This, admittedly, is an experimental blog.

No, I’m not doing anything experimental with blogging per se—I mean blogging is an experiment for me personally. I’m dipping my toe in, checking things out, seeing how it works for me and how to do it.

So far, let me just tell you a couple things I’ve figured out:

  1. Writing well is not hard, but having a cohesive thought that you need to explain is challenging. In other words: it’s sorta tough to come up with topics worthy of blogging. Why? Honestly, there’s SO MANY amazing blogs out there. Well-written, researched, thought out, planned, well-executed. Slapping some crap together just doesn’t work anymore.
  2. Traffic does not come just because you slap some crap together. It’s funny looking at my stats and seeing how many people (none) have stumbled upon my door. I know through work experience that people expect instant traffic when you put something online. I’ve done plenty of work projects where people on the business side anticipate a fire hose, and you have to temper their expectations. Nobody’ll show up without some form of marketing. That’s just how it is.

So, again, nothing monumental here. Did I think this out beforehand? No. Will I get traffic for this post? Nope. Just burping thoughts out there. Interesting to me tho.

Homeboy’ll be the first person I check out. Why? Is it because it’s almost Christmas and he sorta looks like one of Santa’s elves?

Simply put: no. He seems very interesting at a glance, but I have no quantitative (or qualitative) information just yet to justify that view. Let’s get crackalackin’, shall we?

Ron Paul 2008 › Issues

Foreign Policy:  Interesting stance. On the surface, I like what the site has to say. But it is, after all, just his web site. What’s his voting record? What are the details of how he would go about interacting with the rest of the world to bring his vision to life? Dunno yet. But for now, he gets a preliminary <check />

Working from a hotel room with CNN playing the Republican debates in the background, I think I’ve finally found a purpose for this blog: to figure out who *my* 2008 presidential candidate will be.

Over the course of the next however-many months, I hope to define and then outline what my beliefs are, then weed through the candidates and figure out who my candidate is. I realize my values are somewhat off the beaten path (something I gladly announce), so I will bet that whoever I find matches my values and beliefs will not be a front-runner, and will likely in the long run lose.

So be it. At least this time out I will have a clear idea on what my options are. I can’t say that I’ve used my vote as wisely in the past.

In broad strokes, here’s how I see my values at present:

  • in a diverse country like the USA, we must regain the separation of church and state; this belief–probably more than any others–will insure that my candidate will not make it to the end of the race.
  • the era of American “Policing The World” as my mother would say is over; in many regards we have over-extended ourselves and shuttled our military off to various points on earth. We’ve done this for myriad and complex reasons, and it is far too simplistic to say that we should bring all our soldiers home and shutter the windows. While many of our military moves have been (I suspect) purely economic, destructively self-serving machinations to secure oil for ourselves, some of what we do internationally probably has positive moral/ethical impact. How the hell do you figure out what’s what through the tiny distorted lens of the news media? Man, I don’t know. But I’ll try. We have to pull in the reigns and not spread ourselves out so thin that we are promoting military actions with questionable motives we can’t support.
  • promotion of the rights documented in our constitution, and reversal of (what I perceive as) the bullshit the Bush regime has established. I have more reading to do to figure out exactly what that is.
  • vastly improved foreign relations and policies; we cannot be a nation of one in a world of many, arrogantly pushing our agenda on absolutely everyone.

Writing this out really makes me realize that I really hate Bush. At least what my perception of Bush has always been. What the fuck has this guy and his crew been up to? Is it really as bad as I perceive? Worse? WTF?!??!?

Having said all that, god help me, I think I’m Republican. My parents were very much Democrats, but I don’t really know that they did any real research or had any strong grounding for their votes cast. I suspect they knee-jerk voted, and I truly suspect they were of the first generation to vote based on personality politics. How the candidate looked, spoke, etc. Bullshit, in other words.

Let’s see what I come up with in the coming months.

Check this out:  YouTube – Best drum solo by a seven year old ever?

Seven? Are you kidding me? That’s amazing! He’s got chops!

Rigid, sorta sounds like he’s got a wad of peanut butter in the back of his throat, but the editorial commentary supplied by Keith Olbermann is pretty intriguing. He says some really thoughtful, scathing things about folks which, in this day and age, seem rare and fresh to me.

Maybe this is how idiots that like Fox News see what’s his face—O’Reilly. But I find Olbermann worth watching.

OK, that last post was stupid. I wasn’t awake yet and was just stream-of-conscious tapping at keys.

Dumb.

Somebody should create a blog or calendar of events or *something* so we can track and see the events where Google turns the corner and becomes EVIL.

Right now they’re offering a billion free, incredibly useful applications (Analytics, AdSense, Web Master Tools, Search, Docs, Reader, and on and on and on), they’re facilitating nearly everyone’s searching, they’re making sense of the nebulous Web for us.

They’re also gathering piles of cash through AdWords, trading above $700 a share and gathering *tons* of information about us. All of us.

I’d be willing to be that Google would know who I am, even though I’m blogging anonymously. As a matter of fact, I’m certain they know who I am, or can easily deduce it from the data trail.

Fascinating stuff. And, as of yet, not horribly threatening to me. I don’t really mind the data gathering that’s the hallmark of the modern world. Widespread debit and credit card use, phone GPS, club cards for supermarkets and video rental places. It’s endless.

You could say that Experian, TransUnion and its counterparts would know the most about us. In your annual credit check it’s eye opening to see the data they have on you. But it’s insurance companies—and the whole American insurance system—that really freaks me out. I don’t like it.  Maybe it’s my Catholic upbringing that predisposes me to feel guilty/penalized for things I’ve done, but let’s say: you buy a pack of cigarettes with your groceries, you swipe your club card, you pay with your credit card. What you’ve purchased is stored and associated with you; later, when trying to use your insurance you get flagged and dropped by the insurance company because they have mined your data and see that you purchased a pack of smokes and are too great a risk for them to cover.

Grrrrr. I could explain this more eloquently, but you get the idea. We’re fncked. No health coverage, some sort of black mark on your record—and this is *your* record, YOU as a person, not just you as a consumer. This is you, because what else do you have but your health?

Anyway, I’m getting off track. Back to Google.

Like insurance companies, Google has a lot of data on you. And while their motto is “Don’t Be Evil”, their enormous resources (read: power) will at some point corrupt them. I believe that to be essentially inevitable. What will their first step towards the dark side be? Has it already happened? I don’t know. Someone smarter and more in-the-know than me would have to figure it out.

But whoever that is, they should blog about it. Log it. Track it. Mark the date and events that things went south.

So I just dumped a bunch of the feeds I read into WordPress with OPML import.

I look at a lot of different things, so it’s a bit of a mishmash. God help me, I love the UFC. Where that fits in with typography, programming or graphic design, I’m not sure. But there they are.

A couple things about the feeds I regularly read:

  • You gotta respect the earnestness of folks like the guy that writes AjaxNinja or David Seah. Very different blogs, but interesting for their underlying sincerity and knowledge.
  • John Hicks doesn’t write all that much, but his site is great to visit and his portfolio is pretty fantastic.
  • Seth Fricken Godin. Enough said.

Yes, there is so much information available now that we are essentially drowning in choice. And, to completely mix metaphors here, Google is our little sherpa buddy guiding us up to the peak of the mountain for everything we seek.

Fricken brilliant times we live in. Brilliant.

Starting this blog now is the equivalent to showing up to a party when everyone has left and the hosts are going to bed. But hey, you’re still ready to go, so you’re knocking on the door with a sixer in hand.

It’s like that.

Oh well. Of the gajillion blogs out there, the most I can say for this one is that it’s my own. To paraphrase Gunnery Sergeant Hartman: This is my blog. There are many like it but this one is mine.