the students on that team. They are a vital part of any athletic program. They are not just there for the men's sports. They are there to support the home team, and their participation is important as well. They compete around the country. They are not a throwaway nothing to be laughed at. Yes, I used the sexiest possible picture of Megan Fox that I could find--sue me (no, please don't). I could have used the one that Peej sent me, but that one would have landed us all in jail because glass sex toys really have no place on a family blog like this one (it's not, but I have to come up with a second joke here). But I do think that if you've read this far, then Megan and I have done our job (I'd team up with her, but she's scary smart and I think she would crush me like a grape).

    This shouldn't be about volleyball vs cheerleading; it should really be about economic viability, scholarships, and keeping an athletic program running. If there's no way to keep a team in the budget, then that's a decision being made by people who are facing a tough budget crunch. Where is there the most interest? Where can you make the cuts? If the cuts fall on the volleyball team, does that mean it's unfair or that there are only a handful of players interested in that sport, while more students show interest in competitive cheering? Make no mistake about it--these are things that are being agonized over across the country.

    If this is what Title IX is up to now, then I say chuck it and start anew.

    Friday
    Jul162010

    Manufacturing Is Critical, But It Is Not Everything

    Elbe River, Dresden, GermanyI know that I tend to harp on small business issues--I don't pretend to be the "expert" that I would normally pretend to be on most other issues. I think this is a very, very good example of what I'm talking about when I say that we need small businesses in this country to be unleashed:

    My wife and I have a small company (just above Kenmore Air Harbor on Lake Washington, FWIW) that designs and develops high tech embedded electronics devices- most recently a computer to monitor scuba diver's gas saturation. But it could just as easily be medical devices or products for any specialized industry not large enough to be on the radar of an Apple or Samsung. There is considerable economic activity at this not-mass-market level. We are engaging in entrepreneurship in a way that would not have been conceivable when we started our careers (we're about 60). We design on very capable computers, we can access vast technical information databases online, we can send files over the internet and have finished circuit boards to test in days. We make products that can compete technically with the biggest companies, but just address smaller markets. We are a technology version of the family farm. We could be ads for the new "knowledge based" economy. Yet businesses like ours are threatened by the collapse of US manufacturing capacity. 

    Why? In the short term, because businesses at our scale, dealing in the thousands and not millions, need skilled assembly that can be done locally, we need skilled machinists and prototyping facilities to be available here, not on the other side of the world. The personal interchange and creative interaction that comes from a designer working directly with those who do the manufacturing is invaluable. The best designs come from working closely with those who know intimately the processes that go into creating the product. 

    In the longer term, losing manufacturing is a path to losing our creative edge. It's a fantasy to believe we can educate some kind of technical elite absent a connection to the physical reality of making things. The kind of technical secondary education common in Europe, yet almost absent in the US, creates people who do know how to build things. Some of them will have great ideas, and will put them into practice. Meanwhile, I watched my daughter's high school drop all shop classes rather than modernize them, and ramp up "technology" education- mostly by teaching kids how to use Word and Excel. This is so profoundly wrong as to bring tears of frustration to this high tech entrepreneur. Not everyone in society is destined to be a designer or developer. We need skilled manufacturing for a healthy society and economy, and that takes workers with the right skills. 

    Andy Grove got it right in 
    his recent comments: losing manufacturing jobs puts at risk both our society and the wellsprings of our creativity.

    That all comes from a post by James Fallows, who has been following the issue of manufacturing and small business creation, albeit from a more "international" perspective than I have been following these issues until recently.

    The gist of the post is, why aren't we training more young people in the vocational arts? Why aren't we sending more of them through schools that teach them useful skills?

    Allow me to inform you that there is a prevalent attitude in America, one that says "my kid is too special to go to a vocational school." Yes, your son is bright, all right. He's bright enough to get D's at a state college in Party Town all the way upstate, but maybe, just maybe, we'd all be better off if he was getting B's at a school that taught him how to fix cars with a computer or diagnose problems with a piece of fancy medical equipment. Really, how much is his Business Administration degree going to be worth when he's graduating after five and a half years, all fattened up and stupid from being falling down drunk in the quad every Tuesday night?

    Now, as a practical matter, I want to see the couple making that particular product succeed. I don't wish upon them Microsoft status, but I think that they should be allowed to make a fantastic living, create a solid company that employs a few dozen or even a few hundred people, and they should be able to sell it if that's the right path to take and they should have a partnership arrangement with their state and local government as well as the Federal government. Certainly, they should pay taxes and be a good corporate citizen. Government, on the other hand, is there to help deliver infrastructure to their door and to keep things running in the place where they are located (sell libertarian nonsense elsewhere, please).

    The Federal government has decided to get into the health care business. Good for them. Now, let's hope that the health care costs of this small company are not ridiculous, bloated, and confiscatory.

    Overall though, simply making things isn't enough. There are very good examples of how being able to make wonderful things have helped here in Germany. The problem is, Germans don't consume and spend as much as they hope or expect others to consume the goods that they make and spend on the services that they provide. A society cannot be all one or the other; you can't be a simplistic manufacturing society without also having a robust consumer mentality and the ability to convince people to buy things even though times are a little tough.

    I keep revisiting the idea of austerity, and yes--if you simply stop spending money, your austerity affects others. People who are hoping for consumer spending to be there are going to go without it. I do think profligate spending and reckless financing of debt are what we need to get away from. We certainly do not need more companies that exist solely to refinance the debt of people who spent too much for a decade and never cut back.

    Sunday
    Jul042010

    Leave the Sorority Girls Alone

    Swedish Sorority GirlsSome Poindexter is behind this nonsense--I can sense it:

    Sorority spring formals call up visions of young women in colorful dresses dancing the night away — not vomiting on tables, urinating in sinks or having sex in closets.

    The drunken shenanigans of three sororities at Miami University in southwest Ohio sound like something out of "Animal House" and were especially startling for a school that frequently makes the top 50 in a U.S News & World Report academic ranking but never makes lists of big-time party schools.

    The school suspended two of the sororities and put the third on probation. A task force is reviewing discipline and education policies on student behavior and alcohol, and the campus group governing sororities says it will begin teaching new members to speak out when they witness bad behavior.

    There is little evidence excessive alcohol consumption is any worse at Miami than other colleges, but students are worried the antics will damage the school's reputation.

    "It's embarrassing," said Christina Zielke, 21, a senior from Cleveland, who doesn't belong to a sorority. "This kind of thing gives a bad name not just to the Greek system but to the university and students like me who aren't in the system."

    Whatever, grandma.

    The economy is to blame for all of this. The schools are full of young women (because of the young men had to either join the military or go to work full time in the mine) and they're bored. They're partying because they know that there aren't any jobs for graduates of state schools out there. Where a Yale or Harvard or Brown grad might be able to find a position with a reputable company, a graduate of Miami of Ohio is going to have to work retail until things sort themselves out. A lot of them are going to have to become strippers if they want to pay off their student loan debts (strippers never have money and never pay their bills, but they always have fifty pairs of thong underwear that they don't like anymore).

    If I was attending a state school, I'd get drunk to relieve the stress of knowing there aren't any jobs, too. I'd love to see these girls party. I'll bet they do things that would make a sex tourist who frequents Thailand blush.

    Friday
    Jun252010

    No Thugs in This Kindergarten

    I can't remember the last time I had a brawl in public with a group of people at a kindergarten graduation.

    I've had several brawls, and more than my fair share of shoving matches and full-throated screaming matches, but they may have taken place at Miranda's third grade sock hop or Byron's fifth grade zoo trip or something like that. You know the kind of brawl I'm talking about. The kind where someone pulls a suit coat over the head of someone else and kicks them in the ribs when they're laying on the ground covering their head. The kind where someone throws alcohol or fruit punch around like they're trying to douse a small fire. The kind where a perfectly reasonable, grown adult turns into a shrieking, quivering, sweating mass of terrified human flesh, desperately clawing at their eyeballs after biting off the ear of another human being. The kind where someone punches their spouse in the crotch, often on purpose.

    I have reached out to the children to find out if they remember watching daddy roll on the ground with a howling, crazed mother at a kindergarten graduation, but no one has gotten back to me yet.

    I think this points to more serious issues, however:

    Two women have been arrested following a parents' brawl that interrupted a Southern California kindergarten graduation ceremony, authorities said.

    School officials placed Puesta del Sol Elementary in the desert town of Victorville on lockdown Wednesday morning after a fight broke out among a group of parents.

    The San Bernardino County sheriff's department says witnesses told deputies several mothers were involved in an argument and it got physical in a field near the ceremony. Several men then jumped into the fray and the incident turned into a brawl.

    A deputy later arrested two people on suspicion of being a disruptive presence at a school. Witnesses said they were the main instigators. In all, 20 adults were identified in the brawl. A school district official said there could be more arrests.

    San Bernardino County? Check, please.

    This probably didn't have anything to do with slutty behavior or a debt gone bad. It probably has something to do with trash talking or an inadvertent shove down a flight of stairs. I do remember how ridiculous it was to go to a kindergarten class and have to sit there while the kids would drone on and on in their little lisp--you know, that baby-tawk lisp that I cannot stand. We never talked babytalk with the children, at least, not that I can recall. When I think back to how my second, third and fourth wives raised the children, I seem to recall nannies, tough love, and awkward silences punctuated by cold-blooded stares and finding things slashed to pieces in the middle of the night. Standard family fare, of course.

    Miranda never talked like a baby. She came out fully formed and had a wonderful vocabulary by the time she was in first grade. That was the first time she lectured me about ethics and ethical behavior. Coming from an over-serious child dressed almost entirely in black it was like one of those comedy bits on one of those shows I don't watch.

    Sunday
    Jun062010

    Don't Underestimate New Jersey Governor Chris Christie

    Maybe it's me, but when I see this man talk, I get the sense that he is a little bit more on the ball than anyone is ever going to give him credit. Every time this man takes on his critics, he goes through them like shit through a goose. He has a uniquely American style of leadership, so you can dismiss this nonsense out of hand. Governor Christie is not leading a nation in a fight for its very existence but he is leading a large American state through tough economic times.

    You can laugh at me when I tell you this, but I think Governor Christie is going to be the President of the United States one day.

    Tuesday
    May182010

    What's the Harm in a Little Academic Cheating?

    Some building on the campus of Princeton University, an old one, I believeThis doesn't sound as bad as they are making it out to be:

    A former Harvard University student compiled world-class academic credentials -- including perfect grades and two prestigious Harvard prizes -- by fabricating his own history and plagiarizing others' work, according to a Massachusetts prosecutor.

    Adam Wheeler, 23, of Delaware is scheduled for arraignment Tuesday in Woburn, Massachusetts, on 20 counts including larceny, identity fraud, falsifying an endorsement or approval and pretending to hold a degree, according to Middlesex County District Attorney Gerry Leone.

    Wheeler is accused of falsifying transcripts that detailed an outstanding academic career at some of Massachusetts' finest institutions, Leone said in a news release.

    He was exposed after submitting applications and references for the Rhodes and Fulbright scholarships while a student at Harvard University in 2009, according to Leone.

    Is "Pretending to hold a degree" really the sort of crime you have to be arraigned for? I thought that this sort of thing was settled with swift dismissal in the case of attending college or firing for cause in the case of holding a job.

    Do you mean to tell me that academic fraud is that serious now? Academia is the fraud, sir.

    Are they mad because he tried to get into Oxford? Or are they extra mad at this young fellow because of his affiliation to Harvard? I suspect the latter. We wouldn't want anyone to know that the entire school is a fraud, perpetrated on a gullible nation of state college dropouts. Do I say this because I had to go to Princeton, because that was the only school my Father could get me into? Or do I say this because I've seen generation after generation of smarty-pants people graduate from Harvard and then go on to screw up this country in ways no one could have imagined?

    I suspect the latter.