Archive for December, 2004

Silent America

Tuesday, December 14th, 2004

My copy of Silent America, the new book by Bill Whittle, arrived today via UPS.

I wasn’t expecting it and so when I unwrapped it I had a huge grin on my face - and nearly became teary-eyed.

Silent America is a collection of Bill’s essays from his weblog EjectEjectEject about life in the post 9/11 America. Bill is one of the most gifted writers i’ve found on the internet. His essays bring out and highlight what I think is best about America. Not to mention that I believe Bill has captured best the essence of our country today - and how we’ve changed.. but yet not changed.. from our past.

You owe it to yourself to read this book. Or - just visit his weblog and read for yourself.

An excerpt from HONOR:

On October 7th, 2002 I returned to Los Angeles from Arlington National Cemetery where we interred my father, 2nd Lt. William Joseph Whittle, who died from what may have been sheer joy during a fishing trip in Canada.

My dad served in the US Army in Germany, from 1944 through 1946. He was an intelligence officer, and was responsible for recording the time of death of the convicted War Criminals at Nuremburg after the war. He saw them hanged — he stood there with a stopwatch. He was 21 years old.

My father spent two years in the U.S. Military. He spent a lifetime in the corporate world. After twenty years as a world-class hotel manager, turning entire properties from liabilities into assets, he was let go without so much as a thank-you dinner or a handshake. Twenty years of service. He was a four-star general in the corporate world for two decades, and that was his reward.

Monday afternoon, at 1 pm, I stood underneath the McClellan arch at ANC. There were 13 family members there. There were also 40 men in uniform. I was stunned.

They took my dad’s ashes, in what looked like a really nice cigar box (what a little box for such a big man, I thought at that moment), and placed it in what looked like a metallic coffin on the back of a horse-drawn caisson. His ashes were handled by other twenty-one year old men, men as young as he had been, men whose fathers were children when my dad was in uniform. Everything was inspected, checked, and handled with awesome, palpable, radiating reverence and respect.

As we walked behind the caisson, the band played not a dirge, but a march…a tune that left me searching for the right adjective, which I didn’t find until the flight home. It was triumphal. It was the sound of Caesar entering Rome; the sound of a hero coming home. It was the only time during the service that I really began to cry.

My father received a military funeral: the folded flag, the 21 gun salute, the honor guard, and a Chaplain named Crisp who declared a grateful nation was welcoming their brother William home to rest among heroes.

My dad served for two years. He wrote on the back of his Army officer class graduation photo that he expected to die fighting for his country within a few months. Most everybody who signed his photo wrote the same thing.

The chaplain said, looking my stepmom in the eyes like this was the first time he’d ever said the words, that the men and women buried here had agreed to lay down their lives for their country and each other, and that THIS, not rank, or social status, or length in service, is what entitled them to be buried in America’s most sacred ground.

Before the ceremony, I was looking at the headstones, and it’s sad how each area of Arlington is like a forlorn vintage: here are buried the veterans who died around 1995, there is the 1982 pasture, the mid-fifties crop over on yonder hill. And standing between a Major and a Lt. Colonel, I saw a headstone for a PFC who was born in 1979, the year I entered college, and who had died in 1998. This young man, not even twenty, couldn’t have been in the service for more than a few months, and yet there he lay, with the same headstone as colonels and generals and the many, many sergeants that cover those fields.

That is American honor, and nowhere else in the world does it exist in such a naked, magnificent form. Each of these men and women, this band of brothers, receiving the same heartfelt respect. For my father, who died at age 77, it was the honoring of a contract he had signed more than half a century before, defending Europe and helping bring those criminal bastards to justice. It was a contract paid in full, one that has given my family and me an indescribable sense of comfort and pride.

Mmmmmm

Sunday, December 12th, 2004

Watching the Survivor Finale with the Sidekick and drinking some Hot Buttered Rum.

Mmmmm….

Counter-Strike Addiction

Sunday, December 12th, 2004

Well, I’m completely back to being addicted to Counter-Strike again.

I’m not convinced that’s a bad thing - it’s amazing to me though that a game as old as Counter-Strike keeps my attention for so long. It makes me long for the days of the the old 24×7 Assault Server I used to run.

Ahh, the good old days.

How do you write an obituary for this man?

Thursday, December 9th, 2004

Brud20041209David Brudnoy, long time host of the David Brudnoy Show on WBZ News Radio 1030 in Boston died a few hours ago at age 64.

When I moved to Boston in January 1999, I knew very little of the culture and politics of the city. It didn’t take me long though to discover WBZ News Radio 1030.. and then only a few days to discover the David Brudnoy Show.

David had almost a calming show sense about him - and it was that voice of his that first drew me to the show. But after listening, only for a few minutes, I realized that he was indeed something special - and it was his intellect that drew me in.

David Brudnoy could interview like no one I had ever heard before. Whether he was interviewing one of the three governors that have served during my time here in the Commonwealth - or an eleven year old child who had called into his show, David made the show interesting.

Much can be said about a person simply by watching, from afar, at how they lead their lives. More can be said about a man with how they face their own death. And David faced his with dignity and a deep understanding of the short time that he had before him…

Deep Peace, David…

Creating the Home Office for Writing

Saturday, December 4th, 2004

Blogger David Hewson has a post up over at his blog about creating an office for writing at home.

With three computers on my desk now - and a new Tablet PC that I need to find a way to integrate - I’m running into the same problem that he was — how to create the right atmosphere in my home office for creative and professional work.

David writes:

What I wanted of my office redesign was more space and less hassle. I think it gave me both and finally I have room for some books on my desk, not on the shelves behind. That should have been a priority from the start, but somehow the computers got hold of me, demanding I fit in with them, not the other way round.

It was, on the face of it, though quite expensive. There are a couple of ways of looking at this. I now have one computer which works all the time, on the road and at home. Before, either the desktop or the notebook was out of action. Had I replaced both they would have cost more than the notebook alone, and got less utilisation.

My home office is in the basement of a split level ranch and features two desktop computes (a Mac G4 w/ 23″ LCD, a Dell P3-933 w/ 19″ LCD, an Apple Powerbook G4 15″, and a Motion M1400 Tablet PC). I got the tablet specifically for work though I see potential home uses for it as well. It’s truly a portable notebook - I’m looking forward to really putting it through its paces in the coming weeks.

Silence

Saturday, December 4th, 2004

Good God - last night I noticed that I hadn’t posted a thing since November 21st. Time to play catch up.

As my loyal readers know, I work in retail - and this time of year we’re just a bit busy! Life has been good at work and that’s about all I need to say on that. You can read the public information about how things are going on some other website.

Sidekick’s family came out for Thanksgiving, so that kept us busy as well. Work work, cook cook, clean clean, but hey, that’s what you do.

My parents and brother are coming out on December 22nd, so I’m really looking forward to that.

On the technology front, I’m evaluating a Motion Computing M1400 Tablet PC. So far, I have to say that this thing rocks my world. Expect more to be posted on this once I dig out of the domestic hole I’m in….

More leaf raking today - holiday party tonight up the road a bit.

More later…