Saturday, April 16, 2011

Times Like These Make Me Want to Become Libertarian

When I was a junior in high school, my Sunday School teacher took me and my best friend on a weekend hunting trip. I remember two things from that trip. I shot a rabbit while walking back to the farm house to use the bathroom and my Sunday School teacher taught us how to play poker. At that time I was a very good Baptist, so we used .22 and 12 guage shells for chips and didnt play for real money. I had fun and from time to time would play, usually for no money or  maybe penny stakes.

I was re-introduced to poker through my brother-in-law and ESPN a few years ago and the very popular version of No-limt Texas Hold'em. I fell in love with the game. I love the strategy, the math, and the psychology of the game. I love what the game teaches about life. I love the history of game. Pick any topic and I can probably come up with a poker analogy.

Unfortunately, I am man of modest means and limited free time. I hope one day to have a place where I can host a regular game with good friends, but for now, its not in the cards I can't make a time or money commitment. Fortunately, through the magic of the internet, for the past several years, I have been able to feed my semi-addiction by playing poker online an hour or two a week.  I'm basically good enough to not lose money, so for the last 3 years the game has cost me one $25 deposit, which has flucutated in value anywhere from $250 to $2 (currently it sits at about $10).  Probably the greatest lesson I have learned from poker is the effect a positive or negative attitude has on the outcome of my efforts.

Friday, this simple little distraction was taken away from me by my tyrannical, freedom hating, nanny-state, individual-crushing government. In their overwhelming concern for the dangers of gambling addiction, Congress banned online-gambling (apparently online betting on horse races is not gambling) a few years ago. Yesterday, the New York U.S. attorney general indicted the heads of three poker site companies and seized their websites.

As a citizen of a democratic society founded on the principles of limited government, I become more and more frustrated every day with its intrusion into my life. I can't even trust a republican congress with a republican president to stay out of my business. I have a strong feeling a lot more people joined the Tea Party this weekend. I don't know what it's going to take, but I'm just about fed up.

I guess the positive side of this is that I will take those few hours a week I spent chasing a flush and get my house sold and my new house built, and the car-hole converted into a man cave with my own hand-made  poker table so I can have a real game among friends.

Friday, April 8, 2011

Debt and the Pending Government Shutdown

I was driving to work today listing to KFAQ1170 and Pat Campbell gave an excellent analogy to help the average guy understand the issues around the national debt, spending, and the looming government shutdown. All you have to do is reduce the scale and apply it to your own personal life. Begin with 1 Billion = 1 dollar, and 1 year = 1 month. Then:

You have a job that pays $2400 a month. Unfortunately, you are spending $3700 a month. You have done this long enough that if you keep borrowing $1300 a month, you realize you will be financially ruined possibly for life. So you and your wife decide you must cut back. But instead of cutting back $1300, you end up arguing over the difference between $33 and $66 dollars a month, and even over that amount, you are arguing over whether it is your Starbucks or her hair appointment.

And these are the people we thought were smart enough to run our country.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

How Long Have Ya Been Here?

Okay, I know I have fallen off the blog band-wagon for about 6 months, but this is new to me, and to be honest, I really hate writing deep down inside. Blogging and becoming disciplined in it is more an exercise in learning patience and perseverance than anything else. So, here I am trying again. Actually, I got fired up a couple of weeks ago on a topic and decided I wanted to write about it, but when I got here, I realized I had not finished my last subject. Finishing things I start is another habit I need to work on.

When I last left off in October, I was attempting to illustrate the insignificance of the amount of physical space I take up. Trying to understand that God created and maintains the vastness of the Universe and is still a personal God who is uniquely interested in me and has a plan for my life is something so mind-boggling it actually hurts to attempt comprehension. But as if that was not enough, God is not only the Creator of  physical space, he is also the creator of time. So. how do I fit in the time part of the Space-Time Continuum (shout out to all my Trekkie friends).

Actually, when God created the Universe, time was the natural by-product. Time only exists because there was a beginning. We measure time by marking physical events. The earth's rotation, the moon's revolutions, our planet's path around the Sun, the frequency of atoms vibrations, the birth and death of an individual. All of these give us our sense of time, and, what is hopefully obvious by the examples I gave, time is very relative. It's conditional on what it's being measured against. It's so conditional that a pretty smart guy by the first name of Albert figured out time can be relatively slowed down or sped up by the influences of mass and speed.

How does all this relate to my insignificance in the Universe? Well let's go back to my last post. I stated that my best hope is to live around 80 years or  so, give or take 20 years,(hopefully give). The year will be 2035 when I turn 80. Our country will be almost 260 years old, so my life will be about 1/3 the age the United States, which when you put it that way, really makes our country seem pretty young, and it is. So, let's go a little further, to say, 10 times my life, or 800 years, 1235. This would have been the height of the Middle Ages, just a few decades from the beginning of the Renaissance. Now lets go back 100 times my life to around 6000 B.C. This would be the time of the beginning of civilization when hunters and gatherers, became farmers and ranchers and the first permanent cities were built. If we go back 1000 times my life span, then we reach the period when most scientists believe humans began there existence and began spreading out across the planet.(Yes I am taking an "old earth" view, but to any creationist readers, this does not mean I believe in evolution, that's another topic). One important fact to also note is that generations are typically measured in 20 year spans, so at this point we are talking about anywhere from 8000 to 16,000 generations of humanity have lived on earth.

At this point, we can skip from counting in hundreds and thousands to millions and billions of years. Most scientists place the explosion of life forms on our planet as beginning around 600 million years ago. Again at this point I would have to use scientific notation to explain how short my life is compared to that number. From there, the estimated age of the Earth is 4.5 billion or 4.5 thousand million years old. The universe then triples that to somewhere between 13 and 15 billion years old. And all that time, before humans ever walked and communed with God, the Scripture tells us the stars, the rocks, the hills, the trees, everything living and non-living were praising Him.

When I begin to reflect on the vastness of time and space, two questions arise which I will give my answer  best guess in my next post:
If I am so small, why is God interested in me?
If my life is so short, why did God make the consequences of my actions in this life so important for eternity?