Sunday, November 22, 2020
Derminology
There was an ad on TV where the actress
Said something about "my derm",
Meaning her dermatologist.
This usage made me squirm.
Is that for for real, is "derm" the slang
For this medical specialty?
I need to get up to date on this stuff.
I only know: "O B G"!
Thursday, November 19, 2020
Positive Attitude
You can lower the positivity rate
By only testing those who feel great.
My plan will work - I know it will:
Just stop testing folks when they're ill!
Wednesday, November 18, 2020
Reflecting
Unless you’re a lip reader
Looking in a mirror
You cannot “watch what you say” -
The facts couldn’t be any clearer.
My Mother Tongue
The plural of knife is knives,
So I figured the plural of fife would
be fives!
It turns out that fives IS a word,
But not the plural of fife - quite
absurd!
I’m glad that I learned English
first,
Since learning it later would just be
the worst!
Monday, November 16, 2020
Safety
If everyone were locked in a cell,
For a year of isolation hell,
Would that be enough
To kill off this stuff?
Or would virus particles remain here and there
To infect us again when we stepped out for air?
Will this ever come to an end?
Asking for a friend.
Saturday, November 14, 2020
American Theatre in the Twenty-First Century
Needless to say, I'm over the moon.
You can preorder here.
Strong Conjugation by Back Formation
Heard someone say froke
As the past tense of freak.
Sometimes I'm amused
By the way people speak.
But this use of "froke" is apparently not strictly an odd Indian thing. When I looked it up, there is American usage too.
There's also a completely different usage where it's a noun meaning a "frozen Coke".
Pun-ish-ment
Use fascinate in a sentence? Of course!
I'd love to, in fact, I can hardly wait:
I have nine buttons on my coat
But I can only fascinate.
Thursday, November 12, 2020
Forecast
Weather’s much too nice.
Where’s the snow and ice?
What? It’s on its way?
Stay, fair weather, stay!
Sunday, November 08, 2020
Kennedy-Nixon
During the Kennedy-Nixon election of 1960, Illinois was a closely contested swing state. I was 8, and I was in favor of Kennedy, as my parents were.
Kennedy's electoral college victory was narrow, and dependent upon Illinois. There was some question, at the time, about the honesty of the elections in Illinois. My father suggested to me that the Democrats stole votes in Chicago, and that the Republicans stole votes Downstate, and that it roughly balanced out. I suspect this is correct.
Normally, you can only steal so many votes, because there are a lot of safeguards in place. The relatively small volume of stolen votes only makes a difference when the election is close.
Nixon conceded. There were people who thought that was a mistake. I don't know.
What I remember puzzling me at the time, is that the Chicago Republican newspapers, the Tribune and the American, kept running headlines, maybe for a week, about various ballot audits finding additional votes for Nixon in the aftermath.
So, even though Nixon conceded, audits went on. But the audits never added up to enough to get Nixon declared the winner of Illinois.
I imagine that's what's going to happen with Trump in Pennsylvania. But, hey, run the audit, do the investigations. We have laws in place for all this. It was an unusual election, particularly with the heavier-than-usual mail-in voting.
So, let the president sue.
Let the courts do what they do.
Let plenty of light be shined
And we'll find what we can find.
Wednesday, November 04, 2020
Oops
Pollsters swear on the bible
That their numbers are reliable,
But on election day
You often hear them say:
Opinion shifted in the final week,
We’ll get it right next time - with just one tweak!