Sunday, September 21, 2008

Welcome Mosby



All the talk is over; we finally got our dog. Mosby (named after a character in our favorite TV show: HIMYM...which season premiers tomorrow night on CBS!) is:

-a black lab, shepherd, etc. mix
-about 1-1.5 years old
-pretty well behaved and trained by Homeward Bound Rescue

More on Mosby to come...
but until then feel free to ask about what I've omitted.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Buzz Words



Great link from &y, an article from the NY Times.



Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Goodbye American Dream

As I begin my final year in my master’s program tonight, here’s a section from my reading that I wanted to post. It’s from a reading on family systems for my lifespan development class.

The political and economic system

As John Kenneth Galbriath (1996) has said, the political dialectic in the United Stats used to be between capital and labor, between employer and employee, but now the struggle is between the rich (and those aspiring to be so) and the poor, unemployed and those suffering from racial, age, or gender discrimination. Our democracy has become in large measure, a democracy of the fortunate.

The role of the government is disputed. For the poor, the government can be central to their well-being and even survival. For the rich and comfortable, the government is a burden, expect when it serves their interests as in military expenditure, Social Security, or the bailout of failed financial institutions. The United States has the widest gap between the rich and poor of any industrialized nation in the world. In 1989, the top 1 percent of American households owned nearly 40 percent of the nation’s wealth. The top 20 percent owned more than 90 percent and this gap has continued to grow (Galbraith, 1996).

We believe that this state of affairs-rich versus poor-marks the end of the “American dream,” which promised upward mobility in exchange for education and hard work. Now, the poor are not given access to adequate education, technical training, or any but dead-end jobs. We who have lost the will to make the dream possible pay an unacknowledged price in increased cynicism and despair and a loss of pride in the unstable and violent world we are leaving our children and grandchildren, for which we blame the poor.

Carter, E. A., & McGoldrick, M. (Eds.). (2005). The expanded family life cycle : individual, family, and social perspectives (3rd ed.). New York: Pearson Allyn & Bacon.

Saturday, September 6, 2008

Gunnel Mania

Just got a response to Kevin and my gunnel pumping videos. Maybe the '12 Olympics might be possible after all; we're picking up speed.

Friday, September 5, 2008

Our Back Yard

The blog has suffered for many reasons lately: apartment hunting, school starting, internship, the job hunt, homework, etc. But this past week, now that we have a TV again, our extracurricular hours have been dominated by the RNC. The best part of the day, or our own moment of Zen if you will, is following up the speeches with a fresh slice of the Daily Show/Colbert Report. Below is one of many fun clips...enjoy: