Archive for March, 2008

April is Autism month

Sunday, March 30th, 2008

Here are my blurbs for autism month:

We are having our first parent support meeting in Hopedale MA. It’s for parents of teens and young adults with Asperger’s. We are affiliated with the Asperger’s Association of New England. Our first meeting is April 2 from 6:30 - 8:30 PM at the Hopedale library. Feel free to email me if you have any questions - or just show up!

There is an awesome article written by a woman who is a manager at CNN, and also aspie.

Bev has posted a great awareness video.

And my (not-so) little aspie will be graduating from college with honors. :)

!!!!

RAOAR!!

Friday, March 28th, 2008

Humorous Pictures
see more crazy cat pics

so busy

Sunday, March 23rd, 2008

starting to get to the end of my project at work - it’s crazy. And its time for finals.

I cannot wait till May.

pew pew pew

Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

Humorous Pictures
see more crazy cat pics

Is Facebook’s creator Aspie?

Saturday, March 15th, 2008

I don’t know if he is….but his interview with a girly-tech reporter sure makes it look like he may be. She asks him questions, he responds with one-word answers, she thinks he’s responding one way and all the geeks in the room (and watching online now) know he’s not responding they way she thinks he is.

People who aren’t geeks shouldn’t be allowed to be the filter for geek news.

And if he is aspie - how does he deal with the cameras constantly clicking?

I have been working on social media for a long time

Saturday, March 15th, 2008

Since at least 2000. I found a paper I wrote as an undergrad titled “Ethnography and Virtual Communities”. And wow my writing has improved in eight years. :)

Here’s a sample from the paper:

Historically, sociologists have used ethnography “to balance detailed documentation of events with insights into the meaning of those events” (Crabtree). They have noted that there are three basic environments where people interact: where they work, where they live, and the place where they go for companionship. This place that they go for companionship, “the place of idle talk and banter with acquaintances and friends, is often where the sense of membership in a community is achieved and experienced” (Thomsen). Since the traditional places that people would go to experience this idle talk, such as barber shops, pubs or cafes, are essentially gone, “it should not be surprising that millions of people throughout the world turn to the Internet to recreate and reestablish the third sphere of conviviality” (Thomsen).

The references are Steven R. Thomsen, “Ethnomethodology and Study of Online Communities: Exploring the Cyber Streets, 22 April 1998 and Andy Crabtree, The Contribution of Ethnomethodology-Informed Ethnography to the Process of Designing Digital Libraries, May 1988.

I have been interested in this for a long time I guess.

Where I’m at

Saturday, March 15th, 2008

1. Finishing my midterm. This means I am half-way through this semester. Dang only halfway??

2. Work - don’t even want to think about it. I’ll be in the office tomorrow (Sun) trying to keep things rolling on my project. It’s starting to stress me out.

3. Kenny’s home for Spring Break. Bri will be here next week.

4. Bri graduates in less than two months. From college!!

5. I sign up for summer and fall classes on Monday. This summer I am taking a class on how to write classes including some social media tools. Neat.

6. I am on vacation in May. That sounds like a good mantra right? “I am on vacation in May…I am on vacation in May…..”

:)

They deserved it

Saturday, March 15th, 2008

rickroll

via xkcd 

solo…..

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

Humorous Pictures
Enter the ICHC online Poker Cats Contest!

GA Eugenics

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

So, I have to post this to get it out of my head. I am trying to find out why my great-great-grandmother got sent to the crazy house for the better part of her life. One reason I am trying to find out is my daughter is on the autism spectrum, my cousins have kids on the spectrum, and my Aunt Linda was most definitely on the spectrum.

What if this poor woman was too? Mama called my great-Aunt (my grandmother’s sister), and she said that Linnie just got too hard to control What does that mean? Mama says Bigmama told her one time that Linnie took a kid by their arms and just was swinging them round and round. What does that mean? So, did Linnie do inappropriate things? Did she have meltdowns and freak out and physically hurt anyone that happened to get in her way (maybe even to help?) If so, yeah that is hard to control (sorry Bri, you’ve been there!) but for God’s sake you don’ t lock people up for that.

If she got locked up when Granny was 10 or so, no wonder my Granny was as self-sufficient as everyone says she was. And it kills me Granny had to go to a nursing home, she must have really hated that. Also, if Granny’s mama was locked up for so long, how did that affect her parenting skills, and then my bigmama’s parenting skills, and mama’s parenting skills, and now my parenting skills?

I have to know WHY she got locked up.

OK, back to Eugenics. Eugenics is the search for the master race. Even though GA was one of the last states to create a Eugenics law, they used it more than anyone else. This Atlanta Journal article is absolutely chilling. Apparently the Junior League of Augusta led legislative advocacy efforts to create a bill in the State of Georgia that would approve the sterilization of the “mentally deficient”. When the governor vetoed the bill (he joked that maybe one day they would declare him “mentally deficient” and he didn’t want them working on him!), a respected paper lamented “The scientific reasons for sterilization are so well-established and so sound that the governor is flying in the face of accepted practice by vetoing the bill (Larson).
Y’all this was not even 100 years ago. The law was finally enacted in 1937. And it was a class thing, not a race thing, at least at first. They wanted to get rid of “degeneracy, imbecility, insanity, etc among the lowest class of whites and negroes….by sterilizing the younger generation” (Larson).

From that same study comes this alarming statement:

A week before his inauguration, Rivers summoned state lawmakers to Milledgeville for an inspection of the state hospital. Rivers then called for “immediate and urgent action” to improve the “deplorable conditions” of the aged and overcrowded facility. Two weeks later, a thirty-five member legislative committee termed conditions at the hospital “unbelievable” and recommended a massive construction program to expand and modernize facilities (Larson).

I believe this was in 1937. My great-grandmother was still there. :(

According to the study, the Georgia League of Women Voters also wanted to see the “sterilization of the unfit” (what/who was declared “unfit”??)

The scary thing is, one argument for the practice was that by not adopting this “humane procedure”, Georgia was falling behind foreign countries that had adopted the practice of eugenics. Countries like Germany. (look at the date the law was passed….1937!)

AUGH how did any of my family survive!

The study is “Sex, Race, and Science: Eugenics in the Deep South” by Edward J. Larson.