Postponed Again

Thank the Flying Spaghetti Monster.

Unlike a lot of employers, mine has been erring on the side of caution during the whole pandemic. We were all strictly working from home for over a year, but slowly started returning to the office on a limited schedule (every other day) for the past six months or so. It's a pain in the ass, but it's fair to everyone on my team, because prior to that, only one of us was actively handling those tasks that required hands-on intervention. (To be honest, I'm amazed he came through it COVID-free considering some of our remote sites turned into COVID hotspots.)

About two months ago—prior to Omicron—since infection levels were going down, they decided to implement Phase 2B: three days in the office, 2 at home, starting this month. At the time my team successfully argued to keep this schedule even after everyone else returned full time since we'd more than proven we were able to maintain the same level of customer service when working from home a couple days a week as we were when we were in the office full time before COVID. I didn't relish the thought of being back three days a week, but it is what it is.

This afternoon we got an email that announced 2B has been postponed…again. This time until June (at least).

All I can say is, "RA-men!"

It's Almost a Year Old Now

But still so relatable:

It's been over ten months now since I went into isolation to avoid the pandemic.  Unlike some people, I've observed it rigorously.  Death by covid-19 is an awful way to go, and I'm not young any more.  I can't take the risk.  And this is how I choose to pay tribute to the hard work and sacrifice of our health-care workers — not by symbolic applause, but by being careful to avoid becoming one more burden upon them.

Occasionally there's a trip out to the grocery store.  I know exactly where everything in the store is, and I can run in, grab everything, and be out in a few minutes.  Then back home, hand-washing, and a careful procedure to avoid contamination by anything that came from outside the apartment.  It doesn't feel real.  Basically, I exist inside the walls of this one space.

Let me be clear here — I'm not complaining.  I never much cared for socializing or going outside anyway.  And it's a pretty big apartment for one person.  It's been a huge relief not having to go to the office every day, dealing with the noise and distraction and people's irritating habits.  To say nothing of the traffic.  I don't think about the traffic any more.  It's outside.  It's not real.

There are windows through which I could look out at the street outside, and the building across the street.  However, I don't care about the street outside or the building across the street, so I just leave the blinds closed.  The sunlight is annoying, anyway.  The windows aren't real.  The cables are.

At the back of this desk stands a black plastic box with some blue lights on it and some cables and wires attached to it.  One of those cables runs to the computer on which I'm typing this (I don't trust wireless connections).  Through that cable, not through the windows, I can see the world, reach the world.

Through that cable come pictures, information, ideas — everything, displayed on the computer screen.  News of what's happening in the world.  The thoughts and creativity of the bloggers I read.  Messages from people.  Life.  Similarly, everything I write on this blog, all the comments I post elsewhere, everything I do that in any way manifests my existence to the outside world.  All of it flows in and out, at unimaginable speed in coded pulses of electricity, through that dull grey cable snaking across the desk.

It's a kaleidoscope, ever-changing.  So-and-so has a new post up, or a new poem, something I need to think about.  There's a new video of something intriguing, or a piece of music I hadn't heard before.  There's news of some event on the other side of the planet, complete with images awesome or horrific.  All displayed on the screen.  That's the world.  That's what's real.  The street and the building outside the windows haven't changed since I moved in here nine years ago.  They might as well be a big painting a couple of feet beyond the glass.

A few feet away on the desk, at the end of another cable, sits another, much smaller computer which is the property of the company.  Through that cable flow other coded pulses of electricity which that computer deciphers into the problems which, for eight hours each weekday, I need to solve, information to be manipulated in various ways.  These, too, appear on the screen as messages and images — rather dull ones, unlike the ones on the main computer, and dealt with out of duty rather than interest.  There are "meetings" (far too many), the screen split into several rectangles, each with a person's face, talking, nodding.  I suppose those people must actually exist out there somewhere, beyond just being small images on my screen.  Until ten months ago I used to see them every day, in person, but I hardly remember that.

Every payday I use the main computer to look at the bank website and make sure that certain numbers on the screen have changed as they are supposed to.  This enables me to type things which cause the numbers to change again, in accordance with yet other numbers transmitted to me by credit-card companies and various other entities, all through that same grey cable.  I'm acting on the assumption that all these numbers actually mean something.  In the case of one number I receive every month, I know that if I didn't make the corresponding change in the number on the bank website, the black plastic box with the lights and cables and wires would stop working, and then I'd be entombed, sealed off from the world.  So that one is real.  As for the monthly rent payment, it's automated so I won't need to worry about it if I slip up and get hospitalized with covid-19.  It's just another number to check each month and make sure that it has changed in the correct way.

I can see why living this way bothers a lot of people.  It doesn't particularly bother me.  I do want the pandemic to be over so I don't need to be afraid any more.  Plus, I want to go to Italy someday.  I'm fairly sure Italy is still real.

[Source]

I for one would welcome another complete lockdown, but you and I both know the Barons of Capitalism (and those whose strings they pull) will never allow it.

Quote of the Day

You don't have the 'right' to go through a red light or smoke in a building. I hate this whole delusional, evil idea that you get to do whatever you want because of your 'rights,' and the rest of the world be damned." ~ Gene Simmons

Toxic Shock

From Darwinfish2:

The notion of toxic masculinity has been resurfacing in the news of late. Last week it was the ammosexual family of Rep Thomas Masse, posing for a traditional Christmas card picture in front of the tree, along with enough military hardware to annex Ukraine.

"Everyone say, Compensating!"

This is one family where I bet no one ever wanted to bring home a bad report card* or spill their muscle milk. "Jeff, you didn't finish your meat. Go out there and give me 20 headshots from 250 yards."

*Bad report card meaning a grade the parents can't argue or bully into a passing mark.

Back in October, before he was calling women "earthen vessels" meant for child delivery, he gave a speech where he called for women to "raise their boys as monsters," while decrying the loss of masculinity. This coming from a guy in a wheelchair, it seems like an especially blatant attempt to compensate for his own limitations.

"They are trying to de-masculate the young men in our country because they don't want people who are going to stand up," says the man who is permanently seated.

It's no wonder this guy seems to be in a race with Louis Gohmert for "Dumbest Man in Congress."

Whether it's political or social, I see toxic masculinity as the source of a plethora of problems that plague our society. Its footprints are everywhere there's evil and it all has to do with the male ego, with the notion that a man is entitled to anything he wants and if denied, is within his rights to take it by force. Hence the familiar examples:

    • Men who beat or kill a woman who tries to leave them. Or stalk them, threaten them, interfere in their work or career, post revenge porn, and generally make their life miserable. It's a shot to the ego, so man must make her pay.
    • Woman won't date/sleep with him, she gets the same treatment as one who tries to leave. Must be a lesbian.
    • Same with road rage, feeling the need to make someone pay for the effrontery of trying to merge in front of him. "No one gets in front of me, they must be taught a lesson."
    • Men who are answerable to no one because they know everything. "If I don't already know it, it's not worth knowing." This comes along with the dismissal of any experts of their field. We've just had a president with this trait. It would be unmanly and therefore forbidden, to acknowledge that someone else knows more than him about anything.
    • That includes the aversion to doctors and medicine in general because it would be a threat to their masculinity to be sick or ailing in any way. "I have no need for doctors because I'm too strong and fit to be sick. Nothing is wrong with me, ever." The last president thought this as well.

"No one can tell me what to do. No doctors, no lawyers, no wimmen, that's for damned sure."

    • Hence the Vax aversions, which by accepting a shot would mean that their own immune system is in some way inadequate or flawed. Or they have to appear to obey some pencil-neck in authority. Neither perception can be allowed to happen. That's all this "Liberty" crap is about… It's a 5-year old yelling at his mother, "You can't tell me what to do."

    • Excessive love of high-powered weaponry, as demonstrated in the pic above. It's not a matter of having a gun or two around the house for protection, it's having to strap on an AR-15 just to go down to Costco. "Gotta let people know I can't be trifled* with!" These guys have to have the biggest guns and the biggest trucks, just to make up for the rampant dick fear. If they can even see it anymore over their bellies.

*I apologize, none of these guys would ever use a word like "trifled," unless it meant shooting someone with three rifles.

Obsession with the military and especially law enforcement. They love to laud the police department. You'd think that would be taboo, to recognize outside authority, but this is different because the police are loaded with the same kind of guys and they recognize their own. Rednecks with guns are basically immune to the police unless they go and do something in public that can't be covered up. (And even then, it's iffy.)

    • They never apologize or admit it when wrong. These go hand in hand. "I'm never wrong, so what's there to apologize for?" Along with that is the absolute refusal to compromise. "It's my way or the highway." Then when nothing gets done, it's the other party's fault. "Why should I give ground when I'm right?"
    • Persecution of gays in any way possible. They hate gay men for being "sissies" and gay women for turning their backs on men. The whole idea makes them crazy so they'll back anything from beating the crap out of them, to denying them basic human rights, to not serving them in establishments, to being unable to enjoy a simple TV show, if "one of those people" is on it.
    • A complete lack of empathy toward anyone else. "You got problems? Tough shit. Man up and shut up."

While this kind of behavior is not limited to one political party, it still reads like the official Republican Platform. Or at least their operations handbook. It's the kind of behavior that's appealing to people with limited intelligence and reasoning skills, because it's completely without nuance, along with being highly satisfying. I mean, who doesn't want to be right all the time, or be the toughest, manliest, proudest mug on the block? Maybe it's just "fake it till you make it" gone horribly awry.

Maybe someone can describe for me how any of these symptoms make the world a better place? Granted, that's a moot question because these people aren't interested in a better world for anyone else, just themselves and their destructive clones.

As the Thanksgiving Holiday Winds Down…

I can't help but pass on what Dave wrote, as it so succinctly mirrors my own feelings:

I have a great deal to be thankful for.

And yet… it's tough to find a way to appreciate it in the middle of a pandemic where there are still people who are fucking things up and dragging everything out. It seriously feels like COVID is never going to end. The virus continues to mutate, and the anti-vax/anti-mask brigade doesn't seem to give a shit. Despite the fact that they are twenty times more likely to die if they contract COVID when compared to those who are vaccinated.

Oh well. All I can do is attempt to remain careful and try not to die from being one of the few breakthrough cases that happen. What else is there?