Thursday, June 10, 2010

Courage update


     Today, the OC Reg offered a Courage update.
     The lovely three-year-old German Shepherd is doing quite well.
     You'll recall that, in April, Courage was found starving and near death.
     The sweet-natured dog is now flourishing in a new home.


Speakin' of critters, Tammy Bruce had this on her blog today. It's pretty funny.

Funeral and memorial details

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     Earlier this afternoon, the Reg’s Martin Wisckol posted about Paul Wagner’s funeral.
    According to Wisckol, Don Wagner’s campaign manager, Scott Voigts, sent these details:

    “The public is welcome to all services.
    “The funeral for Paul will be at 11 am this Friday 6/11 at St. Thomas More, 51 Marketplace, Irvine (on Irvine Blvd across from Target);
    “Right after the funeral, he will be buried at the El Toro Memorial Park, 25751 Trabuco Road, Lake Forest, CA 92630-4348 (Irvine Blvd. becomes Trabuco; just past Lake Forest on the left). There will be a short graveside service.
    “The Memorial Celebration will be on Sunday June 13 at 11 am at the Irvine Valley College Performing Arts Center (reddish funny shaped building on the IVC campus at Jeffrey/Irvine Center).
    “The family is very grateful for all the prayers and support they have received.
    “Donations in lieu of flowers can be made to the Indiana Veteran’s Home, 3851 N. River Road, West Lafayette, Ind. Paul and a group of his Purdue friends spent countless hours putting together fundraiser’s to pay for a banquet at the home honoring the veterans, and was (like everything else he did) very passionate about it.”

"It's a wake up call"—with tea?

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     On the morning after Tuesday’s election, I noted that, by my count, seventeen incumbents of the OC Republican Central Committee had been replaced. That number seemed awfully high to me.
     So I contacted a friend who is familiar with party politics in Orange County. I asked: “I just got through posting about Padberg, Bryson, and Williams' fate re the Central Committee. I also noted that seventeen incumbents were sent packing. Is that unusual?”
     She wrote back: “Oh, yes, VERY unusual! The electeds and incumbent CC members generally get a free ride to re-election. This time, not so much. I think it's the anti-incumbent, tea-party attitude that drove them out.”
     That sounded right.
     Later, I wrote: “How come the tea party crowd wasn't more of a factor in the Sheriff's race? [The tea-averse Sheriff Hutchens trounced the Tea Party candidate.] I find this all very confusing. Cause and effect is always difficult [to understand], but in politics, sometimes it seems impossible.“
     She wrote back: “I think the tea partiers were very enthusiastic about Hunt. Both of them were quite excited.”
     Very funny. Later, she wrote: “I really think the tea partiers are over-rated and their numbers are seriously inflated. Look, you probably know some Republicans. Do any of them take the tea partiers seriously? I think most find them to be an embarrassment.”
     OK. But then I come across this piece in today’s Voice of OC by the estimable Norberto Santana, Jr.:

The Tea Party Gets Hardwired into Orange County GOP

     …"The asterisks were falling off the map," said the 46-year old [Mike Munzing] and newest member of Orange County's Republican Central Committee, referring to the mark used to identify incumbents on the list of candidates for the committee.
     By the end of the night there were noticeably fewer asterisks than there had been just hours before. The most apt symbol to replace the asterisks...a tea bag.
     Munzing was among at least 10 tea party activists elected to the central committee, based on ballots counted so far. While they still seem a long way from a takeover, the tea partiers will definitely make things more interesting on the committee.
     They were mixing things up even before Tuesday's primary by calling for forensic audits of the party's books, criticizing a new headquarters purchase and questioning establishment candidates like Congressman John Campbell for voting on things like cash for clunkers and the bailout. And in the process they've irritated some influential party regulars.. . .
     "We've become Democrats light," Munzing said of the Republican Party. "(President G.W.) Bush was big government.". . .
     "Who is a tea party person?" said Jon Fleischman, a vice chairman of the state Republican Party who also was elected to the OC Central Committee this week. "I consider myself to be a tea party person.". . .
     "I welcome them with open arms," he said.
     But he also noted a warning that many other party leaders echo. "The most important thing to remember is what's the purpose of a central committee?"
     For Fleischman, that's "driving an agenda and being the conscience of the party.". . .
     Other regulars predict that when these types of activists show up, they're always more interested in adopting meaningless resolutions rather than the hard, plodding work of political organizing. Many activists show up for a bit and then never return.
     Yet other committee members say the tea party folks are exactly what they have been waiting for.
     "I think it is maybe time for some change. Or at least a shakeup that modifies the approach," said Bruce Whitaker, who also was reelected this week to the central committee.
     "It's a wake up call."

     It could be that my friend is right, and, once again, reporters are making too much of what is really a minor and transient phenomenon.
     Hope so. A year or so ago, I started writing about what I thought might be the beginnings of the "Stupid People Movement" (The Worrisome Specter of a Million Yahoo March). So far, Stupids seem to be going strong.

Summer trivia, part 2

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An old joke:
Q: What do you call 100 lawyers at the bottom of the sea?
A: A good start.

     Last time, I noted that Mr. Tom Fuentes once appeared in an episode of A&E’s “Biography” series—namely, the episode about the life of actor Buddy Ebsen.
     I have no idea what Tom said, but I imagine it was something like this:

“When I travel across this great laaand and encounter the good citizens of this blessed county, I often come upon those fine and simple people who remind me of Buddy and the joy he brought them with his ‘Barnaby Jones’ character, and his abiding love of God. And country. And the Balboa Bay Club….”

     Today’s tidbit of ephemera is even less substantial, if that is possible. For I have come across a new book of articles, edited by Desna L. Wallin, Ed.D. that contains an essay by that esteemed “scholar,” Raghu P. Mathur, Ed.D., the Chancellor (for twenty more days) of the SOCCCD.
     The collection is called Leadership in an Era of Change: New Directions for Community Colleges. Even a cursory examination of the book’s contents immediately reveals that it is the sort of work that future generations will scrutinize and puzzle over. No doubt, they will regard it much as, say, contemporary scientists regard medieval alchemy.
     Only it will be far less interesting.

     (I cannot resist noting that the title of Wallin's book, and the title of each of its many chapters, and even the title of its freakin’ epilogue all share the same idiotic format:

Bu duh bu: vuh vuh vuh

     Can a group of intelligent beings arrive at such a practice? Would any set of beings with IQs above that of a pumpkin ever embrace the idiotic custom of entitling everything—EVERYTHING—with a verbal monstrosity comprising a phrase, a colon, and another phrase?
     Absolutely not.)

     Wallin, who works at a God-forsaken community college in a God-forsaken state, describes her book thus: “In unstable times, effective leaders must not only be able to cope with the environment, they must also be able to shape it. Leaders in today's community colleges must fit that mold. Change leadership can be said to embody four essential characteristics that might be called the four 'A's.'…."
     The four “A’s”? How clever! How heuristically adroit!
     But wait! Surely, one might suppose, nothing worth saying could be captured or communicated in four fucking A’s.
     One supposes correctly.

     Mathur’s name comes up in Chapter 3:

3. Dynamic Leadership Development in Community College Administration: Theories, Applications, and Implications
Matthew J. Basham, Raghu P. Mathur
   In a rapidly changing environment, leaders must create dynamic teams that stretch traditional job descriptions and develop the skills and talents of both leaders and managers.

—Do take it all in, dear reader. And now consider this brief list. It will be familiar to anyone who has ever spoken with a person who has recently achieved—via "distance learning," of course—an Ed.D.

Dynamic
Teams
Leadership/learners
Skills (skill sets)
education delivery
Data (data-driven)
Competencies

     Now, I know from personal experience that many proud owners of an Ed.D are not stupid. Still, I say, only utter fools organize their thoughts around a set of buzz words. These are the people in charge of education reform.

     Some days, I seem possessed by the spirit of the Tea Party. I am drawn to simplistic ideas and specious arguments. I am strangely attracted to torches and clubs and I feel a compulsion to join others like me and to march noisily in search of victims of my blind rage and ignorance.
     At such times, I cannot help but to allow some of my own thoughts to mix with my Tea Partyesque spirit. I picture institutions and “fields” that attract the mediocre and produce “scholars” who cannot write or think or explain (or even recognize) the scientific method but who nevertheless are put in charge of whole systems of education.
     I see them scribbling into the night, producing perverse twaddle about “student learning outcomes” and “the four A’s.”
     I just want to burn it all down.
     There. Much better.
     A good start.

Kids raised by lesbians, etc.

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     The Georgia Board of Regents has created a committee to come up with a way to have Georgia's public colleges check on the citizenship status of students, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported…..


     California State University trustees may ignore a recommendation by their own staff to raise student fees by 5 percent next week, opting instead to boost the price by 10 percent, board Chairman Herb Carter told The Chronicle Wednesday….

• This morning, OC Reg’s “Watchdog” reporter, Teri Sforza, posts her second story about the OC grand jury’s report regarding lobbying of government: Officials spent $1.1 million lobbying other officials.

     When you consider that just about all of OC’s governments – 34 cities, and 28 school districts, and 31 special districts, and four community college districts – employ lobbyists, well, it’s clear we’re talking about millions upon millions of dollars spent just so one branch of government (that’s supposed to be working for We The People) can ask for something from another branch of government (that’s also supposed to be working for We The People).
     The part that irritated the grand jury is that while we can find out how much governments spend to lobby governments, we can’t find out what special interests spend to lobby OC....

• My Kid Raised by Lesbians is Smarter Than Your Kid Raised by Straights (OC Weekly)

     The longest-running study of same-sex couples concludes the children of lesbian parents outscore their peers socially and academically.
     Results of the National Longitudinal Lesbian Family Study leave no doubt as to the success of lesbian couples as parents, according to a University of California, San Francisco, researcher who has worked on the project since 1986.
     New Scientist has the scoop….

• Gay basher Alexandria Coronado losing to David L. Boyd (OJ Blog)

     It looks like gay-bashing O.C. Board of Education Trustee Alexandria Coronado is going to lose her seat to Taft University President David L. Boyd.
     So far, Coronado is behind by about a thousand votes.
     This is a stunning turn of events given that Coronado is an incumbent and she had the OC GOP machine behind her….

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...