Tuesday, February 17, 2009

At the old alma mater

Howdy Guys,
     I went back to Davidson this afternoon to participate in the Alumni Panel for the Philosophy Department's Major Decisions Series panel presentation, put on by the Office of Career Services.  There were three alumni on the panel:  me; Sissy Holloman, class of 1981, Special Counsel, Parker, Poe, & Adams; and Brad Smith, class of 2007, Assistant Football Coach, Davidson College.  I'm assuming that I was invited as an object lesson in how not to use your major in your career path.
     There were four department members there, none of whom I knew.  Dr. Stell is still at Davidson.  Dr. Maydole is retired but still lives locally and, I got the impression, visits from time to time.  There were about a dozen students there, most of whom were pretty quiet, but four of them did pipe up.  I would never have known what to say at such an event either, back in the day.
     The panel lasted just shy of an hour and I quite enjoyed it.  Ms. Holloman was able to speak to the usefulness of philosophical training for legal reasoning and argumentation.  Mr. Smith spoke of the use of those same skills in the day-to-day analysis of the news, current events, et al..  I talked about why I chose my major in the first place and about how training in philosophy provides those benefits traditionally ascribed to a liberal arts education in, perhaps, their purest form.  I also recommended a book by Mortimer J. Adler, The Conditions of Philosophy, which was in the library when we were there.  I think I came off as slightly less pompous than usual.  If any of you are invited to participate in this, or a similar program, I recommend doing so.  I felt the time was well-spent.
     Also well-spent was the money I, and others, have sent over the years.  I hadn't been on the campus in 10 years, but it's beautiful.  Natural beauty was in evidence too.  I enjoyed the drive down through the rolling hills of the western Piedmont.  I-40 and I-77 in that part of the state must be quite spectacular in May.
     The town of Davidson is developed more than I ever imagined possible.  I confess I'm not comfortable with that.  I think the education Davidson provided profited from a more cloistered atmosphere.  Tempus fugit, I suppose.
     All in all, it was a good day.  I trust this note finds you all hale and well,
Shane.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Schadenfreude

As a resident of California (budget, we don't need no steenkeen budget), I take great pleasure in Illinois suffering through a fiasco of governance almost as bad as our own. In your most Muppetish fashion now, "De-de-de, de-de de-de-de-de Blagojevich."

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Obama wounds Internet

Connectivity seems to be improving, so it was apparently just a flesh wound as umpteen million people tried to watch the Inauguration online. I can't say I blame then, but it's times like this I dislike programs that have online docs that aren't copied to the local hard drive by default (hello Mercurial!).

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

The Better Angels of our Nature

Barack Obama’s victory in the presidential election on November 4 naturally leads many to think of the first president from a young party founded in 1856 partly on abolishing slavery.  Obama quoted from Abraham Lincoln’s first inaugural address in his acceptance speech saying that “we are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained it must not break our bonds of affection.”  I find myself thinking of the end of the Great Emancipator’s speech which finishes with the hope that we will again reflect “the better angels of our nature.”

 

This victory is historic because of the color of the winner’s skin, his strange Muslim name, and his youth, but I am hopeful that it will accomplish something more important than those historic qualities.  Barack Hussein Obama has an opportunity to take us beyond the culture war that has caused so many political problems over the past twenty years.  Hillary Clinton, John McCain, George W. Bush, John Kerry and most other leaders of both parties became politically active in opposition to or support of the Vietnam War.  Obama is not motivated to refight the battles of forty years ago.  He made his admiration for John McCain’s Vietnam service clear from the beginning of the campaign.  Though he ran many negative ads, those ads did not generally attack McCain personally.  He may have an opportunity to work pragmatically with both parties to find the best solutions to our problems.  After eight years of a president who seemed only interested in pleasing the 49% of the electorate who voted for him, it will be refreshing to have one who wants to represent all Americans.

 

Obama’s lack of executive experience has been a concern about him from the beginning of his campaign.  I have often said that I wish he had become governor of Illinois before running for the White House.  We have found out at great cost the danger of electing someone to the Presidency who does not have experience at the national level.  George W. Bush came into power in 2000 having been governor of a state with one of the weakest executives in the country.  Though he had a disciplined and motivated staff, they seemed more interested in winning more power for Republicans than in actually governing the country.

 

I do not think that Barack Obama will be that kind of president.  He has surrounded himself with advisors who are respected by both major parties, and the evidence from the financial crisis suggests that he will listen to them.  George W.  Bush is an ideologue who seemed to want the presidency initially so that he could avenge the loss of his father to Bill Clinton in 1992.  Obama is a problem-solver who is interested in results for the country.  Even if you think he only wants to help Democrats, I think that he sees the path to success for his party to be in helping the country get out of our current foreign and domestic messes.   He will create a long term majority for Democrats if he can show that his is the party that governs from the middle where most of the electorate is.  No one runs for president who does not desire power.  The sacrifices a presidential candidate must accept for themselves and their families are unacceptable to anyone who does not have enormous ambition.  The kind of candidate we want is one who sees his or her personal success being tied to pragmatic success for the country.  I think that Barack Obama is that candidate.  He has an ability to inspire us to do what is good for the nation even when it might be politically difficult.  He is willing to listen to opposition opinions and make decisions after thoughtful consideration.  If we give him a chance to govern, I think we will be proud that we elected this man president.

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Approaching Dirt

So, I turned 41 yesterday. My two year old brings me an electronic photo frame. I like it. Look out dirt, I'm catching up with you. Earlier this summer I was talking with a boy who sometimes lives across the street. He was playing with a Tonka dump truck like the one I had many years ago.
Me: When I was your age, I had a dump truck like that.
Him: I'm six. Were you ever six?
So I beat him to death with my walker.

Friday, September 19, 2008

Homecoming

So, who's making the trek to north Mecklenburg County? Pam and I will not be going -- California's a long way away and das Kind still needs supplemental O2 on flights. It's too bad. I went to graduate school with one of DC's physics profs (John Yukich), and wouldn't mind catching up with him and the rest of the department.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Not your father's Cushman

Seen on reason.com, why does the Richland, SC sheriff's department need this? I suppose if there aren't any innocent bystanders within a mile downrange, then it's safe (for wildly inaccurate values of "safe"). I guess Sheriff Lott is finally gonna git them Duke boys.