Author Archive

Now That’s a Collection

Posted January 2, 2006 By Dave Thomer

I’m trying to straighten up my basement, and I thought I was having problems. Then I read this feature on Rebelscum about the effort to organize Stephen Sansweet’s collection of Star Wars memorabilia. Outside of the Lucasfilm archives, I don’t think anyone has more Star Wars stuff than Sansweet – and he could probably give the archives a run for the money.

I will bet you dollars to donuts that if Earl reads this feature, he’ll explode with envy somewhere around the paragraph with the arcade consoles and pinball machines.

I’m kind of feeling Sansweet’s pain on a much less grandiose level. I am starting to feel like I have more stuff than I have room to display or use. At that point, what’s the point of having more? And since building additional floors or buying my own warehouse facility are not viable options, at some point I’m going to have to start making some choices.

For now, though, I’ll settle for organizing my paperwork.

Know the Room

Posted January 1, 2006 By Dave Thomer

One of the feeds I track on my home page is Wil Wheaton’s blog. Recently he put up a fairly long post following up on an essay he wrote for Salon about Christmas dinner with his parents. A political discussion turned emotional, and when Wil wrote about it, his parents thought he was being unfair, so he tried to set the record straight. I read the post on Wil’s site, and then noticed that he had cross-posted it as a diary at Daily Kos. It’s kind of fascinating to see the difference in the comments sections. At Wil’s site, the focus tends to be on the emotional content, talking to Wil about the pain he clearly felt, the mistake he felt he had made, and the effort he was making to atone. Since Wil’s readership includes some conservatives who disagree with his politics, there’s also a certain amount of effort to continue the “let’s try to understand each other” theme of the followup post, and a few posts that try to engage the political debate. Over at dKos, it’s a much more charged and partisan atmosphere, which includes some posters criticizing Wil for backing down from his parents and letting himself be emotionally manipulated and others telling Wil that regardless of his protests to the contrary, his father is, in fact, a wingnut.

Some of this is no doubt tied to the different natures of the two communities. One is a personal community built around fans of Wil Wheaton. The other is a community of charged partisans. But that provides an example of how the contexts that we put ourselves in can shape the perceptions that we form and the responses we make. Which suggests that we should not get so commited to them that we react with anger and vitriol when we’re faced with disagreement.

But then again, I don’t want to seem like I’m being so wishy-washy that I don’t think there’s ever such a thing as being right in a discussion. There’s a certain amount of intellectual gymnastics you have to go through in order to simultaneously hold a position and try and convince someone else it’s the right one while you also leave yourself open to being convinced to go the other way. From time to time the effort makes me a little dizzy, but I believe it’s worth it.

Bring On the New Year

Posted December 31, 2005 By Dave Thomer

I just finished bringing my Quicken records of my credit union accounts up to date for 2005. Unfortunately, there are still several accounts left tp update, but that ain’t happenin’ before midnight. The exercise has definitely reminded me I need to stay on top of my record keeping a little better this year. So let’s call that my first major resolution.

Another resolution is to try not to become too cranky this week. I’m going to try and go without caffeine now that I’ve gone through the 24 bottles of Snapple I bought last week. I really hope someone else drank some. But I have a nagging feeling I went through them myself. Which is why I think it might be good to detox a bit. So, apologies in advance if I try to bite off anyone’s electronic head.

Gonna sign off for now and wish everyone observing the standard Western calendar a Happy New Year.

Utensils: Use ‘Em or Lose ‘Em

Posted December 31, 2005 By Dave Thomer

Last night I finally put into practice a suggestion from Alton Brown’s Gear for Your Kitchen. I had been getting frustrated at the tangle of cooking tools contained in various drawers in the kitchen. So last night I emptied all the drawers onto the counter, sorted the tools into groups (tongs, spatulas, scoops, etc.), and went over them one by one. If Pattie or I couldn’t remember when the last time we had used the tool was, it lost its place in the drawers and went into a paper bag destined for the garage. I realized I have three carving forks. I barely use one, let alone three. Next step may well be putting labels on the drawers. Obsessive-compulsive? Probably. But there are a fair number of people coming and going through the kitchen who may not remember the organization system. And believe me, when I’m cooking, it’s hugely helpful to know where things are.

For Christmas I got a copy of the new America’s Test Kitchen Family Cookbook, so I’m going through my every-few-months ritual of going through my cookbook collection looking for chapters I previously skimmed over and recipes I may have missed. I’ve mastered a couple of good techniques over the last couple of years, but I definitely want to broaden the possible menus around here. (As opposed to broadening my waist line.) Right now I’m going back through Shirley Corriher’s Cookwise. This could take a while.

You Pays Your Taxes, You Take Your Chances

Posted December 30, 2005 By Dave Thomer

Goss over at Project Antares has declared Wednesdays to be his What If Wednesday days, where he tosses out whatever idea has been percolating in his brain amongst all the stories and other creative pursuits. Last week he suggested the following:

What if– instead of just sending an amount of money to the IRS every year, every single taxpaying american could itemize their taxes?

What if those on the Right Wing could actually specifically ensure that their taxes were not going to be spent on social programs, but on national defense?

What if the informed people of the Progressive Left could specifically choose, on their tax form, the programs that their taxes would be funding, and protect their money from being given to bloodthirsty mercenaries euphemized as ‘private contractors’ as they murder innocent civilians in other countries?

What if every american, right or left, red or blue, had the comfort of knowing that their money was going toward the america that they envision?

It’s a fascinating idea, but I don’t see how it could possibly work. In Goss’s comment section, I argued that the notion is inherently undemocratic because it gives vastly unequal control over the government to different citizens based on income and taxes paid. In this week’s installment, Goss is kind enough to call me “informed and articulate” while giving no ground. (Which surprised me not at all.) He also tries to spell out in a little more detail how the initial planning of such a program would work. I confess I would need to see a lot more detail before I started to come around. I’m just thinking there would be so many ways to game such a system. If you only used broad categories, lawmakers could find ways to earmark their desired programs into whichever category had money in the budget. If you tried to get specific, taxpayers would be inundated with minutiae that would make the proposition system seem like a walk in the park.

Truth be told, I’m suspicious of Goss’s taxation idea for many of the same reasons I’m suspicious of the proposition/referendum system. On the surface it seems like a way to give citizens more direct control. But without building in any kind of institutional framework to help citizens understand the relevant issues and consider various aspects of a problem, it actually reduces the opportunities for deliberation, intelligent problem-solving, and community-building.

Credit to Bob Barr for Consistency

Posted December 28, 2005 By Dave Thomer

I was not a huge fan of Bob Barr during the Clinton impeachment. I disagreed with the case that he was making and I often disagreed with the way he made it. I have little doubt that my feelings were influenced by the belief that the process of investigations that led to the impeachment was a highly partisan affair. So I have to give Barr considerable credit, because it looks like he is applying the same standards to George W. Bush that he did to Bill Clinton. That’s very clear in this editorial from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, where he writes:

First, in the best tradition of former President Bill Clinton’s classic, “it-all-depends-on-what-the-meaning-of-is-is” defense, President Bush responded to a question at a White House news conference about what now appears to be a clear violation of federal electronic monitoring laws by trying to argue that he had not ordered the National Security Agency to “monitor” phone and e-mail communications of American citizens without court order; he had merely ordered them to “detect” improper communications.

This example of presidential phrase parsing was followed quickly by the president’s press secretary, Scott McLellan, dead-panning to reporters that when Bush said a couple of years ago that he would never allow the NSA to monitor Americans without a court order, what he really meant was something different than what he actually said. If McLellan’s last name had been McCurry, and the topic an illicit relationship with a White House intern rather than illegal spying on American citizens, I could have easily been listening to a White House news conference at the height of the Clinton impeachment scandal.

On foreign policy, domestic issues, relationships with Congress, and even their selection of White House Christmas cards and china patterns, presidents are as different as night and day. But when caught with a hand in the cookie jar and their survival called into question, administrations circle the wagons, fall back on time-worn but often effective defense mechanisms, and seamlessly morph into one another.

A level of consistency is a vital thing if we’re going to have a democratic society. It is much easier to have a healthy difference of beliefs if we have confidence that the other person truly believes what he is arguing, and a very good way to establish that is to know that the person will follow that belief to its reasonable conclusions even in different circumstances. This is not to say that we won’t ever get fuzzy around the edges and be inconsistent from time to time. And it doesn’t mean that beliefs have a one-size-fits-all application – it can be very possible that different responses are justified by the specific characteristics of superficially similar situations. But I think a lot of public officials could take a lesson from Bob Barr right now.

Blogging Bioethics

Posted December 28, 2005 By Dave Thomer

When I was an undergraduate and decided to major in philosophy, the department advisor asked me what I was planning to do with my future. The answer I gave bore very little resemblance to how the next ten-plus years of my life would go. Regardless, he was honest with me about the employment prospects, and lack thereof, in the field, and suggested that I strongly consider bioethics. Given the rapid change in medical science and technology, people who could help companies and governments frame and consider the ethical questions raised by new advances would most likely find themselves in demand even outside the traditional academic world. Over a decade later, it’s hard to argue with him. Prescient as he was, I wonder if he ever envisioned the blog.bioethics.net, the blog of the editors of the American Journal of Bioethics. The editors demonstrate how demanding the field is – it requires not just an ability to think deeply and critically about ethical questions, but it requires keeping up with numerous scientific disciplines and understanding the goings-on well enough to relate the questions to the research. The blog is some fascinating reading.

It’s not surprising that a major focus for the blog over the last few weeks has been the controversy over the South Korean stem cell research program, which has been rocked by an escalating seris of ethical challenges. When I first started checking out the blog, the major concern was the issue of informed consent – were the people who donated eggs to the experiments able to fully understand what they were being asked to do, and were they in a position to say no? I’ve learned in my readings on Stanley Milgram’s obedience experiments that informed consent all by itself is a blockbuster issue for scientific ethics. But that was only the beginning in this case, because it is coming to light that many of the results for which the South Korean team was so celebrated were fabricated. The issue hit the mainstream press a few days ago; the Philadelphia Inquirer covered it right before Christmas.

The bioethics blog has an interesting take on the controversy. In addition to commenting on the immediate issues of honesty and proper conduct, they are pointing out that United States researchers and regulators have very little ability to influence how stem cell research is conducted because they are not allow to work on any embryonic stem cells developed after August 2001. I find it a fairly compelling argument, even though I’m under no illusions that the American regulatory system is working on all cylinders lately. But I’m predisposed to agree with criticism of the research ban in the first place. If I weren’t, I doubt I’d be convinced by an argument that we should do something I think is immoral just because people in other countries are going to do it in an even more immoral fashion. Actually, when I put it that way, it kind of sounds like some of the justifications I’ve heard for torturing prisoners and violating their civil liberties, and I know I don’t find them persuasive.

Recharging the Batteries

Posted December 27, 2005 By Dave Thomer

Shaking off the last of the holiday fatigue. I hope everyone out there had at least half a good as time as I did over the last few days. We got a lot of my mom’s side of the family together for a Christmas brunch, in which I got to don my new Alton Brown apron and make pancakes while others in the family built a truly epic fruit salad.

I got a copy of The Complete Calvin & Hobbes, on which more later, but let me say today’s FoxTrot strip is not kidding around.

Lifting the books may be the first step in an exercise regimen, which I think I’m gonna need to start if I eat too many more pancakes.

Amazon did manage to get most of packages here by Christmas Eve, including all of the gifts I needed to give out. The one box that’s missing is just as well, because I think I want to invest in a new bookcase before any more books get here.

We decided to try something new this year. We’re buying our Christmas supplies for 2006 now, while everything’s on clearance. I’m not an expert in the time value of money, but I’m pretty sure buying now at 50% off beats buying in 50 weeks at full price after inflation.

All the new reading material from Christmas hopefully means I’ll have lots of blogging fodder in the next few days. For right now I find myself trying to reimmerse myself in the usual routines. And I should probably start gathering the paperwork for tax season. Right after I take another nap.

Give Me a Break, Hallmark

Posted December 23, 2005 By Dave Thomer

I took my daughter Alex around the corner to the Hallmark store to pick out ornaments for this year. Got a cute little mark-your-kid’s-age ornament, which was nice. And Alex wanted to get the Princess Leia ornament that’s the latest in Hallmark’s numbered series of Star Wars characters. I’ve been collecting that series anyway, so normally I would be thrilled she picked this one. And mostly I am.

But for crying out loud, did Hallmark really have to put Leia in the Jabba’s prisoner outfit? I mean, I question the wisdom of using that outfit for an ornament at all. And the obsessive-compulsive collector in me is irked that it’s part of the series, especially since this is the first time they’ve repeated a character.

Then again, I suppose I may have something to answer for in that Alex immediately recognized the character in that outfit as Princess Leia. At least I haven’t let her watch Revenge of the Sith yet. (That’s gonna be rough in a couple of years when I need to explain why Episode III is off limits . . .)

The Man in Superman

Posted December 22, 2005 By Dave Thomer

OK, Netflix just delivered the first disc of Lois and Clark: The New Adventures of Superman season 1. And I may very well review the whole set when I’m finished. But between this, Superman Returns, DC’s Infinite Crisis and One Year Later extravaganzas, and maybe the occasional Smallville episode, I figure I’m going to do a fair bit of Superman conversation over the next year. And lest I repeat myself, I figure I’ll get the following rant out of my system now.

Before the late 80s, most of the most popular depictions of Superman in comics and other media depict Superman as the “real character and Clark Kent as a mere persona or disguise, usually one who’s comically inept and clumsy. While I recognize that this depiction goes right back to Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster’s original comics, I have always thought that the more interesting and more logical depiction would be much the reverse. John Byrne’s Man of Steel revamp in 1986 and Lois and Clark are two examples of the approach I’m talking about. A man who thinks of himself as Clark Kent realizes that in order to do what he wants to do with his abilities and still be able to live his life, he needs a public identity, and therefore assumes the role of Superman.

OK, so why do I think this makes sense? Well, just about every version of the Superman story has the character being raised as Clark Kent and then, at some point, adopting the role of Superboy/Superman. So from the chronological point of view, it makes sense. I think of myself as Dave Thomer. When I talk to myself, I call myself Dave. I consider who I am now to be part of a continuity with my past experiences, which I also associate with being Dave Thomer. I think that the Clark/Superman dichotomy works the same way. There’s a scene in the premiere of Paul Dini and Bruce Timm’s Superman: The Animated Series where, the first time Superman shows up in costume, he makes a small mistake and then berates himself saying something like, “Oh, nice, Clark.” That’s the approach I like.

Now, just about everybody who does any work with Batman these days will tell you that “Batman is the real guy, Bruce Wayne is just an identity that he puts on.” And I’d agree, although some creators take that too far. But that interpretation of Batman works to show you how traumatized the character is, and to give you a certain sense of tragedy as to how Bruce’s life really ended when his parents got shot and he became obsessed. Superman doesn’t have the same kind of emotional trauma, and I haven’t really seen many creators try to play up “He can never have a normal life!” as a tragic dimension to the character. Kurt Busiek’s Samaritan in Astro City is a good example of what this kind of interpretation might look like.

To get around the notion that Clark would see himself as, well, Clark, some comics have had Clark becoming Superboy at a pretty young age, to help break the association with his human identity. (I don’t think it’s an accident that a lot of modern interpretations have Clark discovering his powers and alien ancestry more gradually.) And I give Richard Donner credit for having Kal-El spend well over a decade traveling the universe with Jor-El. After an experience like that, his life as Clark must seem very distant – and Donner makes a point of not referring back to Clark’s childhood except for a very brief mention of Clark sending money home to his mother. (We’ll ignore Superman III here.)

Beyond that logic, though, why do I think it’s more interesting for Clark to be a real identity and not just a disguise? There are a lot of people who see Superman as a godlike character, an example of perfection. Mark Waid has commented that he had a hard time in Kingdom Come writing a Superman who was fallible, who kept making significant mistakes of judgement. With the god-among-men approach, Clark Kent is just a disguise Superman throws on to slum around with us mere mortals, perhaps playing a prank on Lois Lane along the way. The approach stresses the alien, the otherworldly nature of the character. It also enforces a certain distance. He isn’t really dealing with anyone who’s on the same level as he is. And if he’s so darned perfect, there’s not a lot of internal struggle for the reader to relate to. Even Alan Moore’s Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow, in which Superman gives up the Clark Kent identity, has to then humanize the Superman persona and make him vulnerable – which is possible because the character no longer has to lie to everyone about who he really is.

On the other hand, what’s always interested me is the idea that Superman is a guy who was raised and educated by normal everyday human beings. That he accepted and adopted our values, that he became one of us. That he’s a human being, with all the wants and hopes and dreams and foibles that come with being human, and a huge responsibility to others on top of all of it. Clark Kent needs to be more than a foppish disguise for that aspect of the character to work. He needs to be a real person – we need to see how the person that Ma and Pa Kent raised became this hero, and how being the hero affects him. We also need his life to matter – we have to believe that when the world sees Clark Kent, it sees someone with the skill and personality to be a reporter for a major newspaper, someone who’s a worthwhile friend or adversary in his own right. All this does invite a somewhat more soap-opera-esque version of the character. It invites a focus on his personal relationship, on his career, on his problems, and so on. Some people may just want to see the action and the hero elements. I can certainly respect that. For me, I think the added humanity of my favored approach is worth it.

OK, end of rant.