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Reality Versus the Fiction Writer [May. 23rd, 2012|10:03 pm]
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[Current Mood |awake]

1) Do I really think everyone should be barcoded?

 Of course not.  

 Seriously...you thought it was for real?   After hearing about responses to the photographer who thought everyone should be limited to just one photo a day, you still thought this was a dead-serious part of the discussion?   The term "Empress of the Universe" wasn't a clue that this was a science fiction writer making something up?   

 2) So why....?

 The format of "The Forum" has this sixty second idea thing in it.   I was told it was the entertaining, fun part of the show.   I interpreted that as "light-hearted interlude."  Participants are asked to come up with an idea--however impractical, impossible, unnecessary, and/or undesirable.   The BBC staff picks one and the person whose idea it was is then supposed to present and defend it.  

 I don't know about the others, but I tossed out several ideas over the phone, and they didn't seem to create any interest.   The idea is supposed to be related to the day's topic (there went my idea for putting solar panels on top of cars in all sunny climes...)   It's not supposed to be related to things the participant has already  given as points they might want to make in the main discussion (there went another idea or two, including an implant to manage aberrant brain chemistry in soldiers so they wouldn't commit stress-related  errors, have rage episodes, maybe even prevent PTSD) or points  put forward by the other participants when  their main statements are known (and there went something else I didn't even mention to them.)   When the first few got "Yes, but..." reactions, I thought "Oh, good, someone else's idea will be used."   I'd been told the right one would be picked on the weekend.  The weekend went by.  Whew.  Off the hook.

Then came Monday.   "We're really looking forward to your 60-second  idea."    What??!!  I guess it's understandable...if you've got a science fiction writer on tap, let her come up with ideas.  Maybe they'll be...off  the wall.   Exciting.  Innovative.  

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And on the Home Front: Green Socks Have Heels [May. 17th, 2012|02:31 pm]
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[Current Mood |accomplished]

Today my husband and son are out of the house--husband went to the city, picked up son, and took him to the dentist, after which they'll go to a movie and eat.   So it was the perfect time to turn the heels of the green socks.  Yesterday's knitting was such a depressing event that I was a bit scared, even though I've now turned the heels of the other pairs successfully.   The heel turning went very smoothly, and I'm happy with the way the heels look. 


.

The "eye of partridge" stitch shows clearly on the heel flap.  I did the heel turn itself in stockinette.  The center portion of the heel (the part with stitches that run "straight" from the back of the leg around and under) has eight stitches.  That's the same as on the blue pair that preceded this pair.  The heel flap itself is 28 stitches, two stitches narrower than the blue pair's heel flap because I decreased four stitches below the cuff ribbing.   Now to pick up the stitches along the side of the heel flap and reconnect the heel to the top of the sock. 

With the family out of the house, I should be able to do this without interruption.  I'd like a nap, actually (short of sleep again last night) but it's too good a chance to miss.   It felt really good to have today's knitting do so well, after yesterday's fiasco.
 



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Is That Me on a BBC Radio program? Yes! [May. 17th, 2012|11:39 am]
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[Current Mood |busy]

Yesterday, I sat in a basement recording studio in Austin, connected via satellite (already SFnal!) to a BBC-radio studio in London.  I was participating in a panel discussion on Future Wars on the BBC Radio World Service series "The Forum."   Fellow panelists were David Rodin and Elizabeth Quintana.   I confess to some nervousness--though I've done radio interviews before, and panel discussions before, I've never done a long-distance panel discussion like this, where the others have the facial and body-language cues and I don't.  So it was fairly intense concentration--an interesting challenge.   The BBC helped me prepare for this with ample information about the process,  and the other participants (as well as what I'd looked up on the internet.)

"The Forum" has a superb moderator, who managed to keep us all more or less on track and moving forward, without being a tyrant about it--there was natural flow to the conversation.  I enjoyed it immensely.    There's information on broadcast times in the UK, plus links to the podcast or--if you want to check it out later--the archives of the series--below the cut.  This is what the BBC sent me.



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Eye to Eye of Patridge [May. 12th, 2012|11:30 am]
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[Current Mood |awake]

 I'm now working on my third pair of socks, this one the same yarn (Ella rae Classic, 100% wool) but bright green, and I'm still tinkering with the design.   (For instance, this pair has a four stitch decrease spread around four needles  just below the cuff ribbing.)    For the heel flap, I decided to go with one of the "reinforcing" stitches, and went with Eye of Pigeon just because I hadn't seen it before.   Turns out it's kind of a finicky thing (for someone who likes to knit in a rhythm and just rock along thinking of something else.)   This means I'm slower on this heel flap than I was on the previous ones, and this on a pair of socks I really need to get done pretty quickly, before I go to a convention. 

However, here's where I am on one of the socks (having speared the heel flap with a knitting needle to keep it from curling so much I couldn't photograph it.)



        

(R) Eye of Partridge stitch above, stockinette below      (L) Wrong, or "inside" of heel flap showing EP purl above, regular below

I don't think I'll be using it on heel flaps again--will try "heel stitch" instead--but may use it on small decorative areas, as on afghan or scarf segments.   Also don't think it looks much like a partridge's eye, but as there are thousands of stitch patterns, finding unique and appropriate names for each one must be difficult.  

Since I didn't do the sensible thing and do a pattern swatch before starting it, I know it's affecting my gauge but not how much.  (Yes, sometimes it really is smart to do that swatch ahead of time.  Sigh.  Well, I have two more balls of green yarn to play with, if these socks turn out to be a very difficult fit...)
 

Another bit of advice-from-experience: don't try a new stitch pattern when you're in a hurry and have a hard deadline on when something must be done.  Too late now for me, but maybe that will help someone else.   If I'd just knitted the heel flaps in stockinette, as I did the first two pairs of socks, I'd be a lot closer to turning the heels (which I'd planned to do today...I would've finished the heel flaps yesterday or early today.   Minor adjustments done with fitting, like the 4 stitch decrease mentioned above, don't slow you down nearly as much as having to remember which row you're on for patterning.  If Interrupted, I can stop stockinette anywhere--I'm either knitting or purling whole rows at a time, and all the knit and purl rows are the same.  Here...no.




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Gay Marriage [May. 10th, 2012|07:09 pm]
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I've posted before about my stand on gay marriage; I've argued for the acceptance of gay marriage in church...and I think it's another of those issues which should never have become a political issue anyway.  I opposed the Defense of Marriage Act, wrote to my Congresscritters (to no avail, as usual), and so far expressing my opinion has had no effect at all.

But here I am again.  Saying the same things again, with emphasis.  And congratulating President Obama for coming out in favor of legalizing gay marriage.   I am appalled at the continued efforts to make gay marriage illegal, especially since these efforts are based on false premises and equally faulty logic.

When someone says that X imperils Y,  they usually have a mechanism in mind, and--for physical things--can usually say what it is.   
Dropping a glass on concrete imperils the glass:  glass is brittle and will break when it hits a hard surface.   Some people claim that allowing gay marriage would imperil traditional marriage.   But they have no mechanism to display.  How--exactly, by what mechanism--is the marriage of two men, or two women, supposed to imperil the marriage of a man and a woman?   What does it do? 

A bit of boundary discussion here: who's responsible for what, and how that relates to marriages.   An individual is responsible for his/her own behavior.  Individuals who form a relationship (be it a marriage or a business partnership or a friendship) are both (or all, if more than two) responsible for the success or failure of that relationship.   The relationship will prosper, or not, as they invest in it the better parts of their character: honesty, courage, compassion, etc.   If three guys go on a fishing trip,  the success of that trip will depend on each one doing his part....and if one is a whiner, and one is a boaster and one didn't bring the food he promised to bring,  the misery they cause each other has nothing to do with the fact that in the next campsite three women are also on a fishing trip, having a great time,  and catching trout hand over fist.    Each group created its own experience. 

It's the same with marriages.   The success or failure of a marriage rests on the people in the marriage.   If the marriage tanks,  they blew it.    Not "society", not the in-laws, not the media, not the marriages of other people in the neighborhood or the social club or the church--not anything but the people themselves...male or female, in any combination that occurs.   The quality of a marriage is determined by the behavior of the people in the marriage. 

So....how, exactly, could the existence of gay marriages threaten traditional marriages, with the responsibility for the health of a marriage squarely on its partners?    Does accepting gay marriage mean that everyone has to have a gay marriage?  No.   No more than having traditional marriages means that everyone has to have a traditional marriage.  Does gay marriage mean that a straight marriage is doomed to fail?   No.  So...how does it threaten them? 

Clearly, it can't.   So those who oppose gay marriage have to leave the mechanism alone and take another route, the appeal to authority, what they say God said.    But the texts quoted do not say that gay marriages threaten traditional marriages...the closest they get is that God supposedly said marriage was between a man and a woman.   So the only legitimate approach to opposing gay marriages is to say that because God didn't sanction gay marriages, they should not exist.  

This is a very weak position.  God didn't sanction a lot of things--even if you take the Bible as the literal word of God, there's a lot simply not mentioned in the Bible.   Automobiles, trains, airplanes, nuclear submarines, electric lights, computers,  the stock market,  stainless steel,  coal mining, calculus, brain surgery, tectonic plates, science fiction, synthetic fabrics,  nail polish...the list is endless.   God specifically spoke against some things that you never hear gay-marriage opponents complaining about:  consuming pork and shellfish, for instance.   Creating economic burdens for the poor.   Flaunting your religion.   Judging others.    Failing to care for the poor.   In fact, if you take the Gospels as an expression of God's will (and if you're a Christian,  you're pretty much stuck with that)  there's no sign that God thought gay marriages were bad for people in traditional marriages...who were urged, along with everyone else, to quit being judgmental and leave the handling of sins to God. 

For those who aren't Christian, what the Bible says, or Paul of Tarsus is supposed to have said about homosexuality is immaterial--those beliefs aren't their beliefs and there's no justification for forcing those beliefs on someone who doesn't share them.   In a country with a diversity of beliefs--a diversity of beliefs that existed in the colonial period and throughout this country's history--there's a Constitutional right for each citizen to be treated equally--not to be forced to accept some other person's religious beliefs.  When the only underpinning for a law is religious--when there is no mechanism by which a different belief causes measurable harm to more than someone's sensibilities--then there's no justification for that law.   Religious practices remain in the religious realm;  law is political, and belongs in the secular realm.

To take a counter-example:  a law against underage marriage.   What's the basis for saying it's illegal to marry someone below a certain age?    A non-religious justification: quantifiable harm done to the underage person (usually female) by the physical, educational, and psychological consequences of  marriage at a young age.   This harm is quantifiable: interruption of education, limiting the fitness of a young person for later life, the physical damage that early childbearing causes, the increased likelihood of a complicated pregnancy and maternal and infant morbidity and mortality, the immaturity of at least one parent, which results in less effective parenting.    There is objective evidence that, in our society, the average young teenage girl  is not equipped for marriage and childbearing and parenting and that very early marriages are more likely to end sooner.   This decision comes not from religion (indeed several religions would permit marriage before the legal age of consent) but from the practical, observable considerations that it is better for society if those who marry are competent adults.

No such practical, observable, quantifiable consideration exists for gay marriage.  On the contrary, the lack of a recognized legal status for gay partnerships prevents practical, observable, and quantifiable benefits for society.,,the same benefits claimed for traditional marriage, in stabilizing relationships within a legal framework that makes clear the legal obligations of the parties involved, a framework that also provides young gay/lesbian people with a viable model of how they might choose to live.  

So  I support gay marriage.    And if one 60+ year old woman, brought up in a conservative small town,  in a traditional marriage for 40+ years, can come to the conclusion that gay marriage poses no threat to her or to any other straight people who are married, or want to get married....how then can some still be foaming at the mouth? 




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Political Mythology: The Greatest Generation [May. 6th, 2012|09:35 pm]
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David Dewhurst, a Texas Republican who would like to be the chosen candidate to take over Kay Bailey-Hutchinson's seat in the U.S. Senate, is running an ad on TV which epitomizes the mythology of the Greatest Generation.   The Greatest Generation, he says, made this nation great and made it rich, but the next generation bankrupted it by demanding handouts and this is the source of the huge deficit that now must be reduced by everyone tightening their belts.   (Just as a side note:  he does not mean rich people must tighten their belts--he means those who depend on, for instance, Social Security, Medicare, unemployment insurance, etc.)

A ritual disclaimer is in order here.   My parents were of the Greatest Generation, a term coined by Tom Brokaw in his took of that title, with the thesis that this generation--coming to adulthood in the Great Depression, and involved in both military and civilian ways with World War II--was, in Brokaw's words, "the greatest generation any society has ever produced."   I'm certainly not arguing that this generation was unremarkable--I am not downplaying their accomplishments.   Remarkable things were accomplished by this cohort both here and abroad.  But just as too much sugar is bad for the blood,  too much praise diminishes, rather than enlarging, those to whom it is given.   Especially bad when credit is given for what was not, in fact, their doing.



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Triumph and....Not Quite [May. 1st, 2012|04:47 pm]
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[Current Mood |awake]

Blue One, the second pair of socks I ever knit, is now off the needles, but not yet ready to wear, thanks to...um...some errors.

However, it's been on my feet for an hour now:



If you think there's something odd about the toes, and notice dangling strands of yarn...you're right.    I grafted (Kitchener stitch) the toes, but...I can't get the loopy bits to agree to snug down.  Not sure why.  Aside from that,  some parts of the socks are still a little large:

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Blue One Progress [Apr. 26th, 2012|12:07 pm]
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[Current Mood |accomplished]

Quietly, in the background, in spare moments here and there, and the occasional half-hour in the recliner, the blue socks have continued to grow.   They're now past gussets and onto the straight part of the foot (but not far onto it.) 


Gussets clearly visible between heel flap, bottom, and top of foot. 

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Lifestuff and Major Distractions [Apr. 25th, 2012|09:23 am]
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And minor ones, too.   It has been a week of ample numbers of both that kept me away from LJ because (for computer reasons I don't entirely get) it takes longer and is harder to post here than some other places.  Listing the symptoms I know about would take longer than I have (LifeStuff & Distractions still being very active.)    It's quick to post to Twitter (only 140 characters, after all) and quicker to post to my site-based blogs, although I can rarely do more than one a day, so two are orphans while one gets the work.   And why, you may wonder, would I show up here to make excuses for why I've been away from here?   Largely out of guilt for neglecting this group.

But I do have one distraction to report on, that's leading up to something that may be entertaining for some of you.  BBC Radio asked me to be on their program The Forum, for a discussion of Future Wars.   This is the first time I've discussed future warfare with anyone other than SF writers/fans or military folk who were SF fans.   It won't be same-old same-old.    I'm delighted to be part of this particular discussion.  

Since they're in London and I'm not (and no, it was not possible to make a quick trip to the UK to be there--thanks to other LifeStuff)  this involved quite a flurry of email traffic between my UK publisher's publicity person and me, some delayed emails (I don't know if mine back were delayed, but some of hers to me took a couple of days to waft here) and then another flurry of email traffic between the BBC and me, and then a phone call yesterday.   I'm not accustomed to overseas phone calls--they're still a big deal--but the connection was very, very clear.   BBC had to find a studio they could use, here in Texas;  I had to figure out where it was (well, actually, when they sent the address, I knew I wouldn't have a problem finding it.  A friend has agreed to drop me off across the street from it, so I don't have to worry about where to park.)

Now to get back to normal stuff (the book lost ground last week and early this, due to the excitement factor.  Need to get a normal day's work done today--and that means staying off the internet until it is.  Except for this.)


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Blue Socks: more progress [Apr. 15th, 2012|09:03 pm]
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The second pair of socks have made considerable progress, and last night I turned the heels of both.   Here's what the pair looks like, seen from the back: ribbed cuff, a little over an inch of stockinette below the cuff, then the heel flap, with the turned heels at the bottom of the picture:


The front of the sock (where the top of the foot will be) is on the bottom in the this picture, with its needles sticking out of it. The sides of the heel flap appear to slant in to the turned heel.   It's hard to see in this photo that the heels really have turned. so here are a couple more pictures:
       

Here the heels are "nose to nose" or "heel to heel," forming an arch and with the central stitches pointing "down" (what will be forward, on the bottom of the foot, when the sock is on.   Unlike the heels of the first (red) pair, these heels look alike and are smoother. 

And here they are side by side, again showing that they're the same size and shape.  Hurray, I said last night.   Now all I have to do (!!) is pick up the stitches along the sides of the heel flap, reconnect at the top to the front/top of the sock, do the gusset, then the foot, and then...somewhere in the front and future...the toes.    And I'd better do it pretty quickly, as I need to get these, and another pair, done by the end of May.   Along with quite a good-size chunk of the next book and various other things that need doing.

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