Thursday, September 29

reworked

some photo of Lincoln i took when my sister came to visit.  completely irrelevant to this post.




______

the following snippet is part of a poetic prose piece i began at an optometrists some five or six years ago.  despite trying to rewrite and rework this particular bit since, oh, the afternoon after i wrote it, i have never come up with an alternative presentation that suited my intents.  lo and behold, i spent an afternoon at the dentist getting fillings (six at a time--not advisable) and suddenly the words came to me.  so, without further ado...

Poetry, as she lay dying,
whispered within, "I always was
a ruse for fools." but we both saw
that brave-worn mask for what it was
askew upon her golden fear.
"where will she go?" i asked the crowd--
but they, blind mob, mute-shuffled past;
at length i found my self and thoughts
alone beside her final home.

btw: this form isn't final.  but it's finally given me a structure to work in--not to mention the rhythms, people, the rhythms!--8 to a line, two 4-beat sets, nine times in a row!  i do love a sweet off-beat, but love the precise cut quite more.


Tuesday, September 27

One reason I have hope for the future of politics, and then again, don't.

It's pretty simple: video games.  If you cast a look around the video gaming world, you quickly notice that since the internet became accessible at gaming-quality speeds, the most popular games quickly became those in which gamers interact--and the more interaction there is, the more popular the game is likely to be.  I would point to the success of games such as Eve and WoW as evidence here, but it's on Facebook & Google+ and every other social networking tool in existence.

There are a few obvious reasons why interactive gaming is successful & popular.  First, as a "replayable" gaming experience, nothing replaces interacting with humans in terms of unpredictability, creativity, and excitement; and how could it?  Interacting with random selections from a pool of (literally) millions of people will always create a more exciting, original experience than interacting with one gaming programmer's planned scenario.  Second, interactive games provide a social platform--something to "do" with another person, something to discuss, something to brag about, and a community of like-minded people to participate in.  Third, interactive games provide an alternative to mundane life, where success is far less complex an achievement and the cost of failure is greatly reduced--allowing measurable growth along a defined skill set in a context that is visible and respected by your peers.  --Hang on, I'm getting to politics.

In this environment, leadership is far, far more linked to personal capability, applicable skill sets, and cleverness than it is in the real world.  Real-world leadership is muddied by a host of things that are basically irrelevant--sex appeal, pre-existing financial or networking advantages, personal popularity, first impressions, and the brute length of time represented by a real-world career.  Certainly some of these things play into gaming leadership, but in my experience these irrelevant advantages or disadvantages are greatly muted in a gaming environment.  This makes gaming a much more brutal testing ground for leaders--but it also encourages leaders and teaches valuable lessons in an environment where leadership cannot rely on false advantages.

Quickly you can see where this applies to the world of politics, which is so reliant on leadership in the course of campaigning--and then serving--in elected office.  Being able to maneuver a complex organization, having the cleverness to outwit an opponent in a test of true political power--these are lessons that are honed almost universally (albeit indirectly) in the interactive gaming environment.  Learning when to argue, when to compromise, how to manipulate strangers--these are the indirect skills being taught by the modern gaming environment.

Why this gives me hope: our future politicians will come from the ranks of kids who grew up being taught leadership by experience, in an arena where they won't rely on real-world advantages.  This will encourage people with real capability to pursue leadership when they may not have done so before, and will teach even those already inclined towards political leadership to rely on a different skill set than previous generations.

Why it doesn't: the above may not be a good thing.

Thursday, September 22

News snippet

"Apr 20, 2011 – The well-known fitness photographer, who is awaiting trial on a host of child molestation charges, has married his alleged victim."

Wait, I--wait.  Now he's the legal guardian and representative.  Does he get to be both plaintiff and defendant now?  Because--that's just--wow.  Hooray, court systems!

Tuesday, September 20

Thought conversations

A brief sojourn through my head:

(Scene: I have just toasted my pop tarts in the work kitchen and am traveling back to my cubicle.  A coworker passes me in the hallway, and I smile a greeting.  She assesses my breakfast unsmilingly and continues past without acknowledging my friendly approach.  The following dialog takes place in my head in the next twenty feet.)

Grim Coworker: We don't smile here.  We're professionals, not emoticons.  Smiling is for...for...yellow people.
EEO Director: ...Yellow people?