Wednesday, November 05, 2008

We CAN believe in change, change we can BELIEVE in. YES, WE CAN.

Okay. I'm going to adopt an optimistic view of what this American Victory means. I've generally had a pessimistic view of politics - a leopard cannot change its spots. But, in the speeches of John McCain and Barack Obama, last night, I think I may have spotted the seam in the leopard's coat. McCain's speech wasn't filled with self-pity or parting shots, it showed us the hand of one man reaching out to the one who had bested him...

Sen. Obama and I have had and argued our differences, and he has prevailed. No doubt many of those differences remain. These are difficult times for our country, and I pledge to him tonight to do all in my power to help him lead us through the many challenges we face.

I urge all Americans who supported me to join me in not just congratulating him, but offering our next president our goodwill and earnest effort to find ways to come together, to find the necessary compromises, to bridge our differences and help restore our prosperity, defend our security in a dangerous world, and leave our children and grandchildren a stronger, better country than we inherited.

Whatever our differences, we are fellow Americans. And please believe me when I say no association has ever meant more to me than that.

Sen. John McCain's Concession Speech at the Biltmore Resort & Spa in Phoenix, AZ

And the man who triumphed, rather than gloating, asked those who have given so much to give some more...

So let us summon a new spirit of patriotism; of service and responsibility where each of us resolves to pitch in and work harder and look after not only ourselves, but each other. Let us remember that if this financial crisis taught us anything, it's that we cannot have a thriving Wall Street while Main Street suffers. In this country, we rise or fall as one nation — as one people.

Let us resist the temptation to fall back on the same partisanship and pettiness and immaturity that has poisoned our politics for so long. Let us remember that it was a man from this state who first carried the banner of the Republican Party to the White House — a party founded on the values of self-reliance, individual liberty and national unity. Those are values we all share, and while the Democratic Party has won a great victory tonight, we do so with a measure of humility and determination to heal the divides that have held back our progress.

As Lincoln said to a nation far more divided than ours, "We are not enemies, but friends... Though passion may have strained, it must not break our bonds of affection." And, to those Americans whose support I have yet to earn, I may not have won your vote, but I hear your voices, I need your help, and I will be your president, too.

Sen Barack Obama's Victory Speech at Grant Park in Chicago, IL

Here's to Hope.

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Hours Left - Polish That Quarter

According to Barack Obama's website, "Middle class families will see their taxes cut – and no family making less than $250,000 will see their taxes increase. The typical middle class family will receive well over $1,000 in tax relief under the Obama plan, and will pay tax rates that are 20% lower than they faced under President Reagan. According to the Tax Policy Center, the Obama plan provides three times as much tax relief for middle class families as the McCain plan." Barack Obama and Joe Biden: The Change We Need | Taxes, 11/04/08

In 2007, I paid just under 24% on my taxable income (contrast that with the shade-under-14% that my wife paid for her self-employment income...and she didn't make much less than I did!). Okay, so do I understand correctly that, if my tax rate is going to be 20% lower, I should expect to see my tax rate drop to just a hair under 20%? And my wife should have a tax rate of around 11%? We'll see about that, if Obama is elected.

Back in August, the Tax Policy Center (a nonpartisan think tank in D.C.) commented that "[n]either candidate’s [tax] plan would significantly increase economic growth unless offset by spending cuts or tax increases that the campaigns have not specified." Then, according to an Oct 15 article by Matt Cover of the Cybercast News Service, the TPC reported that Obama's tax cut plan would actually increase spending! Woah! We're going the wrong way here, folks! More recently, the TPC opined that "[m]ost of the [candidates'] proposals are very poorly targeted and would do very little to address the fundamental problems caused by the economic downturn. The proposal to eliminate tax on some or all unemployment benefits, for example, which is supported in different forms by both candidates, would most help unemployed workers who have substantial other income. A better option would be to extend unemployment benefits for workers who suffer long spells of unemployment. Most of the other proposals would do little good and could have unintended and counterproductive side effects." TPC: The Presidential Candidates' New Tax Proposals - October 27, 2008.

Finally, the latest word from the TPC leaves me wondering what the hell these gentlemen hope to accomplish:
Tax policy has been a major issue in the Presidential election campaign, with both candidates proposing extensive changes. The candidates take very different approaches to tax policy. The main differences are two: first, McCain’s plans would reduce revenues by significantly more than Obama’s; and second, McCain’s would be substantially less progressive, especially among very high income taxpayers. From the standpoint of growth or simplicity, both plans disappoint. It is hard to believe that either set of changes would have significant growth effects on the economy. TPC: Taxes under Obama and McCain - November 3, 2008.

So, it doesn't sound like either candidate has the silver bullet that'll stop the galloping ghost, a.k.a. the recession.

If lowering taxes is likely to require an increase in spending, where is the money going to come from? Trying to squeeze it out of the wealthiest 5-10% of the population isn't likely to be fruitful; those are the folks who fill the breadbaskets of the PACs and other lobbyists who, in turn, grease the wheels of the House and Senate. If the Democrats manage to take control of both legislative bodies (they need two more seats in the Senate to make it filibuster-proof), that may be helpful in the short run, but the backlash - namely, the amount of dollars that this same segment of society routinely donates to charities that serve the poorest in our society - could be brutal. It's a vicious circle.

In the end, I think a lot of votes will swing away from McCain over his selection of Gov. Sarah Palin as his Vice Presidential running mate. I think there were plenty of other women who are more savvy, more refined, more intelligent than Gov. Palin. One of my brothers confided, yesterday, that he lost respect for McCain over that decision. None of my other four brothers has commented, lately, on who they like for the next president. I think two of them may be Obama supporters and another may choose McCain.

Neither of these gentlemen will have an easy road ahead. Both of them are quite well qualified in terms of character and professional ability; both of them have sufficient experience on The Hill; both of them are surrounded by advisers who are specialists with many more good ideas. Some have argued that Obama doesn't have enough experience, but that he has more charisma than does McCain. Others have argued that McCain has more experience than Obama, but has domestic and foreign policies that seem more in line with the outgoing administration than many are comfortable with.

As a country, we're stuck with the reality of a failed economic plan that's not just the product of "Dubyuh's" poor judgement. Much of the failure is due to greed and ignorance and conceit. We're a land of idiots who can't pass up something that sounds too good to be true because, you just never know, maybe dreams really do come true.

My wife and I have been watching DVDs of The Waltons with our kids, at home. Life during the Great Depression. I'll bet a lot of folks who lived through that period never thought they'd see anything like that again - not in their lifetime! But the lessons that our parents learned during that dark period don't seem to have been carried forward by the Baby Boomers and beyond. I think it's possible that we could find ourselves there again - another Great Depression. We've got to start taking moral responsibility for our actions before we find ourselves at the bottom of a dry well.

I don't think it really matters who we elect, this time. No president (or vice president) is going to save us from ourselves. Either person - Obama or McCain - is going to have a very difficult time and we're going to suffer right along with them.

I think the only way for me to make a choice, this time, is to bring a coin along with me into the voting booth. Heads we lose, tails we lose.

Obverse Reverse

Monday, November 03, 2008

One Day To Go

"Barack Obama wants to 'spread the wealth around' and is more interested in controlling who gets your piece of the pie than he is in growing the pie." John McCain

What's odd about that statement is the notion of growing a pie. Never heard of such a thing. I've made plenty of pies and seen pies made, but I've never seen one grown. Maybe McCain means making the pie bigger. I guess he fancies that a bigger pie means we all get bigger pieces....?

McCain and Palin declare themselves "mavericks." Merriam-Webster provides two definitions for "maverick":
  1. an unbranded range animal
  2. an independent individual who does not go along with a group or party
Interesting. Okay, let's go with #2. If each of them claims to be a maverick, then I guess either of them is likely, at any given moment, to break from the other's plan get get (as Sarah put it) "all mavericky." Sounds like a hoot. Shaking up government by refusing to go along with a group or party. I can see where that might be somewhat beneficial, but someone needs to be willing to work with the group or we're not going to have much (any) direction in the White House or on Capital Hill! Yikes!


Sunday, November 02, 2008

Back Trouble

Irrefutable evidence now shows that I DO have a backbone.

I have been blessed with many genetic traits, some good, some not-so-good. On the good side, physical characteristics aside, I have a generally pleasant disposition and demeanor, I possess (some have said) superior musicianship (despite not having arrived at Elton John or Billy Joel status - sorry, Eddie, it ain't gonna happen), I tend to look at conflict through the lens of a relatively equal mix of skepticism and optimism, and I tend to be persistent to the point of being annoying to some although I manage to win over the nay-sayers, eventually (that's what persistence is all about, right?). There are more good qualities, but these are the ones that tend to be at play for me most of the time. On the not-so-good traits, I can be stubborn, somewhat hyperdisciplinarian, and I love to eat. I can manage the eating thing, but managing some of the physical traits that I've inherited have proved darned-near impossible. Take my degenerative arthritic (yes, do take it, please!), something I've inherited from my mother's side. It ain't pretty.

My left foot has already seen the surgeon's scalpel, hammer and chisel. The dorsal cheilectomy that I had done back in 1997 was the result of a buildup of matter on the top of my foot that made wearing shoes a painful experience. After that surgery, I was told that I would probably be back for fusion surgery in 8-9 years. Fingers crossed, it hasn't happened yet and it doesn't feel like I'm getting much (if any) buildup there again. Whew!

About 4 years ago, I was more or less forced to exit my university piano technician career due to an arthritic condition in both of my hands. That problem stems from an unfortunate articulation between a couple of the "pebble" bones at the base of my hand. It turns out making fists all day, which is what a piano technician does a lot of when tuning pianos, was what I should have been avoiding. It only took 18 years to figure that out!

So, here we are with another presentation of this accursed hereditary trait. I've occasionally felt a knot in my upper back, especially while I was a student at UC-CCM. After 6-7 hours of piano practice I would have to massage that knot down to ease things. This was before I understood what ibuprofen was for, but it's probably just as well since I probably couldn't have afforded the pills! The same problem plagued me throughout my university piano tech career.

For the last several years, though - even after changing careers, I've had some tingling/ numbness in my left hand pinky finger and thumb. It felt like a pinched nerve and I always thought it was just that muscle problem. The last time I mentioned it to my doc, she suggested physical therapy. I went for three sessions - the first two went well. I figured I was on the right track. At the third session, I told the PT that I'd gotten some tingling in my thumb and my left arm was sore for no apparent reason. She thought maybe it was a pinched nerve, so she set me up with some traction. That seemed to do the trick until I went to bed that evening. When I lay down on my right side, it felt like my left arm erupted into flames. Incredible pain.

Several days later, an MRI showed that my C5-C6 disc is looking a bit squishy, impinging the nerve exiting at that point. The options to remedy the problem appeared to be fairly broad. Time, medicine, physical therapy, steroid injections, surgery. I don't really like the idea of surgery or injections but had to keep them as last resort options.

Back up a few paces. Why am I suddenly having back problems? I'm pretty sure it comes down to something I did while trying to unclip my left shoe from the clip on my mountain bike. I'd laid the bike down on the grass and, realizing that my left shoe was still clipped in, decided to try raising the bike off of my left leg so I could twist out of the clip. So, I reached down for the crossbar with my left hand and shoved it upward. (My left arm was going across my torso.) It would appear that this move caused the vertebra at C5-C6 to "bite" the nerve coming out of there. There wasn' instantaneous pain, though. It apparently took a bit of time for the swelling to get going, but when it did, OW!

Now, fast forward to surgeon consult #1. He told me that surgery is an option but suggested a posterior procedure (foraminotomy) as an alternative to the more common anterior procedure. #1 didn't spend too much time on the notion of therapy or time. He did mention the steriod injection but as I'd already had a bad experience with one of those, he didn't seem to think I was open to that option.

I saw surgeon #2 about two weeks later. This one said that I'm an excellent candidate for either procedure, but we spent a lot of time talking about alternatives to surgery. Time - he noted that I wasn't complaining about pain as much as I had been several weeks earlier. (I had been able to reduce the amount of pain meds I was taking and while sleeping was difficult for about three and a half weeks, I wasn't having any problems with it now.) #2 speculated that things must be improving with time. He also talked about the steriod injection route. I was pretty nervous about that one, several weeks earlier, but I'd done some reading about the procedure and was now a bit more open to considering that option. #2 also mentioned that physical therapy should be ruled out. Maybe it shouldn't be as aggressive. I got a referral to the U-M Spine Clinic from #2.

My final stop (so far) was the Spine Clinic (SC). That turned out to be an eye-opener. The doctor, there, seems to think that I don't even need to try the injection yet. Rather, she suggests physical therapy and time. She believes that, because I'd been routinely taking NSAIDs, the swelling around the affected nerve has been kept to a minimum. Doing so has apparently allowed the nerve to rest and heal. The SC doc likened my problem to a bruise which, over time, tends to heal itself without much intervention. It's also similar to a scrape; if you have a scrape on your arm, for example, and you keep rubbing against that scrape, it'll stay fresh (and maybe get infected!) for a good, long time. If, however, you minimize contact with the scrape, it heals itself with minimal intervention. She thinks that, if I can keep the swelling down around the nerve and do what I can to strengthen the muscles in the area of the injury, I may be able to avoid even the steroid injection. Wow. I like that, very much.

So, I'm taking my pills and plan to schedule my PT sessions to take place over the next 4-5 weeks. Hopefully, by Christmas, I'll be back to my running routine. Maybe I'll get to run in one last 5K for 2008.

The Great Outdoors

Wow. What's that saying? Time's fun when you're having flies?

Pair-O-Legal, my adventuresome geocaching avatar, logged his 100th find on Aug 21, 2008 (In Honor of Rusty: GC1FE57 - you need to register for a free account in order to see the cache or my profile). P-O-L also completed his first cache-by-watercraft with the help of fellow geocacher, timebandits. This fall, P-O-L placed his first cache - En garde! That was so much fun that he's already planning two more caches. One of them should be posted in the first or second week of November.

BTW: You needn't worry about getting spam from a Geocaching.com membership. I haven't yet gotten any spam attributable to that membership - neither through the internet nor by snailmail!

P-O-L's GPSr is a Garmin eTrex Legend HCx.