Thursday, April 14, 2005

China's Web Censors Find Success

No joke.
WPXI.com - Technology - China's Web Censors Find Success: "There's word that the Chinese government is quite adept at controlling the Internet.

A study by OpenNet Initiative found that filters used by the Chinese government can block specific references to Tibetan independence without blocking all references to Tibet.

Everyone in China can use the state-run ISP. Use the regular phone line attached to a modem on the computer. Use a special number -- only 3 or 4 digits. Log in and password is also very short and sweet, as it is the same short digits as the phone number just dialed. Bingo. Universal access.

Bingo again -- everyone gets to pass their email with the router by the authorities.

Same worries are to be considered with Phili's wireless city concept. Who is to say what goes out and in is not noticed and reviewed by others?

Authorities have their advantages -- and disadvantages.

When in China, I'm careful as to what gets sent on the wires. I use carrier pigeons for the most sensative messages. And, same too in the states, where smoke signals seem to work best, as we've had many clear days of late. Be aware. Be smart. And, if you lead a life that isn't exciting, then you'll have nothing to fear. Just don't overthrow the government.

Now, back to scheduled programing, the PA state senate race.

Coro Fellows to jump into the races

This is interesting. It opens a number of questions. I'll hold off for now on how or what to say about the associated opportunities.
As you may be aware, the Coro Fellows in Public Affairs do a placement in electoral politics for one month. We do require that host organizations have professional campaign staff to act as Field Faculty for the placement, a campaign office, access to computer/on-site space, and will complete an evaluation of the Fellow's work. We do ask campaigns to make a voluntary contribution of $500 - 1000 to help cover the cost of the Fellows' stipends.

Fellows are available full-time from April 19th through May 17th with the exception of April 26th, Tuesday evenings after 5 pm, and Fridays from 8am until 8pm. The Fellows are an exceptional group of young professionals selected in a highly competitive national process. The 15 Fellows in Pittsburgh are highly skilled professionals from 22 to 30. They are completing their final month as a Coro Fellow, and should be expected to be dynamic self-starters that will make a significant impact on your campaign. Fellows are restricted from collecting/asking for campaign contributions and from phone banking, although they may help organize/plan/attend/or manage fundraisers and phone banks. Coro's strict confidentiality code enables us to request host organizations to allow Fellows to have access at the highest possible levels.

If you would like to be considered as a host for a Coro Fellow(s), please respond no later than Friday, April 15th, at noon with the following information:

Fellow(s) Supervisor:
Supervisor email address:
Name of host organization:
Campaign Office address:
Campaign Phone Number:
Name(s) of professional campaign staff:
Opportunities for the Fellow(s) on your campaign:
Amount of voluntary contribution for Fellows' Stipend match:

Thank you. We will let you know no later than 4:30 pm the name(s) of the Fellow(s) who will be assigned to your campaign if you are selected. Please call with any additional questions.

Throwback Script Pitt -- still out but not taboo

Throwback Script Pitt Royal T- Shirt by adidasThrowback Script Pitt logo short sleeve Royal Blue T-Shirt by Adidas.

To nuke the script Pitt was wrong. Steve P did a lot of damage.

The tooth logo is fine. Today I got a tooth pulled, so it is especially near and dear to me as I type. The tooth logo as a trim item seemed to make the dental school connection come back in vogue. The old Pitt student athletes and gridiron players had an great dental school connection. But, the head of the animal -- called a pit bull by others -- never worked for me.

It is nice to see the use of the word and the letters, PITT, return.

Change is fine, if it makes sense. Some of the changes in the past didn't make any sense. This move is a good evolution and makes more sense than what we've seen in some time.

NAN CRIME WATCH BULLETIN -- Attention Residents: Possible Burglary Pattern

Thursday, 4/14/05

TO: SOUTH SIDE FLATS RESIDENTS
FROM: NAN Neighborhood Awareness Network

A burglary was reported on 4-13-05 at 2200 hours by a resident of the 100 block of S. 15th Street. The victim returned home to find a burglar inside her home. When she walked in the front door, he was standing about 10 feet in front of her. He turned and fled out the window that he had entered through. The victim has pets in the home and left the window partially opened. The window is not visible from the street. You must enter her yard to view the window. The actor stole some items and other items that he had gathered were left behind. The man is described as a white male wearing a "puffy ghetto coat" that was either dark blue or black.

This is the third burglary that occurred in the past few weeks that resembled this one. This burglar is scaling walls and fences, entering unlocked windows. He is doing this in the evening when it gets dark, but before 1:00am.

Zone 3 Police hope that we get the word out to the citizens to please be sure to lock their windows and to be aware of anyone suspicious in the area.

CALL 9-1-1!!!

Wednesday, April 13, 2005

Organizers' Collaborative, a display of community and technology

As a state senator, we'd be able to launch a Youth Technology Summit and build upon other endeavors elsewhere, such as this.
(Boston, MA, April 6, 2005) This year, the Grassroots Use Of Technology Conference on April 15-16 in Cambridge, MA will for the first time offer a free "community day" – so that any nonprofit organization in MA can obtain free assistance in overcoming the digital divide. Friday's events will take place on April 15 starting at 1pm in Bldg. E25, at 45 Carleton St. in Kendall Square.

The annual Conference, organized by the Boston-based Organizers' Collaborative, has brought hundreds of nonprofits together from all over New England since 2000. This year the Conference is co-hosted with MIT's Center for Reflective Community Practice. This year's theme, Building Bridges, focuses on the importance of making new and proven technology more accessible to community organizations and advocacy groups, helping them move their work into the 21st century. Sponsors include the Democracy Project of the Gill Foundation, and Wainwright Bank.

The "Community Day" program on Friday will bring speakers from a dozen Massachusetts-based nonprofits. These include Susan O'Connor, coordinator of the Timothy Smith Network, Bliss Austin Spooner of the Massachusetts ACLU, and Jason Pramas of the Mass. Global Action Network. Topics covered Friday include online fundraising, affordable content management systems for nonprofits, online advocacy, community technology centers, and using weblogs. In addition, nonprofit tech "experts" will be on hand to offer organizations one-on-one advice.

"Community Day will enable the smallest nonprofits in Boston, with limited technical background, to learn to move their organization forward without breaking the bank," said Rich Cowan, OC founder.

Saturday's program has a similar focus, with fifteen different workshops on related topics. It also includes a keynote address by political analyst Micah L. Sifry on "The End of Top-Down Politics", focusing on the impact of blogs and other Internet technologies on democratizing the U.S. political system. Mr. Sifry runs PersonalDemocracy.com, and frequently comments on politics and technology issues for CBS, MSNBC, C-SPAN, the Washington Post, the New York Times, The Nation and NPR.

Conference cost is $25 for students/limited income, $40 for Organizers' Collaborative
members and $45 for the general public.

Organizers' Collaborative (OC) is a Boston based nonprofit organization that promotes technology as a tool for social change. The Center for Reflective Community Practice at MIT implements projects that strive to improve the lives of those least served by our society.

Chinese take a closer look at UPMC concussion software

Nice article. But I get into a tizzy about the negative leads. The opening of too many articles is about who would ever want to run 26.2 miles, blah, blah, gloom, doom, oddity.
Chinese take a closer look at UPMC concussion software Preparations for the 2008 Olympics in China might seem a world away from the banks of the Monongahela River.
We often tinker and ponder with Olympic and China element in advance of 2008.
Tony Tye, Post-Gazette, Dr. Yu Changlong, a key Chinese sports medicine official, visits the UPMC Center for Sports Medicine yesterday.

But Dr. Yu Changlong, a key sports medicine official in China, was thinking about the games yesterday during his visit to the on the South Side....

11 drug sweeps, little dirt. (Trib article) Sending in 30 officers to a school

As a Libertarian, as an educator, as a state senator, acts like this would need to stop. Here is a great example of going overboard.
11 drug sweeps, little dirt - PittsburghLIVE.com About 30 police cars pulled up in front of Sto-Rox High School within minutes of each other Tuesday morning. The school was locked down while officers and drug-sniffing dogs searched lockers and classrooms for about 90 minutes.

The drug sweep coordinated by the Allegheny County Sheriff's Office and involving 10 police departments netted no arrests and no contraband. In fact, police have arrested only one person as a result of 11 such searches at area schools this school year.
Where is the accountability?

If this is going to occur, results are needed. But the operations are being foiled. The invasion is heavy handed. So, where are the justifications?

The Homeschooling option looks more and more viable for a greater number of children and families when these instances occur.

"S" is for "snake" so says Havens

Police union head upset, Trib The president of Pittsburgh's police union called Mayor Tom Murphy a 'snake' ...
Hypocritical.

Business as usual.

"Murphy's sitting there saying the ICA board is wasting the taxpayers' money for trying to challenge the firefighters contract. Now he's wasting taxpayer money trying to appeal language in the police contract that was given to the firefighters."
My long-standing position has been announced and repeated often. Mayor Murphy needs to move to the private sector as soon as possible. The longer the city has the same crew within the Mayor's office, the steeper and quicker the decline. Holding out until the end of 2005 is going to make the recovery much more painful and worse.

Rather than name calling, I listen for a new tune. Many would do, such as:
  • Hit the road Jack.

  • Step on the bus, Gus.

  • These boots were made for walking.

  • Leaving, on a jet plane. Don't know when I'll be back again.

  • Where is the FOP Chorus Leader on those tunes?

    Get him out. Fill his parking space away with a broken police cruiser, garbage truck and public works van, -- hour by hour, day by day.

    Tuesday, April 12, 2005

    TV news on 11 at 11 -- got in some quotes

    I was interviewed by TV 11 at the school meeting. The segment ran as the lead story in the 11 pm news.

    "All the king's men and king's horses can't put Humpty together again. But, we can flourish when and if all get involved."

    I have the story on tape. We'll see what TV 11's web site posts in the AM.

    Health care industry leads state lobbying

    Health care industry leads state lobbying The health care industry accounted for one-fourth of all lobbyist spending reported in the state Senate during the last two-year legislative session, more than any other category, according to an unofficial tally.

    State subsidies of doctors' malpractice insurance rates, which were approved in both years, and proposed caps on pain and suffering awards in malpractice lawsuits, which were rejected, were the top issues for health-care lobbyists, industry officials said.

    Learning, feedback, two events

    Greenway Middle School hosted a Pgh Public Schools feedback forum. I participated. A consulting firm has been hired to get comments from citizens. The meeting was with butcher paper on the walls and people with markers. It was much like a walk-in suggestion box opportunity.

    My sons were in tow, and with their arrival another page went up on the side for kids' comments. The giggles there included the expected, "too much homework, not enough play time, and more music and recess." Then my youngest asked for healthier lunches -- meanwhile 95% of his fruit intake is from strawberries. The older wants larger portions at lunch. Both kids eat lunches we pack at home.

    My rants on the posters included a blurb under technology, "Sad about Elbie." Within minutes, another scribe wrote a reply with an arrow pointing to my comment, "Glad Elbie is gone." Oh well.

    I was rushed and didn't get a good chance to read all the other comments. I hope the materials flow out into the public in due time.

    TechSoup.org's International event on Online Learning and Collaboration is slated for April 18-22, 2005, at www.techsoup.org/onlinelearning.

    What are the issues and challenges involved in using online learning? What does it mean to collaborate and learn online? How can you and your organization use online learning and collaboration to achieve your organizational mission? This week-long event will answer those questions and demystify online collaboration tools. Join us as we discuss collaborative approaches for online learning communities, conferences, as well as classes and workshops. We will introduce you to the free tools available on the Web for online collaboration. We will also examine (and demonstrate) software and platforms in addition to best practice examples from the Tutor/Mentor Connection and Knowplace. The Tutor/Mentor Connection (T/MC), based in Chicago , uses the Internet as a resource library and meeting place for people interested in helping inner city youth. Knowplace is a customized International learning community that helps organizations and individuals move into the online world quickly and efficiently.

    * An overview of ideas and practices integral to online learning and collaboration.

    * Best-practice examples of learning community meetings and conferences.

    * A live demo of a synchronous session.

    * Free or inexpensive tools for teaching, training , and building an online learning community.

    * The steps it takes to go from in-person to online learning.

    Monday, April 11, 2005

    No show

    The first three way debate opportunity tonight at the Hilton Hotel downtown turned into a two way give-and-take between Wayne Fontana, D., and myself. The new "R" was absent, unexpectedly. We even switched around the program waiting for him to show. The Mayor's race candidates went first, then came city council candidates.

    Oh well.

    Post debate polling score:

    Mark Rauterkus = 8 out of 10.

    Wayne Fontana = 7 out of 10.

    Michael Diven = 0 out of 0.

    Others, with names, are free to recap in the comment section. I took plenty of notes and will try to post them in a day or two.

    O'Connor exudes endorsements from 7 out of 9 -- but we have 8 now.

    Tip to Bob O'Connor. We now have eight members of city council. Change your numbers. Reprogram your poise.

    O'Connor exudes poise - PittsburghLIVE.com: "During much of the campaign, O'Connor has relied on repeating a few sayings to convey how he would operate. He is less likely to offer detailed plans, unlike his opponents.

    O'Connor frequently promises to become the CEO of Pittsburgh, which he describes as 'a $417 million operation with 3,500 employees.' The campaign promise harkens back to his days as operations manager for Pappan's Restaurants, a job he last held 13 years ago before his election to City Council. He simplified how he would scrutinize city spending by way of example. At the Pappan's restaurants, 'I could always see at how much money was coming in and how much money was going out,' he said.

    O'Connor's gregarious nature is on regular display. At the debate, he arrived late, prepared to steal the show.

    'Seven of the nine City Council members are supporting me,' he told a crowd of roughly 200 in East Liberty. 'I'm still working on Bill,' glancing at one of his challengers, City Councilman Bill Peduto, who slowly shook his head as the laughter quieted.

    If Bob had all that support on City Council -- why is it that the Mayor is still getting his way with things around here? Why is it that the mayor got over for so long?

    Bob has the support because Bob has been one of the supporters. The whole gang is suspect.

    If I don't get the endorsement of Onorato, that is a feather in my cap. Onorato would have to do a lot of fancy footwork to endorse O'Connor for Mayor and endorse Rauterkus for PA Senate. That would be a challenge for him. Onorato isn't going to expend that type of energy.

    If Jim Roddey doesn't sign my petition to allow me to get onto the ballot, as was the case in 2001, that is a victory for me. Roddey is part of the establishment. Roddey was part of the problem as well. A small part -- but a part nonetheless. Roddey is tickled with Diven's switch. Roddey, in 2001, talked every day with Tom Murphy. The Roddey - Murphy relationship went cool, but later.

    Real reformers are hard to find within the ranks of the powerful.

    The voters, however, know what's what.

    A recent poll, conducted by the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, put O'Connor well ahead of his two top rivals, Allegheny County Prothonotary Michael Lamb, 42, of Mt. Washington and Peduto, 44, of Point Breeze.

    That poll isn't so recent any more.

    The polling data is interesting. The media does the polls when the race is hot to drive up ad spending among the candidates. Bob and Tom went at it in 2001. They held a dozen debates with only Bob and Tom and there were an similar amount of polls taken.

    We need polls to be fair. We need the reporting on the polls to make sense.

    A poll from a month ago isn't recent.

    Finally, it is the hope of many that city council one day goes to five, not nine.

    What we really need to hear is a candidate say that one day, as mayor, five out of the five on council will be supportive of the mayor's efforts of debt reduction and reforms. AND, all five on the council then will not be from the council of today. That dream is about new Pittsburgh leadership, new regional voices that overcome the same-old same-old.

    Sunday, April 10, 2005

    Calendar: 4/10/05 -- I'll be there too. Hilton at 6:30 pm on Monday.

    Business calendar: 4/10/05 Pittsburgh Downtown Neighbors Association, candidates forum, 6:30 p.m., Hilton Pittsburgh, Downtown. Participants include Michael Lamb, Bob O'Connor, William Peduto, Joe Weinroth, Sala Udin, Michael Diven and Wayne Fontana. Call John Valentine at 412-281-1160.

    This event, Monday evening, is the first where all three candidates for PA Senate, 42nd district, share the same podium. Jon Delano of KDKA is going to be the moderator.

    I am confirmed for the event. Come on out if you can.

    Newsday.com: Hey, Mom, I'm famous (On the Internet)!

    Interesting article about blogs and fame -- an at.

    A fellow stay-at-home dad, but this bloke is from NY, has fun with his kid and photos. Don't worry, it's all clean.
    Newsday.com: Hey, Mom, I'm famous (On the Internet)!: "
    Others stumbled on cash for fame, including Jeremy Zorek, now 3 years old, whose fame may fund his college education.

    His father, Michael Zorek, 44, a stay-at-home dad in Manhattan, snapped a photo of Jeremy when he was 4 months old, posing with the Barber brothers, Tiki and Ronde, twins and pro football players. Then Zorek snapped a photo of Jeremy with actress Jamie Lee Curtis.

    A friend who received the photos via e-mail suggested posting them online. WhoIs ThatWithJeremy.com now has 119 photos of Jeremy with celebrities, including Madonna, Billy Joel and Ringo Starr. The Web site lists nearly a dozen shows that featured Jeremy. 'Not bad for 2 1/2!' the site says.

    Jeremy has achieved fame 'to a certain extent,' Zorek said, but added, 'He has absolutely no idea what any of this means.'

    But he will in 15 years, when income generated from the site will help pay for Jeremy's college costs, as Zorek usually charges for permission to publish photographs, bringing in several thousand dollars last year. (Zorek won't disclose the exact income figure.)

    'We looked for a way to sort of make this something that could help him in the future,' Zorek said. 'And college, of course, is no cheap thing.'

    Does he have a photo of his kid on The Great Wall?

    What about with the Harlem Globetrotters? He's from NY after all.

    What about with a panda bear on his lap?

    How about on a boat in S.F. Bay with the Blue Angles about 50-yards over his head?

    I don't go for the celeb shots. Rather, I'm more into the experiece.

    Next mayor will face safety issues

    My comments within the article:

    Peduto: The COP program (Community Oriented Police) has a nice ring to it. However, I'm not convinced of its honest effectiveness. It might sound better than it performed. Putting officers into dinky mini-stations was not the same as putting them onto the street. Why did we need the mini-stations? Where the mini-stations a place to hang out? Were the mini-stations really a place to hang a big sign and not really serve much of any purpose?

    I'm not going to lend support to the COPs program. At this time, I'd nix that as a position plank.

    Next mayor will face safety issues Lamb would ask the Legislature for tighter gun restrictions within the city limits and work with the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency on drug prevention programs.

    Tighter gun restrictions, and begging to Harrisburg some more. No thanks on both matters. We don't need to change the rules. We don't need to be in a begging position seeking changes to the rules. Furthermore, changes to the rules won't really help in the end.

    Lamb: "... placing civilians in administrative Police Bureau jobs can get more uniforms on the streets."

    Better use of technology could get more information out the the neighborhor and others on the street.

    Better use of traffic police, or a traffic division -- like crossing guards, could get more help out on the street. Crossing guards were paid and part of the police force. They gave us a big bang for the buck. They could have been doing some more enforcement, but that could be part of the program when they are put back into serious operation.

    Better use of civilians throughout the city and region can get more assistance and understanding for the police and the struggles we all face. The civilian police academy was cut by Mayor Murphy. Bad move. The Civilian Police Academy could have been made into a stand-alone department that pulled its own weight financially. Creative management lags in Pittsburgh.

    The end of the drug wars, especially against grass, could help get a lot more done in terms of overall safety.

    High marks for Lamb to Lamb encourage participation with the Citizens Police Review Board, which has been largely ineffective without city government's support. My stance is along the same lines, but much more advanced. I'd not only encourage participation, it would be demanded.

    The voters put the citizens police review board to Pittsburgh. It has been a joke -- due to the miss-management of the administration and others. The city council appointment to the board has done nothing in the past 16 month (or more). Nothing.

    The citizens police review board isn't perfect. But, it needs to operate as it could and should for the first few years. Then it can evolve into the tool we all need and voted to create.

    In 2001, both Carmine and I took the citizens police review board seriously. Murphy and O'Connor didn't lift a wimper on this topic.

    Strong nods to Lamb too for his mention of technology with the building inspection duties. An overhaul of all tech components of government is needed. These efforts need to be rooted in the realm of open-source solutions.

    Mt. Oliver is kicking Pittsburgh's tail in terms of building inspection, enforcement, and governmental cooperation among all parties. Great for Mt. Oliver -- as they are trying. Pittsburgh doesn't even care.

    There is a lot to do in terms of inspection and enforcement in the city. Things go to hell around here and there isn't any way to get anyone to even care. The iron curtin in the city is alive and well in this area with a contrast to what occurs in suburban Pittsburgh.

    The color and geneder of the police force. Murphy hired a few classes of recruits and they were mostly white guys. I'm a white guy too. Come on. This city's diversity among its workforce needs some attention.

    This is a point, (diversity among police force recruits) to Bob O'Connor's credit, that he yapped about four years ago. It isn't getting much attention now because it was only a gottcha with O'Connor in 2001. Murphy's policy and performace was so bad that it was painfully obvious. Furthermore, in recent years, the police force has been shrinking, not expanding with new hires. A couple of new classes have been in the works. What are those numbers Bob? Do you care? Continue that conversation.

    Is the diversity among the men and women in blue a point that served its purpose, like the citizens review board? Time to move on? Time to let it rest?

    Don Walko, D., North Side, State Rep, wants to change the rules, making it more difficult for bounty hunters. Peduto wants to put parole enforcement into police cars. Perhaps the two can be talked about in the same discussion. Peduto should issue a release saying he does NOT like the Walko suggested rules.

    The college credit elements for the job application process for the police was not talked about. Jim Motznik has some strong opinions on that topic.

    I have great respect to the professionals working in Pittsburgh with Fire, Police and EMS. I am not close to any service group. All have been dumped upon by the present mayor. I think that each group could do more to remove him from office sooner and help with the discussions among our public landscape. But, they all are jaded. All are burnt out. All are pushed past the max -- mostly.

    One of the biggest jokes is the concpet of a merger among EMS and the hospitals. Dream on. It took a major miracle to get 911 services to merge in nine years. There is no way they are going to be able to even start the conversation with EMS and hospitals, yet alone Fire.

    Wellness is very important to me and our region. We need to allow these topics to be our strengths in the future. Now they all are liabilities.

    I'm a lifeguad at heart and in my history. I understand that these endeavors are important and time based. Support needs to be present. Too many are running on empty. The interactions among managers, performers, citizens, customers and even things like BILLING are disjointed.

    New relationships and understandings need to be forged. This is going to take time and lots of effort.

    I'd rather have a mayor care more about the public service elements and less about the convention center hotel, retaining the Pirates, knocking down the Civic Arena, new condos in town, or making a re-do of the Gateway Center T-stop.

    Candidate survey from Pittsburgh Catholic

    Not sure if this went via fax or was idle in the office and never sent.



    Tom Murphy boasts of sandbagging the Legislature

    Murphy didn't blink. I'll give him credit for not blinking. His head was in a hole, and still hasn't moved. But if he says he didn't blink, I'll not challenge that self-assessment.

    No blink. Did stink.
    Tom Murphy boasts of sandbagging the Legislature - PittsburghLIVE.com Recalling his conversation with Bloomberg, Murphy said in an interview, 'We had this conversation and he said, 'How did you win?' I said, 'Because I was willing to take the city into bankruptcy.' If I were (New York) mayor, I would probably have shut down the bridges coming in from Long Island. ... We just didn't blink and the Legislature blinked.'

    Saturday, April 09, 2005

    Univ of Pittsburgh's School of Health and Rehab Sciences

    Happy Anniversary. Its 35 years old. We're celebrating.

    Supporting a loser. Onorato takes a LTE hit from Beechview

    This is a letter to the editor from another person (Emily), just reposted here.
    Supporting a loser - PittsburghLIVE.com Supporting a loser - Friday, April 8, 2005

    I think Allegheny County Executive Dan Onorato is making a huge mistake by endorsing Bob O'Connor for mayor of Pittsburgh (O'Connor picks up Onorato's support,' April 1).

    Onorato is supposed to be a reform-minded politician, yet he's supporting someone who has been a key player in creating the problems that our city government is currently facing.

    O'Connor is a politician of the old school, having supported Mayor Murphy's costly spending until it became convenient for him to do otherwise in election years. He's a two-time loser in the mayor's race for obvious reasons -- where was he all those years that the city was being irresponsible with our money?

    I'm greatly disappointed by Onorato's decision. We have a chance to move this city forward by electing a new mayor, but he wants us to choose someone who represents everything we should be getting away from.

    I guess he's not the kind of leader I thought he was.
    Emily Waschak, Beechview

    I'm not exactly sure what Onorato will do in the PA Senaate race, nor when. Dan has some political strength, of course. However, political strength isn't something that I'd put as his ace in the hole. What does Dan's Onorado blog tell us as to what he's projecting and thinking about? Then we'd know and he'd have more sway.