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About Ramblings of a Hopeless Khowaga

Welcome to my Web site. My name is Chris, and I’ll be your host. I\'m an opinionated, snarky, gay academic with a predilection for the history, the Arab world, languages, photography, food, and music. I live in Austin, Texas. You can read more about me, learn 100 random things about me, and if you’re wondering what the heck a khowaga is, click here. Feel free to browse, read, and leave comments!

Tag: ‘Wikipedia’



The wit and wisdom of desperate coworkers.

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

RamblingKhowaga: Did you see the story about the cute (that’s disgusting-cute) gay couples in the NYT?
EvilCoworker: NYT?
RamblingKhowaga: New York Times
EvilCoworker: no
EvilCoworker: I only read picture books
RamblingKhowaga: … well, then never mind.
EvilCoworker: (saved by my stupidity on that one!)
RamblingKhowaga: yeah, it’s 10 pages of gay couples under 30 who got married.
EvilCoworker: awww
EvilCoworker: that’s cute
RamblingKhowaga: and they’re all doctors and lawyers and living in NYC (do you need me to spell that out?) and Boston and way rich and successful and white
RamblingKhowaga: and it’s kind of gross.
EvilCoworker: i’m slowly becoming unable to fall into that group
RamblingKhowaga: yeah, at some point i hit 30
RamblingKhowaga: which I think means I’ve hit “troll-dom.”  No more raging orgies for me!  (Not that there really ever were any … )
EvilCoworker: wait… i’m supposed to be doing that until i’m 30?
RamblingKhowaga: enjoy it while you can.
RamblingKhowaga: and then come tell me about it :wink:
EvilCoworker: well, shit
EvilCoworker: I misread the memo
RamblingKhowaga: i don’t get the memos.
EvilCoworker: at this rate, if i ever have sex again
EvilCoworker: i’m going to tell EVERYONE
RamblingKhowaga: oh dear
EvilCoworker: why do you think I ride my bike 100-200 miles every weekend?!?!?!?
EvilCoworker: and swim 5 miles a week?
EvilCoworker: exercise is a great replacement for sex
RamblingKhowaga: thank you, Barbara Novak.

Life after Christmas

Tuesday, January 2nd, 2007

Sometimes in this world you have to have a sense of humor about things or you’ll cry, and sometimes I forget that. Hence last night’s post … but I think I’m better today.

I found myself with an unexpected day off today. The Governor closed all state of Texas agencies in a day of remembrance for Gerald Ford – one of the rare occasions when the University of Texas is considered a state agency (others include budget cuts, the need for layoffs, etc.). Times when we’re not considered a state agency usually include all of those weird holidays that everyone else gets off but we don’t (San Jacinto Day, Texas Independence Day, etc).

They did a crap job of announcing it – we got an e-mail yesterday, but I can think of several people that I work with who don’t check their e-mail at home, so I’m wondering how many people showed up at the office today not knowing that we had the day off. Stuff that makes you go “hmmmm.”

So, instead of going to work, I went to Costco and bought lots of household cleaning products (this not being really connected to any of the above) and a copy of Little Miss Sunshine, which they had on sale. Now I’m on my eleven-teenth load of laundry and marvelling at how large the living room is without a Christmas tree in it (and wondering how it is that every year the stuff never seems to fit back into the same box it came out of).

In other news:

A plane crashed in Indonesia yesterday, and after detailed reports saying that the plane had been found and that there were survivors, “senior officials” have announced that they were wrong and that they haven’t found the plane after all.

Speaking of needing a sense of humor — it’s one thing to say that you think you know where the plane is and then come back and say you were wrong, but it’s another thing entirely to say you’ve found the plane, come up with specific numbers of survivors and fatalities and then turn around and say you were wrong. Something weird is going on there … too bad Mulder and Scully aren’t around anymore.

In other weird news. Wikipedia inadvertantly shut off the ability of everyone in the country of Qatar to edit the site anonymously. I’ll bet this is some sort of weird vendetta against Qatar for defying English grammar by not placing a “u” in their name. Once internet access is available on airplanes, fliers on Qantas Airways better be careful, that’s all I’m saying.

And, back in “bang your head against the wall” territory, the Massachusetts legislature has voted to allow a proposed constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage (which is currently legal there) to move forward. One step forward, two steps back … right into dog poo.

Remember to keep smiling.

Happy Birthday to the World…

Monday, October 23rd, 2006

Wikipedia’s “On this day” feature is so much better than a lot of other similar ones out there, because otherwise I never would have realized that today, October 23, is the day that was at one point fixed as the exact anniversary of Creation (Sunday, October 23, 4004 BC, 9 am. Please don’t ask which time zone).

I’ve always been intrigued by the idea of literal interpretations of the Bible, not in the least because there are two different stories of the Creation in the Old Testament (see: Genesis 1 vs. Genesis 2). In addition to all of this, of course, is the fact that the Jews, from whom we (I say “we” as if I’m a practicing Christian, which I’m not this week) acquired the text, don’t consider it to be the literal truth, but rather chock full of divine metaphor that requires careful study and meditation in order to be properly interpreted.

But why let a little fact and logic get in the way of a good witch hunt?

Speaking of which, the always inflappale Andy Towle points us to a fun and exciting story developing in Houston in which a landscaper and his wife decided that they couldn’t work with a gay couple because it violated their religious beliefs. The gay couple was so astonished that they forwarded the turn-down e-mail on to some friends, who forwarded it on to some of their friends, and you see where this is going.

The suffering couple (the landscaper and his wife, not the gay couple — please! This is Houston — you don’t think the press would be sympathetic to the gay couple, do you?) says they feel “privileged to see just what happens when you make the homosexuals and the devil mad.” Allow me to barf quietly in this corner over here if I may. This is, of course, not to say that all of the people making threatening phone calls are in the right, however. The gay community does have a tendency to be its own worst enemy in cases like this.

The most astonishing thing about this article is that I didn’t realize that even El Paso has laws on the books prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation. Houston doesn’t. So, while the poor landscaper and his wife suffer from phone calls and e-mails from angry homo-sinuals, according to Houston law, they (the landscaper and his wife) did nothing illegal. Them gay folk, on the other hand … well, it’s no longer illegal to be gay in Texas, but I’m sure there’s someone in the state legislature working on a way to fix that. There always is.

Gotta love Texas. I’m pretty sure that Round Rock (the ‘burb where we live) doesn’t have such a law on the books, either. We’re across the county line from lib-url Austin into deeply Republican Williamson county where all campaign signs have to have as a slogan is something like “A Real Conservative for Office.” I’m waiting for the day there’s a bitch-slap fest up in Georgetown between two candidates duking it out over who’s the more real conservative. It’d be funny if it weren’t so sad.

Anyway. The state gubernatorial elections are coming up, and I’m not sure who to vote for. Kinky Friedman has been a long-time favorite, but, as the Austin Chronicle pointed out last week, Friedman doesn’t really seem to have much of an interest in politics past one or two key issues, and the last time we voted in a governor like that he wound up moving on to the White House (after leaving the state in a hell of a mess — the great improvement in education that GW keeps going on about is that Texas moved up in the education rankings from 49 to 46 among the 50 states).

I don’t care for Carol Keaton Strayhorn, nor the fact that she sued to be listed as “grandma” on the ballot (and lost — the judge pointed out that Richard Friedman has been going by “Kinky” since the 1960s, whereas Strayhorn has been using “Grandma” professionally since … never). I particularly don’t care for the fact that she’s a Bush appointee who became an independent to run against Governor GoodHair … I mean, Perry.

So, I guess by default I’ll wind up voting for the Democrat, who doesn’t have a chance in hell even though the incumbent’s numbers in the polls are under 40%. This is what happens when there’s 3 other candidates running for office.

Anyway. This is a long rambling message to point out that all is weird in the land of Texas, and not in a good way as we start the last week in October. But the cool season has finally started (well, what we consider cool, anyway), and I get to work out of the office today and tomorrow. So that’s something to look forward to, anyway.

I hope YOUR Monday is off to a good start, too.

 

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