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Holiday Weekend in Review!

Saturday Go on a whirlwind tour of four states with Margie and Katherine. Follow large chunks of the Santa Fe Trail and Route 66. Discover that while In-n-Out at…

Saturday

Go on a whirlwind tour of four states with Margie and Katherine. Follow large chunks of the Santa Fe Trail and Route 66. Discover that while In-n-Out at midnight is good, McDonalds at 2:30 a.m. is a waste of time.

Sunday

Finish said tour.

Sleep for about four or five hours. Well, Margie and I did. Katherine basically stayed in her room until the time she was told she could get up, at which point she did.

Get up. Wrap gifts. Many thanks to Jim and Ginger for setting up the wrapping station downstairs.

Take a nap.

Get ready for Christmas Eve Dinner. About twenty-odd friends and relatives (including my folks) this year. Kids got a Kids Table for the first time. Good food, good company.

Clean up. Bring gifts down around the tree. Good night.

Monday

Get up surprisingly early.

Open stockings, then gifts with Jim and Ginger.

Shower, change, relax a short bit.

Head on up to my folks’ house. More gift opening with them and Nona.

Head on over to my brother’s new house in Alta Dena (very nice, and a lot easier to find than his old one in Fontana). Still more gifts. Yummy Christmas Dinner — ham (not Honey Baked, thank the Maker), cheesy potatoes, carrot cake, etc. Yuuuummmm.

Head on down to the Dellis’. Dessert (more). Yet more (if final) gifts.

Head back to the Ks. Sleep.

Tuesday

Spend the day in equal parts (a) dealing with Christmas cards, and (b) dealing with a critical, urgent proposal that needs costing and scheduling stat!

Finally wrap that up around 6 p.m. Read a little bit. Drink some martinis. Eat leftovers from Christmas Eve Dinner.

Relax. Set the alarm for 4:30 a.m. Sleeeeeeeep.

Rest of the Week

Work today. Work tomorrow. Work half (ha!) Friday.

 

 

 

Yeah, um, about that “vacation” thing?

Well, yesterday, my “Boxing Day” off, consisted of about half a day’s worth of phonecons and heads-down spreadsheet and project plan crunching for a proposal that a functional group presented…

Well, yesterday, my “Boxing Day” off, consisted of about half a day’s worth of phonecons and heads-down spreadsheet and project plan crunching for a proposal that a functional group presented to us a week ago and said, “Oh, by the way, we’ve negotiated all of this with the vendor, and we need your nod to approve everything that’s there” — which didn’t include any IT-related costs (let alone schedule considerations) such as servers, contractors, etc.

Today, so far, it’s been heads-down in the office over the same stuff, though my boss did congratulate me on the costing and planning done to date — “We’ve done far worse with far more time to do it in.”

None of this includes any of the other Urgent Items I was expecting to work on today. Rrg.

Annotated Travelogue

I’ve updated the various photo shots from our trip out with a couple of other comments, for those who once more want to Relive the Saga….

I’ve updated the various photo shots from our trip out with a couple of other comments, for those who once more want to Relive the Saga.

Season’s Greetings

Things are still incredibly, wildly hectic here, but we’ve made it through gift wrapping, Christmas Eve Dinner, and the first round of gift opening. I expect the rest of…

Things are still incredibly, wildly hectic here, but we’ve made it through gift wrapping, Christmas Eve Dinner, and the first round of gift opening. I expect the rest of the day will be even more frenetic.

Formulating all sorts of plans for Christmas Cards (and the Lack Thereof of Sent Ones). We’ll see.

At any rate, for those celebrating Christmas today, may your day be merry and bright, bringing you happiness and joy and peace. And for those of you not — well, I wish you the same as well. 🙂

And to all a good night

Merry Christmas Eve! this post enabled by airblogging.com and Margie….

Merry Christmas Eve!

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“You have arrived.”

Nineteen hours on the dot, but we made it! Night, everyone! UPDATE: Turn-down service by Jim and Ginger, complete with mints on the pillows. this post enabled by airblogging.com….

Nineteen hours on the dot, but we made it! Night, everyone!

UPDATE: Turn-down service by Jim and Ginger, complete with mints on the pillows.

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The road home

South of Barstow on I-15. In the home stretch. UPDATE: Note that as soon as we crossed into California, we increased the temp by 10 degrees, the freeway by two…

South of Barstow on I-15. In the home stretch.

UPDATE: Note that as soon as we crossed into California, we increased the temp by 10 degrees, the freeway by two lanes, and the gas prices by 50 cents a gallon.

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Time for a smackerel of something

Milk shakes in Kingman, AZ. UPDATE: My folks were all, “Hey, where is that in Kingman? We’ll want to stop there ourselves next time.” All told, we didn’t do much…

Milk shakes in Kingman, AZ.

UPDATE: My folks were all, “Hey, where is that in Kingman? We’ll want to stop there ourselves next time.”

All told, we didn’t do much with caffeine this trip — a big gulp from Carls at dinner, mostly. It didn’t seem to affect our alertness, and did affect our need for rest stops.

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Night, Kitten

Just beyond Flagstaff. UPDATE: The mambo seems to have worked — but she never really got a deep sleep and work up frequently — and when we got to California,…

Just beyond Flagstaff.

UPDATE: The mambo seems to have worked — but she never really got a deep sleep and work up frequently — and when we got to California, she never really went down out there, either. She didn’t crash until the afternoon.

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Mambo bed time in Holbrook

Mambo bed time in Holbrook Arizona. Good night Kitten. UPDATE: After the the coincidence of nestling into bed just in time for Annie Lennox and “Into the West” on the…

Mambo bed time in Holbrook Arizona. Good night Kitten.

UPDATE: After the the coincidence of nestling into bed just in time for Annie Lennox and “Into the West” on the RotK sound track we were listening to, Kitten decided she wanted one of her standard going-to-bed discs — a collection of mambo tunes. Go fig.

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Dinner break

In beautiful Gallup, NM (and the Carl’s Jr. therein). UPDATE: We decided the delay in game of stopping was outweighed by the advantages of getting out of the car for…

In beautiful Gallup, NM (and the Carl’s Jr. therein).

UPDATE: We decided the delay in game of stopping was outweighed by the advantages of getting out of the car for more than a few minutes after several hours.

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Into the West

Sunset over New Mexico. UPDATE: There’s something very romantic about the sunset. Also a relief, as it meant the sun wasn’t blazing through our front window the rest of the…

Sunset over New Mexico.

UPDATE: There’s something very romantic about the sunset. Also a relief, as it meant the sun wasn’t blazing through our front window the rest of the trip.

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Again with the cry for approval!

New Mexico rest stops have serious self-image issues. this post enabled by airblogging.com….

New Mexico rest stops have serious self-image issues.

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I shoulda taken a turn at Albuquerque

And so we have, shift from south on I-25 to west on I-40. Woot! 440 miles down, 780 to go! UPDATE: I drove the first leg, to after lunch (Ft….


And so we have, shift from south on I-25 to west on I-40. Woot! 440 miles down, 780 to go!

UPDATE: I drove the first leg, to after lunch (Ft. Union rest stop in NM). Margie drove most of New Mexico; we traded off at some little gas station far into the west. I think we swapped again at dinner, and then back when we filled up for gas in Needles. We continued that way until an abortive food stop in Victorville, when Margie took back over for the last time and we made it home.

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Scooby-Doo, where are you?

In Las Vegas, New Mexico, in point of fact. UPDATE: For the record, Katherine was great on the trip. I read to her (and Mommy) for large chunks of the…

In Las Vegas, New Mexico, in point of fact.

UPDATE: For the record, Katherine was great on the trip. I read to her (and Mommy) for large chunks of the drive (Gaiman’s Stardust), and much of the rest of the time she just rested (been a long couple of days for her), watched her little DVD player (as shown), or just watched stuff. Made the trip quite nice.

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Well, I suppose so

In New Mexico. UPDATE: For some reason, all New Mexico rest stops have these signs with little buttons next to the Yes and No to send a signal to the…

In New Mexico.

UPDATE: For some reason, all New Mexico rest stops have these signs with little buttons next to the Yes and No to send a signal to the Dept. of Transportation mother ship or something. I mean, if a rest stop doesn’t get a good vote, do its maintenance crews get fired? Does it get razed?

Regardless, all the places were in good shape (though NM’s rest stops all have a strange “loving hands at home” sense about their construction, a lot less institutional than CO or AZ or CA), lots of plaques and rocks walls and stuff.

It’s always nice to have one nearby.

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Lunch in New Mexico: 11:50

Lunch in New Mexico: 11:50 MST. UPDATE: Biggest problem we had taking pictures (especially with my Treo) was that we were traveling south, then southwest, then west, i.e., tracking directly…

Lunch in New Mexico: 11:50 MST.

UPDATE: Biggest problem we had taking pictures (especially with my Treo) was that we were traveling south, then southwest, then west, i.e., tracking directly toward the sun. Made pictures of landmarks and freeway signs problematic. Thus the plethora of in-the-car shots.

In this case, we’d hit the Sonic in Trinidad (CO), but after failing to get a decent shot of a “Welcome to New Mexico,” Margie settled for the drink cup.

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On the road again, again,

On the road again, again, again. UPDATE: We took off at about 9:40 a.m. from the house. For the record, the interstates were all dry and the weather was cold…

On the road again, again, again.

UPDATE: We took off at about 9:40 a.m. from the house. For the record, the interstates were all dry and the weather was cold but lovely. Biggest snow problem was sun glaring off of the stuff to the sides of the road.

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On the road again …

Heading off down I-25 to I-40 out to California. Weather looks like it should be okay, and we’ll evaluate around Winslow/Flagstaff if we’re staying the night on the road or…

Heading off down I-25 to I-40 out to California. Weather looks like it should be okay, and we’ll evaluate around Winslow/Flagstaff if we’re staying the night on the road or tag-teaming until we get to California.

We’re getting the car packed up with all the normal provisions, entertainment sources, changes of clothes (and jackets and boots), and it should be a long but safe trip.

I will, of course, photoblog along the way. 🙂

Appreciation to the respective ‘rents, who’ve been very supportive and thinking of how to adopt to our being five days late arriving out there or so, to my brother who called up with his concerns over our drive (really, playing it safe here), and to Jackie for her house sitting, her companionship, and her shuttling of us to/from the airport, not to mention her listening to us bitch long, loud, and imaginatively over the last 72 hours …

But some Constitutional provisions are more equal than others

The Constitution indicates that there should be no religious test for holding of government office. Huzzah. But that simple requirement (designed to prohibit oppression of minority religious views) seems far…

The Constitution indicates that there should be no religious test for holding of government office. Huzzah. But that simple requirement (designed to prohibit oppression of minority religious views) seems far too controversial for some folks.

In a letter sent to hundreds of voters this month, Representative Virgil H. Goode Jr., Republican of Virginia, warned that the recent election of the first Muslim to Congress posed a serious threat to the nation’s traditional values.

Mr. Goode was referring to Keith Ellison, the Minnesota Democrat and criminal defense lawyer who converted to Islam as a college student and was elected to the House in November. Mr. Ellison’s plan to use the Koran during his private swearing-in ceremony in January had outraged some Virginia voters, prompting Mr. Goode to issue a written response to them, a spokesman for Mr. Goode said.

In his letter, which was dated Dec. 5, Mr. Goode said that Americans needed to “wake up” or else there would “likely be many more Muslims elected to office and demanding the use of the Koran.”

“I fear that in the next century we will have many more Muslims in the United States if we do not adopt the strict immigration policies that I believe are necessary to preserve the values and beliefs traditional to the United States of America and to prevent our resources from being swamped,” said Mr. Goode, who vowed to use the Bible when
taking his own oath of office.

May I say, as a Christian, how unutterably offensive such a set of statements by Rep. Goode is? Replace “Muslim” with “Jew” or “Catholic” and you get a better sense of how godawfully wrong and un-American such a sentiment is.

And let me say how equally disappointed I am in Dennis Prager, who is usually more conservative than I am but also usually thought-provoking.

The fracas over Mr. Ellison’s decision to use the Koran during his personal swearing-in ceremony began last month when Dennis Prager, a conservative columnist and radio host, condemned the decision as one that would undermine American civilization.

“Ellison’s doing so will embolden Islamic extremists and make new ones, as Islamists, rightly or wrongly, see the first sign of the realization of their greatest goal — the Islamicization of America,” said Mr. Prager, who said the Bible was the only relevant religious text in the United States.

“If you are incapable of taking an oath on that book, don’t serve in Congress,” Mr. Prager said.

WTF? Prager’s full article is here, where he makes the … well, bizarro assertion that,

What Ellison and his Muslim and leftist supporters are saying is that it is of no consequence what America holds as its holiest book; all that matters is what any individual holds to be his holiest book.

Forgive me, but America should not give a hoot what Keith Ellison’s favorite book is. Insofar as a member of Congress taking an oath to serve America and uphold its values is concerned, America is interested in only one book, the Bible. If you are incapable of taking an oath on that book, don’t serve in Congress. In your personal life, we will fight for your right to prefer any other book. We will even fight for your right to publish cartoons mocking our Bible. But, Mr. Ellison, America, not you, decides on what
book its public servants take their oath.

Um … what, exactly, is the point of taking an oath on a text one does not believe in? The whole reason for such an oath is not to demonstrate that one believes in what everyone else does, but that one is guaranteeing one’s fidelity to an oath by committing under a text sacred to oneself. Swearing an oath based on a text one doesn’t believe in doesn’t seem to be very meaningful, regardless of what a majority vote might indicate is the “right” sacred tome.

An individual doesn’t need to be a multiculturalist, a political correctionist, or an Islamicist Terrorist to consider Prager and Goode’s stance to be both offensive and silly. For shame.