Dreams of a lego spaceman...

This is the official page of author Duane Gundrum. It is also the portal for the comic strip The Adventures of Stickman and the Unemployed Legospaceman.

Monday, August 30, 2004

Why journalists don't talk about science
I wrote an editorial in the Western Herald that appeared today, and a physics professor wrote back all hot and bothered that the way it was presented didn't jive exactly with his interpretation of how physics was developed. Keep in mind, my first degree from West Point is physics; it's not like I just made the stuff up.

Anyway, my point in mentioning physics in my editorial was to actually talk nice about the natural sciences. I'm starting to understand why journalists don't. If you mention the natural sciences, someone in the natural sciences throws a fit. It's no wonder more and more people think business is the way to go instead of actual science careers.
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Friday, August 27, 2004

Life, the Universe, and Assistantships...
Sometimes you just have to laugh. Dr. B just contacted me through email and told me that there was a last-minute drop by a funded student, so my name is next on the list, but because of my Herald position, he doesn't think I can take it. Actually, I can take it. I was doing the Herald job at the same time I was doing the associateship last year, and through the summer when I had both positions. But it doesn't matter. I'm teaching this semester at KVCC, and the Herald job is something I'm very interested in doing anyway.

Yet, 3 days before classes start, an assistantship appeared open. That's probably what I find really funny. It's not one of those laughs you point at anyone in particular. Just a laugh nonetheless.

I'd take it if it was a teaching job, but I don't think I'd be all that interested in grading papers or being someone's go-for next semester. Who needs that kind of life?
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Thursday, August 26, 2004

Teaching...continued
Today was my first official day of teaching. Tuesday was my first scheduled day, but it was more an introduction than anything else. Today was really the day.

I was actually pretty nervous, even though public speaking is not a new thing for me. I kept thinking I was going to screw up. Then I realized that this was a subject I knew well. So I went ahead and started teaching it. I thought I wouldn't have enough information; I didn't have enough time. I made some laugh, some think, and the rest nod their heads every now and then. Someone asked if I pronounced some ancient Athenian incorrectly (don't even remember who), and he was right, but that's always been the case, and I just explained that I'm the king of doctoring names, but I guarantee that they'll get a lot out of the analysis of the person, even if I call Socrates "So-Krates" (an allusion to Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure).

Overall, it went really well. I was pretty happy with it. I just hope it continues going this way. I got some interaction with the group, so I hope that develops further during the semester.

Teaching is fun. It's like storytelling without someone telling me I need to shut up or change the subject. :)
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Tuesday, August 24, 2004

Wishlists and cookies
This is yet another one of those things designed by morons. Sure, they sound great in theory, but so does dating your cousin. It just never seems to be the right thing to do.

Amazon has a wishlist feature where you can put things you'd like to buy in it. I put in a few books, and then it started suggesting all sorts of stupid books that I started saying I either owned or was not interested in. Well, that just opened up a landslide of continuous suggestions that kept getting worse and worse. From a nonfiction book by a political science author, I found myself facing screens of computer game choices in some kind of seven degrees of separation from Hell. I guess somewhere down the line I said that I owned Neverwinter Nights, and now this wishlist comes at me with games I would never play, like Doom 3 and Farcry, the shoot em up kind of games. To be honest, I NEVER wanted a single game on my amazon wishlist to begin with because I would NEVER buy a game through amazon anyway; their prices for games are usually pretty stupid.

This is probably why I will never have a gmail account. The whole idea of my email recommending ads for me is like asking for Amazon to start filtering my spam for me.

Netflix does this same thing. I watch a stupid movie once, and from that point on forever I get "recommendations" of the stupidest movies of all time. And you can't get rid of them because even if you say you're not interested, they find even worse movies to throw in there. Look, just because I liked Charlies Angels Full Throttle because I drool whenever I see Lucy Liu does not mean that I am interested in XXX the movie. The other thing that gets on my nerves with Netflix is that if I'm in the middle of watching a 7 CD TV series, it wants me to evaluate the whole series after I finish watching the very first CD. And that stupid request never goes away, and it blocks the evaluations of movies that I may actually have wanted to evaluate.

The point: none of this "extra convenience" is proving to be more convenient. If I want to buy your product, I'll search for your product. Just because I use dishwashing liquid doesn't mean I am in the market for a microwave oven.
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Monday, August 23, 2004

My political analysis to someone who has woken up in a cave and only now realizes an election is about to take place:

John Kerry

John Kerry is running on his war record against a president who a lot of people believe has led the country in the wrong direction. As such, Kerry has taken the position of "the alternative to Bush" because the Democrats had to nominate somebody, because "anybody but Bush" couldn't be written onto the ballot.

Kerry stands for pretty much left-leaning moderate democratic platforms such as raising taxes and more money for education. His foreign policy platform is somewhat hazy as he appears to be interested in doing what Bush has done, but not like Bush.

A final determination of Kerry is that if you vote for Kerry, expect the same type of administration that you had under Clinton, except you would probably have a few statesmen, like Wesley Clark, who are capable of waging strong wars by appearing on CNN and telling us what isn't working.

George W. Bush
Not to be confused by his father of almost the same name. They're not alike in any way. Also not to be confused with Reagan, of a completely different name, although the younger Bush would like to latch onto that individual as his "new" father, even though he's nothing like him.

Bush's platform is "vote for me and things will be good", which means that if things are good for you right now, expect them to be exactly the same four years from now, although we might be hating a different country by then, so don't invest all of your money in anti-Iraq bumper stickers.

Bush is tied to the religious coalition, and when push comes to shove, he will do what they tell him to do, or if he's seriously searching for support, he'll do things he hopes they want so they'll come out and support him.

Bush promises good things if re-elected, but the reality is you will get exactly what you have now under Bush with four more years of Bush. If that's a good thing, then that should help you figure out your vote. If it's a bad thing, then you should rethink that vote. If Bush had any great ideas for the next four years, he would have enacted them long before the election, so we're stuck with the same path he's already steering. Again, that's open to interpretation, based on how things are for you now.

The biggest criticism of Bush is an accountability problem. If anything goes wrong, expect him to blame your Aunt Lizzie before he says he did something wrong. As a matter of fact, anyone in his administration can embezzle money, have affairs or blow up small countries that can't fight back, and he'll still say it's okay because they're "patriots and good Americans".

A final determination of Bush is that if you vote for Bush, expect the exact same government you've had for the last three years. Exact. No difference.

Ralph Nader
His platform boils down to "hey, look at me over here. No, really, please look!"

He has zero chance whatsoever of being elected. But he has very important things to say. He believes the Democrats and the Republicans have become so entrenched in government that common Americans have lost touch with their own government. His campaign is about reminding the two parties that Americans still care about government that isn't pre-packaged for them by one of two parties.

But his message will be lost in the ether because neither of the two parties take him seriously, even though his message is probably the only one during this and the last election that actually makes any sense.

A final determination of Nader is that his administration will...okay, I can't continue. It's hard to keep a straight face when talking about an administration that has less chance than the Lego Party.

Conclusion
If you listen to one or the other party, they will tell you the other side is nuts. If you're a Republican, Kerry is a traitor to his country who cheated to get his medals while never being injured, and if elected, he will flip-flop so many times that nothing will ever get done as Al Qaeda terrorists invade America and blow up the local Dairy Queen. The Democrats say that George W. Bush is dishonest, wants to kill your working class children by sending them to wars that no one wants, is inherently stupid but diabolically evil (still trying to figure out that connection), and is clueless about the American people.

By not actually paying attention to the election, you may be the ONE person who knows more about who we should elect than the rest of us. The rest of us are so bogged down in our own feces that our political opinions concerning the election can only be seen as ridiculous, and funny if there was someone not so tied to the fight to be able to laugh at all of us.
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Sunday, August 22, 2004

Saturday, August 21, 2004

My thoughts on the political knowledge of Americans
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Friday, August 20, 2004

My class for fall at KVCC
I just checked my roster online; they finally entered me so that I'm officially there. I have 45 capacity, and there are 45 students signed up. Okay, I'm scared. Before it was a lot easier when it was just words. Now there are real students signed up to take the class.
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Tuesday, August 17, 2004

Spam on blogs
This is something that really makes no sense, but why would anyone waste his or her time spamming someone's blog or including stupid comments that are irrelevant to anything whatsoever? I know a few people who have been getting frustrated with spammers on their blogs, and to this day I've never understood the rationality behind such a stupid action.

It was bad enough with spam on email. I gave up my main email account, and I'm with the crowd of people who are moving further and further away from the Internet because it is no longer useful. This, in the end, makes the Internet less and less useful to those that do use it when more and more people no longer trust it as a medium for source information.
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Monday, August 09, 2004

Buried Memories
I wrote a short story today called "Buried Memories", a story I've been playing around with in my head for a number of months now. It's a story written backwards in time from the present over a number of years until 21 years ago. It's kind of a strange love story, to put it as simple as possible about forgiveness that takes 21 years to happen.

I was going to write it as a play, but I think it works a lot better as a short story.
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Teaching at KVCC
I wasn't really planning on doing it, but Tim Farrow from KVCC left me a message and asked me if I was interested in teaching the introductory political science course at KVCC this fall. I went there today, and it looks like I'm going to do it. It's an early morning class, and it should be interesting. It won't conflict with my Herald job, and I have no actual class schedule next semester of my own (doing an independent study with Dr. Corder). The extra money will definitely come in handy, and I'll finally get a chance to actually do some teaching, rather than just hold someone's hand or grade for a professor's class.

I start on August 23rd, the week before school actually starts at Western. Well, actually, I start August 24th, because it is a Tuesday/Thursday class, and the 23rd is actually Monday, the day that classes officially start at Kalamazoo Valley Community College.
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Friday, August 06, 2004

Why I Continue to Love Bureaucracy
Today, I went into the registrar's office to change my address (from when I moved last time). On the phone earlier, I was told it was easiest if I actually just go in and do it. So, I went there, and I changed it so all was okay. Then I went home.

As I opened my door, the phone message system was taking a message. It was the Registrar's Office saying there was a discrepancy in my home address. I caught the call before they hung up, and the woman told me that there was an error in the address (they couldn't remember which one was correct), and they needed the new address. I told her. She told me she could fix it over the phone.

???

Explain to me again why it was important for me to go in physically, please.
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