reasons

One of the main reasons that I refused to vote for Obama is that I knew heโ€™d bargain away Medicare, Social Security and other vital programs โ€“ and Congressional Democrats would go along, as heโ€™s a Democrat.

Turns out, heโ€™s doing just what I thought he would.

Surprise!

Need it

I realize I am an atypical user (but not that atypical), but Firefox suspending development of their 64-bit version is completely idiotic. I run up against the 2GB process limit of Firefox in 32-bit all the time:

image

Then my Firefox slows to a crawl.

Way to meet the future, Mozilla. Theyโ€™ve made the interface shitty, dumped many necessary features and now are retreating from necessary development. What next, a โ€œnew, innovativeโ€ 16-bit version that runs on fucking phones?

poor

Itโ€™s so true that you never get over being poor.

I remember looking in the refrigerator and seeing nothing but a few pieces of a loaf of white bread.

And I know that people from overall poorer countries have difficulty understanding this, but in rural America where I grew up you absolutely need a car to survive.

I remember my parents getting their car repossessed as they were unable to make payments. Imagine the effect that had on our lives — 10 miles from anywhere, and no car.

I remember looking through the couch cushions to find change to buy food.

My grandparents started helping out when I was 7-8, and life got better after that.

But Iโ€™ll always remember the desperation I saw in my parents and felt myself in the darkest times.

Now, I could quit working for years and be fine. If I were careful, I could probably quit working forever.

Now, I buy generally what I like and often donโ€™t even look at the price if itโ€™s something I really want.

But still, thereโ€™s always that nagging thought in the back of my head that asks, Do I have enough? What if the worst happens? What if someone takes it all?

Irrational thoughts, but having been poor, and having lived so close to the edge, those thought really never go away.