We’re Rollin’

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Tech support from my host wrote me back today. I guess I have to take back my premature rant, because this actually went very smoothly. Maybe the incident from this summer was an anomaly. They installed Storable perl module, so now I’ve got MT Blacklist, MT-DSBL, Real Comment Throttle. Once I read the documentation and figure out what I can do with it, I’ll be using Book Queue Too instead of All Consuming to keep track of my booklist. I like All Consuming okay, but it is off-site, and having things in one place might be easier.

Oh, and here’s a clever poem via Roger Darlington’s blog.

</geekout>

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Server Woes

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I swear, one of the first things I am going to do come March is move to a new server. I don’t know why my server has to be such a pain in the ass. On the one hand, I feel I shouldn’t complain, because my server hasn’t ever been down that I know of, and they generally try to help. On the other, they upgraded to new servers without giving me a reasonable warning (my “warning” went into my junk mail folder — I didn’t get it for a few days). They told me they had configured MIME type on the server to render CSS so it would properly render CSS in browsers besides IE, but they apparently still haven’t done that, because we had problems when 1) I tried to intall MT 3.14 and noticed the user interface was whacked, and 2) Steve tried to install a new style sheet on his true crime blog. By the way, if you have this problem, a very simple line of code exists to work around it. At the beginning of your style sheet, put the following text: <?php Header (“Content-type: text/css”);?>. That will enable all the smart Firefox users to see all your pretty CSS instead of plain text. By the way: I don’t know if that messes up validation or anything — frankly, I’ve given up on trying to make sure this site validates.

So why am I complaining now? My server has Perl 5.6 instead of 5.8. I don’t have Storable perl, so I can’t use a buttload of the coolest MT Plugins. I put in a help ticket with my server host, but considering they acted like they didn’t understand what I was talking about with the MIME type, I’m not holding my breath. DreamHost gets such praise…

What do I like about my server? Unlimited bandwidth. Very, very reasonable prices. You just can’t leave those two very important variables out of the equation.

I just wish they knew what they were doing all of the time.

Shoot. I feel bad even complaining, because I know they’re not native speakers of English. I’m sure a lot of the problem is the language barrier.

I guess I’ll wait and see what happens with the perl upgrade. I’m thinking if they can’t get that figured out, then it’s adios Maxipoint.

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Upgrade

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Okay, upgrade to Movable Type 3.14 seems to be successful. So far, I like the new features. An upgrade was necessary because I just couldn’t take advantage of the new plug-ins with 2.66. Also, 3.14 has more safeguards against comment spam. To that end, from now on, comments will be moderated. Unless you sign in with a TypeKey registration, your comments will not be automatically posted. However, you no longer need to type in the number “captcha” in order to sign the comments, which eliminates the need for JunkEater — seems like too many spam comments were getting past them, anyway.

I am indebted to Learning Movable Type: TypeKey Authentication for Comments, The Tweezer’s Edge: A Replacement for <MTCommentFields>, and AnziDesign: Migrate Your MT 2.x Blog To Movable Type 3 for valuable assistance in this conversion.

Soon, I will be implementing further spam-protection measures as described in MT’s Guide for Fighting Comment Spam.

Why am I telling you this? Things may be wonky around this site until I get it all fixed up, and also I thought you might like to know about the change in comment policy. I hope it doesn’t inconvenience anyone too much.

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Best of Blogs

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Awards go to the popular. There are a great many excellent blogs that will never be nominated for a Best of Blogs Award. That said, go check out the nominated blogs. Sometimes people are popular for a reason.

Big English department presentation at the faculty meeting tomorrow. I am a little nervous, but I also feel we have a good presentation lined up.

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New Year’s Resolution and Trivia #3

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My friend Greg’s death has inspired me to do something I don’t do, and generally don’t believe in: make a New Year’s resolution. I am going to do whatever I can to touch base with old friends. I don’t want to feel, at the end of my life, that I didn’t do everything I could to try to maintain my friendships. Over the last several years especially, I have let my life concerns get in the way of being a proper friend. Then I looked around and discovered I didn’t really have any friends. Oh, you all who come by and read my blog are nice, and it isn’t that I don’t consider you friends. In fact, you’re my only friends, really. Frankly, I think it is sad that my only friends are people I’ve never actually met. You have to admit that is sort of sad. It isn’t that I don’t want to make new friends, but I haven’t been a good enough friend to the old ones… no wonder I looked around and was alone. I don’t want to be that way anymore. This blog is a great opportunity to communicate, and I want to use it. I want to say, when I comes time for me to die, that I was here, and I want my friends to remember me, too. And I can’t find any pithier way of saying it: life is too short to do otherwise than live it.

After September 11 happened, I remembered how awkward it was to go on with life. To laugh. Of course I am not saying that the death of a person I was friends with 7 years ago is comparable to that tragedy — or even the tragedy being played out as I write — at this writing, over 140,000 confirmed deaths are attributed to what has to be one of the worst natural disasters on record. Things like this, though — the death of a loved one or even an acquaintance, tragedy, reminders that we are mortal — all serve to make us feel, well, guilty. We live. And we’re probably not doing it up right, either. On the other hand, levity feels wrong. I will never forget that SNL skit Will Ferrell did maybe a month after 9/11. TV comedy seemed dead in light of the events in the news. How were we going to laugh again? Ferrell played a businessman who worked in an office that decided to slacken the dress code to enable workers to express their patriotism. And Ferrell wore a red, white, and blue thong to work. I laughed so hard. Every time I see it, I laugh again.

It’s Friday, and I have this newly established literary trivia thing — it’s actually fun for me. I wondered if I should post a trivia question here, right after a post about Greg’s death. Then it occurred to me. This is the sort of thing he would have enjoyed. So, to that end:

Which famous poet had a club foot?

Answer: George Gordon, Lord Byron. Credit goes to Dana-Elayne.

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War in Iraq Hits Home

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Because I am a UGA alum, I get an alumni magazine with some regularity. I couldn’t tell you how often it arrives. It comes to my parents’ house. I admit I don’t read it closely. It most often seems to be a showcase for big donors to the university to see their names in print. I do, however, check out the section in the back — it’s called Class Notes. It tells about people having babies and getting married. I always scan those columns looking for news of college friends. I have never found any. Not until today, that is. It wasn’t in the place I expected. It was in the obituaries. I never look at those. No need, right? I’m only 33. My college friends are still fairly young. For some reason I looked today.

You know how when you hear or read something really unexpected, you draw in your breath sharply. It’s just. Well. They call it shock. And I guess that’s an accurate term for what I felt. Because it said, right there in black and white, that Gregory Goodrich (AB ’93, MEd ’97) of Bartonville, Wisconsin, had died on April 9.

It’s weird. I just referred to him, rather obliquely, the other day:

I guess it boils down to this: I am 33. I’m not 19. In the last five years or so, with so many works of literature under my belt, my analysis skills seem to be much sharper. Age and maturity have taught me what to pull out of a book. It’s funny, because when I was 25, I was having a conversation with a classmate (I was a senior in college after quitting for three years when Sarah was born, then going back). This classmate was 30. I remarked at some point upon how well-read he was. He said, in what I thought at the time was a very exasperated tone, “I’m also a lot older than you.” Well, “a lot” is stretching things. But there is definitely something about being over 30 that makes me look at reading and books differently. (entry entitled “Literary Snobbery”)

My first fear upon reading of his death is that he had committed suicide. Frankly, he held a series of jobs that were not commensurate with his intellect or academic background. Perhaps he was, as it seems he is somewhat depicted in his obituaries, simply a modern-day Thoreau. I was worried that he felt unsuccessful in life and just… Well, I was wrong. Spc. Greg Goodrich died when his truck convoy was ambushed outside Abu Ghraib in Iraq.

I hope any loved ones that ever come across this writing later are not offended by my first thoughts upon learning of Greg’s death. I was greatly humbled when I discovered the truth. Greg was posthumously awarded the Bronze Star, the Purple Heart, the Meritorious Medal, and the Army Commendation Medal for his bravery — he saved the lives of ten other soldiers before being killed.

Thomas Hamill, who was taken hostage during the same attack, related the following about Greg’s last moments:

…By then we were hardly moving at all, and the gunfire had not stopped. Out of nowhere Army Specialist Gregory Goodrich ran and jumped up next to me on the running board of our truck, wrapped his left arm around the mirror and yelled, “We have got to drop this trailer.” …

I looked over Specialist Goodrich’s shoulder toward the buildings; all I could see were AK-47s sticking out around the corners. I didn’t see a soul, just all those guns stuck out and firing, I felt at any minute the brave soldier would be cut down.

He was just standing up on the running board and had absolutely no protection. He was shot in the arm but kept firing away and trying to hold on. A couple of times he grabbed another clip, bumped it, and slammed it in his M-16. He was sweeping his gun back and forth and firing, not really picking his targets. He realized he needed a better rest, a better support for his rifle. He swung around and climbed onto the hood of the truck to fire from a prone position. Using it as a rest, he continued firing at anything that moved…

We had no more choices. We had to bale [sic]. Right then a Humvee pulled around in front of us at about 100 feet and stopped. Then Specialist Goodrich rolled off the hood of our truck and fell to the ground, picked himself up, and ran for the Humvee…

Months later I learned that Specialist Gregory Goodrich, the soldier who defended my truck, was shot and killed a few minutes after he dove into the Humvee that rescued my driver.

His obituaries describe him as a loner, an avid reader, an environmentalist, a patriot. This sounds like the Greg I knew when we were pursuing our respective degrees in English Education (mine a bachelor’s, his a master’s). We worked through the same program. I recall sitting with him in UGA’s august libary and showing him how to find NPR’s web site on the Internet. We worked together on a project for class, which, if I recall, was why we were at the library in the first place. On the day we all took our TCT (Teacher Candidate Test) to get our certification, we went out to Applebee’s for celebratory drinks. Greg bought us all a bottle of champagne. We exchanged pleasant e-mails during the course of our studies together. We lost touch immediately after graduation. We were not close friends, but we went out together with others from our class. We had lots of conversations about books — he was animated as he described his appreciation for Joseph Campbell’s work. He was a really good guy. He was very upbeat, very cheerful. I remember he dressed like a male English teacher, if that makes sense — blazer with patches on the elbows, pleated Dockers, oxford shirts. Actually, I have always thought he resembled Steve Burns from Blue’s Clues. Like I said about him previously, he was just so well-read. He had simply read everything. I felt really inadequate when we talked books.

And now. God, now I feel really inadequate to the task of saying anything about Greg. About the sacrifice he made for his country, his fellow soldiers… for all of us. I never realized he was in the Reserves. Or, if he wasn’t at the time I knew him, then it didn’t seem like something I could picture him doing.

My mom said when she was young and Vietnam was raging, she remembers it seemed like everyone was touched by it somehow. She knew boys who died. She didn’t lose anyone close to her personally. She never said outright, but she alluded to the fact that she lost people like Greg — guys she had known, if not intimately, well, then, at least well enough to call a friend. I’d like to think for the time Greg and I knew each other we were friends. I know that I cried when I found out how he died. I also know tears have come to my eyes several times as I wrote this.

Greg died in April — I know… I said that earlier. But I just found out today. I guess I didn’t hear about Greg’s death because he wasn’t native to the Atlanta area. At this point in the war, only Atlanta deaths are reported on the news. And frankly, I wasn’t aware he was involved, so I wasn’t watching for it. His father lives in Macon, so it stands to reason my parents might have heard. They wouldn’t have known we were friends, and they would have dismissed him as one more casualty — if a local one. Greg and I shared the same high school alma mater (where I taught for a time) — Warner Robins High School. Now, seven months have passed, and I might never have known except for a blurb in the alumni magazine that caused me to search Google to see what I could learn about his death.

I am stunned in the face of his bravery. I extend my sympathies to his family. And Greg, rest in peace. Thank you. You are not forgotten. You are not one more casualty. And if I have taken a moment to think about anything in the last couple of hours since I found out, it is that none of our fallen soldiers are “one more casualty” — they’re people like you, Greg. And somehow, now I feel like I need to apologize for so much of my thinking.

Please read more about Greg:

Clever adventurer was “student of life”
Illinois soldier remembered as a loner who loved his country
Former WR [Warner Robins] man dies in Iraq ambush
Thomas Hamill On His Iraq Escape
Friends say reservist valued peace
Memorial Day events in midstate honor soldiers

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Seasons Greetings and All That

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Please let me remind readers old and new that I consider myself a Christian. However, I think Christ must weep daily over the atrocities done in His name. What I am about to relate isn’t exactly an atrocity… or is it?

I was barely awake and listening to talk radio, left on by my husband after he fell asleep the night before. I can’t even recall who the host was, but he was talking about this.

Now, to me, this a prime example of how reactionary the Religious Right is. Anyone tries to be least bit inclusive and all of a sudden our country is going to hell in a handbasket, and secular humanism is taking over. Pretty soon, it’ll be like the days when Christians were thrown to the lions. What they lack is perspective. For the short time I have taught at a Jewish school, one thing I have learned is how dominant and omnipresent Christianity is in our culture. Of course, I speak from the perspective of someone who lives in the South — specifically in Georgia. I really don’t think Christianity is currently in any danger of being subverted.

The talk show host ranted especially about Kwanzaa, citing all the usual objections: the holiday’s creator did prison time; it detracts from Christmas since it’s so close; it isn’t an African holiday at all; it’s an invented holiday. Blah. Blah. Blah. I guess one could say most of those things are true, but so what? Why was he so threatened by Kwanzaa? No one is forcing him to celebrate it or even to accept it as legitimate. Kwanzaa matters to those who celebrate it; to those who don’t — who cares? Why should it bother you that it exists? Kwanzaa is no threat to any religious holiday, because it isn’t religious.

Slaves brought over from Africa were made to convert to Christianity by their Christian masters. Over time, their culture became entwined with that of the slaveholders to create African American culture. What is so threatening, as I said, and to extend that, what is so wrong with wanting to embrace parts of your culture stolen from you? Or even to marry the cultures and create something new?

First of all, yes, the holiday’s creator spent time in prison for assault. Because of that, the holiday is bogus? I don’t understand this argument, because it seems to insinuate that in order to create something, you need to be without blemish — perfect or pure. Who says?

Second, yes, it is close to Christmas. But there seems to be a pretty good explanation for that.

Third, Kwanzaa is not an African holiday, but some of the principles incorporated into the celebration are African, and it embraces African roots. I think the idea is to make something distinctive that means something to African Americans, who are disconnected and removed from their antecedents in Africa. Again, is there something wrong with trying to connect with that past?

Finally, “it’s an invented holiday” is the weakest argument, because every holiday was invented at some point in the past. Christmas, for example, is most likely nowhere near the time when Christ was actually born. It does coincide closely with the Winter Solstice, which was celebrated by many different cultures. Rather than suppress the “pagan” celebrations, Pope Gregory I did something very politically astute: he encouraged Christian missionaries to incorporate those celebrations into Christianity. Christmas was born. It has been in Christian theocracies, such as Puritan New England, where Christmas has been suppressed. Surprising, no? Our staunchest Christians in the past — so devout that they devised a government that would be a shining city on a hill, a beacon to light the world and show the world the way, a government with God at the center — should suppress celebration of the birth of their Savior? Why? Because they recognized it as pagan, that’s why. It should logically follow, then, that if you are truly a fundamentalist, devout Christian, then you shouldn’t celebrate such a pagan holiday as Christmas. If what I just said sounds absurd to you, then maybe you’re starting to understand my point.

I suppose I’m talking about more than Kwanzaa here. I suppose I’m taking about Christmas, Hanukkah, the Winter Solstice, and maybe even Boxing Day and Hogmanay. Or Twefth Night. Or whatever. I’m talking about the fact that there are groups out there so threatened by the idea that holidays besides Christmas be acknowledged that they are taking out ads encouraging Christians not to shop at stores that have signs declaring “Season’s Greetings” instead of “Merry Christmas.” One of my few holiday cards this year was sent to me by a Jew — a rabbi, as a matter of fact. She honored my holiday by sending me a card a few days before Christmas. Why can I not honor her holiday by simply acknowledging it in the form of greeting I use during the holidays?

The end of the WSBTV article was chilling to me:

But to many, the threats and demands that stores put up “Merry Christmas” signs are no laughing matter.

“Why not simply require stores owned by Jews to put a gold star in their ads and on their storefronts?” the Rev. Jim Melnyk, associate rector of St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in Raleigh, wrote in a letter to the editor.

That was how it started once before…

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Trivia #2

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I know these are supposed to be on Fridays, like I said last time, but tomorrow is Christmas Eve, and I’m going to Macon. Here is this week’s literary trivia. Kind of an easy one, I think:

To whom did Herman Melville dedicate his masterpiece of American Literature, Moby-Dick?

And the correct answer is Nathaniel Hawthorne, author of the classic novel The Scarlet Letter. Credit goes to Dana Elayne.

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