Fortunate Drawers

Sitting here in a café in a small Turkmenistan town, watching caravan after caravan go by (what you Americans might call tractor-trailer rigs), smelling jet fuel and gunpowder, I figure this is part of the forward base action I was expected to report to my superiours in a conference call later this afternoon.

At first, I complained about this satellite phone, looking like a geek at a debutante party, or rather the rich geek father depositing his little princess at her coming-out party (and yes, you can take that for all it’s worth, these days).

But looking at those guys across the street cradling their smartphones covered with acronyms trying to get a good signal, I say being the sore thumb at an M.C. Hammer hardware store is a good thing, for once.

Besides, I’ve got a friend who carries her lucky knickers just for me.

And I’ve got another friend, El Presidente, who thinks about nothing but al Qaeda and schooling in Sunday afternoon football smackdowns to keep my thoughts warm at night, too.

I wasn’t always like this, sipping stale coffee, spreading badly-worded rumours from underpaid government copywriters, but then maybe I was…we just called it primary school back then.

That’s okay.  It beats sitting at home, not making any money there, either, watching the television news or surfing the Internet for useless tidbits like every other secret organisation in the “business.”

Where was I?  Oh yeah, spiking my coffee with homemade hooch.

You see, in the hinterlands of the former Soviet Union, radioactive material is as easy to get as rabies from the raccoons I used to…well, let’s not go into boring details at this juncture in the punctuated story.

But hey, when a guy gets lonely…never mind.

Anyway, I was sitting on a crate of rotten eggs, unable to distinguish the smell of my ripe, unwashed body from that of chickens that’ll never live to see the light of day reflecting off a machete swinging toward their heads, when it hit me.

The kid down the street, always pestering me to call a tobacco shoppe down the street from his cousin in London and asking if they have Princess Edward in a can, looked at this blog I was texting with my calloused thumbs (calloused, mind you, from texting — what else did you think caused the callousness?  I mean, calloused hands.).

He asked if I had a more interesting writing style, after he’d thrown the uranium/plutonium ball at my noggin.

Hey, that reminds me.  Maybe I’ve got a gold mine at my feet.  Either that, or the pyrite the panhandler pretended to think was gold and sold it only to me, his best friend in the whole wide world, if not the block in which we both live, at a bargain basement we were using to brew the hooch I give out to unsuspecting tourists before I remove their overweight wallets.

Seriously, what have I got that you don’t?

All this nuclear fissable material.  No, that’s the Coke gurgling in my stomach that’s fissable.

It’s the fissionable stuff I’m dreaming about right now.

You see where I’m going with this, don’t you?

Yeah, you know it.  Re-activating Project Orion.

We’ll just declare Turkmenistan off-limits and use it to launch the Mars mission my fellow members of the Committee are dreaming with me.

We’ll rename the country ChernobylTwo or something like that.

We can put this whole “war” to contain nuclear proliferation to a rest and just keep starving the Iranian people to death while their leaders bask in the personal glory of the sacrifice of their people to show them old episodes of “Who’s The Boss?

Can you think of worse torture than that?

Rumour has it the last thing that Andrew World’s-worst-job-as-overpaid-angry-man Breitbart saw before his heart acted up was Alyssa Milano pretending to act.

Let that be a lesson to you, kids.  Don’t get your hopes up.  And further more, don’t listen to a word your clueless parents have to say.  They were terrible students in school and the only reason they’re doing well is that their bosses were even worse so the whole adult scheme is to pretend that everyone is smarter than they really are.

Of course, you kids have no clue what I’m talking about because, as we’re supposed to know, genetic research proves that our species has actually gotten worse, our purity as animals watered down with talks about backyard BBQ parties, easy-to-hack security alarm systems and other ways we deny we’re overdressed members of the fight-or-flight club.

Almost time for the conference call.

Go back to looking at your cute kitten videos and sports scores.

I’ve got a nuclear bomb powered rocketship to promote!

A private message from Tehran

Hello, my name is Quinn O’Casey, a fellow embedded software programmer here on a worker’s visa in Iran.

You can’t see what’s going on but I think there is some confusion.  The soldiers around me, non-Iranian, I believe, dressed in traditional civilian clothing of the local subculture, misunderstand my job title.

For some reason, they think that I was embedded in Iran for military action.  They don’t understand the term “embedded software,” which puts both of us at a disadvantage.

I don’t know how to hack into the computer system they want to access in order to shut down a strategic part of an Iranian defense network but they won’t let me go because now they think I know too much.

Which is it?  Do I know too much or know too little?

Thank goodness, they can’t tell that I’m sending out this message through an old RS232 link I sometimes use to diagnose my embedded software code.

How is it that I’m with the good guys and they think I’m a good guy, too, but they won’t let me go?

If I don’t return to my regular work after this extended lunch break, I’ll probably be fired and then lose my visa.

That alone will piss off my girlfriend who was just getting adjusted to life in part of the former Persian empire.

Am I calling you for help, you probably think?  All I’m asking is that you inform my boss that I’m having a little difficulty with the local authorities so I won’t lose my job.  He’ll sympathise.

Meanwhile, I’ve got to wiggle out of this situation on my own.

Now the guys are saying something about insurgents ready to detonate the diversions before they make their move.  Also something about satellite-based attacks and railgun placements.  Stealth bombers and EMP bursts.

If I don’t get back to the office before the end of the day, call my girlfriend and tell her to grab a bus for the Caspian Sea where we have a friend who’ll transport her safely out of the country.  She knows where to wait for me in Russia.  She can get you out, too, if you want.

The Future is Now

We captured this video of a world news organisation revisiting the past and determining how to best present to you a modern war on TV and Internet for highest entertainment value while lives are sadly “lost” in the process:

High Noon, Shootout at the OK Corral, Yee-hawwwww!

The saga of global management continues…

The Committee revealed today that it had convinced U.S. military leaders to show a soft side, a sympathetic position in its support of our species.

The military will soon divert resources to stop global warming by strategically triggering bombs and other military-grade devices underground, causing magma pockets to combine into giant high-pressure chambers under volcanoes around the globe.

Then, in a series of timed explosions, the military will set off volcanic eruptions that will spew ash plumes tens of kilometres into the atmosphere, blocking the Sun’s overheating power, thus reducing the greenhouse effect for several decades, allowing our species to maintain the status quo in current crop allocation ratios.

Negotiations with the airline industries over disrupted flight paths are ongoing at this time.

Meanwhile, the Committee is trying to address population growth issues, and may resort to taking “excess” babies from overproductive families and training the children to become future workers on offworld farms, easily expendable in the big picture, in other words.

The sooner the babies can be launched, the less fuel used and the better they will acclimate to the gravitational forces and emotional stresses of life on our Moon, Mars, and other celestial bodies.

The Committee is soliciting ideas for the perfect surrogate mothers to tend to these babies as they reach prime working age, around six or seven, and then will not need “formation years” nurturing any longer, converting the surrogate mothers to worker bots on the farms.

So a friend asked…

So a friend asked, as a guy, what kind of messages are the political candidates sending him.

He can understand if nonheterosexual men are receiving “love letters” from male political candidates, even those that are unintentional/subliminal.

But my friend is a heterosexual male contemplating a vote for what he assumes is a slate of heterosexual men running for U.S. President, including the incumbent/sitting man on the White House Throne.

He never exchanged notes with guys in grade school that he exchanged with girls — the typical:

“Do you like me?  __Yes __ No
If you like me, do you love me? __ Yes __ No
If you love me, will you go out with me?  __ Yes __ No
If you don’t like or love me, will you go out with me anyway? __ Yes __ No
If you won’t go out with me, will you tell your friend Tiffany that I think she’s cute.  __ Yes __ No  __ Who are you, again?”

So, he wonders, if, like me, his guy friends were all about drawing scale models and interiour cutouts of ships and submarines as little kids and then dissing on girls, sports and maybe school subjects as they got older, how are the political candidates trying to reach out to him as he reaches voting age?

Well, candidates, what do you think?

What promises are you making to the 18-to-21 year young potential voters, voters who may be your champions for life?

When I was 18, I exercised my right to vote for political candidates, which included Ronald Reagan, Jimmy Carter, John Anderson and a few other choices for U.S. President.

I grew up in a family where my father was a gun-toting member of the NRA and nonunion, my mother was a sharpshooter herself but a card-carrying member of the teachers’ union.  He was a staunch Republican and she just as strong a Democrat, although at the local political level they voted mainly for the candidate and not just the party ideology.

I looked at the two main presidential candidates, Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan, who pretty much touted their party platform, including planks that showed firm roots in the extreme version of the party’s main ideology, with plenty for noncommitted voters to consider.

Neither one appealed to me.  Me, an 18-year old kid about to enter college on a 4-year Navy ROTC scholarship that honoured my male lineage of service to the military, voluntary and/or drafted.

Me, who was an upstanding citizen of my community because he knew how to keep his good (i.e., law-abiding) friends separated from his bad (i.e., troublemaking) friends, with neither telling the other about my friendship with them, or our habits — one of the advantages of having secondary school cliques with their imaginary boundaries that few talked about crossing, although many did and still do.

I wasn’t interested in the labels that either the Republican or Democrat candidate wanted to attach to its young voters, both who basically said, “You independents vote for me and together we can speak as one voice, wearing the same label,” which contradicted the whole idea of I-follow-no-one independence.

So I ended up voting for John Anderson, mainly as a protest vote against conformism.

Which led me to question why I was joining the U.S. Navy and its training me to be a good order-following/dictating officer after four or five years, but that’s another story to be told.

Well, my friend, what are you hearing from the candidates?

After 32 years of listening to candidates ask for my vote, I’ve stopped listening to them and started analysing what exactly they can do for me in reality, not in some fictional world portrayed in a brochure or 30-second advert.

I look at their social network, who they can bring into the political arena and who’s already in the arena they can make friends with, the business deals they’ve made, if any, and their personal will-to-power that every great candidate must carry, including strong selfish exhibitionist tendencies, to serve the political office well.

If they continually fall back on dogma to defend themselves, including religion or other emotion-based gobbledygook, then I tend not to take them seriously.

I don’t plan to fall in love with, have fantasies about and then imagine I’ll marry a candidate, which some middle-of-the-roaders seemed to think when they first saw Sarah Palin.

I want facts, not hope.  I want action, not dreams.

If I had my druthers, politics would be less significant than it has become in our current polarised, binary, votebuying world, but history has a way of repeating itself, repeating itself, repeating itself.

Listen to the candidates, if you want, and let the subliminal hints of “Vote for me and I promise to like you, maybe even love you, in whatever way you deem appropriate,” wash over you like good advertising-driven campaigns should, turning candidates into a hodgepodge of parent/friend/lover/counselor/sage/god.

I suggest you ignore the messages altogether and analyse the candidate’s ability to get the job done.  Everything else is just a thin coat of veneer that’ll scrape off at the first sign of abrasive trouble that every U.S. President faces as soon as the protective honeymoon phase washes away.

Or you can simply ignore the whole thing, spending Election Day with friends and lovers, far away from the hocus-pocus magic that politics pretends to be, and focus on what makes you special, including any skills/talents you want to share with the world that you don’t need politics to enable you to become/be the person in this moment that’ll make moments to come more fun, relaxing and enhancing the world around you.

Change of Plans

The U.S. military decided to usurp the authority of the U.S. President, as Commander-in-Chief, to reverse orders to prepare attacks on Iran.

Instead, the military has set up a surprise invasion of Canada to protect the U.S. rightful access to oil sands reserves and stop the U.S. government’s covert agreement to turn over Canadian oil to China in exchange for continued access to China manufacturing facilities that will keep the majority of Americans happy (relatively speaking) buying cheap goods.

South Korea has not been asked to comment on this hilarious scenario sure to be quoted by wellmisinformed members of the U.S. Congress in order to be reelected on bogus issues unrelated to their constituency needs.

And Ricky Gervais is still as unfunny as ever but he never cared to begin with. At least he’ll be forgotten faster than that…uh…that singer, what’s her name?

Avogadro’s Number, or is it PV = nRT?

In our supercomputer simulations, we represent sub/cultures and countries as molecules.

In one recent simulation, we asked the supercomputer network to calculate how many helium-filled balloons it would take to carry a payload into outer space.

The computer stopped immediately and asked exactly how we planned to fill the balloons with helium.

In other words, if one balloon is “full” of helium, it will burst at a lower elevation than a balloon only partially “full,” but the partially-filled balloon will not carry as large a payload.

A latex rubber knapsack problem intersecting a few gas laws.

You, the reader, are fully aware, aren’t you, what this means.

An enclosed space that we pretend contains largely a uniform distribution of a “pure” substance — gas or subcultural beliefs, for example — tends to behave according to simple mathematical formulae.

Telegraph a public message that contains little in the way of subtext and you can expect a ready answer in return.

On the other hand, atmospheric conditions are not uniform.  Pressure is related to density of gas molecules and gas ratio distribution, is it not?  Atmospheric disturbances, including solar heat related phenomena and patterns we give labels such as “Arctic Oscillation” also play into the picture.

People, are, for the most part predictable.  A person raised in a remote Pakistani village will probably not suddenly start dancing a perfect Argentinian tango from out of nowhere.

Which means we can tell the supercomputer to add layered parameters to the simulation, with every layer’s data passed into the simulation and the simulation rerun when the previous layer’s data has been crunched into output that is available to add to the next layer’s data crunching.

Inside every layer are matrices of changes, some predictable and some random, that we build from hypotheses and hallway discussions rather than tried-and-true scientific formulae broken down into simple subroutines.

Often, we save a set of output data, vary a layer’s matrix and rerun the simulation for one specific layer over and over with large numbers of matrix variations.

What’s the point of having a good hypothesis if you can’t subject it to rigorous testing and verification?

So, if I want a payload of a known mass that is not changed by atmospheric pressure changes to reach outer space, I give the supercomputer network the number of balloons I wish to attach to the payload and ask it to tell me at which elevations the balloon(s) burst until the last one carries the payload into outer space.

The same goes for the 3D chess game that is the constant interaction of sub/cultures.  A person is a molecule is a subculture is a balloon is a culture is a generalised personality archetype.

Bottom line: two issues hog some of the international news spotlight — the massacres in Syria and the nearly uncontrollable bankrupt behaviour of Greece.

It’s like telling Hernandez’ agent that the NY Giants will find a way to secretly reward him for his behaviour toward the end of the 2012 NFL Super Bowl.  Some things should be too obvious to mention.

But they aren’t.

So, we have to proceed with what’s next.

The Committee wants to box me into a corner and force me into making a decision that sways the next U.S. Presidential election.

Some want me to reveal what the supercomputer network says is a religious forecast that predicts the balance of faith-based belief for the next century or so.

Others want to ensure their families are well provided for, as usual.

For me, it’s always the hardest task to give the supercomputer network a touch of irony and sarcasm in its output.

I don’t care whether a CPU is multicore and has interlaced optical memory or if some portions of the network still operate with relay-based and bubble memory.

I sit here, after the end of a grueling session with the Committee, with seven billion of us to manage, as individuals, multiplexed into subcultures or a combination of the two that I vary by degrees in simulation scenarios that either I see fit to estimate or is input by the hacker network I depend on to throw me an unexpected curve every now and then.

Change is constant.

If India completely rejects monetary aid from the UK, who will follow by example?  Will this influence future Saudi military contracts with the U.S.?  Will Greece break up into city-states once again?  Will Syria divide into Assad-controlled and international consortium-controlled sectors, leading to the creation of the next “Berlin Wall” and a lukewarm Cold War?

And, looking back 1000 years from now, will we say this next millennium was the era of extremophiles, our only encounter with “alien” or extraterrestrial lifeforms being a set of states of energy we were unable to see or comprehend with current technology in 2012 but wholly integrated into our way of life by 3011?

Questions, questions, questions.

The saga continues unabated.

Is any one life more important than maintenance of the status quo to preserve a subculture’s place in the jigsaw puzzle of global belief sets?

Yes and no.

At least according to one simulation after the next.

Every life is important.

Every life is canceled out at one level or another of scenario stacking.

One relationship disappears and another takes its place.

Interdependencies described in the world’s longest SQL statement.

All just to say what is the smallest number of balloons to take an indescribable payload into outer space.

Outer space is infinitely bigger than the sphere from which we calculate its intersection with us.

A finite sphere full of everyday drama begging for attention 24/7.

Time’s a-wastin’!

A Movement, A Foot

The countdown clock waits for no one — 13,972 days to go.

The Committee has its hands full right now.

We move equipment and supply routes to accommodate a possible international action to destroy modern-day Iranian technology, specifically that associated with nuclear weaponry production but also any that does not impede oil exports.

Needless to say, India will not allow quick strike equipment on its soil during this preparation period, as dependent on Iranian oil as the Indian economy has become.

In response, the Committee has made it clear there will be no attempts made to evacuate expat Indians within Iran or any Iranian strongholds from now on.

The Committee weighs its options.

Should an overt military operation in Syria, to “help” the Syrians protect themselves from themselves, serve as a covert forward base of operations to use against Iran in the near future?

Will the unrest in Egypt interfere with forward military bases there?

Will the Israelis make a first strike without waiting for the Committee’s permission to proceed a few mere minutes before the rest of the military groups situated inside and outside of Iran?

Does the value of the Euro that favours countries like Germany have a detrimental effect on the rearguard/reserve troops hidden in eastern European countries?

Will Hollande take over and lead France to greatness, despite the Merkozy plan of European domination for years to come?

Can a silent movie move you to tears in this day and age of 3D glasses, Dolby 7.1 surround sound and Siri?

While the Committee takes a break to resolve a problem with the encrypted speakerphone system we use during extremely sensitive discussions, mainly because our brain wave readers/talkers are on the fritz, I’ll search (and research) our archives, hoping a bit of history might lead me to suggest, rather than demand, a few simple solutions.

More as it develops…

The downside of profiling

Enter two data points that are scary in and of themselves:

Mix them together and what do you get?  Answer: the next generation of “death by suspected terrorist” suicide seekers, upping the former lower level of “death by cop” prevalent among the truly despondent too afraid to kill themselves.

Pebbles in a pond, waves flowing out and causing the Law of Unintended Consequences to create quantum effects one cannot easily compute with the archaic devices we currently call supercomputers.

I wish life was just happiness and bellies full of good food but it doesn’t always turn out that way…sigh…