Saturday, October 24, 2009

Joel Feik, We Are Offering You A Great Work-From-Home Job Where You Can Earn Over $100,000/Year!!!

I don't think we as a society are quite to the point where we can all work from home and make tons of money, although I for one would welcome this.  Since as a side job I am a futurist, I know that there will be a period from 2017-2033 where work-from-home jobs will be held in high esteem and over half of the US population will telecommute in their jammies.  This of course predates the eventual abolition of all labor starting 2034ish, which comes about threefold: increased robotization, the changeover to an energy-based currency, and the recreation subsidies.

For now though we must wade through piles of spam and scam trying to pluck out the real jobs when we apply on the Internet.  I bet there are more fake jobs listed than real ones, if we take the aggregate total of Internet job listings everyday.  This is excellent news for the fake jobs economy, which unfortunately has no real effect on the real world.  It is good however for fake people, who are more in abundance than you would think.

Sometimes I wonder if I am deluding myself as to whether I am fake or real.  Judging by the amount of fake job offers I get, I could be persuaded that I am fake.  When did this happen?  But seriously, maybe if I switched over to this fake economy I would be better off. 

Hiding on the side of your Gmail is an outlet to this parallel fakeverse.  It is the Spam filter.  You thought you were getting enough fake job offers?  I dare you to take a peek in this filter, but first avert your eyes.  This is where the fake job offers reside that obviously aren't trying very hard to be real.  A few highlights:  multiple e-mails addressed from a MARK HANCOCK that are exactly the same except that they are always signed from a different person, multiple e-mails from the same "company" that loves to use size 28 font, e-mail job offerings that have unsubscribe links, e-mails that don't mention the name of the company, e-mails that use bad grammar, and e-mails that offer to save you money.

I actually like to check the Spam filter.  I get excited to see if my fake friends have been thinking of me.  I am tempted to de-spam all of them, so that they show up in my regular inbox.  Wouldn't you love to have fake friends that never bug you (except with phony e-mails) and that you never have to do anything for?

Look, we all have pseudo-fake friends on Facebook.  Just take the next logical step into the blindness.  Embrace the scam. 

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Inspired ideas that fall outside of my stewardship

Occasionally, I have ideas that I think could change the world and make everything better--or I have ideas that would make a certain specialized thing better.  Unfortunately I usually have ideas that I have no control over nor any influence.  When it comes to some of my religious ideas, we have a nice concept in the church called stewardship.  To the best of my understanding, we use this term in the church to explain the principle that everyone is entitled to personal revelation as well as revelation for those people and things over which they have authority.  It prevents people from having revelations for the whole church unless they are the prophet. 

For example, I have previously discussed my idea that missionaries should be called to their mission when they are a lot younger.  It would be so cool, but I don't think the prophet is taking open suggestions on how to radically change the mission program of the church, because of that pesky stewardship clause.  It makes me wonder, is my inspiration from the devil?  Why did I get it, and not the prophet?  Oh well.

Fear not; I also have many other impractical and hare-brained ideas to reform the church, the NBA, computer games, world hunger, our nation's clogged highways, and the electoral process, to name a few.  Here's a quick fly-by:
  • Why can't men in the church have homemaking or enrichment or book clubs or whatever it is the women do?  Exactly, there's no reason.  Also, I had a lot of great ideas for singles wards, more specifically the singles ward I was in.  Except now I've joined the dark side of being married and feel an irresistible urge to shun all single members and treat them as an awkward disease...
  • I have a cool idea to prevent lottery-bound teams in the NBA from purposefully losing games to try and get a higher pick.  Once a team has been eliminated mathematically from making the playoffs, the teams go into a consolation playoff after the regular season with the seedings based on the records they had in the last 10 games of the regular season. The winner of these playoffs gets first pick with the runner up getting second, etc.  It rewards teams that are still trying while not overly penalizing teams that just are horrible and deserve a good pick.
  • My favorite computer game franchises, Civilization and SimCity, both could be a lot cooler if they had a multiplayer option for collaborative play.  This would allow players to micromanage some aspect of the same civilization or city.  The players would be on the same team, have the same ultimate goals, but have their own duties and responsibilities.  In Civ, one player could be the defense minister, another the science minister, another the foreign advisor, another a provincial governor, etc.  In SimCity, different players could be in charge of Education or Public Safety or Transportation or Zoning.  I can't believe I'm letting this idea out, it could be worth millions.
  • To solve world hunger, we can just make food out of the people who die.  Plus, the state of Indiana could feed the whole world, if the world always wanted corn.
  • We could get rid of the nation's clogged highways if we scrapped our entire car-based paradigm and switched over to rail and bikes!  Cars are unsafe, expensive, ugly, polluting, and most importantly, too self-empowering.
  • It is well established that I champion the idea of an overhaul of the current electoral process in favor of a compulsory Internet voting system that removes middlemen representatives and senators.  The day of true democracy is now within our grasp, people!  Technology has provided a way to bring us back to the glory of our ancient Greek ideals!  We need not disenfranchise ourselves by outsourcing our vote to a politician who has their own selfish aims at heart!  We need not be ashamed that we have no land, the wrong age, the wrong skin color, the wrong gender!  We all can vote on every issue!  What, I say, is holding us back from our destiny?!

Monday, October 5, 2009

Books exorcising my weak-willed imagination, vol. 1

Here is what I have read or attempted to read since I got married, starting with books I finished or gave up on:

Moby Dick by Herman Melville
Probably less than 25% Completed.
Alyssa and I were reading this together for months, even before we got married.  It's a big book.  It was easier than I thought it would be to get into it, but it was even easier to get out.  Did I say it's big?  Cool writing style.  I wish I liked whales and the sea and stuff. 
Rating:  3 Headhunters

One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
100% completed.
I have a soft spot in my heart called russkyus literaturus and I have an imaginary quota to fill.  I was curious about ol' Solzhenitsyn and I gave this book a whirl.  It's about a guy serving in a Stalinist work camp.  Not fun.  It convinced me that it would be miserable.  It was kinda miserable to read too.  It's not Tolstoy or even Dostoevsky.
Rating: 16 Babushkas

American Pastoral by Philip Roth

100% completed.
I haven't read any Roth before, and I was wondering what the deal was about that, so I read this.  It's about this star athlete who has a charmed life who has this crazy daughter who is a terrorist and opposite in every way.  It is high on writing style, high on character, maybe a little lower on plot.  Would I recommend it to my Mom? No.  Heck, I wouldn't really recommend it to anyone.
Rating:  5 yarmulkes

The Bridge of San Luis Rey by Thornton Wilder
100% completed
Five travelers fall to their deaths when an old rope bridge in Peru mysteriously breaks.  Was it some divine fate or just a coincidence?  SPOILER!  That question remains unresolved.  We get a peek into the lives of each of the doomed characters.  This book had a very high literary style that tickled my literary bone.  The characters were very well-developed as well as their stories.  It's a book I feel I need to read again.
Rating:  5 million sombreros

We by Yevgeny Zamyatin
100% complete
I love a good dystopia.  I even love a bad dystopia.  This combined my Russian fix with my dystopic fix, and let me tell you, it went down smooth.  It's one of the first dystopias, predating all of your piddly 1984s and Brave New Worlds.  In a world where everything is scheduled out down to the number of bites it takes to swallow breakfast, how could anything ever go wrong?  Oh man, things sure go wrong.  I couldn't put this book down for the first 100 pages, then I started to put it down some but I still read it in like three days.  My second recommendation.
Rating:  73 Department of Redundancy Depepartments

The Telling by Ursula K. LeGuin
100% complete
Even though We is sci-fi, I needed an even purer shot, because I thrive on performance-enhancing books.  I also read this with Alyssa, who was enthralled at reading her first LeGuin.  If you haven't already read her work, why haven't you?  This was my second after LHOD (abbreviations make me sound cooler) and I again enjoyed her feminine, social science approach to sci-fi.  In fact, I like her ideas the most, but I wouldn't say the plot nor characters nor style were that great.
Rating:  33 ansibles

Now here are some books I am in a partial state of undressing:

A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce
about 25% complete
I snagged this book as well as a book of critical essays about this book, ready to swig some turn-o'-the-century Irish kunstlerroman, get hungover, vomit, and then examine the contents of the vomit.  But, blimey, I am having a hard time getting into it.  You have tricked me again, every list I have ever seen of the best books ever written!  I am enjoying the critical essays more than the book so far, but I haven't given up hope yet.

The Natural by Bernard Malamud
about 75% complete
When this book walks down the street, do people say, "there goes the best book there ever was?" Um, no, they don't.  And books don't walk.  I do feel like I am breaking a personal vow to never see a movie and then read the book, but we got this book for really cheap at a Red Cross Charity Booksale, and I could hear it calling my name.  So I read it and was immediately drawn in because of the familiarity of the story, but after settling in I realized that I actually liked the movie better and I think this Malamud was a bad writer and somehow he got lucky and they made a cool movie about his kinda dumb book.


Dombey and Son by Charles Dickens
about 5% complete
Too early to tell.  Dickens stories have some pretty great expectations from me.

On the Docket:
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon
How We Are Hungry by Dave Eggers
something by Faulkner

Saturday, October 3, 2009

A date with Cappy makes me happy

Alyssa asked me why I capitalized the second word of the title of my last post, and postulated that I just like to randomly capitalize words that I think are important, like the British sometimes do.  And my Answer was that I would Never consciously do Something like that.

Here is a recap of last night's date:
  • we went to Target.  That was the date.  What?  Don't act like it's not an awesome date.
  • we had over $100 left on our gift card, and it was literally burning a hole in my wallet.  
  • Here are some highlights of our big subsidized spending spree (in order of importance):
    • Hershey's Bar with Almonds
    • a new blender I call the Blenderbuss (we were blenderless)!
    • a new 11 piece set of casserole dishes!
    • granola bars
    • pasta and sauce
    • nylons
  • Here are some of the lowlights:
    • a comforter that couldn't comfort the most comfortable person ever to have been comforted
    • we couldn't find any raspberry balsamic oil (you know, to lure fruit flies)
  • and other things were purchased, and we still have $20 left!  
  • then we went to Borders and snooped around, buying nothing.  
  • We switched through a couple musicals before ultimately watching old Mr. Rogers clips.
 

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Are Interpretations created in the mind or do they exist on their own?


A great philosophical rift opened between me and my wife last night as we lay trying to go to sleep.  I don't know how we didn't discover this sooner:  I am a true-blue, through-and-through metaphysicist while she is a staunch materialist. 

This argument got started while discussing possible interpretations of Rosenquist's "I Love You with My Ford" (pictured above).  I offered up that to me, it was a tripartite flag (in the style of Germany's) representing the nation of pop art. 

Then she said something, I wasn't really paying attention, but our conversation hit on the requisite salient points:
  • my interpretation was silly;
  • there is no correct interpretation;
  • if we knew what Rosenquist said about this work it still wouldn't be the correct interpretation;
  • there are a lot of possible interpretations;
at which point a point of contention arose:  how many possible interpretations are there?  She said something to the effect that as soon as someone thinks of one with their mind, there is born another interpretation.  I countered by saying that the interpretations exist before anyone even thinks of them.  Not only that, but there are an infinite number of interpretations.

She bristled at my theory.  She asked "how can an interpretation exist without a mind to think it?"  I said that "there were an infinite number of interpretations possible the moment it was created" which I later amended to "even before it was created there were an infinite number of interpretations."

Well, as you can see we were clearly going deep dish.  She stuck to her guns, I stuck to mine.  It was a long war of attrition, but we realized that she dwells among the world of tangible things while I am adrift in the world of ideas. 

No insults were thrown, except she called me "Platonic" which I took as a compliment, and I lovingly called her a "flesh-and-blood pragmatist wretch" and then we started talking about the chronology of the Indiana Jones movies somehow.

If you are curious as to the answer to the question contained in the title of the post, it turns out we are both wrong--interpretations are neither created in the mind nor do they exist on their own.  They are actually sentient (yet mindless) non-existential beings called Golliwogs that are invisible to all five senses and only can be briefly found in paradoxical situations such as double negative sentences (I do not not exist) and certain M.C. Escher drawings.