Codejnki's Blog
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Apr 23rd
I’ve put in place a self imposed writing blackout till I complete the full edit of an article I wrote that I’d like to eventually submit for publication somewhere.
I really need to finish editing it.
Nov 9th
My girlfriend recently challenged me to take part in NaBloPoMo after listening to me whine that I don’t write enough any more. Well I didn’t sign up. Looking at my work schedule I knew there was simply no way that I could keep up a work schedule, blog, and devote the required number of hours needed to completing Guitar Hero World Tour (on hard, wearing a bathrobe by the way).
So anyway I was feeling like a lazy ass for not joining the daily blog posting, that is, till she wasn’t able to make it past about day five. Now I don’t feel so bad.
Anyway, on to other things besides gloating.
The truth is that the housing crisis in America has hit me. Dial the way back machine to 2003. Prior to my ex-wife and I getting married we refinanced the house she owned to help pay down some debt, get a lower interest rate, and have some extra cash to pay for the wedding. In 2005 we had a line on a very good deal for the purchase of a Victorian in town and decided to put an offer in. With the housing market starting to slow we knew we would be unable to sell our first house. So we decided to rent the house out. A young family moved in and we were able to cover the mortgage payment from their rent and things were good.
In 2006/2007 when my wife and I divorced she got the Victorian, I got the rental. At the time, this seemed like a halfway decent deal. At the same time I also relocated to the east side of the state, starting my live over again for the third time. In the mean time the renters continued to live in the house.
Fast forward to late October 2008. I received a phone call from my renter telling me they are leaving with about 2 days notice and they are behind on rent by three weeks. I make my way down to the rental and get a look at what is a very disgusting mess. After a near two week ordeal just trying to get the keys back I am now in a serious bind. With just some rough estimates the house is going to require over $5000 worth of repairs in new flooring and paint. The house is also now worth almost half of what it was worth back in 2003. To say that I am upside down on this house is now a complete understatement.
So here is where I sit. I don’t really have the money to fix the house and make house payments. If I don’t fix the house I can’t get renters. If I don’t have a renter I can’t make house payments. I think that right now I sit in the literal definition of a Catch-22.
So I have resigned myself to become another national economic statistic. My rental house is going to end up going back to the bank. I am going to keep making payments on the house as long as possible but the house is up for sale at a drastically reduced price. I am currently in negotiations with the bank to attempt to avoid foreclosure, but right now, in this economic climate, I do not see that as being a reality.
Unlike many of the people who are going through foreclosure I feel like I did things exactly right. There is no funky strange loan on this house. It is a straightforward starter home that we chose to rent out and up on. Thousands of people have done this. It just didn’t work out for me.
Jan 16th
To Whom It May Concern,
I am writing to you today to voice my displeasure and regret at what has happened to the NBC News organization. For the past thirty-one years, I have considered myself a loyal NBC viewer — of both your news and entertainment programs. I have always considered them to be of a higher quality than other television offerings. I grew up watching Tom Brokaw on the Nightly News and have always viewed him and the rest of the NBC News organization as some of the most professional journalists in the world. Last night, though, my entire view of your organization was turned on its head and will forever be tarnished. I am speaking, of course, of the decision to exclude Dennis Kucinich from the Nevada Democratic debate on January 15th, 2008 immediately followed by the miserable debate moderation by Brian Williams and Tim Russert.
By excluding Congressman Kucinich from the debate last night, NBC has chosen who our Democratic candidates are. Mr. Kucinich has had a long and distinguished political career that spans nearly my entire life. For nearly thirty years he has had a consistent message regarding his vision for making our country great, and therefore as a presidential candidate he deserves to have his message heard as part of the greater discourse on how the next four years of government will be ran. By excluding the congressman from the debate you are implicitly responsible for making his candidacy unfeasible — which is obviously the exact reason you chose to exclude him. As a news organization, you enjoy ultimate protections under the First Amendment. But, with those protections comes a responsibility: to provide due diligence to your viewers and readers and to provide them with all the relevant information available on a subject. Excluding a candidate — who is still on the ballot –from a debate does a disservice to the American population and tarnishes your reputation as an honest and reputable source of information.
Perhaps your news editors will rethink their decision of excluding Mr. Kucinich once they review the performances of Mr. Williams and Mr. Russert as debate moderators. For over twenty minutes, we as viewers were forced to watch two distinguished journalists attempt to start a petty squabble between Senators Obama and Clinton over the issues of race — a topic that prior to the debate they had clearly stated was no longer open for conversation. Instead, Mr. Williams and Mr. Russert attempted to goad the candidates into a personal attack on one another, instead of asking substantive questions regarding, i.e.: the economy, the war, health care, corporate intrusion in the election process, the environment, eduction, President Bush’s legacy, America’s moral standing in the world, and a host of other topics.
The senseless barrage of questioning was only ended when a heckler from the audience clearly voiced to all your viewers his displeasure, and called for an end to the line of questioning. The priceless “deer-in-the-headlights” look on Tim Russert’s face at that moment seemed to say to me that he had a number of follow-up questions regarding race and, quite possibly, a number of gender-related ones to keep us going through the first hour. I for one was pleased to see the questioning end and move on to the topics which our next president will actually be faced with.
Why were the news editors afraid to include Mr. Kucinich? Were they afraid that they would be interviewing three candidates who sound the same on all of the issues, only to be left with one candidate who would not only offer up a contrary point of view to the issues, but also be able to back it up by a voting record that he shows no regret for, unlike the others sharing the stage? By including him, maybe the debate last night would have been much more helpful to us in choosing a Democratic nominee. Instead, last night’s debate only served to help mesh Senators Clinton, Edwards, and Obamas’ messages together, into an amalgamation with no distinguishable differences between the three. Instead of choosing a presidential nominee and their message, we are left to only choose the face of our presidential nominee, and do we want it to be white or black, male or female? That choice is as exciting as choosing to have fries or onion rings at a fast food restaurant.
I feel that NBC News has lowered the standards of its journalism and interjected its corporate preferences into our election process — something no respectable journalism organization should ever do. You have lost my respect as a news organization and only significant amends to your journalistic practices will prove that your organization takes its role in society seriously.
Sent to letters@msnbc.com and info@kucinich.us. Thanks to Meggi for the editing and cleanup help.
Nov 3rd
So in the effort of Patrick completing the “NaNoWriMo” I completed the first 1,163 word today. Here is my stats page in case you are interested.
Nov 2nd
National Novel Writing Month, or two friends who don’t know each other telling me to “shit or get off the pot.” I’ve signed up for National Novel Writing Month. Right now the site is increadibly slow so it may be a little difficult to pull up right at this second. But the idea is that over the course of November you will write a novel and at the same time network with other writers from your community.
I have basically had a chance to sign up and do nothing else. The site is completely down right now. I guess I’ll work on it tomorrow then. I guess between now and then I need to come up with a novel idea for a novel (bad pun I know).
So ok, guess that’s it for this moment. I’m heading out here in a little bit to go hang out for the night so I really won’t get much writing done right now.
Nov 1st
I am sort of the unofficial inventory guru at work. Tomorrow we are doing an inventory at the building up in Oxford. I get to be there to be part of the “buy-off” team. Mainly that means I get to go around and be a hard ass and make sure people are counting properly
There isn’t much else going on, only I’ve had two people tell me that I need to get involved in national novel writing month. I am thinking that might be a propper use for creativelychallenged.us. Take some of the various things I’ve written and get them up there and start to flush them out till they look good. We’ll see.