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August 30, 2006

Freedom: The Conundrum

I have a lot to say about freedom, and I have stopped numbering this series because it's a running theme now.

So I'm going to switch gears for a minute.   Throw a curveball at you.  Side with The Man.

The recently foiled plot to blow up airliners bound from London to the US is reminicent of a similar plot in 1995, that was foiled within days of execution by an astute police woman in the Phillipines.  In that case, acting on a hunch against a backdrop of a seemingly innocent report of an accidental and minor fireworks explosian in an apartment building, the police woman felt "in her gut" as a veteran cop that something was amiss.

Without an initial search warrant, she went into the apartment and uncovered the materials being assembled to simultaneously blow up 11 airliners over the Atlantic Ocean.  In 1995.  

So the question for you to kick around in your head for a whileis:

Assuming that the Phillipines laws regarding unlawful search and seizure are somewhat similar to the US laws, was the police woman in the right?  Did she do the right thing?  Forget for a moment the thousands of lives she saved. ..

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Right.  You CAN'T.  It's simply not possible. 

So if what she did is right, is what the US and UK governments are doing to "protect" their citizens right too?   What measure of liberty CAN or SHOULD we give up to ensure our safety?  When we know for sure that people will die?  When it's over 1000 people?  10000?  WHERE IS THE LINE?

I welcome your comments. 

August 29, 2006

Freedom Part 3: The Problem

The problem is THIS.

The problem is also, giving one nation that violates the basic tenets of freedom Most Favored Nation trading status, while driving other nations that are trying to improve into abject poverty. 

The problem is the media, the White House, and everone else telling us what to think, while a misguided and misplanned war drives more young Muslims into Jihad, because in their lifetimes they've known nothing else but hatred of a government that can tolerate relgious extremism in their  own government, but not in others.

President Bush is trying to frame the War on Terror as a war against Islamic Extremism.  I challenge President Bush to correct his term, and declare war on Religious Extremism.  

And he should start at home, where religious extremism and towing the party line is undercutting the basic tenents of freedom and liberty that the wisest men in our history, from Thomas Jefferson to Louis Brandeis to Abbie Hoffman fought to protect.  For us. 

Freedom Part 2: The Answer

So yesterday I posted a question, who said "You measure a democracy by the freedom it gives its dissidents, not the freedom it gives its assimilated conformists." 

The answer is a bit surprising, when you think about it.  Louis Brandeis said almost the same thing:

"Experience should teach us to be most on our guard to protect liberty
when the government's purposes are beneficent. Men born to freedom are
naturally alert to repel invasion of their liberty by evil-minded
rulers. The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment
by men of zeal, well-meaning but without understanding."

But the quote I posted was not one of Brandeis.  In fact, Brandeis and the person who made the observation I highlight today made very different contributions to society.  

One might think that it sounds kind of Jeffersonian.   Thomas Jefferson was a real radical in his day.  So radical, in fact, that the "conservative" states of New York and New Jersey were skittish about the proposed content of the Declaration of Independence and Constitution that southern and northeastern radicals were espousing.  A compromise was reached, that would have the net effect of continuing slavery for another 50 years.

But no, these were not the words of Jefferson, or Franklin, or even Lincoln 100 years later.

These were the words of Abbie Hoffman. 

A lot of people probably conjured up images of radicals in the 1700's when Jefferson's name was mentioned in social circles, much as the mention of Abbie Hoffman does today.  And Hoffman's words are as applicable today as they were 30 years ago, and Jefferson's words were 200 years ago.  The lesson we must start learning is that the person is not the important part, it's the words that should inspire us to do better.

More to come. 

August 28, 2006

Freedom Part 1: The Riddle

Some time ago I posted some favorite quotes from our founding fathers, espousing the ideals of freedom and liberty.

Today, I post another one;

"You measure a democracy by the freedom it gives its dissidents, not the freedom it gives its assimilated conformists."

 Hint #1: He was NOT a founding father.

The answer will be posted tomorrow. Send your guesses in via comments.  Those born between 1920 and 1955 have a definate leg up in this, so there won't be a contest.  That was another hint.

August 27, 2006

Even More Summer Vacation Pics

A new assortment as we start to pull pics off of cameras and so forth... plus we went to A Day Out with Thomas yesterday, GREAT pics from that event...

Indian Echo Caverns, PA: http://gallery.famille.org/main.php?g2_view=core.ShowItem&g2_itemId=582

A Day Out with Thomas:  http://gallery.famille.org/main.php?g2_view=core.ShowItem&g2_itemId=581

August 20, 2006

More Family Photos

I've posted more family photos to the Gallery.  I've reorganized them, added more from this summer, and also posted the long-overdue pictures from our spring NYC trip. 

http://gallery.famille.org

Enjoy! 

August 14, 2006

The Impact of the Cease Fire

Thankfully, the cease fire seems to be holding, despite a few minor skirmishes.  Lebanon and Israel could be very good neighbors if given the opportunity (read: other countries keeping their fingers out of their business) by virtue of a shared tourism trade and many other cultural similarities.  Neither side needs the civilian casualty count daily on CNN.

The cost to Israel will be slow and severe.  Ehud Olmert was the first Israeli Prime Minister elected who did not have a significant war background.  This seemed to fit well a few months ago, when Ariel Sharon's Kadima party was backing off the hawkish Likud rhetoric and looking for ways to acheive sustainable peace by making concessions.  There is a lot of nervousness in Israel about making concessions, but many people trusted Sharon to be able to decide when the time was right to give and when the time was right to fight.  Now, many people believe that this non-military leader led them into a conflict that cost them 100+ lives, a million refugess (most of them who could ill afford to move around, having just arrived from anti-semite countries) and an apparent military loss.  In the long term, the loss itself probably won't matter much (they can always claim that they broke the back of Hizbolla, after all) and indeed hopfully the weak UN resolution will bear some teeth later and enforce the demilitarization of Hizbolla.  That would be a true victory.

But the "victory" to Hizbolla is not without it's costs.  True, Hizbolla managed to hold off the mighty Israeli army for over a month, much longer than Syria, Jordan, and Egypt were ever able to accomplish.  But intelligent Lebanese have no illusions about who caused the destruction they are returning to.  This would have been Lebanon's best year ever for tourism, if Hizbolla had not provoked the fight that drew southern Lebanese into the line of fire.  They will undoubtedly pay a hefty price for their victory in the political arena, which hopefully is the only arena that will matter in the future. 

August 12, 2006

The Impact of Hizbolla Rockets

While everyone is talking about the effects on Lebanon of the war the Terrorists are waging against Israel's northern border, I don't see many news articles about the effects on Israel.  Sure, they report that 100+ rockets rain down on Israel daily.  Then they go back to reporting the misery and death caused by Israel's defense.

In Safed, an absorption center funded by the American JUF to accept Jewish immigrants from Etheopia sustained a direct targetted hit by Hizbolla rockets.  A nearby hospital was also targetted.  

Lets not forget the primary purpose of Israel - to provide a safe homeland for Jews who are persecuted around the globe.  The terrorists are not just targetting suburban homes with affluent Israelis.  They are targetting the heart of Israel, the camps and centers that take in any Jew that is persecuted around the globe.  When these centers are targetted, no Jew anywhere in the world is safe.  It is an attack on Judaism directly, because it is an attack on the people and buildings that make Jews safe.

I hope that the recent advancements at the UN will result in sustainable peace in the region.  But I will not support a resolution that trades the security of Jews who seek a safe haven from global antisemitism .

August 11, 2006

Carry On Bags

This is one of those blog entries that probably will make all my readers say "Huh?  What the heck are you ranting about now?" so hence the Rantings and Ravings category.

The UK has moved to restrict all carry on items in the wake of the foiled terror plot.  The US has restricted all liquids, but still allows some carry ons (including electronic devices).  Other countries, such as India, have followed UK's lead and several congress people have said that the US travelers should get prepared for the day when no carry on items are allowed on airplanes.  I love this idea.  You can't get more safe than knowing that every passenger you're sitting next to has the same thing in their clear plastic bag that you do - enough to get through the flight, and that's it.

This has all my business travelling collegues up in arms.  What in the world will we do for eight to fifteen hours without our laptops and Blackberrys?  

I'll tell you what we will do.  Fly.  Safely.  And maybe get some rest.  We need it.

When did it become so important to work every spare minute of the day that even the loss of a few hours in return for  a safe  trip is a p is a loss?  I don't get it.  In the olden days, when I flew between Chicago and San Antonio and San Fransisco, it was very simple.  You got on the plane with what you needed on the plane.  When the plane docked at the gate, you stood up, and got off.

Not now.  Everyone has gotten wise to the "carry everything you're taking onboard" trick, so now instead of waiting at the baggage carosel, you wait in the cabin of the plane.  Hunched over.  While you, and all 350 people ahead of you on the plane, pull their luggage down from the overhead bins and under their seats, get everything organized, and then make their way off the plane.  We've traded a wait at a carosel for a wait in the cabin of the aircraft.  And some people still think this is faster.

Baloney.

Naturally the airlines have their job to do now.  It is also true that in the olden days, airlines were more responsible with luggage and you could be fairly certain that wihtin a reasonable number of minutes after deplaning, you would have your luggage in hand, undamaged and ready for you to use on your trip.  The airlines have really messed this very simple concept up, largely because "ramp service" (the airline lingo for baggage handlers on the ground) has been cut continually, starting way back before 9/11.  Airlines must now reverse the trend and offer customers better baggage service, or they will lose - because customers will have no choice but to check bags.

So here's how it will work, in a utopic future I envision:

You get on the plane.  It takes about 10 minutes to get through security because you and every other person in line has only the items they need for this flight.

When the plane lands and docs, you stand up, and walk off the plane.  Within 10 minutes, you're at the baggage claim.

Within 30 minutes (as much time as you would have spent in the airplane cabin pre-2006) you have your bags, and you're on your way.

Sounds like 1975 to me. 

August 09, 2006

Indian Echo Caverns - Hummelstown PA

This was one of our activities on Saturday, when we had some free time.  After we spent the requisite one hour at Hershey's Chocolate World, we made our way to Hummelstown to check out the Indian Echo Caverns.  These are fairly complex caverns about 190 feet below ground.  There is a gift shop, and several other money-making activities that we generally ignored.  It cost us $11 per adult and $6 per child to take the tour.

The tours are lettered, and after you buy your tickets they call out your letter and several dozen people join the group at an appointed location outside the gift shop.  WARNING: There is no apparent accomodations for people with disabilities.  There are ~70 stairs down to the caverns, and ~70 stairs up, with no elevators or ramps.  Also the cavern tour would be very very difficult to navigate with a wheelchair.  You should be prepared to decend and ascend by foot, and tour the caverns themselves on fairly slippery, narrow paths.

That said, it's a hell of a lot of fun, and a cool 52 degrees farenheit year-round.  The only criticism I have is that the various tours starting at different times cross each other often and you have to stop and allow for other groups to get by.  But that wasn't a huge issue.  The tour includes a large area and several paths going in to smaller areas.  The tour guide was not a geologist, but was very knowlegeable about geology nontheless.  Everything was well lit and easy to navigate visually.

If you're in the Harrisburg / Hershey area and need a break from Hershey Park (although not a break from the workout I'm afraid) you should visit this attraction. 

Hotel Review - Holiday Inn Independance OH

This is the last hotel we stayed at during our vacation.  Overall, it was a good hotel - same room configuration as the Bucks County, PA hotel - but a few differences show the good from the bad.

The wallpaper was peeling.  There were missing tiles in the bathroom, both that could clearly be seen by sitting on the commode.  One near the floor, and one around where the shower curtain rod screwed into the wall, leaving the screws for the shower curtain rod exposed.  When we checked in, the lights and clock on 1/2 of the room didn't work, and it took 2 calls and several hours to get maintenance up to have a look.  It turns out a rather overloaded extension cord was pinched under the headboard and had to be extracated and reattached to the outlet.  Also the remote didn't work, and required batteries.  

These were all realatively minor issues, but issues that should have been picked up by housekeeping all the same.  A little attention to detail would make this hotel a better place for it's guests. 

Hotel Review - Holiday Inn Bucks Country PA

This is a couple of quick blogs to finish off our trip report.

The Holiday Inn Select at Bucks County PA is excellent.  We had a standard King / Queen foldout room (not suite) and there was plenty of room for us and our kids.  The rooms were clean, well maintained, and didn't show the signs of mis-repair that most hotels do (like peeling wallpaper, bare carpets, and missing tiles).  The only downside we found was that the shower/baths don't have safety grips on the floor of the tubs, and no rubber mats are provided, so it's very slippery. 

The pool looked good but we spent so much time in the water at nearby Sesame Place that we never had time to try it out.

The most appealling feature is the restaurant staff.  They advertise that they carry 110 beers, and they're right.  The selection is well spread across local and foreign, bottle and tap, and even a few cans for good measure.  But best of all the staff is very knowlegeable about their beers and can tell you about the brewery it came from, how it was made, and even suggest (and give samples of) other similar beers that you might like.

Overall an excellent experience, and we'll go back again. 

August 06, 2006

Preliminary Trip Pics

Go to the Famille gallery page to see some trip pics so far... not organized yet, and not all uploaded, but it'll give you a taste... http://gallery.famille.org/main.php?g2_view=core.ShowItem&g2_itemId=351&g2_fromNavId=x48a715c1

August 05, 2006

Review - Hershey Chocolate World

I cannot believe that there were people arriving, parking miles away and taking trams, to attend this Hershey Park area activity all day.  We arrived at approximately 9AM (it opens at 9, about an hour before Hershey Park), parked up front, did everything we wanted to do (which was basically take the Hershey Factory Tour Ride and buy some overpriced chocolate from the gift shop), and left by 10.  There is a little more to do there, but not much.

The factory tour ride is well worth the five minutes we waited to get on.  Any more than that, and it's probably not worth it.  It's interesting, but not inspiring.  At the end, they hand out "samples" (a miniature Take Five bar in my case) and you can buy photos. 

There is a "trolly tour", I don't know where this goes but be advised - these are just buses.  If your kids are looking forward to some sort of rail-driven event, you will be disappointed.  It's some sort of tour, and I think it actually costs money, but at the end of the day, it's a bus ride.

In a corner of one of the gift shops (and there are many) there is an area where the kids can actually "participate" in a Hershey's Kisses production line.  This consists of waiting for wrapped Kisses to fall down a "production line" and they catch them in a box.  If you want to keep the box, you have to buy it.  They take pictures, and you gotta pony up ten bucks to get them back. 

Overall it's mostly a mall, with shops and fast food and shops and shops and shops.  Plan to spend money. If that's what turns your crank, go for it.  Don't come here expecting to "experience Hershey" (unless you define "Hershey" as "every other strip-mall corporate America presence you've ever ignored while driving home from work.")

My advice - go early (parking is free for the first 2 hours), take the tour ride (free), buy some crap, and get out.  The hoarding masses will thank you for your front parking spot as you leave.

Hotel Review - Hampton Inn Harrisburg East

Following are my experiences and observations at the Hampton Inn, Harrisburg East on Union Deposit Road in Harrisburg PA.  We stayed here three nights, checking in on Friday August 4th and checking out on Monday, August 6th.  As you'll note by the posting date, we're still here, so there's probably more to come.

 I'd like to say that every hotel I stay at (and I stay at a lot) gives an outstanding experience.  By and large, most do, and some just give an acceptable experience.  But unfortunately one or two now and then fail miserably.

We had my family (five - two adults and three kids) plus my in-laws, so we got adjoining rooms.  One room was in absolutely poor shape - wall paper peeling off in very obvious places, the AC unit barely kept the room luke warm, and old thread bare carpet.  The other room was marginally better - same old wall paper but at least it wasn't peeling.  The AC managed to keep up with the 90 degree F heat in Harrisburg this weekend. 

The "free" breakfast was overcrowded and under stocked.  In order to get a selection of items you wanted, you had to keep going up to get them at different times because nothing was fully stocked all the time.  They clearly can't keep up with the level of bookings that they are taking at this hotel. 

The worst part was the pool experience.  I took my oldest and youngest sons to the pool.  Aaron wore his t-shirt and flip-flops and I brought my room key because Marla and Ethan were going out.  We were swimming in the outdoor pool for about 30 minutes when I noticed that my room key and my son's t-shirt, which we had left on a table by the pool, were missing.  I remembered that the pool "guard" (their term for someone who sits and talks on her cell phone) had just left recently, so when she came back I asked about my belongings.  She replied that she had taken my key to the front desk and the t-shirt to her pool room.  She returned the shirt, and told me to go to the front desk to get my key.  I looked around, and other swimmers (about 20 at the time I was there) had also left their belongings on tables and chairs around the pool.  I was completely mystified as to why my belongings were singled out for seizure.  I asked at the front desk, and was unapologetically told that they were taken because they were left on the table.  They could offer no explanation as to why my belongings were chosen, when several dozen other people had safely left their belongings on tables and chairs.  When I argued that I felt that it was inappropriate to single out personal belongings without warning when clearly other similar belongings were fine, they replied that I shouldn't worry, after all, I had gotten my shirt back, right?

The behavior of the pool "guard" and the response of the front desk staff was out of line, and I would not recommend this hotel to anyone staying in the Harrisburg area.  Hopefully I will leave this hotel review as is - but if I encounter more infamous "Hampton Inn Attitude" I'll post it here.

August 04, 2006

Sesame Place Review

It's Friday about 4:26 PM (EDT), we're now in Harrisburg, PA.  Yesterday we went to Sesame Place.  I'll give my review of that first, then possibly a few entries about our travels.  There was good, bad, and ugly at Sesame Park.  Overall, a great experience, but there are some tricks and traps you should know about.

Sesame Place is great.  It's expensive; not Disney expensive but still, a steep chunk out of your pocket.  We spent ~$400 up front for admission tickets and reservations for the "Breakfast with Elmo" character breakfast, which gets you into the park one hour early and lets you have premium picture taking time with the characters.  We have a family of five, all three children are over their "free line". 

The breakfast food is ho-hum.  In fact, it was terrible.  The eggs were runny, the bagels were stale, about the only thing that tasted right was the orange juice and the sausage.  If you are going to the character breakfast for food, skip it.  It is not worth it at all.  If you're going to have premium time with the characters, by all means, go - it's worth it.  One note, they have professional photographers walking around taking pictures (you're allowed to take your own).  They have a photo ID bracelet that lets you collect all your photos later, but the "Big Bird" photo op at the breakfast doesn't use this system ... and of course, they lost our photos with Big Bird.  Why they don't include the Big Bird photos with everyone else's photo ID bracelet system is beyond me, and as suspected they don't do it right and pictures thus get lost. 

Enough grousing.  The park layout is absolutely fabulous.  There are big rides interspersed amongst wading pools, zero depth pools, and other splash attractions.  Many of the review websites warn this but you just can't say it enough ... be prepared to get and stay wet.  Dress and pack like you're going to a local pool or water slide park.  I wore shoes, mostly to save packing space on the drive out (no room for my sandals in my bags).  I ended up buying ill-fitting flip-flops at the park.  You cannot go barefoot (no rule against it, but some of the walkways are rough on the bare feet, and very hot) and your shoes will get soaked.  Really, go prepared - sandals or water shoes, wear your swimsuit, put on sunscreen early and often, etc.  We rented one of their double strollers, it was a great tool and there was no place it couldn't go. 

You'll still get plenty of opportunities for photos and meeting the Sesame Street characters just walking around the park.  Be aware that around mid-day is the most busy and the lines start forming, and in the heat the characters (which I learned have to wear RUBBER SUITS under their costumes... ACK!) must go in often for cool-down and water.   Either get in line early, or be prepared to wait while the characters have their cool-downs.

I was a bit surprised, having been to Disney where credit cards are swallowed en masse like Lattes in Seattle, that fewer places take credit cards and the clerks don't seem to know how to process them.  One place kept insisting that all of my credit cards (and oddly all of the patrons around us) were being declined, until a manager was summoned and pointed out that the clerk had not "totalled" the bills prior to running the cards.  They claim that everywhere except their "Kiosks" take credit cards but I was surprised to find what constituted a "Kiosk" ... almost every drink and snack shop.    Water bottles are outrageous, more than even Disney - almost $3 a bottle, cash on the barrelhead for each one. 

Overall, we were very happy with our experience.  By 4PM, the kids had done all they could handle and were ready to go back to our hotel.  We covered probably 80% of the park from ~10AM to ~4PM.  If we had stayed until closing time (8PM) we would have done it all, probably at the expense of our kids sanity.  The tickets also allow you a second day's admission, but we passed on that as we headed out to Philadelphia to visit the Liberty Mall (more later.)

August 02, 2006

Day 2

Feasterville Trevose / Bucks County PA:  

We made it to our first extended stop.  Considering we got on the road really late today, we made excellent time.  Credit where due, the PA State Troopers were all going the other way today.  We went from Boardman (on the OH / PA border, near Pittsburg) to Feasterville Trevose, just outside of Philadelphia. 

It occurred to me as we were making the last interchange (I76 to I276 East) that in the last six days, I have literally travelled from coast to coast.  As some of you know, I ended last week in Portland Oregon on the Pacific coast.  Tonight, roughly six days later, I'm heading to dinner and a few beers just a few minutes from the Atlantic coast. 

It's not quite as exciting as a few years ago, when a London -> Hong Kong -> Tokyo -> Chicago trip left me circumnavigating the globe in about 2.5 weeks.  But it's something. 

More tomorrow after we go to Sesame Place.