Deserving a Job

From the New York Times via International Herald Tribune:

The Senate’s latest immigration bill is an awkward, unappetizing compromise, which would shut out many newer immigrants and impose daunting red-tape hurdles on the rest. But at least it remains wrapped around a vital principle: the option of citizenship for those who want and deserve to become Americans.

So if I break into the NYT offices, I deserve to become a reporter for them?

Or if I hack my way into their Web site, I deserve to become a reporter for them?

That’s how I read it.

Abbas in the Crosshairs?

How long can Abbas last? That’s the question that came to my mind when I read this:

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said on Monday that he would not fire the new Hamas-led government at this time despite the Islamist group’s refusal to renounce violence and embrace peacemaking with Israel.

Abbas, leader of the more moderate faction Fatah, last week vetoed Hamas’s nomination of a Gaza Strip militant to a senior security post, prompting violent street confrontations and warnings of a looming Palestinian civil war.

Unless Abbas was grandstanding and playing to the international audience (with Hamas knowledge and consent), I think they’re going to taken him down. Violently.

Advise Me: Dell or Lenovo?

My IBM ThinkPad 760e is ancient. I’ve had it at least five years. It runs Win95 on a 3Gb hard drive. No network port. No USB. No CD. Even so, I’m very pleased with it. In the past, I’ve generally been very pleased with IBM’s service and tech/warranty support. I say “in the past” because it’s been about three years since I’ve dealt with them.

My desktop is a Dell machine purchased a year ago. It’s my second Dell desktop. I’m very pleased with it. And have been very pleased with Dell’s tech support.

I really should get a new notebook. I’m torn between an entry-level Dell and an entry-level ThinkPad. (I’m very partial to ThinkPad because of the TrackPoint keyboard. I’m partial to Dell because of the price difference.)

What do you advise?

Remember KAL 007?

Kamchatka — a name seared in my memory from an event 23 years ago.

I remembered immediately when I saw this headline at Yahoo! News: Massive quake rocks Russia’s remote Kamchatka peninsula.

A massive earthquake measuring 7.9 on the Richter scale, followed by another huge tremor, rocked Russia’s remote northeastern Kamchatka peninsula but reports from officials indicated only light injuries.

But no mention of this atrocity.

Good News: Hannah Clark

What a story! This is too neat!

A 12-year-old girl from South Wales is believed to have become the first heart transplant patient in the UK to have her donor organ removed and her own heart brought reinvigorated.

Hannah Clark, who has also suffered from cancer, had the operation, carried out on 20 February, after her body rejected her donor heart. The procedure is important as it shows that surgeons can allow a heart with acute inflammation to rest itself by using a “piggy back heart” before reconnecting their own organ. Previously, patients died or had transplants before their hearts had a chance to recover.

The heart specialist Sir Magdi Yacoub was persuaded to come out of retirement by Miss Clark’s parents to reconnect the dormant heart he cut off 10 years ago.

I had no idea this could be done. I just thought the bad hearts were chucked.

Cheers for Sir Magdi Yacoub!

Private
Above all, love God!

since November 9, 2005