The Day We Fight Back: Protest NSA Surveillance on Your Blog

Paul Sieminski's avatarWordPress.com News

Today, a broad coalition of interest groups, websites, and people around the world are joining together to fight back against government surveillance. We’re supporting the “Day We Fight Back” on WordPress.com and have created a banner that you can easily add to your WordPress.com blog to get involved, too.

The “Stop NSA Surveillance” banner shows support for this important cause and provides a link to a page of resources to help visitors to contact members of the US Congress to support much needed anti-surveillance legislation. For more information, please visit thedaywefightback.org.

How to add the banner to your site

Here’s how to add the banner to your site in three steps:

  1. In your WordPress.com dashboard, go to Settings  Protest NSA Surveillance.
  2. Click on the checkbox labelled Protest Enabled.
  3. Click on the Save Changes button for the change to take effect.

The banner will remain on…

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Short Story a Week 3 – Ye Old Scheduling Conflicte

Ye Olde Scheduling Conflicte

King Andral groaned a standard, highly regal groan.  He was seated, as he always found himself at half past noon, upon his throne.  The Royal Advisor, who had stepped away to fetch the Royal Schedule, was taking a little longer than expected.

The king reflected on how he should have just kept his grand vizier around.  Yes, the man was highly unstable.  Perhaps even a touch homicidal, the king recalled, as the number of Royal Food Tasters who had dropped dead of “a troublesome case of not being reverent enough of the king’s meals” had sky-rocketed.  However, he always got the Royal Schedule in a timely fashion.

Normally, the schedule was fairly standard.  The start of each week alternated between threats of invasion and conquest by neighboring kingdoms and threats of domination and destruction by warlocks, demi-gods, and so on.  By mid-week, some force of evil would have successfully kidnapped the princess (or, on some weeks, the prince, who often behaved as the prototypical princess would be expected to, whereas the princess would often be the one stuck doing her own rescuing).  By the weekend, things were usually wrapped up neatly, peace restored in the form of treaties signed, villains vanquished, and feasts prepared in celebration.

“My liege,” the Royal advisor said, his words hindered by a rather unfortunate stammer.  “You were right about the schedule.  Something seems a touch, a bit, a smidge wrong.”  King Andral stood from his throne.

“I suspected as much,” he said quietly as he walked to one of the small windows that overlooked the castle’s northern-facing bridge.  The cacophony outside was being generated by a decent-sized band of Kuldarian Hell-Bandits, who were known for their unparalleled brutality in combat, flair for the dramatic, and obsession with what they referred to as “war jewelry”.  The multitude of piercings on each warrior’s head caught the sunlight just right that the bridge, from above, appeared to have been coated in quicksilver.

“My goodness,” King Andral said.  “What a rowdy bunch this is.  Dreadfully shiny, too.”  He walked toward the chamber doors, his gait slow and deliberate.  He stopped, only briefly, placing a work-worn hand on the massive oak door.

“My liege,” the Advisor said.  “Surely you aren’t thinking of going out there, are you?”

“Not due until next week, yes?” King Andral said, glancing over his shoulder.  Tufts of his beard and mustache obscured the King’s facial features, making him difficult to read.

“You know the Schedule better than anyone else, my lord.”  The king huffed another heavy, highly royal sigh, and pushed the door open.  Once the door had closed behind the King, the Royal Advisor, sprinted to the nearest north-facing window to watch.

The front gate opened after several long minutes, and out stepped King Andral.  His face was a deep crimson, and his breath was almost loud enough to be heard over the Hell-Bandits’ war-screams.

“Yargh,” said one of the more heavily-pierced, decorated Kuldarians.  “The king shows himself!  Let’s gut him and make him into a stew!”  Another Kuldarian, more decorated still, stepped out in front, smacking the previous speaker hard upside his head.

“Yergh,” he said.  “No.  That’s revolting.  My gods, who even let this man join our ranks?”  He looked back to his comrades in arms, an eyebrow raised.  King Andral waited, so as to not offend.

After as much waiting as a member of any royal family could endure, King Andral cleared his throat.

“Yergh,” said the Kuldarian, who then turned back to face the King.  “I am Grom-takk, and these are my mightiest men.  We’ve come to claim the princess so as to repopulate the once-prosperous valley-nation of Kuldarras.”  King Andral pinched his nose, adjusting his glasses afterward.

“While that does sound like a noble cause,” he said, “I’m afraid you won’t be doing that.”  The crowd roared with a mix of enthusiastic disagreement and a number of curse-words the King had never been overly fond of hearing, but had grown accustomed to over the course of his time on the throne.

“Yargh,” said the one Kuldarian, stepping forward with a jagged saber raised above his head.  “Big words for such a puny man.”  King Andral rolled his eyes.

“Not even the most boot-kissing of my knights would call me puny,” King Andral said, making a great sweeping gesture to indicate his Royal rotundity.  “And you’ll keep such thoughts of my daughter to yourselves.  You lot aren’t even supposed to be here until next week, anyway.”  The king gathered his composure, straightened up, and cleared his throat.  Grom-Takk scratched his heavily-bejeweled head.  After a heavy silence, Gromm-Takk snapped his fingers.  The crowd of warriors parted, and a small, bespectacled man made his way through.  He had minimal tattoos on his bald head, and a small satchel belted around his waist.

“I’m afraid, my most fierce lord,” the man said, producing a parchment from its carrying case.  “Says here we’re not due for another half a fortnight, as the Dread Wyrm Tsonira will have kidnapped her fair majesty.”  Much murmuring of discontent could be heard in the ranks of the Hell-Bandits.  The king sighed, checking his wrist-bound sundial.

“Off you go, then,” King Andral said, waving his arms to shoo the heavily-armed warriors away.  “If tonight goes anything like I suspect it will, my daughter will be returning shortly.  Blood-stained and battle-worn, no doubt.  Have you any idea how difficult it is to get dragon’s blood-burns out of stone?  Now, off with you.  I’ll see you lot next week.”

Absinthe makes the heart grow fonder.

Yes, absinthe.  Yes, I realize how dreadful that pun happens to be.

I could go on about how I have been burdened with my crazy-neurotic fears of student loan debt, or how the effects of having adults use the word “gimme” on a regular basis slowly whittles away at my sanity (which, I suspect, looks like an old-timey whistle or something by now).

Never mind all of that, however, because this is a post about (at least, in part) absinthe.  The green fairy so many people have chased in the past all across Europe, this potent spirit has quite an air of mystery to it.  Maybe it’s the elaborate, ritualistic preparation of a proper absinthe drink; the slotted spoon, the sugar cube, and so on.  Or maybe it was the allure of a drink that caused hallucinations (I kid, of course; I see the world through some pretty magical filters without the aid of hallucinogenic substances, thank you very much).

Ultimately, it had to do with the drink’s association with artists, and their oh-so-quirky, unconventional ways.  And my tendency to give in to my personal whims.  To add perspective: I tried Jack Daniel’s because it was mentioned in Neil Gaiman’s “American Gods” as Mr. Wednesday’s drink of choice (Spoiler alert: going from no booze to straight Jack is, well, a great way to test the mettle of your tongue.  Mine still has a restraining order out against me since that.

Some very basic stats about absinthe before I continue:

  • The particular bottle I purchased was about $62 after tax, all things considered
  • It was 60% alcohol by volume (120 proof)
  • The green color is clearly visible through the bottle, but less noticeable once in a shot glass
  • You should be measuring the use of this spirit with a shot glass
  • Unless you really want to familiarize yourself with intense drunkenness
  • And possibly vomiting (nobody likes vomiting)

I procured a bottle of Vieux Carre absinthe (which, I must warn, is not the least expensive booze to purchase), and embarked on my own journey to chase the green fairy.  Things to keep in mind while reading include that I did not have a slotted spoon, so that eliminated the classic absinthe drinking options.  Google revealed a good number of mixed drinks featuring absinthe also happened to involve egg whites.  Bit of a deal-breaker, that.  Much Googling later, a drink called the Traffic Light was chosen.  It’s a simple mixed drink, and involves absinthe (of course), orange juice, and cranberry juice.  If mixed carefully, a layering effect produces a traffic light pattern.

If you mix it anything like I did, you’ll get a very vibrant pink concoction that smells quite strongly of licorice (thanks to the liquer’s anise content).  The drink itself had a pleasant, sweet taste to it, and left me feeling warm and thoughtful.  It also helped contribute to some really enjoyable live-tweeting of the Oscars.  Or, as others may have perceived it, being obnoxious in one-hundred-and-forty characters or less.

While it may not be the stuff of legend from Europe, I will say the green fairy’s possibly tamer (I hope not, because I fear a wilder version of this would only be suited for simulating intense schizophrenia) cousin has left a good impression on me.

Oh, and I’m not dead from the experience so I suppose I could chalk that up as a victory as well.

So I decided, after how work went today (in a word: horribly), to take the night off to enjoy a little WoW and watch Elementary.  And then I find out we’re killing the Sha of Anger.  Nerding it up pretty hardcore.  Apologies for the deviation from writing-related stuff, but this had to be shared because, frankly, my mood is a billion times better, which means my writing tomorrow will go a billion times better.  Hell yes.

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