Do I annoy you?
I ask this because you're here by choice. You stick me on your friends list presumably because you believe I have something interesting to say, or share, or something like that. Whatever it is that you like about me you keep me around on your flist. Maybe you grew tired of me months ago and I live on in your flist due merely to inertia.
This afternoon I took Kouryou-chan to her dance class. I was trapped there in the front room while rehearsal went on in Studio #4. While I was there I was subjected to a woman reading the newspaper, loudly, and proclaiming loudly in that way that, I'm sure, annoys red state conservatives. I don't even know what she read but suddenly she was talking loundly to whomever she was trapped with about how our cheap food and cheap clothes and cheap whatever was due to our underpaying all the illegal immigrants here and we weren't doing enough for those peolpe and if they were going to be here they should get paid the same rate as Americans and on and on. Another article about Burma lit her off into a rant about how the tsunami two years ago was somehow America's fault; if not the storm itself, then all the deaths were our fault because we hadn't done all that we could to instrument up the ocean over there the way we've instrumented up the West Coast to protect our own people. A third article about Iowa apparently flooded well-worn grooves in her brain about how governments had failed in their responsibilities to those poor people and how things could have been prevented if the government had done something.
When she got to the article on the earthquake in Japan, all was well because the state machinery was on the ball, which was good because "you can't do nothing when Mother Nature wakes up."
And on and on and on. Oh, did I mention she was loud?
Gods, she's a teacher. "I tell my students, privacy policies are a lie. They don't keep your stuff private. If you put your name on a petition, and the government doesn't like it, they'll know who you are. They might come investigate you." Half-truths don't serve us at all.
I think I drive people crazy because I seem to vacillate between being a conservative and standing behind liberally proposed programs that-- surprise-- benefit me and lay the groundwork for the well-being of my children. But this woman drives me crazy with her assumptions that all the ills in the world are due to failures of U.S. governance.
Lady, get a blog already!
I ask this because you're here by choice. You stick me on your friends list presumably because you believe I have something interesting to say, or share, or something like that. Whatever it is that you like about me you keep me around on your flist. Maybe you grew tired of me months ago and I live on in your flist due merely to inertia.
This afternoon I took Kouryou-chan to her dance class. I was trapped there in the front room while rehearsal went on in Studio #4. While I was there I was subjected to a woman reading the newspaper, loudly, and proclaiming loudly in that way that, I'm sure, annoys red state conservatives. I don't even know what she read but suddenly she was talking loundly to whomever she was trapped with about how our cheap food and cheap clothes and cheap whatever was due to our underpaying all the illegal immigrants here and we weren't doing enough for those peolpe and if they were going to be here they should get paid the same rate as Americans and on and on. Another article about Burma lit her off into a rant about how the tsunami two years ago was somehow America's fault; if not the storm itself, then all the deaths were our fault because we hadn't done all that we could to instrument up the ocean over there the way we've instrumented up the West Coast to protect our own people. A third article about Iowa apparently flooded well-worn grooves in her brain about how governments had failed in their responsibilities to those poor people and how things could have been prevented if the government had done something.
When she got to the article on the earthquake in Japan, all was well because the state machinery was on the ball, which was good because "you can't do nothing when Mother Nature wakes up."
And on and on and on. Oh, did I mention she was loud?
Gods, she's a teacher. "I tell my students, privacy policies are a lie. They don't keep your stuff private. If you put your name on a petition, and the government doesn't like it, they'll know who you are. They might come investigate you." Half-truths don't serve us at all.
I think I drive people crazy because I seem to vacillate between being a conservative and standing behind liberally proposed programs that-- surprise-- benefit me and lay the groundwork for the well-being of my children. But this woman drives me crazy with her assumptions that all the ills in the world are due to failures of U.S. governance.
Lady, get a blog already!
no subject
Date: 2008-06-18 02:36 pm (UTC)That's what I would have done, but that's me. I'm a New Yorker, I'm an expert at it. Then again, if she was really crazy, I'm also good at Not Getting Involved(tm).
But no, you don't annoy me. I can skip what I don't want to read. It's cool.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-18 02:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-18 04:12 pm (UTC)Well, get your material, then shut her down?
;)
no subject
Date: 2008-06-18 02:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-18 02:45 pm (UTC)Until I figured out that *I* was actually pretty much a conservative too -- in the real, original sense of it before there was a silent implied "social" in front of the term.
That's how you generally strike me too. (Of course I keep you friended to keep up with what's up in your family mostly, but I get neat news tidbits from your daily round ups too.)
no subject
Date: 2008-06-18 02:49 pm (UTC)If you say something I don't agree with, I either say so or just scroll to the next friend. If you say something that I consider boring I ignore you. If I ignore you long enough I drop you from the list. Not a big deal for either of us, really.
Oh, about the petitions... (http://www.boingboing.net/2008/06/17/philly-cops-raids-ac.html)
no subject
Date: 2008-06-18 03:00 pm (UTC)As do I. In general that's why I'm a libertarian.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-18 03:10 pm (UTC)Mind you, from where I'm looking, a US liberal still seems uncomfortably right-wing. And your country's bits of political magical thinking look as crazy as some of my country's must to you.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-18 03:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-18 03:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-19 12:45 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-06-19 01:34 am (UTC)- Eddie
no subject
Date: 2008-06-19 06:00 am (UTC)And idiocy is not limited to any one side of the political spectrum. Close-minded self-satisfaction is evident in all political camps. People often expect better of those who are in agreement with them - despite all evidence of the silliness of that position.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-19 03:28 pm (UTC)My main source of comfort when processing my exposure to Seattle's default liberal mindset is telling myself I would be just as enraged by the opposite stupidity if I lived in a red state area.
But I still think the lib piss me off more, mainly because, in general, they like to sneer they are smarter than cons, while the cons in general do not sneer that they are smarter than libs.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-19 08:48 pm (UTC)That's the crucial difference between spam in my inbox and whatever stuff crops up on my LJ friends list -- in the latter case it's me who has charge of the "unsubscribe" button.
I was initally here because I'd read your stories -- the first one I read was "Goodby Donna", on its first outing on Usenet back in the mid-eighties.
I remain here because of the posts about parenting, about geekery, about your use of transport, about loads of things ... but it's worth mentioning that you talk on both sides of US politics, which keeps things interesting -- whereas many people who talk on one side only swiftly become boring.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-20 12:02 am (UTC)Doesn't help that my girlfriend listens near exclusively to Air America. (headdesk)