Friday, December 18, 2015

The Welcome Star Wars Protocol

I've talked to a few folks that are so excited about the new Star Wars flick that I can't help imagining them in some sort of Lovecraftian idol worship cult---chanting arm-in-arm around a small Yoda statue.  A friend reported that someone told her it was, "Star Wars Eve," which prompted me to write the following protocol.  Practice and be ready for the next Star Wars zealot you meet.

--- THE WELCOME STAR WARS PROTOCOL ---



1. Pop eyes as wide as you can.
2. Slowly make a big close-lipped smile.
3. Sway side to side four times.
4. Continue to sway and sing:

Fah who for-aze!
Dah who dor-aze!
Welcome Star Wars,
Come this way!

Fah who for-aze!
Dah who dor-aze!
Welcome Star Wars,
Star Wars Day.

Welcome, Welcome
Fah who rah-moose
Welcome, Welcome
Dah who dah-moose
Star Wars day is in our grasp
So long as we have hands to clasp

Fah who for-aze!
Dah who dor-aze!
Welcome Star Wars
Bring your cheer

Fah who for-aze!
Dah who dor-aze!
Welcome all Who's
Far and near

Welcome Star Wars, fah who rah-moose
Welcome Star Wars, dah who dah-moose
Star Wars day will always be
Just so long as we have we

Fah who for-aze
Dah who dor-aze
Welcome Star Wars
Bring your light

Welcome Star Wars
Fah who rah-moose!
Welcome Star Wars
Dah who dah-moose!

Welcome Star Wars
While we stand
Heart to heart
And hand in hand

Fah who for-aze
Dah who dor-aze
Welcome welcome
Star Wars
Star Wars
Day

Bonus: Rehearse with a group of friends so you can mob-up if any one of you get triggered.










Thursday, December 10, 2015

I Self-Certify This Blog Post

I got a lot of helpful intel at the SMWVBO conference yesterday, but the lunch-session talk from  Mr. Lyn Watts was just sad.  Watts, the "Senior Program Privacy Manager" for Microsoft, was hand-wringing about the October 6th death of the "U.S.-EU Safe Harbor Framework."

I remembered the date because I had been surprised to hear the Cort of Justice of the European Union (CJEU, aka Minitru) had taken a position that appeared to support the privacy rights of its huddled denizens by protecting them from the U.S's rogue NaTional ZecurIty Agency.  I also remember hoping Safe Harbor would stay dead because a few years ago, my betters had requested I analyze it and provide them with an "executive summary and recommendation." I worked with a "Guy from Legal" for about two days to establish the policy and governance, as well as what the company would have to do in order to "Self-Certify" compliance.

That's right.  "Self-Certify"

Since the "Guy from Legal" had roughly the same dark sense of gallows humor, we started printing up mock self-certificates for all sort's of absurdities until He had one proving he was the Pope, and I had one to self-certify myself as a "Benevolent Singularity" that would never harm anyone providing my demands were met promptly and cheerfully, or they were the Pope.


Basically, a loophole that let US companies stick a straw into profitible EU marketing data, all that this nonsense addition to the existing nonsense  pseudo-legislation about European Import/Export law required of us was a pinky-promise stating that our company would protect the personal data related to European people in a way that conforms to European standards, a brief survey of which revealed our current policy to be much more likely to actually prevent any sort of inappropriate use, loss, or leak.  We could keep sluping up EU data as we saw fit, and as a bonus, the same pinky-promise would cover the Swiss as well!  Yay!

However, on 6 October last, Minitru decided that they would no longer accept pinky-promises, and that, in light recent events demonstrating the reprehensible behavior of the NSA in stealing private information from everybody in the whole world, along with the incompetence and/or criminal negligence that are the hallmarks of NSA's ability to keep confidence, Eurosoc would no longer allow sharing the invariably sordid details of the European citizens' private lives with Amerisoc. Big heads exploded at big data strip-mining concerns like Google, Amazon, and Microsoft which were all atwitter, and lit up the blunderwebs with dark forebodings too.

In a mind twisting paradox, I actually agree with Big Brothers finding on this one. A few days prior to 6 October, I had been shredding all of the mail in my lofty "maybe someday" stack (upon which any correspondence arriving marked "Urgent! Open immediately" is automatically placed,) but one such marked packet turned out to be a notice from Uncle S. informing me that he had suffered a cock-up on the privacy front, and as a result, my fingerprints, identification numbers, all financial account numbers along with balances and passwords, political affiliations, recent purchases, reading habits, shoe size, etc.--- well, all of that stuff was now public information, and so... you know, apology, sorry, regret, etc.

But what prompted all this reminiscence was when Mr. Watts (Remember Mr. Watts? He was the Microsoft guy at the SMWVBO conference.)---when he said, "...to understand the issue, you have to understand that the European attitude and culture regarding privacy is much different than ours.  Personal privacy is actually written into their constitution!"

At first I didn't believe him because I couldn't find anything about personal privacy in any of the sixty sections of article one of the referenced constitution, but then, only sixty six sections into article two, I found not one, but three whole privacy related articles!

ARTICLE II-66
Right to liberty and security
Everyone has the right to liberty and security of person.

ARTICLE II-67
Respect for private and family life
Everyone has the right to respect for his or her private and family life, home and communications.

ARTICLE II-68
Protection of personal data
1. Everyone has the right to the protection of personal data concerning him or her.
2. Such data must be processed fairly for specified purposes and on the basis of the consent of the person concerned or some other legitimate basis laid down by law.  Everyone has the right of access to data which has been collected concerning him or her, and the right to have it rectified.
3. Compliance with these rules shall be subject to control by an independent authority.

Curious, I decided to skim the U.S. Constitution before writing my congressman to propose an amendment when I found this in one of the existing amendments:

AMENDMENT IV
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

A little stuffy-16th-century-powder-wiggy, but from a legal standpoint, I think it's essentially the same, apart of course from the insanely vague nonsense about specification, legitimate basis, and rectification found in Article II-68.2 of the European Constitution.  

In addition to questions I now have regarding Mr. Watts' basic literacy, I wonder if it might be advisable to remind our U.S. of A. Federal Overlords that the biggest part of their job is to secure these rights to the citizenry, and perhaps they might like to take this opportunity to  somehow remind data whores like Zuckerberg and Bezos that the consequence of selling stuff that does not belong to you is not limited to fines and fees, but often includes having your slick ass thrown in jail as a deterrent to those who might wish to emulate your, erm---"Business Model?"

Then again, it was the aforementioned Overlords that set this whole goat rodeo in motion, so trying to remind them of anything might be on the pointless side.



On a totally unrelated topic, here is my brief review of the new Microsoft Windows 10 operating system:

OOOH!  SHINY!


Friday, December 4, 2015

Texas Moon - Chapter 3

From a writing project wherein I attempt to avoid any funny business

Before her father converted the old hotel into a dance hall, he raised Candace there. More accurately, you could say it was where he let her raise herself. As a child, she had loved the huge old hotel-come-honkytonk, or the “palace” as she called it.  In those days, she spent most of her time holding court for an endless cast of imaginary characters until they were either replaced by, or became part of the dreams.

Around age ten, most girls force themselves to abandon the art of pretending. Candace, too, began to tell herself that such things were childish. She packed up her tea-set, and made every effort to be all grown up.

She succeeded to a large degree---filling her days with chores, sketching, reading, and a million other mature pursuits; however, her bizarre remodeling dreams only became more frequent. In the course of a few short years they added an entire actors guild worth of characters to her increasingly crowded imagination. In spite of a strong feeling that it was another childish pursuit best left behind, she loved the dreams more than anything in waking life. She loved to discuss them with her father. She began to draw surprisingly accurate, almost architectural draft quality sketches of the various rooms she saw in her dreams.

Barry was captivated by the drawings, and always listened attentively to narrations of the wild events of the dreams---all the while doing his best to conceal from her what he felt they might mean.

She once took the chance of sharing these dreams with Brittany, a friend from school. This had prompted her classmate to declare that Candace was, “the weirdest girl that ever lived.” Brittany went on to launch a social smear campaign based on the assertion. Candace had an acute awareness of her own quirkiness , and had taken the superlative “weirdest” as a personal compliment. She even looked up the word and learned that “weird” originally meant anything involving, or made by, witches---nice. Years later, Brittany would escape from a state mental institution, steal a revolver from her father's house, and use it to kill four random Wal-Mart shoppers while screaming, "I'm not crazy!" and turning the gun on herself, but that was years later, and probably had nothing to do with Candice or her drawings. It’s just one of those details that stands out in retrospect.

It was just after Candace's 14th birthday when worlds collided. She was taking her dad a cup of coffee from the kitchen up to his roost on the third floor. Feeling completely non-weird, she rounded the corner at the top of the third floor only to find another set of stairs between her and the top floor.

She stood there questioning herself---suspecting she might be dreaming---knowing she was not.  Dust filtered through a shaft of sunlight; her dreams had a no-dust policy. She turned and looked over the railing of the switchback staircase---back down into what should have been the second floor, and it was---but? Her head swam and she half expected to see herself looking back up (or down) because, in the ordinary space of the house as she knew it, she would be looking down on the exact spot where she now stood.

As terror gripped her, she stood transfixed, alternately looking up to the top floor, then down to the second floor below her. It was dead-calm and she could hear her father rustling papers above her. She stood there so long that she began to think maybe she had always lived in a four story mansion, and she had somehow just never noticed this third floor part. She found that if she craned her neck over the railing she could get a glimpse of the red concrete pavement in the old carriage house that took up most of the first floor. Now, it was two full stories below where she stood.

It felt like hours. The floor she was standing on seemed to be laid out like the top floor, with two long halls and smaller passages leading to eight or ten rooms. She didn’t explore it because while she was looking down at the spot where her rational mind was telling her she should be, she thought she heard the rattling of dishes---and bits of a muffled conversation echoing up from the kitchen. One of the voices was her father’s, which was disturbing because, then, who was shuffling papers?  The other voice was more disturbing because it was unfamiliar---exotic---maybe Russian.

She didn't really decide to ascend to the third (or fourth?) floor. She just lurched into action as soon as the fear and confusion that had paralyzed her wore off.  The fear and confusion were still there. Her legs were just now responding to the internal commands that had been repeating in an infinite loop.  She took the the steps of the final flight two at a time.

“Are you OK?” Barry asked her as she burst into the roost.

“What? Yeah-oh sure. I just got up from a nap and I must have just kept dreaming instead of waking up all the way.”

He looked over his reading glasses at the cup in her hands. “It happens. Is that for me?”

She didn’t know right away. In fact it seemed like the cup had just sort of appeared in her hands. But, yeah---it must be for him because it was inky black, and she always took hers with sugar and much more milk than coffee. Before she said anything, she took a sip and found that it was cold, almost icy. “Yes, but...” she said. “It’s cold. I- I got distracted and... I’ll warm it up.” She turned to leave.

“Candice wait, what’s going on? Really, maybe you should just sit down. I’ll go for the coffee.”

She started to object, but caught a glimpse of herself in the window. She had gone paper white. “Yeah, OK. Probably best,” she said as she sat down on the strange taxidermy Longhorn sofa Barry kept in his office.

Barry took the cup of cold coffee from her and left. She listened to his footfalls as they descended what seemed to be entirely too many steps. Fear welled up again as she waited. When he came back, she made a conscious effort to count his steps. She counted twenty six, which was about right---twelve for each switchback, plus a couple for turning around on the landing.

He set her "blond latte" on the end-table before he put the cup of hot black on his desk. He asked her again about what was troubling her.

“You know those dreams I tell you about where there are extra rooms in the house that I’ve never seen before? You know, the drawings and all? Well I was bringing your coffee and---and well, I thought I was suddenly on a whole other floor between here and the kitchen, only I was wide awake, and when I got here your coffee was cold and...” she trailed off.

“And what?” Barry asked.

“Well, it was just so real that I’m afraid to go back down. This sounds stupid, but it’s like one of my remodeling dreams leaked out into the real world and… and I’m really not sure how many floors there are. I mean, it was just so real. I got creeped out, and I guess I’m still a little confused. And I feel... just weird I guess---not to mention that every time I think of the word ‘weird,’ it creeps me out even more because---Did you know that ‘weird’ originally meant something made by witches?"

“Right,” he said.  “Like the three ‘w-e-y-a-r-d-’ weird witches from Macbeth---ill wyndes that doth blow no man good---but sorry, I’m just fanning the flames of creepy aren’t I? So, how can I help?” he asked her.

She realized this must be why he always pronounced it, “we-yard,” but from a man with a couch made out of a real cow in his office, it had never seemed odd. Half joking, she said, “You could start by telling me how many floors there were when you came back up.”

Not joking at all, he replied “Candace dear, there were four on the way down, but only the normal three on this trip up. There are always at least three---and this one is always at the top---carriage house is always on the ground floor---but sometimes the mudroom next to it is a porte-cochère.  The truth is Candice, things change around here.“

She wanted to think he was just messing with her, but when Barry prefaced anything with "Candace dear," she knew she could take it as gospel---it was the God's honest truth from a man in whom there was no guile. Her head swam again. She stared into her cup, trying to be angry with her father for not taking her seriously, but actually being much more so because she knew he had.  She knew he was finally letting her in on the unvarnished truth, or at least as much of it as he thought she could handle.

It seemed that recently he had been naturally less protective in the way parents are as their children mature; but there was nothing natural about this, and truth told, this weirdness (weyardness?) was so severely lacking in anything like objective reality, she felt a nice coat of shellac might have been in order.

This wasn’t mortgage payments or menstrual cramps. This was something more like Lovecraft’s “dead dreamer” and that “non-linear geometry” she had read about in one of the other books from the “off-limits” collection. At the same time, it was a truth she had guessed at all along.

She kept staring into the cup for what seemed like hours. Barry finished whatever trivial bookkeeping task he had been doing, and left the room without a word. Maybe he had said something, but it didn’t register. Candace kept staring into her cup.  She never took a sip. When the rest of the room went dark, the almost white circle of beige milk seemed to be the only light in the room.

When she finally reached for it, there was another disturbing shift in her perception.  She realized she was no longer sitting on the sofa, but was in her father’s office chair facing the window; no longer looking into a cup of anything, but reaching out her hand toward a brilliant and impossibly full moon.


A full moon through trees.

THE DISLEXICON

I stopped keeping this secret list of grammar and logic problems about ten years ago.  I collected them from business documents I had to review while doing copy editing for executives at a very large oil company.  Collecting them was fun at first, but the collection started to look like hundreds of mutant butterflies pinned to a deteriorated piece of styrofoam.  A few individual specimens were interesting to study, but then I just started to feel sorry for them.

I'm about to print the whole list to the network shredder, but I pulled out a few of the more stunning examples to share with you.


THE DISLEXICON

-------------------------------------------------------
 "...no pun in ten did"
-------------------------------------------------------
"I'm looking at you paper".
-------------------------------------------------------
"Can you pick ones up for Gina and I?"
-------------------------------------------------------
"This is purely speculatory."
-------------------------------------------------------
"he was just thinking allowed."
-------------------------------------------------------
"The enormity of the budget..."
-------------------------------------------------------
"Is this gift for yourself?"
-------------------------------------------------------
"...send them an invite."
-------------------------------------------------------
"Just give them the fifty thousand feet's view."
-------------------------------------------------------
"... sold in pre-prepared packages."
-------------------------------------------------------
"... applied the breaks."
-------------------------------------------------------
"I personally..."
-------------------------------------------------------
"Disrick"
-------------------------------------------------------
"Lieberry"
-------------------------------------------------------
"Scholl"
-------------------------------------------------------
"eksetera, eggsetera, eksedra-eksedra"
-------------------------------------------------------
"Drawring"
-------------------------------------------------------
"Supposably"
-------------------------------------------------------
"ascared"
-------------------------------------------------------
"irregardless"
-------------------------------------------------------
"acrost"
-------------------------------------------------------
"flustrated"
-------------------------------------------------------
"It's not a problem per say..."
-------------------------------------------------------
"We can create that add hock."
-------------------------------------------------------
" ... so forth, and so on, ed sedera..."
-------------------------------------------------------
"...might work pro boner?"
-------------------------------------------------------
"I shouldnof..."
-------------------------------------------------------
"This needs to have more scrutinazation."
-------------------------------------------------------
“ATM Machine”
“RAM Memory”
“CD Disk, DVD Disk”
“Federal FBI investigation”
“Department of DOD”, “DOD Department”, “DOT Department”, etc.
“FDIC Corporation”
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Thursday, December 3, 2015

That's the Sky's Falling (Hector Pt.1)

I moved to San Antonio from Amarillo, or actually, to a little town named Marion about thirty miles East of San Antonio.  Even though both of these cities are in Texas; culture wise, it was like moving from Fargo to Guadalajara.

I missed the initial culture shock due to circumstances I won't go into here.  The first thing I did when I got there was sleep for three days straight.

I woke up at noon on the third day with a blinding headache, and when I walked out of the house in my whitie tighties, I saw a swarthy little guy with giant white teeth wearing bib overalls and cop style mirror shades looking at me from the other side of the fence.  I was just noticing his shades had multi-colored pot leafs on the lenses when I heard this weird whistling noise that got louder and louder until the pecan that was making it hit me so hard on the exact top of my head that I thought I'd been shot.

I stumbled over in Hector's direction while shouting the entire obscenity section of my vocabulary into the ground.  When I looked up at Hector, he was still just smiling at me. As stunned as I was, I was also thinking he had the biggest teeth I'd ever seen on anything that wasn't a horse, and at the same time, I was still trying to figure out what had happened to my head.  I rubbed it and said, "what the &#@* was that?"  I wasn't really asking Hector, but he stopped smiling and made an unnatural looking serious-face, peered over the top of his shades and said, "Oh hey like, that was the sky's falling Chicken Little. Jew better run!" and went back to smiling even bigger and bobbing his head in a self congratulatory way that somehow had the same thick accent. This turned out to be a stock and store Hector Sanchez routine that I would come to know well over the next year.  At the time, I only understood what he said by virtue of having listened to Cheech and Chong's Big Bamboo album about a million times. Hector sounded a lot like a Texas twangy version of Cheech.

I probably would have smiled back because the Chicken Little thing was a really funny thing to say, but meanwhile, the tree-missle had spun up the pain in my head into a dimension I didn't even know existed, and when I pulled back a blood covered hand from my head, I just turned to go back in the house instead.  I was hating San Antonio and life itself while grimacing up into a very very tall pecan tree and zig-zagging my way back across the yard. I knew one more pecan strike would put me down for good.  Behind me, Hector was saying, "Hey dude, hey it's like 'Hector' dude, like, you know? My name is like Hector anderrthingiht, hey like, what's your name anderrthingite."  I turned around and showed him my bloody palm and said, "It's uhm... Andy dude, I ... I gotta go man."

I saw him working on his beater Chevy later that day when I came back out, and  he asked me if I could come over and help him get a thermostat working, or at least that's what I thought he said. He asked me something, and since he held up a thermostat and pointed at the car, I was able to work out the translation.


He was frustrated because he had been trying to put the thermostat housing on facing the wrong way. When I turned it around the right way, it slipped into place, and Hector told me I was smart in a way that made it sound like a problem. He went on to say he was a just a "dumb Westsider anderrthingite." I started thinking maybe he was right because he kept calling his car a Camero in spite of it being a Nova.

He said he had just moved to Marion.  I told him I just moved there too, but I was a Southsider, at which point Hector looked at me like I just said I was a roll of aluminum foil. We worked this out as we started to come up with a process for translation.  The larger problem wasn't so much  Spanish-to-English, as it was Spanglish-to-hick, but the problem at hand was that I didn't know Hector was talking about the West side San Antonio, and Hector thought I was talking about the South side of San Antonio.  We eventually came to understand each other well enough, but it was rough going at first.

I put it together when he said he didn't know there were any white dudes on the South side of San Antonio, and when I explained to him that I meant the South side of Amarillo, I got my second dose of classic Hector humor. He just turned, started wrenching down the thermostat, and said, "Shi-man, I din-un-e-nun know Amarillo was like even big enough to even like HAVE any sides anderrthingite."

n.b., That last word  parses out to "and everything right?" in English, but it has zero meaning. Hector always used it as a kind of verbal period to end a sentence.  At first I thought it was Spanish, but it turned out to just be Hectorish, a sub set of mixed Spanish and English with it's own set of rules, i.e., the phrases "like even" and "even like" must alternate if used in the same sentence.

The only Hispanic I had ever known in Amarillo was Tim Perez who made a point of telling everybody he wasn't "Mexican"---that he was Spanish. I went to his house for lunch one day and his mom made us hot dogs with cheese which I said were kind of like Tacos. This prompted Tim's mom to tell me the family wasn't  Mexican---that they were Spanish.  Looking back, Tim was probably the whitest not-a-Mexican Spanish person I've ever met. Conversely, Hector never missed a chance to tell people he was a Mexican like he was answering a "Mexicans Wanted" classified ad or something, and his Mexicanity was a secret specialty he had worked hard to cultivate.

The whole time I knew Hector and his family I felt like I was in a National Geographic special about infiltrating some mysterious primate culture. Don't get me wrong; I'm still not sure who was playing chimp and who was playing Goodall; I think it was probably him.

(See, that right there was me trying to use Hector humor---adding a nuanced conclusion to an already confusing statement with enough sarcasm to be insulting and really funny if you took it one way, and yet enough ambiguity to maintain plausible deniability by saying it should be taken some other way if you got caught. Truth told, we were both such abnormal specimens that standard anthropological notions probably wouldn't apply anyway.)

After we got the radiator hose on, we went into his house to wash up and I met his mom who was just as funny as Hector.  She introduced herself as "Hector's mom," and said I could call her something Spanish I didn't understand. When I tried to repeat whatever she had said,  she put her hand on my mouth and said, "Mira look, no.  You can just call me 'Hector's mom, OK?"

Hector told her I was a Southsider and that's what the entire Sanchez family called me from that  day on---Southsider.  Considering it was "Chicken Little" up to that point, I was pretty happy with Southsider.

When Hector's Mom turned her attention to him, he was still wearing the stupid pot-leaf sunglasses and she let out a torrent of Spanish that included all of the colorful Spanish words I had ever heard before she slapped the glasses off of him so fast that Hector didn't even see it coming.  It was like lightning. After she calmed down she told him something in Spanish, and when she noticed the puzzled dog tilt of my head, she translated, "'You're not right Hector.' I told him he's not right." then she repeated it to Hector in both languages one more time before she gave us what she called "Pollock-os." These were Polish sausages wrapped up in what I first thought were grilled pancakes, but turned out to be thick home-made flour tortillas!  This was also a pattern that I would come to know and love; Introduction, correction, mild violence, and interpretation, followed by the best food I had ever had in my life.  Suddenly, I was starting to cozy up to San Antonio life. I didn't even mind later on when Hector's mom started slapping me around a little---in fact, it actually made my mouth water.







Spanglish Phrase of The Day - "Mira look"
 ---Mira is a real Spanish word that means "look," but in Spanglish, it's always immediately followed by the English word "look"; the weird thing is that it doesn't mean look; it doesn't even mean look look; it means listen, or maybe more like "listen dammit."




Stay tuned for Hector Pt. 2 when Hector gets me a job making "Walboardings" and Hector's mom feeds me delicious fried cactuses... anderrthingite?