Repost

I’m not sure if this is true; has anyone else heard of it? It was originally posted by and then by :

I need to bring y’all’s attention to something. This affects every single one of you in the United States, and a lot of you outside of it, if you rely on our mail service to get things into and out of the country.

Our mail service is threatened. Badly.

I’ve been talking to [info]bat_cheva and reading handouts she has gotten from her APWU meetings, and we have a problem here.

I will try to do this justice, but time is really short and I’m working on the fly here. Basically, some people in the USPS are pushing fast and hard to change the USPS radically, closing many, many locations and potentially subcontracting for retail and delivery services. This is so not okay. Without a federally protected mail service, we have no strong federal guarantees that our mail will get where it is going, let alone in a timely fashion, or that it will arrive safe and unopened.

Granted, I’ve had problems with the USPS, but it is nothing compared to what would happen if it was put into the hands of smaller private companies, or if postal services were drastically reduced, along with staff. And you could kiss the relatively low costs goodbye.

Do you need to go to the post office to send stuff by registered mail? Do you want to have to do that from a single downtown location in the large city nearest you, along with all the other people who will be there? Do you have reliable transportation to such an area, like a lot of poor folks don’t? Do you have a PO Box that you don’t want moved without your permission? Do you frequently engage the USPS for services that are too complicated for automated postal centers to provide? Do you rely on real-life postal service stations and their trained employees instead of the (terribly confusing and unhelpful) USPS website?

Two-thirds of the over 4,800 postal stations and branches nationwide will be submitted for review, a review process which does not involve public or media notification, involves only a ten-day input period from the public (remember, with no prior notification required), and for which there is no appeals process. These evaluations of post offices in your city will happen over the course of sixty days. Sixty. That is all the time they are going to take to determine how much this will affect the American public and paying USPS customers.

In an APWU statement put before the Postal Regulatory Commission, it states that “some, perhaps many of the stations and branches that may be affected are located in areas where residents rely primarily upon public transportation. Closing or relocating these facilities will undoubtedly change the nature of the postal service and create a hardship for this population. An additional question that must be explored is whether the effect of these closures will disproportionately affect low-income households, racial, or ethnic minorities, and the elderly.”

In other words, this screws over the poor and the housebound and the elderly. Forcing these people, who may not have bank accounts, credit or debit cards, computers, or access to transportation to rely on automated postal stations and the USPS website is just absurd. This is not a service meant for the wealthy, healthy, and young, it is a vital service meant for all.

The USPS management also wants to outsource retail and delivery services, completely destroying what is called the “sanctity of the mail,” and creating enormous potential for exploitation. Very dangerous exploitation. Without the USPS’ rigorous background checks, you would never know who was delivering your mail, including bank statements and official documents and records, personal items, and so on. They would know where you lived, what sort of car you drove, whether you had children, what your names were, all sorts of personal things. They would have a good idea of when you were home, what your cars looked like, how to get into your yard, whether you have a dog.

Have you thought about this? Have you thought about the fact that your mail carriers and in-plant mail handlers have been selected to be safe and trustworthy people? And what it would mean if they were not?

What would it mean if the USPS outsourced these services? What would happen if your mail was being delivered by the lowest bidder? Do you think that the level of service would remain the same? Would it be consistent countrywide? Would it be safe?

These bureaucrats are pretending to respond to the USPS’ admittedly troubled state when they are in fact doing nothing that will help the USPS or its customers long-term. It would, in fact, fundamentally alter the services we receive, and destroy the USPS as we know it.

This is against the law. The fundamental nature of the postal service is federally protected and it cannot be changed without an act of Congress, yet the changes that are being proposed will most definitely constitute large changes.

The USPS upper management has kept this to itself. The public DOES NOT KNOW. We need to get the word out, and we need to get people riled up.

What you can do:

# Link to this from everywhere you can. You have my permission, you don’t have to ask. Get this out there.

# Write to your congresspersons. We have only until the hearing on the 28th of this month to make our voices heard, so it’s imperative that you contact them right away. Because mail going into the capitol is still being screened for anthrax, we need to make these communications in person, over the phone, or via email. Send multiple messages if you like.

Tell them in your own words to cosponsor and support HR 658, which will modify the procedures for closure or consolidation of postal facilities and ensure that it is done fairly to the American public and to postal employees.

And we need to tell them that we don’t think that the USPS will be able to continue to provide adequate services to the American public if these stations are closed without fair and public evaluation, and that you expect that the law will be upheld and that no substantial changes will be made to our postal service without an act of Congress.

Right now there is no recourse, no appeal if the USPS closes a facility. The USPS does not need to justify their decision, hold public hearings, notify the public, or notify the papers. They don’t have to tell anyone about it! For dramatic changes to a public service, that certainly lacks transparency. HR 658 would require public assessment of the need for closure or consolidation and provides an appeals process.

So, go right here to find your congresscritters and put in your zipcode to get started.

On a very personal note, I also want to bring up another reason that this needs to not happen. The USPS tries to transfer or retrain employees when closings occur, but if this happens, it is unavoidable that lots of people are going to lose their jobs for basically no reason at all. The USPS is a good employer that offers good benefits and union support, and employs a lot of veterans. That makes me partial to it to begin with. It also employs my best friend, my non-biological sister, [info]bat_cheva. If she loses her job because some glue-sniffing bureaucrats want to pillage one of the best mail systems in the world so they can line their pockets, well, that makes this personal.

But really, if you get mail, if you send mail, if you use the USPS at all for anything, this should already be personal to you, and you need to act. The integrity of the mail and the importance of a readily-available mail service is something we can all agree is important, whether we are Democrat or Republican or Independent or Green, whether we are involved or apathetic.

Furthermore, we are all united in needing this service, so whether you individually agree with the changes proposed or not, the service itself should not be changed without the permission of our elected representatives and without our input.

The APWU information center about the plans for consolidation.

More about consolidating stations.

More on why this will not help the USPS recover from its current slump.

ETA: Whether or not privatization is a good thing is a matter of opinion based in no small part on whether or not you trust private companies, with what seem to some people to be positives being interpreted as negatives by others, and vice-versa. Even if you don’t think the USPS can survive in its current incarnation, and that privatization of these services would be a bad thing, the fact that this is being done secretly with no public input is troubling, and the fact that it is being done so quickly and with so few provisions for what will happen afterwards is just not okay.

———
I have to agree with her on not wanting my mail to be delivered/handled by whoever they can pay least.

Reaching for alone

A full-time job. I wanted a reason to not do all of the extra chores that I picked up when I got fired. I wanted a reason to bury myself in my headphones and shut everything else away. Of course, the reality is that with the both of us being full-time students, neither of us would have time to study by ourselves – we’d have to be watching the kids at the same time.

When I am depressed, I want to shut everything out. I want to be alone, be left alone, and float in the silence. Every noise, every phone ring, everybody who wants my attention irritates me more than the last, because they’re pulling me farther and farther away from where I want to be. It’s not a reasonable or rational desire, and that makes it impossible to express or explain without mountains of guilt.

I guess that my desire to work, even in a full-time job with a steady paycheck and insurance, isn’t as family-centered as it may have started out. It has selfish motivations as well – it gets me away. That explains why working from home was so attractive while I had an office job – it got me away from my co-workers. Or would have, had it ever happened. The idea that being left alone at home would be impossible had never crossed my mind.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged

One of ‘s random picks. I could really use the space in my brain that the memory of this movie takes up. The main character comes off as creepy, and the Leprechaun/Fairy love story comes off as contrived and forced. The only redeeming quality is Colm Meany’s performance. One star.

One of ‘s favorite movies, Multiplicity is a quarter science fiction, a quarter romance, and a half comedy. Copies of copies. Michael Keaton shows quite a bit of versatility in this movie, despite the technological limitations of green screening at the time. Three stars.

Prioritization

I need to prioritized. I need to categorize. I need to lay the information out in a grid so that it becomes something more solid than ephemeral floaty bits. What projects and priorities need a significant amount of my time and my focus? Family. My family is the foundation, the base line. For the next eighteen plus years, I will be deriving the “why” of almost everything that I do from family. They give me the love that I had been without for so long. They also put up with my shit. That’s something.

Everything that I put effort into must be in some way explicitly related. Job-hunting. That’s an easy one. A steady paycheck with benefits like insurance would return the stability that we’ve lost. That I’ve lost. It’s not a magic wand that will fix me or anybody else, but it would be a major relief. On the flip side, the search for said job is maddening. Every resume that isn’t responded to, every interview that goes nowhere, every rise and fall of hope is maddening. I end lower than where I began. Though it’s the interview process that causes this, I end up feeling like I am perpetuating, fueling, and pulling the lever on my own spiral into worthlessness. But a steady paycheck with insurance would be good for the family. So I continue.

I’ve got it down to a science, so it takes up 3 to 6 hours per week.

Starting my own company, take two. This is similar to the above in that the goal is to bring in money to the family. That’s the primary goal. What it lacks in things like stability, initial pay, and insurance (not to mention long-term benefits like retirement), it adds doing what I love, being my own boss, and putting my morals and ideals into a company. I’ll be able to show that you don’t have to be a dick to succeed in business. I can break the traditional rules, and I’m being given that chance. Sometimes it’s hard to remember that I’m doing this one for family, and not for me.

I’m giving this one about nine hours per week, but that will be going up shortly. Next week is our first focus-on-the-business-and-nothing-else meeting, and I’m really looking forward to it.

Writing. Whoo boy, this one’s loaded. It’s hard to make this one about the family, which means that it’s really not. The webcomic can bring in some money, and it will. So will the sequel, or any other novel that I can actually finish. Pure writing projects take years and years to start returning on the time investment that’s been put into them. I guess that that explains why I haven’t been putting much effort into them. They do serve as a release of stress, and as I told Nikki, they’re a detox of my brainmeats. Since I haven’t been working on them, I’m not sure if that detox would help me with my kid-based frustrations. It’s worth further thought.

I spend about two hours every three weeks on writing. Maybe less.

I now have the opportunity to return to school. President Obama has adopted a federal version of Governor Granholm’s “No Worker Left Behind” program. A new Pell Grant is available for “displaced workers,” which is PC for unemployed. Changing what it’s called doesn’t make me feel any better. Following my gut, I filled out the FAFSA, applied to LCC, and began to sign up for classes. I visited an advisor, picked a couple of possible majors, and plowed forward. My goals were twofold: (1) take a Japanese class, with the end goal of returning to MSU and finishing my degree and (2) get some certifications to help with the job search. At some point, I passed from this into the habit of filling a semester. Didn’t even realize that I’d done it.

I don’t need full-time to accomplish my goals. I don’t multitask for crap, and a full-time class load comes with a lot of homework, and I have difficulty with being interrupted already. These realities were impressed upon me this morning, despite my desire to not acknowledge them. They’re all valid points, and I need to accept them.

I didn’t sign up for a full class load so that I could accomplish a set of goals to improve my family’s life, I did it because I wanted my stuff to matter, too. I wanted to be important, worth something, like I was when I had a job.

Transformers: Animated – Seasons 1 & 2

The series continues the story-based awesomeness that was prevalent in the pilot movie. The frame rate left some to be desired, but it was still much better than the one back in 1984. They used the old transforming sound a lot, and there are a ton of nods to the old series. Not just gratuitous nods, but good ones. Black Arachnia’s relationship to Elita One, and Soundwave. There are a lot more human villains than expected, but I can forgive that as I roll my eyes about it. The story and the integration of old characters more than make up for the low frame rate. Four stars.

Still with the low frame rate. Shards of the shattered Allspark have embedded themselves all over the city of Detroit, and some are creating new Earth-based Transformers. This creates more awesomeness in the form of nods to the past, like Wreck-Gar (I love who they got to do his voice) and the Constructicons. We also meet Ultra Magnus and Wasp(inator) in plotlines of their own. By the end of Season 2, the story has gotten pretty engaging and even tries its hand at a cliff-hanger twist. My only disappointment is that Soundwave did not make a return appearance. Four stars.

More Web Criticism

Last time, I visited both Virg Bernero and Carol Wood’s web sites.  That same day, my post got twittered by either Virg or his staff, and I was amazed.  My comments weren’t wholly positive toward him, but they were certainly harsh on his rival.  So, after a little bit of searching, I found a third candidate’s web page.  Charles Ford seems to be running a serious campaign, and is trying to use the bickering between the two “primary” candidates as an opportunity to showcase himself.  Bravo.

At first glance, I was definitely pleased with Mr. Ford’s site.  The first thing that struck me was that this is a politician’s site, through and through.  It’s got some nice, minimal animation that doesn’t distract from the site.  It enhances it, instead of overwhelming it.  Everything’s clean, thought out, and crisp.  Not easy to do when you’re dealing with the wide berth of info that comes with wanting to be mayor.  He’s even got some YouTube videos embedded there, to show that he’s not out of touch with technology and the intarwebs.

I have only one problem with the page… up until a few days ago, there had been no updates since February, when it went up.  I’m glad that the last couple of days have spurred some updates, but we were left out in the cold a bit during the interim.

I’m not going back to Ms. Wood’s page.  I would like to keep my retinas, thank you very much.

After suffering a mini-Ford attack, I’m back, and I’m voting in the primary today.  It’s open until 8 PM, AFAIK.  Go out there, vote, and write in silly names (mine?) if you can! :)

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged

Anyone out there using Liferea as an RSS reader? Ever had it lose your back list of unread entires? Is it too much to ask for a feed reader to handle more than three thousand back entries? And how come the Twitter feed entries aren’t saved? *flails* Google Reader cuts you off at a thousand entries, and won’t pass user names and passwords for protected entries (such as LJ). Am I demanding too much of RSS? Shouldn’t this be local archiving so I can catch up at my leisure?

I’d forgotten that Rhythmbox has Last.fm integration. Looks like I’m back on that horse again. Once I entered my data, the copy of my playlist that I’d allowed it to keep was uploaded with the quickness. One part awesome, one part scary. My profile. I’ve embedded the Big Brother Music List into my user profile. :)

Anybody have an example of typical LLC bylaws that I could have or borrow for a while?

We completely cleaned Aidan’s and Hunter’s rooms yesterday. and Matt did most of the work, while I distracted the baby and kept him company. We moved Aidan’s bed to eliminate a hiding spot used for nefarious diaper activities, and have our fingers crossed. Hunter’s room has been completely revamped. His desk now faces a wall, instead of a window, for decreased distraction potential. His television is not viewable from his desk, either. Now, if only he can keep it in a state where everything he owns is not destroyed.

Ha, I was right! The voice for Wreck-Gar in Transformers: Animated is Weird Al! Definitely a good follow-up to Eric Idle (1986 movie)… not to mention he got to say “Dare to be stupid!” I giggled a lot when I heard that. There’s so many wonderful nods to the original series.

This is my kind of craftiness.

The first time I printed out the Hávamál, I hadn’t thought things through. It’s a 164-verse Norse poem, and it’s part of the Poetic Edda. I didn’t scale the font or anything. Twenty-five pages churned out of the printer. Um, yeah. This wasn’t going to work.

See, had given me a blank, lineless, hardcover bound notebook with “Book of Shadows” emblazoned in gold on the cover. She’d had it for a few years, and had never used it. A little bit cheesy for my spiritual tastes, but… it was perfect. I still can’t resist saving a notebook from the dump, it seems. Anyway, the thought was to affix these pages inside the notebook, and write my thoughts on the document on the facing page.

Did I mention twenty-five pages of large text?

So, I got a bug up my butt about it today. I went to the original site, I copied the document (including attributions), and I reformatted it. Ten point font, two columns. Almost biblical, when I look at it now. It’s now eleven pages, and re-printed on the backs of the original printout. It’s also been affixed to the inside of the notebook. I’m turning the Book of Shadows into an eclectic Pagan workbook of sorts.

Luckily, I like scotch tape.