dkSez : : : : : : Don Kahle’s blog

Quips, queries, and querulous quibbles from the quirky mind of Don Kahle

Why do people say 'after dark' when what they mean is 'during dark'? After dark would be when it's light again, right? * There are 10 types of people in this world -- those who read binary, and those who don't. * I'm rethinking the whole brown rice thing. What if it's just more white liberal self-hatred? Whole wheat, honey, unbleached flour. All better. Sez who? * Eugene should be HQ for White People for Diversity. We'll fight for diversity to be included in books, which is where we know to look for it. * Give a man a fish and he'll eat for a day, but give a man a pillow, and he'll dream of steak. * What can you say about a state that puts the town of North Bend 225 miles southwest of Bend? We rely on visitors for entertainment.

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Short Subjects in Series

October 31st, 2008 · 2 Comments

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Fifth Friday Footnotes, Follow-ups and Far-Flung Fripperies:
• I wonder how much of the Wall Street panic has been driven by the sight of bankers and lawmakers working weekends.
• In these uncertain financial times, I’m doubling down on “forever” stamps. They won’t lose their value, and they fit well inside my mattress.
• Does anything ever impend besides doom?
• Now that we’re paying three dollars for a gallon of gasoline, can we please remove the nine tenths of a penny added at the end of the price? The fraction adds one almost-complete insult to a larger-than-ever injury.
• Using the same logic, now that we’ll be dialing ten digits to ask a neighbor for a cup of sugar, can we dispense with dialing “1” first? Who would oppose that ten percent reduction in dialing labor?
• Of course, there’s always the possibility that we’ll instead go next door and knock on the door to ask for that cup of sugar. Not a bad thing at all.
• I worry that homeowners are beginning to fence off their front yards now, isolating neighbors from each other even more.
• Motion detectors on urinals may seem benign, but can a civilization be given great odds for survival when it no longer trusts its citizens to flush their own public toilets?
• Is it my imagination or have baseball caps become more popular that baseball?
• Have you ever personally furrowed anything but a brow? Have you?
• Nobody should have more than one, but if they did, they’d be mothers-in-law. So when you have more than one know-it-all, are they called knows-it-all?
• I’m more than sympathetic with people who takes things very literally. As a child, I would read a sign that said “Absolutely No Admittance” and wonder why they put a door there. And when I saw a roadside sign that said “Speed Limit Enforced by Aircraft,” I couldn’t get scenes of aerial bombings out of my head. (Airplanes can enforce speed limit laws from a distance, but enforcing the speed limit itself would require direct intervention.)
• Leftovers are God’s opinion that the world should go on.
• What happens when two young people with hyphenated last names start a family of their own? Could their children have four last names joined with hyphens? Did anybody think about how this practice, however laudable, is not sustainable?
• Clones are people two.
• Roundabouts not only relieve drivers from idling at stop lights. They also prevent those awkward avert-your-gaze moments with placarded homeless audiences. Is that what commuters will like best about them?
• If Apple Computer and google merged, the world would get much better and quickly, in my opinion.
• Airlines scored the public relations coup of the decade by getting travelers to confuse their transit time with flight duration — overlooking commuting to the airport, standing in security lines, sitting on the tarmac, and waiting at baggage claim.
• Is there any compulsory activity in American life that requires more walking than changing planes for a connecting flight?
• Today is the first day of your ongoing, inexorable death.
• I don’t wonder about lefties who carry water bottles everywhere, obsessing about the dangers of dehydration. I wonder why they always screw the cap so carefully between sips. That’s not really true. I wonder about both.
• Can’t we ask Piercy and Torrey to take turns being mayor? Maybe they will anyway.
• Lanyards make me nervous.
• After returning to Eugene from the Middle East, I feel an urge to organize my fellow-tea-drinkers as an oppressed minority.
• Help me out here. When I buy a large tea instead of a small tea, what am I getting for the additional money besides extra hot water?
• Beware the upcoming aftermath.

==

Don Kahle (fridays@dksez.com) offers the following biographical notes:
• He published the Comic News for a decade in Eugene and loved Boyd’s Factoids as much as anyone.
• Had his short attention span been diagnosed earlier, he may have been medicated throughout his childhood.
• He’s not sure whether it’s OK for a pacifist writer to use bullet points.
• He believes readers should have the last word by visiting and leaving comments.

Tags: Arr-Gee published · Grins · Quips

2 responses so far ↓

  • 1 ardeel // Oct 31, 2008 at 12:24 pm

    im not a regular reader of the r-g but today read the opinion page and now i feel like ive re-united with two lost friends, The Comic News and Boyds factoids. Thank You, your blog is near the top of my favorites list

  • 2 mp // Nov 13, 2008 at 3:20 am

    This article is perfectly distilled dk-ness. It’s random, concise and leaves you realizing that you’ve heard plenty for now but feeling unapologetically selfish about wanting to read more.

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