Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Handicap Parking

Sunday, July 30th, 2006

Last night I witnessed first hand the importance of the proper use of handicap spaces and the surrounding area. My wife and I attended the her 10th reunion for the Summerville High School class of 1996. The event was held at clubhouse of a local gated community in Summerville, SC. We were joined by some good friends from out of town at the event and had a pretty good time. The event itself was not worth the $40 per person in my opinion, but the girls wanted to go. I spent a good portion of the night talking with Paul. Paul is the husband of Noel one of my wife’s friends since high school. Paul and Noel were in town from Virginia where they now live. Paul has been bound to a wheel chair for many years as a result of a motorcycle accident that left him paralyzed from the chest down. We have grown closer to Paul and Noel in recent years for many reasons because they also have a young son who has had to battle some very complex medical issues. Our families have endured a lot of common scenarios in dealing with our sons’ health care. They are very knowledgeable about their son’s very unique diagnoses.

They have visited our home several times in the past and we try to have them over or go out with them when they are in the area. Paul can drive. My wife did not even know that cars and vans could be equipped like this until just a few years ago. Paul has a specially equipped van that he can travel with unassisted. He can open the right side sliding door and lower the ramp with a remote control. He then navigates his motorized chair into the van where he rolls right up to the driver’s controls. His chair locks into place and he is ready to go. The use of these features of his van is where the problem came in last night.

Last night Paul parked his van in a handicap spot with the right side facing one of those blue striped areas. You know the ones I am talking about. The are found right next to the handicap space with the diagonal lines that are painted the same color blue as the handicap symbol found painted on the pavement in the handicap space. The purpose of these diagonal lines are alert people not to park there to allow for specially equipped vans to lower their ramps and lifting systems. Paul parked and exited his van using this nice space as it was intended to be used.

After the reunion gathering, Paul, Noel, Sherry, and I were the last of our group of friends to depart. The four of us talked for the better part of an hour just outside the door of the clubhouse. We then proceeded towards our vehicles to find a cute little Honda Element parked about two feet away from the right side of Paul’s van. There was absolutely no way to get the ramp down. There was no way to get him positioned in front of the ramp even if it had come down. His vehicle was rendered useless by the position of the other vehicle. Now we considered for one short minute the possibility that one of use could stand in there and use the controls to move the van back far enough to clear the other vehicle. Noel tried that once in the past when facing a very similar situation. She ended up bending the Paul’s van and another car in the process. We also thought about putting the van in neutral and attempting to push it back far enough for Paul to get in but I was really the only one immediately available to push. The most logical option was to go back inside and ask the DJ to announce a description of the vehicle that needed to be moved from blocking access to a handicap equipped van. I gladly took on this duty and proceeding back into the building. I found that there was no one in there except the DJ who was packing up, some club staff, and a few stragglers from the reunion. I asked each of them if they drove a Honda Element. No one claimed the vehicle. The club staff offered to call a tow company and I gladly accepted. The remaining few of the reunion attendees were gathered outside the front door. I stopped by every single group of people standing around talking and asked if any of them owned a Honda Element. I did not find the owner of the Element, but I did get some very proud responses from some who wanted to make sure I and others knew they drove Hummers, Mercedes, or BMWs. Once I explained why I was asking, they quickly piped down. I am guessing that these overly proud folks were a little embarrassed about using this unfortunate circumstance to play the “mine is bigger than yours” game.

I went back out by Paul’s van where Sherry was waiting with Paul and Noel. I told them that I could not locate the owner of the vehicle and the staff was calling for a tow truck. A few minutes later the lights flashed on the car like someone was hitting the lock button on a remote. I immediately yelled out that who ever owned this vehicle should move it immediately because a tow truck was being called to haul to off. No one responded and the few groups of remaining folks just stood a looked at us like were crazy.

A few minutes later a couple of the clubhouse staff members came out. One of them said that none of the towing companies would respond to this situation because they had no one to pay for the tow. The staff then called the North Charleston Police to see if they could help. The police arrived a few minutes later. They proceeded to inform us that there was nothing that they could do. The officer said that since this was private property they could only leave a situation on the car for $25 for illegal parking, and they had no authority to order a tow truck to move it. The officer said that he could write the owner a $200 ticket if they could be located. We were stunned. I asked the officer what Paul was supposed to do if the owner could not be located. He just shrugged and walked back to his car to run the tag number. He was going to see if they could locate the owner and that was about all he could do.

Here we were a good ten miles from Paul and Noel’s hotel with no way to transport him and his chair (about 600 lbs) and nothing that could be done to help us if the owner could not be located. We could have paid for a tow truck to move Paul’s van or the other vehicle, but how is fair for one of use to pay to get Paul out of this situation?

It was about this time that a second police car arrived. Then the lights flashed on the Element again. Then we saw a woman walking in our direction from the front of the clubhouse. We asked if she owned this vehicle and she confirmed that she did. We told her that the nice officer would like to speak with her. He asked here to first move her vehicle and she did so. The officer then came over and asked if we wanted him to cite her with the $200 ticket. I told Paul that I would appear in court as a witness, but it was up to him as to whether to pursue the charges. The woman told the officer that it was raining very hard when she arrived at the clubhouse and that she did not realize it was a “no parking” area. It had been raining hard earlier, and there was not a sign in front of the space. There were only the pavement markings. Paul and Noel decided to let it go without pressing the charges. They displayed an amazing spirit of forgiveness even though the woman didn’t even ask them to forgive her.

Sherry and I talked in detail about this experience on the way home. We learned just how difficult life can be when a person in a wheel chair is faced with circumstances like we witnessed. While no one was hurt, this was certainly a violation of Paul’s rights in my opinion. He could not make use of his vehicle due to this woman’s choice in parking spaces. Ignorance of the situation is not really an excuse. I have been told that a few times in my life by officers writing tickets for my speeding.

The moral of this story is to be aware of your surroundings and how your seemingly innocent actions may affect others. Use common sense when arriving late to a function. If most all of the spaces in the parking lot are full then you should look very carefully before parking in that one little space right near the building. It is probably vacant for a reason. And by all means, DO NOT park in a handicap space if you are not transporting a handicap person regardless of how far you might have to walk.

012345

Wednesday, April 5th, 2006

I could not resist this one. This post was made at 01:23AM on 4-5. It is a variation of the time and date combination that many others have been talking about today. Tonight the time and date can be displayed in a unique way that we only get to see every one hundred years. At two minutes and three seconds after 1AM it was 01:02:03 on 04/05/06.

I promise that I did not email Michelle Malkin about this today.

April Fools For Some

Saturday, April 1st, 2006

La Shawn Barber has posted an I am not who you think I am post. Let’s just pray that this really is a joke. Could something like this really happen? I know it could because I run another blog by another name. It is nothing bad and nothing I would be ashamed of if I got outted over there. I just started it as an experiment to see how other bloggers would react to different approaches when requests came in for trackbacks or link exchanges. La Shawn’s blog is way more popular and she has been published and interviewed in too many places to have got away with something like this. I am Hank Osborne. I promise.

For me April 1st marks a sad day in my history. This is the day that I buried my dad in 1990. He died of suicide by way of a self inflicted gunshot wound. He was a Baptist preacher at the time. That is just a tiny bit of my true story. Many people find it a miracle that I will even step foot into a church. Now look at the faith I have in God.

Iowa Rock

Tuesday, February 28th, 2006

Iowa Rock painted by Ray Bubba SorensenI received a story in an email a few days ago with this picture and several others attached. I found a DOD - American Forces Press Service story validating the email. This picture shows a rock in Iowa that Ray “Bubba” Sorensen II has painted every year for Memorial Day to honor our Veterans.

The email I received had the following text in it:

“For generations, kids have painted slogans, names, and obscenities on this rock, changing its character many times. A few months back, the rock received its latest paint job, and since then it has been left completely undisturbed. It’s quite an impressive sight.”

Visit Bubba’s web site at bubbazartwork.com.

Hat tip: E. Fisher

Tech Land on WordPress 2.0.1

Tuesday, February 21st, 2006

The Tech Land of Ozz is being migrated from Blogger to WordPress 2.0.1. The problems with Blogger trying to publish using ftp to personal domains continue to hinder blogging. Here is a copy of the error that I have been getting when trying to publish my Blogger posts using ftp:

001 java.net.ConnectException: Connection timed out/index.html

The Tech Land of Ozz will be where I post pure technical stuff in the future. I may cross post some things over here, but I plan to build that blog as a separate technical blog.

Open Post Monday - WayBackMachine

Monday, February 13th, 2006

The WayBackMachine Internet Archive is way cool. It is great for a laugh or too drudge up some views of the days of old. I even laughed at my own sites in this archive. Below are a few notables that you might find interesting. I think that Drudge Report has got to be the least changed web site format that I pulled up. Below shows the Drudge Report site back on December 6, 1998 as a sample of what you will see over at WayBackMachine.com.

Drudge Report Archive

Other notables that you can click to see their archive listings led me to find that La Shawn Barber and Glenn Reynolds were once Blogger users. The Instapundit seems to have held his own for the longest. The Michelle Malkin archive of 3/1/00 led me to a story at the Jewish World Review. Below is the first paragraph from that story.

“WHERE HAVE ALL the churches gone? From Oregon to Florida, houses of worship are getting zoned out of their neighborhoods by government regulators who put high-priced sod above G-d.”

I wonder why she could not spell out God?


Welcome to the open trackback Monday. Here are the the links to track this post.

Post URL:
http://www.hoei.com/blog/archive/2006/02/13/217/

Trackback URL:
http://www.hoei.com/blog/archive/2006/02/13/217/trackback/

Check out these other blogs: Mark My Words, Freedom Folks, RightWinged, Don Surber, Blue Star Chronicles, Quietly Making Noise, and Conservative Cat.

Intelligence and Success

Monday, February 6th, 2006

This is a pretty touchy subject in my opinion, but one worth some attention. La Shawn Barber has opened this subject and she seems to be doing a pretty thorough job of addressing it. Her post titled Intelligence: Some Research is quite interesting.

I am one of those high scoring folks when it comes to qualification tests. I scored at the top on my military AFQT with a 99. I was also told that I scored higher than any applicant had ever scored when applying for a job in an oil refinery after discharging from the US Air Force. There were approximately 2000 people applying for five positions. I got hired. That test was a combined test of math, mechanics, and chemical knowledge. Most of it was the general IQ type of questions. I don’t know that I have ever taken a real IQ test, but I scored in the top 1% on the first Internet IQ test I ever took. I think that is pretty good from what their statistics said.

Now from the perspective of someone who has scored reasonably high on intelligence measuring tests, I will guarantee you that your score on these tests in itself has little impact on your overall success in life. I believe that success in life is mostly a choice and is definitely relative. By relative I mean that each person has a different scale for measuring success. By choice I mean that you have a choice in how you respond to the results of an situation where you “fail” to measure up. Yes, you needed to score good to even get an interview with that refinery mentioned earlier. If you measure success as getting a job in a refinery then I guess you are not very successful if you did not score high enough to get an interview. With that said I will acknowledge that a person’s ability to gather and retain information will help in becoming and remaining successful, but I do not believe it is the determining factor in most circumstances. What do I think is most important? I think that attitude, personality, education, motivation, social skills, and current social environment are all very important factors in just about career related success measurement.

I said that these tests within themselves have little to do with your level of success. I do believe that the way people let their view of themselves become degraded based on how they perform on these tests does affect success in life in general. How can it not? When you fail to get an interview for a job or you fail to get accepted into a college or you fail to get your first choice of jobs in the military, you can easily get depressed and loose motivation to do something different that you can be successful at.

I have been on the other end of this subject. I scored well when tested and tended to perform well against my peers technically, but I still did not blast out into great success. Where I had a problem for the longest time had nothing to do with my test scores. My problem had to do with my heart. I treated people badly. I had a bad attitude and I pretty much didn’t care what people thought or at least that was the attitude that I intentionally displayed. I have learned the hard way how attitude can affect success. The reasons for my attitude are a story for another day. Now I try to measure everything against God’s standard rather than my own. I am much more successful than ever as a result. I think that everyone has an opportunity for success in this country today no matter what their race is or how they scored on some test. You just have to get your head screwed on straight and put the failures behind you no matter what the failures or how they were dealt into your life.

I am a

Thursday, February 2nd, 2006

I am a Network Security Engineer and it is a good thing since my answers to this quiz say I should be an Engineering major. My actual major in college (night school) was a BS in Computer Science. I had just been accepted into a double major program in Electrical and Computer Engineering at Clemson when I found a woman in Charleston who I could not live without. We have been married for 5 1/2 years and have a beautiful family. I still get to do fun Engineering stuff for Uncle Sam to bring home the bacon.

My Major should be Engineering

Thanks to Danny Kaye who got this from The World of Stuff.

Am I a Disgruntled and Begrudging Blogger?

Tuesday, January 31st, 2006

This posts is in response to La Shawn Barber’s questions on her blog this morning. She asks the following questions shown in italics. My responses to those questions are in bold. You can read more responses to these questions in the comments section of La Shawn’s post titled Disgruntled and Begrudging Bloggers.

“1) Do you or someone you know spend 50 percent or more of your blogging time writing (negatively) about other bloggers?”

No. I don’t nor do I know anyone who spends 50% of their time writing negative about other bloggers other than maybe the guy who gave me my first ever trackback. I will get to that in a minute. I do my share of holding others accountable like with my post on Sunday Google China Censoring or NOT?.

“2) Do you or someone you know begrudge another blogger’s “success”?”

No. I believe that there cream will rise to the top. Bloggers who are good will get return visitors from those who land on their blog(s) from searches or links.

“3) Are you or someone you know angry, perplexed, stumped — or the adjective of your choice — because certain bloggers seem to get linked frequently by the bigger bloggers, although you believe your posts are much more interesting and well-written?”


Yes I am amazed at how some bloggers get so many links, but not surprised. Although I do not believe my posts are that much more interesting or well written. I write much of my stuff during the middle of the night and quite often make mistakes. God willing, I will get better with time and write more interesting stuff.


“4) Do you believe it is wrong, impractical, wasteful, comical, useful — or the adjective of your choice — to build a reputation by trying to tear down other bloggers? “


Yes! I have a big problem with those blogs built on a foundation of negative criticism of other bloggers. I have been the target of a blog that built its foundation on tearing bloggers down. As a matter of fact I got my first ever trackback from a post that was dedicated to tearing me and my blog down. I got so excited about getting my first trackback. I did not pass on the chance to answer the critic. Here is the post titled Yee Haa..I got my first trackback”. That said, I do believe in holding each other accountable. (See answer to question 1)

What is the foundation of my blog? That really depends on which blog you are talking about. I have one blog where I have not revealed my identity. It is sort of an experiment. It is not negative and I don’t post there very often. As for the others:

The Land of Ozz: This blog is a Home of Everything Interesting to me and a few others. The numbers are growing. I get the most enjoyment from my Godcast postings of “The Living Bible”. I am working on getting some great new content for The Land of Ozz. I have a very good friend who has just received her certification as an herbalist. She has expressed interest in joining The Land of Ozz to share some great information on growing and using herbs.

Caden’s Page: My first/original blog. I started Caden’s Page on a static HTML page before I even knew that the term blog existed. Caden’s Page was created to keep family and friends updated on the events surrounding the birth of our second child because we did not and still do not have any family within 150 miles of us. Caden was diagnosed with a rare heart defect in utero that was linked to a genetic condition called Di George Syndrome. I have continued the blog due to some very positive experiences with others who have been touched by our experiences with Di George Syndrome and the dozens of medical professionals that we deal with on a regular basis. By the way, Caden will grow out of most of the things related to Di George and will lead a normal life.

Grill’n Time: It is about grilling and cooking in general. I enjoy cooking on and off of the grill. I have let this one rest for a while, but I am cranking it back up. I have a draft post sitting over there right now. It has recently been converted from Blogger to WordPress. Look for more tasty stuff to come soon on Grill’n Time.

The Tech Land of Ozz: This one is a pure technical blog. I have sort of let this one slide too. I cross post most of the stuff on The Tech Land of Ozz to this blog that you are reading in the Techie category. I may at some point just dismantle The Tech Land of Ozz and post all techie stuff in the Techie category of this blog. I am still undecided.

Summary: Blogging is a fun activity that helps me grow my web development skills and hopefully share something inspirational along the way.