Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Some Panty-Twisting News

This blog's perennial favorite inadvertent comic, Michele Bachmann, has just graced headlines with yet another whopper: she claims that Hurricane Irene is "God's warning to lawmakers to limit the size of government."

I guess we have to give her credit for not claiming this is God's warning over doing abortions.  When the Passion of the Christ came out, certain Christians claimed abortions were responsible for earthquakes in Mexico.

It is borderline hysterical to hear good old Michele make this stuff up, even when she technically hasn't made it up (and claims it was just a joke).  The whole reduce the size of government thing really belongs to this blog's perennial favorite presidential candidate, Ron Paul.  She just added the God bit, as she is wont to do.  Come to think of it, Rick Perry has `appropriated' a number of Paul's platforms too.

What is not borderline hysterical is that there are apparently legions of drooling followers who believe this verbal excrement.

Speaking of excrement, why should anybody care that Lady Gaga apparently dressed like a man at a recent appearance.  I certainly don't care.  I wouldn't even know about it if it hadn't appeared as a headline on a few allegedly serious news sites I read.

Beyonce is pregnant.   
I didn't do it.

Paris Hilton is over.
Good for us.

Consider my panties in a knot.

----------

More amusing than panty-twisting is President Giveaway apparently trying to bring back the nostalgic days of Jeb Bush and Billy Carter, infamous presidential siblings (and human failures).  The president's aunt was arrested and flagged for deporation but somehow wound up being granted asylum a while back.  The other night, a Kenyan illegal immigrant was arrested for DUI and demanded the White House be called.  His name was Onyango Obama, the president's uncle.

Speaking of Vladimir Putin, do we ever get to see President Giveaway riding a Harley?

Monday, August 29, 2011

The State of Gardening in 2011

I have said it before and I will never stop saying it: I hate grass.   More specifically I hate mowing the grass.  I don't really have anything against grass per se, I would just prefer that it stay at a predetermined height and spectacularly fail to grow.

I have even gone so far as to research replacing the green bits with concrete, but alas, the county has certain silly rules about drainage and flood planes.   Since I am the reason my county has an anti-Slinky ordinance*, I dare not tempt fate.

I have a long history with mowers.  Somewhere in the bowels of my shed, there's a push mower.  Just knowing it's there annoys me, although I can't ever remember using it.  Eventually an electric mower showed up (don't ask me how).  It lasted a few weeks, being the anemic piece of attempted machinery it was.

So we had no choice but to go to gas.  It lasted the better part of a season and died.  Mower Number Four was also gas-powered and ran like a top.  Well, it ran like a top right up until it stopped running.  I observed that it seemed to be a fuel issue, so I had no choice but to disassemble the carburetor/fuel system.

In retrospect, I'm not entirely sure why I felt I had the expertise to deal with a carburetor.  Perhaps it was because all of my cars had carburetors.  Perhaps because a friend rebuilt my carburetor on the dining room table once and it looked cool.  Perhaps I just figured that if I could build computers, I could certainly fix internal combustion engines.  Regardless of the reason, I was completely and accurately incorrect: I could not, in fact, do much more than put gas in the tank.  And with the cost of gas lately, even that was in doubt.

Oddly enough, I was correct, in that the cylinder wasn't getting fuel.  I was just incorrect about my ability to repair the issue.

Flash forward to the current mower: Mower Number Five.  We purchased a Craftsmen because they make great tools, so we just made the bizarre leap of logic that the mowers would be every bit as good.  To be fair, it ran flawlessly over a few  years, always starting pretty quickly (long before my back started telling me to stop pulling that ripcord, asshole).

Things being what they are, I brought out Mower Number Five at the beginning of the season, expecting to start the on the first pull.  And I suspect it might even have started on that first pull, had the ripcord not broken as soon as I started to pull it.  Why did it break?  Because it was made from stranded metal cable that was exposed to the elements and it rusted.

Not to be outdone (by yet another mower) my wife sprang into action.  She seems to like Lowes in much the same way she likes shoe stores, by which I mean to say expensively and fatally.  She managed to locate something called a Universal Choke Replacement Cable, which seemed perfect for the part.

And when I say perfect for the part, I mean it looked perfect right up until I tried to install it.  My wife is as fond of instructions as I am of all things Mac, so I am in charge of all assembly.  As it turned out, the cable was somewhat less universal than its billing.  So there sat Mower Number Five, having beaten two full-grown adults into submission.  My wife's idea for getting even was to take it for repairs.  I swear I heard it laughing at her as soon as her back was turned.  I simply gave up.

Giving up allowed me the luxury of not mowing.  It also meant constant `reminders' from the wife about the size of the grass.  I can only assume the construction hat with the flashlight duct taped to it and references to going out to locate the dog was her way of telling me the grass was getting rather tall.  Having given up, I simply pretended not to notice.

Then it happened.

I'm not entirely certain what happened or where it came from.  All of the sudden I remembered that I used to really like cars, taking them apart, and fixing things in general.  I used to be able to rig things so they'd work.  And there I was, beaten by a simple broken choke cable.

I got up off my well-padded posterior, grabbed some heavy wire, and rigged the ($*#ing mower so it would start on the first pull.   Since this is me we're talking about, it started on the third pull but who's arguing?  Just for fun I told the wife I refused to mow the lawn ever again so she'd get mad at me then walk out back to discover I had mowed anyway (we have that kind of marriage).

She was most appreciative and I felt like a Real Man<tm> for the first time in years (antidepressants be damned).

But speaking of gardening....
(that wins Segue of the Century)

My wife decided to exercise her green thumb this year.  Again.  Normally, this means that she goes to Lowes and purchases huge bags of dirt and moss, which sit on the front lawn until the following year when it's time to go back and purchase more dirt and moss (presumably because the previous year's dirt expired?).  This year there were actual plants, flowers, and real genuine vegetables.  The last time she planted vegetables, we became inundated with a plague of yellow squash the size of watermelons.  We couldn't give it away fast enough.

This year there was careful consideration given to which vegetables she would grow, including which side of the house on which to plant.  There were these huge tomato triangular cages that looked like medieval torture devices (but I won't make any reference to them not being similar to the medieval torture devices in the bedroom, as this is no doubt being read by children as well as adults without a strong constitution).

I saw genuine excitement on my wife's face as things started to bloom and grow.  This was quickly followed by crushing disappointment, as every $*#@ing thing she planted got eaten by various fauna.

Apparently it started with the bunnies (as it always does).  The bunnies came by and ate some of the vegetables.  Then the badgers, raccoons, and foxes came along to eat the bunnies.  As previously described, we had nightly 11:15pm skunkings for no apparent reason.

We are fairly normal suburbanites, living in a fairly normal suburb.  We don't live near the woods.  We don't live near animal sanctuaries.  So why is it that almost every species of herbivore known to the mid-atlantic portion of the US stopped by to munch on our vegetables?  My friends out in the boonies don't have this kind of variety (although the mother-in-law has bears, but that's a different story entirely).

My wife simply gave up.  I would have heartily applauded her but I was too busy pretending to ignore the entire affair, having given up on the outdoors long before moving into this house.

To add insult to near-fatal injury, while I was mowing the lawn, I unknowingly plowed the rest of the garden.  Fortunately my wife had already given up, so she was able to note this with some degree of dark humor (we have that kind of marriage).

Ah, the great indoors....

----------

* I once heard that Slinkys make so-so antennas for shortwave radios.  So I strung four of them together and ran them from an upstairs window to a shed.  The neighbors, who already thought I was a few pennies short of a nickel, just stood and stared.   As it turned out, they were right: the antennas were so-so at best, so the Slinkys were just there for `decoration'.

Friday, August 26, 2011

Brand New from Apple!

Get it now - iCancer.

Steve has it - why shouldn't you?

Apple is stepping up production on an emergency basis - they don't know if they'll be able to fulfill all the expected orders for iCancer.

[Photo of hordes of the faithful, lined up in Apple Position (supplication, wallet outstretched)]

The executive board of Apple met last night to decide when to offer iCancer: now or later.  Stock is expected to go through the roof if anything unfortunate should happen to Steve.

All over the country, CEO's are scrambling to get iCancer.  Special dispensation has been granted to allow an early preview for Bill Gates.

Purchase iCancer through the Apple Software Store (as if you could get it anywhere else).  Remember - any other form of cancer isn't iCancer.
DRM is checked via DNA.
Directly from His pancreas to yours!
Get all sorts of skins!

Don't forget iCancer Portable - now for iPhones and iPads.
iCancer available on iPad Touch only with $250 iMelanoma upgrade.

Remember - if you don't have an iPhone, you don't have iCancer.

Warning: do not use iCancer in high radiation areas or near medical testing facilities.  If iCancer lasts more than four hours, consult a physician.  Do not fold, spindle, or duplicate without the express written consent of Steve Ballmer.  If your iDevice survives iCancer, you will be charged full price for another copy.  Has anybody seen the bridge?

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Best wishes to Steve Jobs on his health.


Thursday, August 25, 2011

Further Reviews of HTC Sensation and Samsung Galaxy Tablet

It's been a while since I got my grubby paws on the Samsung Galaxy 7" tablet, as well as the HTC Sensation 4g phone.  I wanted to update my impressions on the devices, just in case anybody's reading.

HTC Sensation 4g

My boss keeps telling us he will always have more G's than we do and to date it's been a factual statement.  I suspect this has more to do with our carrier being T-Mobile than anything else, but it's not like we have a control sample to test out this hypothesis.  Suffice it to say that the coverage was much better with Verizon, our previous carrier.

This phone has largely been a blast.  It's a speed demon that has required very little instruction or maintenance.

My favorite/most useful apps:

  • Opera Mobile - a fast browser
  • WiFi widget - to turn off/on wifi quickly
  • gStrings free - excellent, free guitar tuner
  • World Newspapers - great source of news, albeit a little unsteady
  • TV listings - for obvious reasons
  • Wolfgang's Vault - classic rock streaming
  • Slacker Radio - the Jeff Beck Channel... say no more.
  • ES File Explorer
  • ConnectBot - ssh
  • SysAid/PRTGdroid - work apps
  • AK Notepad - a yellow pad
  • Timeriffic - controls functions by time to extend battery

I could obviously do without the T-Mobile crapware but I have not rooted the device (yet).  I am waiting until others do to see if the gains are worth it.   I am very satisfied with the default messaging and email apps, which is a miracle in itself.

The battery life is so-so, but definitely better after applying Timeriffic.

Samsung Galaxy 7" Tab

I am very specific about this model because there is also a Samsung Galaxy phone and a Samsung Galaxy 10" tablet.  It makes ordering accessories a bitch sometimes.

Given the choice, I'd rather have a 10" tablet but I couldn't argue with the price of this one.  This is a completely different device one may think: in essence, it's a very large phone.  The technology is a little older and a bit slower than the Sensation.  While it doesn't have a phone, it has a phone number.  I guess I could make calls if I rooted, which I haven't.  It will message.

I will get around to rooting the tablet, if for no other reason than the operating system's willingness to allow any program to start itself for fun.  Task Killer has a busy job killing all of the self-starting programs.  These can be killed or frozen when the Samsung is rooted.


My favorite/most useful apps:

  • Advanced Task Killer
  • Xiaalive - radio streaming
  • Android Assistant - takes the place of many utility apps
  • 1Page BBC - BBC news
  • Drudge - Drudgereport.com viewer
  • Astro File Manager
  • Zeem Launcher - small, fast replacement for stock Droid launcher
  • PremierGuitar - guitar magazine reader
  • Scanner Radio - listen to radio scanners all over the world
  • Sparse rss - rss feed reader
  • Yahtz Me - Yahtzee clone for my wife
  • Angry Birds - my nephews would kill me if I didn't have this installed
  • CPU Usage Monitor - cpu graph

I like my tablet and will continue to use it.  It is just the right device for when I need to spend a little more time on a larger screen than on my cell phone.  I check my rss feeds in bed and this is a pretty good device for the task.

I noticed that charging seemed like a day-long affair.  My advice is to charge this only via the supplied charger, not the usb cable, as the supplied charger puts out twice the current and this is a rather large battery.  If you turn off wifi when not using it and can calm the apps down, the battery will last a while.


The thing that irks me the most about Android devices is the programs that start on their own.  There is simply no reason for it.  If I have disabled GPS, why does TeleNav start by itself?  If I don't get push mail, why does Mail start?

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Toilet or Amusement Park Ride?

So I'm at work, sitting there, minding my own business, making use of the facilities.  All of the sudden, the device upon which I am sitting starts to display an in and out soft of motion, completely uncharacteristic of normal operation.

This is not to say that we haven't had more than our share of strange happenings in our rest rooms, no sir.  We have a urinal that's only operational one day per week, between being broken and physically being missing.  We have a stall that has a semi-permanent lake just to the right of it.  And we have automatic paper towel dispensers that never give you the same amount of paper towel twice in a row.  Regardless of what size they give you, it's not enough.

Doing a quick inventory, I assure myself that I have not forgotten any of my Happy Meds<tm>, nor have I forgotten to eat.  I have no outstanding appointments with any doctors. 

Plumbing has been known to shake a bit here and there, but I was experiencing rather a prolonged excursion, somewhat on the order of a child ride at the amusement park.  When porcelain moves, it's a bit difficult to determine whether it's just the porcelain or the entire building.

Bright soul that I am, I decided out would be a good place to take myself.

Back in my office, everyone was atwitter (does that still mean the same thing?) about the earthquake.

Oh.

How did we know it was an earthquake?  Because everyone on Faceyspaces said so.

Oh.

Education: Because I'm Worth It

The embattled chief of the Philadelphia public schools, Arlene Ackerman, has had her contract purchased and is being politely asked to leave her job.  The buyout is nine hundred and five thousand dollars.

Fiscal responsibility aside, this woman is essentially being paid nine hundred and five thousand dollars to leave.

Why the hell can't I get paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to leave?   
I'm definitely worth it.


Monday, August 22, 2011

Android Crapware

If you get nothing else from this post, I hope you understand to be careful with your Android device.

If you have been paying attention lately, there has been a lot of press about Androids, very little of it positive.  There have been quite a few applications listed through the Android Marketplace that have contained viruses and trojans, not to mention good old malware.  Much as I truly don't like iDevices, they typically don't distribute a lot of crapware through their marketplace.

The obvious solution is to scan the bloody downloads before making them available to everyone, but perhaps the Droid folks haven't gotten there yet.

Next up is a particularly annoying bit of crapware called xapush.  Certain apps make use of this little item, which pushes ads to your device's taskbar, with a note that you can opt-out at xapush.com.

I object most strongly to this violation of privacy and trust, both on the part of the authors and xapush, not to mention the Marketplace.  At very least there should be a warning about this crapware in the Marketplace.  While I understand the point of it, there should still be a warning, to give you the chance to avoid or opt-out up front.  Auto opt-ins should be illegal (talk to your local Congresscritter about that).

Some (but not all) of the apps that use this piece of... ummm...  malware... are 3D OpenGL, MP3 musicdownload, Best Buy Product Guide and EasyFilter.

Fortunately the Droid community has responded, in the guise of Air Push Detector, also available for free in the Marketplace.

WHAT CAN I DO?


In the meantime, please be careful with your Android device.   Watch permissions requested by all apps.  Make note of permissions that change with app updates.

Don't think for a second that your privacy is protected.  Between Google and its partners, you're toast. 

Don't even get me started on location-based tracking.. err....  services...

Sunday, August 21, 2011

How to Get Ahead in Business

Anybody who has worked anywhere at one place (or others) has had a chance to observe human (and largely inhuman) behavior with reference to obtaining things.

For instance, the fastest way to get something fixed is not to call the specific department in charge of fixing; instead you complain to your superior that something is broken and interferes with the performance of your job.

Poof - Instant Fix.

Then there's the best way to get something.  Again, you write to your superior that you need this particular device to assist you in doing your job.

Poof - Instant Present.

I watched with bemused horror as this took place today, with the requestor scoring herself a six-hundred dollar tablet, because, of course, it would assist her in doing her job.  This was even more interesting as she's a programmer and the tablet can't be used for programming.

Last week another enlightened requestor mentioned that his iDevice fell and scratched its case, so another would need to be ordered (to assist him in doing his job, no doubt).  Sixty dollars later, a custom case was on its way.

When I pointed these methods out to a female coworker, she remarked that she needed the company to purchase several Victoria's Secret gift certificates, in large denominations, for her, as it would make her boobs happy.  And if her boobs were happy, she was happy. 

I chimed in that if her boobs were happy, all of her coworkers were happy too.

Friday, August 19, 2011

Who Likes Short Shorts?

Ex Robs Exotic Dancer in Big Beaver: Cops

A stripper in Big Beaver was assaulted and robbed by her ex-boyfriend.  I hope the poor lady isn't injured too seriously and recovers quickly, but I couldn't let this real headline pass without notice.

Undertaker Molests Sleeping Woman: Police

Wow, I think we found one that prefers them alive!

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Cocker Skunkiels and Other Assorted Fauna

My wife likes her fans.  So much, in fact, that I fear I have lost count of them.  Most recently a dual-fan unit appeared in the kitchen window.  This one must be truly advanced, as it has a bright red digital display, which is visible from across the house.  Why a bright red digital display is necessary (or even optional) on a fan, I cannot guess.

Fortunately I didn't have to guess.  Apparently this new-fangled dual-fan unit has a thermostat on it, with the temperature reading out on the display (which is visible from across the house).  Thrilled beyond belief, I asked if she set the temperature to sixty-five degrees, would it magically cool the house to sixty-five?  After all, we could get rid of those expensive air conditioners.

Apparently not, but my wife went on, ecstatic with her new purchase.  These fans really brought in the air, though.  I suppose they would really send out the air too, were they put into that mode.

I mention this strictly because the house started to smell really horrible last night after dark.  It was an odor most foul, incomparable to most other odors in my neighborhood (or outside of it).  After a few seconds, it started to register.... it smelled like a combination of skunk and motor vehicle accident.  I have smelled skunk before and this was worse; much worse.  Perhaps the skunk was driving the motor vehicle that got into the accident, I dunno...

After this olfactory assault started, I couldn't figure out what it was but I could figure out that something needed to be done at that moment, if not sooner.  It seems that my wife did, in fact, get a great deal on the fans, as they were doing an incredible job at bringing the horrid odor into the house.

I reasoned, correctly I assumed, that the fan would be of greater use turned off.  As it turned out, this was not going to be an easy state in which to put said fan.  In fact, like no fan I have ever seen, this one did not have a power switch.  It had all sorts of knobs and switches, like Temperature, Speed, and Stench Amplifier.  It was apparently operating in Stench Amplification Mode<tm>, as evidenced at very least by the fact that my eyes were watering and the room was moving in rather a more violent way than my kitchen is wont to do.

Right before I got out my spelunking gear to determine where the bleeding appliance was plugged in, I must have mistakenly hit the right button or knob and turned the thing off.  In the nick of time, as I was close to losing consciousness.

As the stench started to dissipate, Marshall the Terminally Cute Cocker decided it was time to go out.  Figuring the emergency was over, I let him out.

Marshall passed me on his way upstairs to lay with (some would say wake up) his mommy.  His mommy appeared downstairs in mere seconds, which is only the case when the cat trips her down the steps.  She was most terrified that Marshall had had a run-in with a skunk.  When I asked her to smell Marshall, she became satisfied that he had not, in fact, done battle with a striped cat from an old cartoon.  Unfortunately he did walk through the area of the battle, attaching a bit of a scent to a paw or something.  This became evident when the smell returned to the room at the same time as the dog.

My poor wife was kept up for thirty minutes with the near-impossible task of keeping Marshall off my pillow.  There's something tragically attractive about my pillow to Marshall.  This becomes a serious issue after Marshall goes for a swim in his pool (yes, Marshall has his own plastic pool, which he adores) and wants to snuggle with my pillow, making the bedsheets all sorts of damp in the process.  If the wife manages to keep him off the bed, the moment she dozes off, he senses it and leaps up.  It is very similar to Vulture Mode<TM>, where Marshall watches her eat.  The moment she gets up or turns her head, he leaps for whatever he can get.  Mind you, he's perfectly happy with a dirty napkin to shred, but he'd definitely prefer some meat, ice cream, or cat food (his Native American name is "Smells Like Cat Food").

In the end I won, as Marshall generally likes to sleep like a parachute or umbrella over his mom's head.


----------

The Skunk Issue cannot compare to the Ant Issue, though..... (how's that for a segue?)
Everybody I talk to tells me that they are having a terrible time with ants this summer.  I feel their pain.  I have never seen ants like this in the twenty years in our house.  They're flipping everywhere.  I finished a piece of fudge and put the wrapper down on the table next to me.  In twenty minutes, the thing was full of ants.  I'm finding ants in places there is no apparent food at all, like the upstairs bathroom (unless they're particularly fond of shampoo and body lotions, of which my wife has a small amount that will last long after the nuclear winter).

The ants have no fear of people either, as I frequently find them on my arm.  No idea what's so appetizing about my arm, although the cat frequently licks my hand.  I refer to this as him tenderizing me.  I prefer to have neither activity in my general vicinity, thank you very much.

My wife, who keeps an eye on this sort of thing, tells me that we have a skunk because we have red foxes.  We don't have bunnies because the red foxes ate them.  Are you taking notes?  There will be an oral quiz later.

I wonder what would happen if the ants met the skunk.   Whatever happens, I don't want it happening out back or anywhere near the fans.

Monday, August 15, 2011

It's Not Easy Being Libertarian

While I was at work today, it occurred to me that the libertarian party should pay me.  I am pretty much the lone libertarian among three-hundred democrats.  No matter how much I speak up for my people, I am shouted down by coworkers, including a constable and someone who is probably going to run for office soon.

Yet I stand up for the abuse, time after time (like Mac users at work).

Today's point of boast is Ron Paul's near win in Iowa. 
What?
You mean you haven't heard about it?
Shocking.

Well, not so much shocking as what is technically known as a news blackout.  Ron Paul came within two hundred votes of beating the winner, Michelle Bachmann.  But instead of reporting this simple fact, the controlled media chose to say that someone else won or to report news about Rick Perry running.


Another pair of shockers:
  1. Michelle Bachmann is running
  2. people actually voted for Bachmann

This is a sick universe.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Happy Belated, Leo!

August 10 would have been the 102nd birthday of (Clarence) Leo Fender, one of the founding fathers of the electric guitar (and bass).  You see Leo's name on millions of Fender guitars as well as the G&L brand (George and Leo).


Leo was an incredible man.  He saw a place in the market for working man's gear and produced products for that market.  He used basic designs and the least expensive parts that would work but still kept the quality.

Leo stayed with the company that bore his name after they were purchased by CBS in 1976.  He eventually went on to form G&L Guitars with George Fullerton, also an old Fender employee.

Leo never stopped innovating, which makes his legacy that much more interesting: he couldn't play a note.

----------


I am a proud owner of a number of Fender guitars and amplifiers (all tube, of course); a `77 Stratocaster, two `78 Stratocasters, a `78 Telecaster (all lefties), and some incredibly sweet tweed amplifiers.  I own many guitars but my favorites are Fenders.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

The `Gay Agenda' Strikes Again?

In yet another item that no one of us could have foreseen, there is apparently a petition going around, calling for Sesame Street's Bert and Ernie to marry.

Yes, marry.

To the best of my knowledge, neither Bert nor Ernie has come out of the closet, unless you consider the fact that they cohabitate their closet.  A friend told me that her precocious son has had many questions about the pair from when he was very young.

The petition was started by one Lair Scott, an Illinois resident.  Scott believes this could help bullied and LGBT kids with their plight.   There are over seven hundred people who have signed the petition.  No word on how many oppose.

I suspect this will prompt a Defense of Puppetry Act from the more religiously-addled members of the right wing.  Or, as a coworker referred to it, the Henson Amendment.


They're just f-ing puppets, people.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Ozzy Osbourne is a Poofter

And we all know Rule Number One:  NO POOFTERS!

He's the pince of freakin' darkness, fer chrissake.... the man practically helped invent heavy metal.  He launched the careers of many an axeslinger, such as Randy Rhodes and Zakk Wylde.

Why, you ask, is Ozzy a poofter?

Because the esteemed Mr. Osbourne just put down ten thousand dollars for a Yorkshire Terrier.

Yorkshire Terriers, or Yorkies, as they're called, are not dogs suitable for your princes of darkness.  Not even your run of the mill prince of dusk would be seen alive with one of these dogs.  And when I say dogs, I mean cleverly disguised rodents.

Now let's cut to the chase: Yorkies are the exclusive territory of homosexual males, not legendary heterosexual rock stars (regardless of what their wives say).

Does Ozzy wear sweaters?
No.

Does Ozzy sell women's shoes?
No.

Should Ozzy own a Yorkie?
No.

There.  It's really that simple.



Mandatory disclaimer for the humor-impaired:
I don't care what anyone's sexuality is.   Roles is roles and rules is rules. 

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P.S.  Thank you very much, readers.  Your stopping by and commenting is very uplifting.

Monday, August 1, 2011

Hospital Hijinks

It's been a rough few weeks, as evidenced by my less than stellar output.  Hopefully the forest can now be distinguished from the trees (as well as the logging equipment) and I can return to some sort of (ab)normalcy.

If you have ever been in the hospital, you couldn't wait to get out.  Getting out of the hospital, whether emergency room or inpatient, is a very long, involved process beginning with doctors telling you that you're going to be discharged.  Hours later, nurses start telling you to get ready.  Then more of those wondrous hours go by and you hear from nobody (except the person collecting the television fee).

Just a few short hours later, you wander over to a convenient medical-looking person and ask them when, exactly, you're going to go home.  You feel just a tiny bit closer to your house after the janitor you just asked heads off to find a nurse (the only one who knows anything at all in the entire building).

"Hmmmm," the nurse says... "the doctor said he was doing your paperwork and then you could go home."

You inquire whether the nurse has seen said doctor in the past few millenia, to which the answer is always a resounding NO.  Being the helpful sort she is, she wanders off to locate Dr. Flatzenfuss.

But a few short hours later, the nurse locates Dr. Flatzenfuss, who is on his way to the floor to do the paperwork.  Little do you know that on his way is code for `hold your breath, sucker'.

Don't bother asking why, if the doctor said you were being discharged, he didn't fill out the paperwork on the floor on which he was working at that moment.  The answer is a medical secret to which literally no one knows the answer.

In case you're wondering if I made this whole thing up, the answer is no.  I actually sat by, helpless, while my wife was at the mercy of these jokers.  But as you well know, I get distracted, and more importantly, bored easily.  With all that spare time, I decided to think up a few ways to speed up the discharge process a bit:


  1. Stand out in the hall yelling MRSA! 
  2. Keep demanding that the nurses line up for my inspection
  3. Water ballooning the residents
  4. Hospital bed races
  5. Hitting the code button to call the nurses.
  6. Referring to the md's as medical disappointments (or mentally deficient)
  7. Hook the wireless heart monitor up to someone else.
  8. Phoning the desk and ordering pizzas for other rooms
  9. Every time the monitor bells ring, look dazed and threaten to assassinate RFK
  10. Start filling out your own discharge paperwork
  11. Make the beds in other patients rooms
  12. Take food orders in other rooms
  13. The old carrot sticks up the nose trick
  14. Asking the doctors if they mind if you smoke near the oxygen
  15. Inciting the other patients to riot
  16. Programming the heart monitor to say you're dead. 

Needless to say, I managed to get the eight hour discharge window down to a more respectable four hours.


I leave you with this thought: 

If cell phone radiation is bad for you, why do hospitals use wireless telemetry, attaching the transmitter to the patient's (open) gown?