Archive - 2010

Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit - #swct, #frff

Each month, provides an opportunity to reflect on the past month as well as hope and plan for the next. June has been a long hard month. Various conferences and family circumstances have taken a lot of time and energy, unfortunately, the billable hours have been lacking. This coming month brings us Social Web Week Connecticut 2010. This will be a weeklong collection of events in New Haven, July 10-16. The goal of Social Web Week is “to bring people together in CT to explore how best to use the social web to improve our quality of life.”

Later in July will be the Falcon Ridge Folk Festival. This is a festival that I’ve been going to since the early nineties. We camp out at a farm, and spend days sitting in the sun, and occasional thunderstorm or worse, listening to music.

I am pretty excited about both events, and so I start off the month, like I try to start each month with the old childhood invocation of good luck, “Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit”.

June 30th

Wordless Wednesday



Flag at Old Tavern Ball Park, originally uploaded by Aldon.

June 29th

The Connecticut Gubernatorial Whine Index

This August, Connecticut voters will go to the polls to select the Democratic and Republican nominees for Governor. Already the press releases are flying. Some are valuable, illustrating the strengths and ideas of various candidates. Some are simply annoying whining. To help make sense of this and to encourage candidates to show their strengths and help build a stronger Connecticut, I am instituting the Connecticut Gubernatorial Whine Index.

Last year, I established the CTNewsWire. It is a Google Group that politicians, candidates, advocacy organizations and government agencies can send press releases to in an effort to reach bloggers, citizen journalists, and other interested parties. So far, the press releases are predominantly from Democrats, with both of the Democratic Gubernatorial candidates sending their press releases.

To calculate the index, I read the press release and assign a whininess score. When a candidate lays out a position on an important issue, they get five points. When they make a comment that positively reflects their character by highlighting an endorsement, expressing concern about a recent development in the state, and so on, they get three points. Updates about coming events also score a point.

On the other hand, they lose points for whining about their opponent. If the whine has merit, they may only lose a single point. Typical whines lose three points, and when the candidates start behaving like spoiled kids in the back seat, they lose five points.

I went back to June 20th as the current start of the index. Over time, I intend to add any new press releases and perhaps dig back through older press releases.

For the current scores, I’ve looked at seven press releases from the Lamont campaign. Two are whiny, and the current Whine Index for the Lamont campaign is 3. The Malloy campaign has issued fifteen press releases covered by the Whine Index. Four of them are whiny. For a total score, the Malloy campaign currently stands at 9 on the Whine Index.

The Malloy campaign has issued about twice as many press releases as the Lamont campaign and about the same percentage of them are whiny. Let us hope that both campaigns focus a little bit more on the strengths of their candidates and how they can make Connecticut a better place, instead of wasting time whining about their opponents.

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June 28th

Music Monday - Lee Penn Sky

It was a cold January day on a remote highway in Idaho. A young man stopped to help other travelers who were trapped in an overturned truck. As the man was working to rescue them, another car skidded off the road and struck him at highway speed. That man was Lee Penn Sky.

On that grey day, Lee almost lost his life and nearly lost his leg; what he did lose was his fear. Until this day, Lee had been a prolific songwriter but never stepped from behind the shelter of a band into the spotlight himself. The risk of stepping into the spotlight seemed to pale in comparison to nearly losing his life.

I’m always skeptical when I read stuff like this. It feels too much like someone is trying to sell me something useless. I wonder about the parts of the story untold. I think, “Yeah, right, but what about the rest of us?” We all have our hurdles; our accidents on the road to Damascus.

Yet, since I was going to listen to his submission to the Orient Lodge Music Review via Sonicbids, I figured I should try to give him a fair hearing. It didn’t take me long to change my opinion. His music is really about all of us.

It’s been about two months since I first listened to his music. I put it near the top of my list, but there have been some other really good musicians fighting for recognition as well, so it is only today that I am getting around to this review.

Perhaps it is all timing and now is the time to write the review. Over the last week or so, one of my mother’s best friends died. A cousin died. Our dog died. Yeah, it’s been one of those weeks. At the memorial for my mother’s friend, some of us talked about all that is going on in the world. The BP oil slick, global warming, and conservative activists judges on the Supreme Court more interested in rewriting over a century of jurisprudence to protect large corporations, shield them from accountability and give them greater say in our electoral process.

Yeah, people were in a kind of down mood at the memorial. I tried to be upbeat, to recognize the power of individuals, reaching out in compassion to those around them, sending out ripples of hope. I spoke of nature’s power to heal and my recollection of run down parts of cities where nature has retaken the land.

Maybe it’s just a little bit like some guy getting hit by a car on a cold snowy Day in January as he tries to help out some people, and instead of getting bitter, stepping into the spotlight to sing his bitter sweet songs of hope in downtrodden situations.

It’s been a rough week, for me, for people on the Gulf Coast, for the widow of one of the men who died at the Kleen Energy explosion in Connecticut as she testified at a hearing calling for more protection for workers. In spite of it, I cling to the sort of hope that you hear in Lee Penn Sky’s music.

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And So, Summer Camp Begins...

It is already hot, sticky and hazy at quarter of nine in the morning as I drive Fiona to camp. The town recreation director is sitting at the entrance to the camp dressed up in a silly outfit to welcome the young campers. “Oh yeah, I forgot about that,” exclaims Fiona.

I drive the old black car through the slalom of small cones to get to the drop off point. As we approach, Fiona shouts out, “Oh, I see two of my friends”. The green is covered with counselors wearing their Woodbridge Recreation Department T-shirts.

I pull the car to a stop and Fiona says, “I think I’m a mermaid this year”. Yup. Her group this year is called the mermaids. A counselor approaches the car and Fiona rolls down the window greeting the counselor saying, “I missed you so much”. The counselor checks what grade Fiona is going into and they are gone.

No longer are there tears of departure, fears of how much she will miss mommy or me, or other protestations. Nope. She is out of the car without so much as a ‘bye’, or ‘thanks for the ride’.

And so, summer camp begins.

(Cross-posted at the Woodbridge Citizen.)

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