generalizations

I sometimes wonder at the completely different perceptions academics have of the world. My comments are italicized.

Marginal Revolution: Why I love the suburbs:

Why I love the suburbs

I favor the suburbs for several reasons…

1. We live 30 minutes from Washington but we also have a fox in the backyard. Deer are a frequent sight as well.

30 minutes? At any time of day? Will that last? I don’t know many people who regard a fox — a predator, with the manners and temperament that accompany that niche — as a good neighbor. The illusion of wilderness: what does the fox live on, with his home range converted to suburb? Pets?

2. Chinese restaurants are usually better in the suburbs these days.

Hoo, boy, there’s a benefit.

3. Driving is fun and a good way to experience music. MR readers know I favor a (revenue-neutral) gas tax. My worry is that car culture makes people more individualistic and thus I have some reluctance to tax this trend. Try Chuck Berry’s “No Particular Place To Go.”

As noted in the comments to the original post, driving is not fun and “experiencing music” as a reason to drive underscores how boring and undemanding — ie, a waste of time — it is. And the individuality he mentions should be called by it’s real name — self-centeredness — or it’s chief manifestation, road rage.

4. A few weeks ago, the first Fairfax County police officer died in the line of duty. That’s the first ever. In New Jersey, where I grew up, you might speak of the first local cop to die today.

This tells me nothing if I don’t have the context of Fairfax County’s population density in mind. Comments suggest this is an artifact of zoning: the distribution/division of land keeps prices high and keeps the poor out. I suspect one could make similar claims of many affluent communities. I wonder when the last police officer in Medina — where Bill Gates lives — drew a weapon?

5. Many of my friends who live in Manhattan lose interest in global travel or never acquire it. Sadly they feel they already have everything they need from the world right at home.

Yeah, this is accurate <snort>. My recollection of suburban life was that it was a way of escaping different experiences and new sensations: urban dwellers were more likely to seek out those things.

This is all a bunch of meaningless generalization, of course, in the original and in my responses, and I would hope that someone who managed to secure a PhD would realize that before he pressed the ‘Post’ button. Perhaps I am being unfair to academics, but there seems to be some reality distortion effect from guaranteed lifetime employment that clouds the vision.

The best line from the comments?

“There are suburbs and there are suburbs.”

Related reading:

The Triumph of Burbopolis
A SPRAWL WORLD AFTER ALL

spam

Still dealing with lots of spam, cleaned out a few hundred today via WordPress’s moderation tools and found hundreds more in the database.

Turns out they were coming in as trackbacks, against which there is no real defense except to disable them. Did that two ways: by turning off pingback/trackback in WordPress’s controls and moving the wp-trackback file.

My highest comment_ID is 31,649, while active comments only number 1974. Almost 31,000 spam comments, against less than 2000 real ones? Nice, real nice.

new pinhole images

Just got some new pictures back and I think this is the best of the lot.

Adirondack

Taken with the old Foldex pinholer on Fuji Velvia 100. I’m going to try negative film and see if that helps at all: the exposure latitude of slide film is perhaps not the best solution for pinhole experiments.

Flickr images of the rest of them are available. I am over the limit for my free sets and am not sure about the $25 for a Pro account. If you feel generous . . .

Friday Random Ten

  1. Pretty / The Cranberries / Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can’t We?
  2. Moral Kiosk / R.E.M. / Murmur
  3. The Scarlet Tide / Elvis Costello & The Imposters / The Delivery Man
  4. Starless / King Crimson / Frame By Frame [2 – 1972-4]
  5. Recoil / Magazine / Real Life
  6. Not The Girl You Think You Are / Crowded House / Recurring Dream
  7. Bright Future In Sales / Fountains Of Wayne / Welcome Interstate Managers
  8. I Believe / R.E.M. / Life’s Rich Pageant
  9. Satellite (Demo) / Elvis Costello / Spike Bonus Disc
  10. Symphony 6 – Beethoven / BBC Philharmonic conducted by Gianandrea Noseda / The Beethoven Experience – Downloads

bonus: You’re My Drug / The Dukes of Stratosphear / Chips from the Chocolate Fireball

it’s only money

A friend of a friend took her own life yesterday.

She had been caught/discovered embezzling funds from small businesses for which she worked as a bookkeeper and, for reasons known but to her, decided there was no other way to make amends.

It’s only money. Even if it couldn’t be repaid, it isn’t worth a life. No one would have asked for this as a punishment.

She was sitting in the room in which I write just six days ago, surrounded by a dozen friends, all sharing laughs and occasional shrieks as the wine flowed along with the conversation. Any one of them would have listened with a sympathetic ear.

This sounds angry, as if I am angry with the departed. And in truth, I am, a little. We have all been robbed of a friend and a chance to help, and over something as inconsequential as money.

Does this mean I condone stealing? Am I some kind of soft-on-crime liberal? Far from it: but I value people more than money.

I lost a friend many years ago in a similar way. She felt she had no other options, but the difference in her case was her health. She had survived debilitating cancers, twice, and when the third instance was found, she didn’t have the strength to go on nor did she want to be that helpless again. I can accept that, a medical-based decision, more readily.

new look for Spring

Time for a new look. I re-skinned the WordPress stuff with a little help from wpthemes.info.

I ran across Sandvox today and ran the top-level page, uninteresting as it is, through it.

Welcome | a crank’s progress | Paul Beard

Sandvox looks interesting, from what little I used it. It seems to do a pretty nice job at abstracting away all the icky html stuff. It also introduces a modular assembly idea with Pagelets, little stubs that be added or removed from the page as needed. Peeve: you can add a Flickr badge, but not yours. There’s one coded in and you have to remove/replace it with your own badge if you have one.

And unregistered users get a big yellow banner across the bottom of their one page announcing their cheapskate status šŸ˜‰

But for all those petty niggles, it looks good, works well, worth a look.

And I got a reply/acknowledgment of my Flickr badge kvetch in less than an hour. Encouraging.

Now playing: Porrohman by Big Country from the album “The Crossing”