Sunday, June 08, 2008

Frittatas, Hawaiian Music, Apple, People We Don't Know We Know



I once thought I was cooking omelettes, but long ago someone told me I was cooking a frittata. Just to be sure today I checked and by Wikipedia definition, it's not technically a frittata either. Mine never makes it to a grill.




A frittata is a type of Italian omelette that frequently features fillings such as meats, cheeses, and vegetables. Like a traditional French omelette, a frittata is prepared in a skillet. However, whereas an omelette is cooked on a stovetop and served folded, a frittata is first partially cooked on a stovetop but then finished under the grill (broiler) and served open-faced.
This is my normal Sunday breakfast, but we had a friend coming over today, so I made a bigger one. And while I was cooking, Island Style was on the the radio, another Sunday tradition. Hit the yellow button to get a bit of Island Style. This one is half with egg yellow and half with egg white only.

Remix Default-tiny Island Style Hana Guy by AKRaven

And some fruit salad and a few other tasties.



Have you ever met someone you knew about, but you didn't know it was him? At the Alaska Apple User Group (AAUG which meets this Wednesday at 7pm at the Anchorage Museum) there was a man named Guy who was in charge of the products you can take home and keep if you review them.

One day something came up and in my head, finally, Hana Guy on Island Style, and Guy at the AAUG merged into the same person. Hana Guy is on the right (Kalihi Boy and Honey Girl) and in this picture from the Island Style website.

Do You Have a Check Coming from Chugach Electric?

Do you know:

Adgerson, Jimmy
Gjendem, Pat
Grube, Wayne
Hunt, Scott
Marfin, David or Sarita
Security Pacific Natl Bank
Yerkes, Charles?

Chugach has money for them and about 13,000 more people.

Chugach also has information about this on their website. There's a little more information in the letter online than the one in the newspaper.

Last December the Chugach board of directors authorized the return of nearly $5 million, the last of the retail capital credits on the books from 1988, and a portion of the credits earned in 1989. A similar action by the board in 2006 authorized the return of $2.4 million of the 1988 capital credits.

Chugach mailed checks to members of record from 1988 after the board authorized retirements. Postcard notices were mailed to members who had not cashed a check from an earlier retirement. Many of the checks were either not cashed or were returned as undeliverable. In all, about 13,000 members of record are still eligible for their share of about $1.3 million in unclaimed capital credits.
That comes out to an average of $100 per person. Then there's this interesting bit:
State law makes a provision to prevent the unclaimed capital credits from going to the state, and preserves them for members of record who might make a claim on them in the future.
Capital credits from these retirements that have not been claimed by Dec. 31, 2008, will be retained by Chugach Electric Association. However, members of record may continue to claim their unpaid capital credits beyond this date. Questions may be directed to Chugach's Capital Credits section at (907) 762-4643 or to Customer Service at (907) 563-7366.
It's easy to jump to conclusions and wonder why Chugach keeps the money and doesn't turn it over to the state. Or who got that sweet provision into legislation? Since banks and other such institutions have to turned over unclaimed assets to the state after a period of time, why shouldn't Chugach?

That would be easy if we didn't read carefully and think things through a bit.

Chugach is not a regular private for profit corporation. It's a member owned coop. Wikipedia says

A utility cooperative is a type of cooperative that is tasked with the delivery of a public utility such as electricity, water or telecommunications to its members. Profits are either reinvested for infrastructure or distributed to members in the form of "capital credits", which are essentially dividends paid on a member's investment into the cooperative.

Each customer is a member and owner of the business with an equal say as every other member of the cooperative, unlike investor-owned utilities where the amount of say is governed by the number of shares held.

And that's what this money is. The newspaper section and the website say:
Capital Credits are a member's share of the cooperative's margins for a year in which revenues and other operating income exceed fixed and variable expenses.

So, who's on this list? Well, these dividends are for 1988. I'm not sure why the wait 20 years to pay the dividends. This list makes the voter registration list look up-to-date I'm sure. No wonder people they can't find anyone. (We used to get dividends from Chugach until our part of town came under ML&P.) I checked a few names on Google. I emailed three people who could be people on the list and for whom I could find email addresses without much trouble. (I chose less common names).
  • One works for Early Head Start Enhanced Home Visiting Project
  • Another is a landlord in Oregon (who got a great recommendation by one of his tenants)
  • Another works for the US Department of Agriculture.
Some others whose names popped up on Google:
  • Was listed on the F/51st COMPANY ROSTER "died peacefully on his houseboat on April 19, 2008, in Silver Point, Tenn." (Lived in Alaska once.)
  • Complained about a late delivery from Amazon.com.
  • Served in WW II, his 85 year old brother died last year and has relative in Craig, AK
  • Came up on the Permanent Fund dividend attachment list

What's the PFD attachment list you ask. From a State of Alaska website:

What's Included

Only information about dividend attachments in October and November 2007 is listed. The list includes both successful and unsuccessful attempts to take people’s 2007 Alaska Permanent Fund Dividends (PFDs) to pay debts. It contains information about the following:

1. dividends seized by writ of execution
2. unsuccessful attempts to seize the dividend by a writ of execution
3. PFD assignments (in which a person voluntarily signs over his or her PFD to the court)

It does not include assignments to other government agencies, writs issued by the federal courts or attachments by the IRS (taxes), CSED (child support), the Commission on Postsecondary Education (student loans), DHSS (public assistance overpayments and court-ordered treatment reimbursements), or the Department of Labor (money owed under the Employment Security Act).

There are 1011 pages of names (30 per page) - 30,330 minus duplicates, I calculate* nearly 24,000 people whose PFD checks are attached, not including all the ones excepted above. So the PFD last year paid about $40,000,000 to pay off creditors of Alaskans. (Not all of it actually got captured from what I can tell.) Think about it. We paid to cover $40 million worth of bad debts with Permanent Fund money. I wonder how much of that went to collection agencies or credit card companies? I'm sure there are situations where this makes good sense. Especially people who are working on paying off their debts and assign the money to their creditor. Except that probably also includes the Pay Day loan companies who pay people a fraction of their check's value in advance if they sign the check over to them.

I'm not interested in the state baby-sitting people who can't handle their money here (though that is a serious issue that we all pay for), but I'm just mulling over the idea of our paying off creditors to the tune of $40 million when we have villages with honey buckets still.

I know, there are creditors who are Alaskan businesses who are barely making it, for whom even a piece of this money is helpful. But it would be interesting to see a study of
  • how many people/entities got money this way and
  • how much each got.
Surely the PFD data base could spew out this information fairly easily. Then we'd know if this was something to try to work on or not.

Enough.

*Note: There are 1011 pages of names (VOLUME 5 (SEUBE through ZYWOT), pages 810 - 1011 - same link as above) with 30 names per page. But there seemed to be duplicates. Checking ten random pages the duplicate names ranged from 3-8, with 8 being the median number (most frequent). It averaged about 21% duplicates (I guess the duplicates represent more than one claim per PFD check.) So 30 names/page * 1011 pages = 30,330
- 21% = 23610

Saturday, June 07, 2008

Where's Summer?

It's greening up and there are some flowers, but it's chilly and slow. What's chilly for June in Anchorage? Highs in the 50's F and low 60s (13-16C) and lows 40's and sometimes down into the 30s. (2-9C).

So after J came back from her Tai Chi, we went to get a few more plants (we got back too late from Chiang Mai to start seeds this year) and to recycle.

Friday, June 06, 2008

Innumeracy - Do People Really Pay $45,000 for a Halibut Charter?

Innumeracy.com, defines innumeracy as

A term meant to convey a person's inability to make sense of the numbers that run their lives.


The New Literacy, linked on the site, by Lynn Arthur Steen expands:

...Innumeracy hurts in other ways as well. For example, public policy issues may increasingly move beyond the intellectual grasp of citizens who lack appropriate skills in quantitative reasoning...

Listen to this excerpt from an APRN report on a lawsuit over Halibut Charter allocation cuts in Area 2C. I think it is a good case of innumeracy , not only with the person giving the numbers, but also the reporter who doesn't question the them. (Click the yellow button)

Remix Default-tiny APRN Report on Halibut Charter Cuts excerpt by AKRaven

In this audio Charter Halibut Task Force spokesperson Kimberly Tebrugge says:

Eleven people filed affidavits with the lawsuit saying that they’ve had cancellations and the total for that just eleven people were half a million dollars.
My ears perked up immediately. Eleven people. Half a million dollars.

[LATER: MPB comments "
I think the reporter might just be a poor writer-- do the numbers add up if the "11" refers to the collective losses of the 11 plaintiffs rather than 11 clients?" I think she got it right. Actually, this was a radio piece, I did the transcribing. But this makes more sense. There were a few more examples that I didn't add in here and so it probably adds up to half a million for those eleven. The sentence is not the greatest but I should have caught it after listening to it a couple of times and writing it out. So I apologize to Ms. Terbrugge and the reporter. And thanks MPB for catching it. I've put this comment here because it totally changes the things. I'm tempted to take the whole post down, but I guess it's a good warning to me to be more careful. And to my readers to not assume I got it right.]

Ten people would mean $50,000 each. Don't even need a calculator for that if you are numerate. Eleven people would be $45,454 each.

Bells and whistles should sound for anyone who is thinking. $45,000 to go halibut fishing for a couple of days?!



In this audio Charter Halibut Task Force spokesperson Kimberly Tebrugge says:

Eleven people filed affidavits with the lawsuit saying that they’ve had cancellations and the total for that just eleven people were half a million dollars.
My ears perked up immediately. Eleven people. Half a million dollars.

Ten people would mean $50,000 each. Don't even need a calculator for that if you are numerate. Eleven people would be $45,454 each.to go halibut fishing for a couple of days?!

A quick Google search got me to the Charter Halibut Task Force website with links to the lawsuit they filed. Here, from their very own Memorandum of Support of Plaintiffs' Motion for aTemporary Restraining Order and/or a Preliminary Injunction

The evidence of serious and ongoing harm to Area 2C charter operators is irrefutable. Larry McQuarie, an Area 2C lodge operator, states in his affidavit that 26 regular clients have already canceled existing reservations for the 2008 season because of the one-fish limit, and that 10 additional clients chose not to book with his establishment for the same reason. The 26 cancellations alone represent a loss of $98,970.00 in gross revenues. See Exhibit 1. Scot Van Valin, also an Area 2C lodge operator, has already lost even more. Mr. Van Valin has had 40 regular clients cancel their 2008 reservations because of the one-fish rule. He had refunded $147,800.00 to those clients. Thirty-two additional regular clients have also decline to book respectively.
So, if "26 cancellations alone represent a loss of $98,970.00 in gross revenues" that's more like $3,800 per person, a number that sounds a lot more reasonable than $45,000.

How could Terbrugge give such an outrageous number, especially when they had the more accurate numbers in their Memorandum of Support? Why didn't the reporter question the outrageous number? I would argue "Innumeracy," We just say and hear these numbers without thinking about what they mean.

If she had said each charter cost $45,000, people would have perked up and said, "That can't be right." But when eleven people are lumped together to get $500,000, people don't do the simple division that would result in the $45,000 figure and don't say "That can't be right." Innumeracy. Think how much we miss when it takes more than one mathematical operation.
For example. Do you know how many acres Potter Marsh is*? People talk about acres all the time. A wild fire burns 30,000 acres. ANWR is 19,049,236 acres. How many people have a clue how big that is? But we just let it pass by without even thinking. And so people can use totally ridiculous numbers and we have no idea. Innumeracy.

The second part of the audio gets into the economic impact to the Southeast and other parts of Alaska. Terbrugge talks about all the other businesses that will be affected and the story's implication is that all this money will be lost to Alaska. But wait a minute. If you read their legal documents, you find out that the fishers aren't canceling their trips altogether, but rather they are moving from Area 2C to Area 3A.
The experiences of these Area 2C charter operators are corroborated by the affidavits of their colleagues and competitors in Area 3A, who have received booksings from clients lost by Area 2C operators. Rex Murphy states that he has booked three clients for this year who have told him that they moved from Mr. McQuarrie’s Area 2C Sportsman’s Cove Lodge because of the one-fish rule. See Exhibit 8. Finally, Donna Bondioli has had three groups of fishermen book with her in Area 3A buisness for the first time. These new clients stated that they had moved from Area 2C to Area 3A because of the one halibut limit.
So, where are Areas 2C and 3A? Another Google search finds an old UAA Institute for Social and Economic Research (ISER) report with a map of the Halibut Management Areas.




Assuming the areas haven't been changed since this report came out in the 1990s, it looks to me like they are moving from one part of Alaska to another, so Alaska isn't really losing all that money. Though the businesses in Southeast are.

So, when you hear numbers being thrown around and words like acres, don't just space it. Ask yourself, "Do I know what this means?" If not, write it down. And then figure out how big it really is. What the numbers really mean. Ask if it makes sense. Before long it will become a habit. Get numerate!

*Potter Marsh is 450 acres.

Thursday, June 05, 2008

Political Reporting Issues: The Press Does Ray Metcalfe

Bloggers overlap with various other more traditional categories - diarist, gossip, and journalist seem to be among the more common. When we morph into a journalist form enough, people start sending us press releases. I don't get too many. APU's Engaging Muslims series started sending them after I posted on the first evening of the series. The Alaska Report has sent out links to some stories. And I've been getting Wednesday sneak previews of the Anchorage Press. I've always wondered how, say, NPR gets their stories. How many come from their reporters actually going out and finding a story and how many are based on press releases? Of course, the email I mentioned yesterday offering to exchange links falls in a related category of self promotion.

I write all this because as someone new to much of this, I don't take these things for granted, and I want to comment on them before I do. Most of us probably don't know why certain stories become news and others don't. And part of me wants to work on stories that others aren't working on, and not be a promotion site. Or work the stories in ways others aren't working them.

So this story from the tomorrow's Press (well, by the time I'm done it will be today's Press) is about something I've been thinking about. And I have mentioned that Brendan Joel Kelley, who wrote the story and emailed it out to various reporters (the list isn't visible) and I had lunch a couple of weeks ago. He ended up paying for mine because mine was only $5 and I had a $20 and a $1. I contributed the $1. I mention this because I think politicians who have their lunches paid for by people lobbying them on various issues should tell us who they talked to and if they got a free lunch out of it. And I'm willing to disclose that even though I don't have to.

Anyway, I'm not ready to do this story, but I think there are a couple of angles here to be explored that Brendan doesn't explore.

The story is basically about whether Ray Metcalfe is a serious candidate for the Senate. According to the story, Metcalfe says he is.

The issues this story stirred up for me - still unresolved but I can raise them here and say that I may actually follow up on them or not - are about:

1. How journalists cover politicians
2. Ray Metcalfe's political personas

The media issue is ultimately the more important long term issue and Metcalfe is more a case study to help us think about the first.

Brendan Joel Kelley writes:
Metcalfe points out that Palin exposed the Republican Party chair, Randy Ruedrich, for ethical violations, and says that he’s exposed a hundred times as much corruption as that. “Look what the public did for her. It’s not the good ol’ boys that are going to put you in office, and it’s not the guys with the thousand dollar campaign checks. It’s the guys with the five dollar campaign checks and the yard signs and the elbow grease.”
Here, Brendan has interviewed Metcalfe and is reporting what Metcalfe says. This is an important part of journalism, as reporters on behalf of the rest of us, talk to the candidates. We need to know two things about candidates:
  • Content - where do they stand on the issues?; and
  • Credibility - do we feel comfortable with them and can we trust them?
Television has the advantage of showing us the interview so we can judge for ourselves (though we don't know what they cut out or how different camera angles subliminally affect how we perceive the candidates.) We get the feel and intonation of the candidate that help us judge credility, but this can distract us from the content.

The written report has the advantage that it can be more in depth than most television news stories - Charlie Rose's interviews being an exception - and they can focus on the content and analyze in more depth as Richard Mauer's infrequent, long, and informative investigative reports do.

This Press piece is more like a tv interview, telling us what the candidate said and and not doing much research to find out whether it's true or not.

In the above quote, Metcalfe is trying to grab some of Sarah Palin's glow as a stalwart who refused to go along with corruption. But Palin's just isn't going to stick for Metcalfe. While Metcalfe has standing up against corruption in common with Sarah Palin, how they stood up aginst corruption and their whole demeanor are totally different.

Palin was put in a position where she had to go along with corruption or stand up and say, publicly, these guys are cheating and I can't work with them. But that's just one part of what makes her attractive to Alaskan voters and national Republican strategists. She's also a good looking woman with a warm personality who makes people (except Republican party leaders) feel comfortable.

Metcalfe, in his own words says he’s "exposed a hundred times as much corruption." Metcalfe probably thinks that makes him a hundred times more deserving of the public's gratitude. The Greeks talked about doing all things in moderation. And for many people, I suspect, it raises questions about why he seems so obsessed with exposing other people's wrong doings. And he doesn't have Palin's smiling personality which goes a long way in the trust department. And becoming a hero by turning on your former friends (Metcalfe is a former Republican) was never a sure path.

Whistle blower is the most positive word we have for such people, and some even use whistle blower pejoratively. Other words for what Metcalfe has done include tattletale, snitch, and turncoat. Don't get me wrong. I think that Metcalfe has performed an invaluable service and we need more people to follow his example, but our society is ambivalent about this kind of work. I suspect because it seems to conflict with our value of loyalty.

Spousal immunity is a principle that reflects this conflict between loyalty and turning in a criminal. In court it helps protect the necessary bond between a husband and wife that

... was thought to require a testimonial privilege, one that would both reflect and foster the loyalty that married people should feel toward each other.
For Palin, calling out Ruedrich and Murkowski was an important act, but it was one of many things she did and stood for. For Metcalfe, in most people's minds (those who even think about these things at all), it is his purpose to go after corrupt politicians. In the public's view, this isn't balanced out by other aspects of his life. It's not balanced. Brendan writes:
It’s worth asking what Ray Metcalfe is running for, as opposed to whom he’s running against.
(The article does also then give a list of things he's for.)

Brendan also raises the question whether the US Senate is the right job for someone who appears to excel in criminal investigations, asking
. . .if he wouldn’t be better suited for a job other than Senator from Alaska. Like working for the Department of Justice. Or becoming a private investigator.
Another identity issue for Metcalfe is whether he is becoming the Hillary Clinton of the Alaskan US Senate race.
His allegations against Begich are complex and involve real estate deals with local developer Jon Rubini, of JL Properties, who’s also connected to Ted Stevens through property deals. Metcalfe’s compiled his paper trails and accusations in documents that are on his website, www.metcalfe4senate.com
While he says he is serious about this campaign, the money and polls suggest that Begich is the likely Democratic candidate, with a far more significant lead over Metcalfe than Obama ever had over Clinton. If he has no chance of winning, does he have a good chance of causing the Democrats to lose?

As one rebel union member who also has issues with Begich said to me, "Yes, I have problems with Begich, but I'm going to vote for him over Stevens. But I won't be out campaigning for him." Primary elections are all about politicians from the same party showing why they are the best candidate and sometimes that involves showing the weaknesses of their, same party, opponents. But while I don't think the McCain campaign will need any help from Hillary when they attack Obama, I suspect that Stevens' campaign will use Metcalfe's material against Begich, and it wouldn't have had that material without Metcalfe.

Comparing Metcalfe to Clinton works only in one aspect - being the potential spoiler who won't let go to the point where many think he/she will enable their shared opponent to win in the general election.

And this raises another journalistic issue. Brendan raises Metcalfe's allegations and then he offers a response from the Begich campaign:
For its part, the Begich campaign has a thick stack of papers rebutting one of Metcalfe’s claims—that Begich assisted Rubini by pushing to rezone of a parcel of land, boosting its value significantly. The federal government subsequently purchased it from Rubini’s company, at what Metcalfe says was an inflated price, for the National Archives building. Begich disputes all of Metcalfe’s accusations, calling the situation a shame.

“He throws these allegations around because they make good political hay and he never has to back it up,” Begich says. “Honestly, I run my campaign focused on the issues that I want to talk about; Ray would rather throw grenades and he doesn’t really care where they land."
This is the same sort of 'he said, she said" journalism we get every day, which clouds the issues in voters' minds, but doesn't dig deeper into the validity of the claims. We need some people to read through all of Metcalfe's allegations and take his tour and then go to the Begich people and sort through their responses. And then map them out. Are the allegations merely correlation without evidence of cause and effect? Are the responses credible and do they effectiely refute Metcalfe's claims? I know Metcalfe believes he's right, so do Pete Kott and Vic Kohring. I don't mean to lump Metcalfe with those folks, but merely to point out that believing you are right is not the same as being right.

One person who has a better perspective on these things than I do, says that Begich has some blindspots like everyone else. A member of his campaign just as vigorously defends Begich's actions on the waste issues. But good journalism should do some of this work for the public. And I say some people instead of someone should do this so we have various people reviewing and then interpreting the evidence.

One other thing wasn't quite clear to me. Did Brendan actually take the Metcalfe tour of Anchorage? He writes:
There’s a tour of Anchorage that Ray Metcalfe likes to give to journalists, politicians, FBI agents, and other interested parties. He calls it his “three-hour tour,” although it could probably go on longer. The tour hits everywhere from base housing at Elmendorf to parking lots in downtown Anchorage to a lot in Midtown near Loussac Library to a road in a sprawling development in South Anchorage.
This second quote (below) indirectly hints that he did, and I suspect he did, and he just didn't realize anyone would even question it, but it would be helpful if he just came out and told us directly that he took the tour.
One wonders, when you take the three-hour tour and listen to Metcalfe pontificate on his passion for independently investigating political corruption, if he wouldn’t be better suited for a job other than Senator from Alaska. Like working for the Department of Justice. Or becoming a private investigator. Or charging money to tourists for the three-hour tours.


I noticed at the trials that the Main Stream Media (MSM) and us bloggers didn't really do the work. The FBI and the prosecutors did all the work. We just had to be in court and listen and take notes.

The same thing is true about the Republican and Democratic conventions (I was out of town for the Republican convention, but the other bloggers were there) and the AGIA workshop last week. The Governor's team at the Department of Natural Resoures did all the work, we just listened to what they reported.

Metcalfe did the real work of the journalists of doggedly tracking down information and making sense out of it. And whether that makes him a good candidate for the Senate, I can't determine, but we owe him a great debt for the hours and hours of work he did so well. But I also wonder about people who spend so much time exposing other people's failings. In some cases such people appear to have some complex pyschological issues - such as evangelist Ted Haggard or New York Governor Eliot Spitzer. Others appear to simply have a strong sense of justice such as Ralph Nader whose life has been thoroughly investigated with no evidence found to impugn him.

The facts allow for lots of different interpretations. Getting enough information is a long and difficult job. Right now I think too many people claim to know the answers when at best, all they can really do is guess at possible ways to interpret the data. And reporters have a real role in helping the public in this process - and bloggers can fit in that role of reporter.

Fresh Halibut's In Town

$4 a Gallon Bikers


In a post the other day I used the phrase "$4 a gallon bikers" to suggest that while $3 a gallon gas didn't change driving habits, $4 a gallon does seem to be getting people to seek alternative forms of transportation.

This cartoonist in the June 5, 2005 Anchorage Daily News - I can't quite read the signature enough to confirm it on Google - seems to have the same perception. But I'm not sure whether this violates the Anchorage Daily News' or the cartoonist's copyrights. Like a photo, it is use of the whole piece, but I would argue I'm using it not simply to decorate my post, but as a reference that others also believe that somehow the $4 threshold reveals that the price of oil is indeed not inelastic, that there comes a point where consumers change their gasoline purchasing habits because of price. And that $4 is that threshold for a significant number of people. And that the phrase $4 biker has meaning to others besides myself. So, is the name ARIAZ? ARIA?


Wednesday, June 04, 2008

Recent Google Searches That Got People Here

Google is fantastic at helping us find things we never could have found otherwise. But it isn't perfect. The biggest problem I see is that it will grab words from unrelated posts. In the couple of lines you get, it isn't always clear that the words don't come from the same post. And as I've mentioned before, it's not totally clear how they pick which post to send people to. Some people who have googled "Vic Kohring" have gotten to one post, and other people to another post, or just to the main What Do I Know page.

Anywho, here are some recent searches that I found interesting for one reason or another:

  • do any people speak english in anchorage
    From Australia. I wonder if reading my blog answered the question.
  • being pressured to resign, what should i do?
    Sorry to hear this. It doesn't sound good. Unfortunately, this person got to a post about when corrupt politicians should resign. Close, but not quite what I suspect what the person needed.

  • monks walk what do they do for swimming
    Any thoughts on what this person wanted? I'm sure the answer wasn't there.

  • discovery channel no paid employees
    I got a number of these so there is obviously some sort of a story here. When I looked at some of the Google results, there didn't seem to be anything answering the question. They got to my post on the Discovery channel shelving the movie Taxi to the Dark Side

  • chiang mai, thailand women resorts motels weather
    From Venice, California. (I guess I noted that because I went to Venice High) But I hope the person didn't find what he was looking for on my site. Actually, I probably should have done a post on the topic of foreign men and Thai women. It seems that there are a number of marriages that have resulted from foreigners visiting prostitutes and economically, I'm told it works out well for the women. But that doesn't balance out the damage done to girls and boys and women forced into prostitution.
  • contact email and telephone numbers of all the mine in alaska
    This was from South Africa. Maybe someone is just looking for a job. But I bet there's an interesting story here.

  • where do pigs get their energy?
    What is there to say? I have no idea how this person got to this site. [I did mention slurry pigs and I have an energy tag. And I'm sure I've used all the other words somewhere.]

  • nus auditorium rental
    Here's an example of words from unrelated posts. NUS is the National University of Singapore, where my son is studying. The person (who was from Singapore) got to a post which included the rental fees for the Wendy Williamson auditorium at the University of Alaska Anchorage. They stayed a while, so maybe comparing prices was of interest.

  • what do women do at conventions?
    Greely, CO. Your guess is as good as mine.

  • why you may find indian hospitality uncomfortable
    Well, this person probably got what she was looking for. I did a post from India about the cross cultural mixed signals that Indian sales people give that make Americans uncomfortable

  • airline oxygen mask for a fee
    Oh my. I suggested this in my list of absurd new fees airlines could create. But you'd have to be really warped to think about such a fee.

  • morels of abortion
    Spelling errors can be so much fun. This person got a post on mushrooms. By the way, there are new morels in our backyard again this year.

  • what was the biggest cyclone/hurricane/typhoon of all times to hit the world
    My post on the difference between cyclones, hurricanes, typhoons, and tornadoes has been getting a fair number of hits since I posted it. But I don't have the answer to this one.

  • blogspot thoughts about sex
    From Moldova - I just discussed this one in the previous post.

六㆕




Today is the 19th anniversary of the Tianamen Square confrontation between the Chinese students and other Chinese citizens and the Chinese government. Just as Americans say 9-11 to signify the day of the Twin Towers attack, the Chinese say Liu Si or 6 六 - 4㆕. You can hear the two numbers in the audio.

Remix Default-tiny 6-4 Mandarin by AKRaven

The students I had in graduate class in 2004 mostly didn't know a lot about what happened on June 4, 1989.

OF ALL the taboos in modern China, the violent quelling of the Tiananmen Square democracy protests on June 4, 1989, remains the most sensitive.

Nineteen years later, China is now the world's fourth-largest economy, and proud host of this year's Olympic Games. But unlike other touchy subjects - Tibet, Taiwan and the Falun Gong group banned as a cult - there is no public discourse on the Tiananmen Square "incident". The real death toll is a state secret; more than a dozen protesters from that time, plus hundreds more dissidents, are in jail. (From today's Sydney Morning Herald)

I arrived in Hong Kong in 1989 about a month after June 4 and during the year I taught at Chinese University I heard a lot about what happened, including a first hand account by one of my colleagues who had been doing research in Beijing during the events. Of course, any individual's accounts are limited by where he was and what he saw.

In any case, I did want to note the day. You can see the Chinese characters for the numbers at AskAsia. This link will take you the character 一 (can you guess?) 1. There you can listen to someone say the character and then go on to the other numbers. I copied their recordings of six and four and mixed them on Jamglue for the audio. Thus it doesn't sound exactly right, but it's better than if I tried to say it. The Chinese have hand signs for the numbers and I'm sure you can figure out what the two at the top stand for. You can see the rest at Chinese-Tools.com.

Tuesday, June 03, 2008

More on blogrolls and my first poll

Well, I'm really glad Paul suggested yesterday (in the comments) I set up criteria for what blogs I put up on my list of blogs, because today I got an email from Thoughts About Sex suggesting we exchange blog links. Of course, I had to check it out if I would even consider linking to it. It's actually not a porn blog, the most lascivious picture is a woman eating a hot dog on a bun. And it isn't written by a native English speaker. It's not particularly special either. But the background graphic is nice.

Unfortunately, I haven't got my criteria yet. The other blogs on his links list already include:

Blogroll

* Anal butt plugs
* Anal sex toys
* Condoms
* Dildos - Sex toys
* Kamasutra Sex
* Sex toy - Masturbators
* Sex toys and adult dvd
* Sex toys - Realistic Dildos

Don't you think What Do I Know? would fit right in?

I started out thinking I would post this as a joke since I just yesterday posted about linking to other blogs and I haven't gotten an email about exchanging blog links since I first started blogging. But then I started wondering, hey, this is a chance to see how much sex makes a difference in blog hits. But won't they be disappointed when they find out I know nothing? And will it bring unwanted visitors here?

Well, what do you all think? I guess this is where I should have been paying attention to the stuff about putting a poll on my site.

Just back from checking out polls. Turns out there are lots of ways, but blogger has one built right in. So I can do my first poll to find out what you think. Oh, and I also found out how my new best friend got here. This was NOT in response to yesterday's post about exchanging blog links. He was googling for "blogspot thoughts about sex" from Moldova and got to my post on Eliot Spitzer. (It was on page 5 of only 631,000 hits. But that doesn't sound like that many hits, so maybe blogspot bloggers don't think about sex that much. The Spitzer post was, I think, so far, my only post on sex. A sad commentary I guess. But then I don't think of this post as being about sex. It's about blogging.) Then he sent me an email.

So it's now up to you. I have no idea where this poll will show up. I'm guessing not in the post itself, but on the side. Look for it.[It's in the upper right column] Vote. And if you don't like the choices, leave a comment with the choice you couldn't find.