Category: blogging
Thor’s Day Rant: I Gave At The Office

This isn’t just a rant. It’s a proclamation: I won’t be giving anything to charity this year.I already gave at the office.

About midway through January, my car was broken into. Okay, "broken" might be too harsh of a word here as I suspect it was an unlocked back door (thanks, kids) that allowed the thief entry. I didn’t have to repair anything on my car. Nothing was actually "broken."

Nope, there I was, walking out to the parking lot after another hard day in the office, when I noticed the glove box open in my car. And papers pulled out. And my doors unlocked.

Oh, crap.

Sure enough, someone had rifled through my 1991 Toyota Camry. Which is in itself kind of puzzling. I mean, I drive a junker. It has rust spots and holes in the body and everything. The paint is peeling off the roof. Oh, sure it has a new high performance engine in it, and new tires, but outwardly, it looks like a piece of crap. I like to think of it as urban camouflage. Or at least, I used to.

What kind of a person is cruising the parking lot- which I might add is next to a Court House and Sheriff’s Office- and thinks, "Oh, I bet there’s good stuff to steal in that car!" And anyone looking in my car is going to see the toddler booster seat in the back, the blankets for the kids on the seats, the crappy, 1994 generic radio, the hole worn in my driver’s seat from the Leatherman pouch worn daily on my belt, the crayons on the floorboard. What is there to steal?

Oh, wait; maybe it was my spare change.

I keep a lot of spare change in the car – dollars and dollars worth of pennies in the center console. All the drive-thru change I get goes there for my oldest daughter. She gets a thrill at cleaning the change out of the car. Except for January- since it was stolen before she could get to it.

Okay, even that is not entirely accurate. The lazy @#$% that stole money from my car couldn’t be bothered with the $2 or $3 worth of pennies. Nope, they took the time to pick through and get the maybe $4 or $5 of quarters, nickels, and dimes. Wow. What a haul. I hope they didn’t spend it all in one place.

Of course, that’s not all I’m out. No, it’s more complicated than that. See, the intruder also searched my glove box, where I keep gas receipts and deposit tickets and slips. And maybe a spare checkbook. Sometimes it’s there, sometimes it’s not. So I had to go to my bank and get a new bank account number.

And that’s where the real trouble began.

First, there’s the time I had to spend going and getting a police report made. Then I had to go to the bank, with my wife, to open the new account, get new debit cards, order checks, etc.

Then there was the trouble of contacting the two autopayees I have, like my insurance company, and telling them I’m changing accounts. In particular, I had to tell them that my automatic monthly payments should still go through, rerouted by the bank, but if not, to let me know and I’d fill out new EFT forms.

So two weeks pass, and the new checks come in. Wrong. Wrong name for me, and my wife’s name is missing. That went over really well. A call to the check printer wastes a good half hour of time, as the little smart ass there tells me I have to go see my bank to get a name added. Then he tries to tell me where my bank is located.

"I know where my bank is," I responded. Smart Ass sneered over the phone (a skill he no doubt learned at the HP Customer Service Academy) and told me that he wasn’t saying I didn’t.

Fun stuff.

So it’s back to the bank on my lunch hour the next day to raise hell and order a second batch of new checks. With the right names- both of them.

February then rounded out with some excitement. Where in January my two automatic bill payments were deducted from the new account as promised by the bank, in February the bank decided not to honor them…Without telling me. The first payee was kind enough to contact me about it, and I sent in new ACH forms. Not so my insurance company.

On March 4th I contacted the insurance company, in person, and told them that my payment didn’t come out at the end of February as it was supposed to. I filled out a check, and the lady tells me, “that’s okay,” she just needed the account numbers; she won’t cash the check.

Sure enough, the same day, a payment is withdrawn electronically and I’m current again on insurance.

Five days later, the insurance company cashes my check, overdrafting my account. This requires a visit to the insurance office again. The insurance man doesn't even apologize. He just pledges to "look into it." Time to switch insurance agents, I reckon. And that's going to take more time and signing papers.

So, let’s see… I’m up to $38 for an overdraft fee, $150 for a duplicate insurance payment, and about, oh, I don’t know, 8 hours of my time. All in all, I figure this works out to over $300 of loss for me. I know that’s not a whole lot, but it’s more than I normally give to charities.

I sure hope whoever broke into my car really needed that $6 worth of change they stole. Like they were starving to damn death. Realistically though, I imagine they used it to buy lottery scratch offs or a pack of smokes, or maybe some drugs (I could be wrong there, no idea what drugs cost). Heck, maybe they bought some colored markers and invested in an eye-catching "will work for food" sign. Obama wants everyone to reinvest in America, right?

Whatever the thief did with my kid's loose change, that’s my charity for the year. This’ll be the first time in my life that when someone approaches me for a handout or a raffle ticket to aid something, I can, with complete and utter lack of guilt, refuse and declare, "Sorry, I gave at the Office."

 
The Illustrious Fidel removes stamp of approval

I find it quite interesting that, when in an election cycle, candidates (namely BO) invoke foreign leaders' approval to indicate global solidarity for themselves. To be more accurate, they use their surrogates like Michael Moore and Susan Sarandon.

Anyway, the wonderboy has already lost favor with one of the most generous and caring leaders in the world…Fidel Castro. Yes, known for his unfailing love for his people, Fidel has begun to criticize the actions of Obama. I thought the entire global community was singing and dancing in accord to the tune "We are the World," and that global peace was now at arms length…maybe Obama is just a mere mortal after all.

Who's next? Hugo Chavez?

 
*Obama redefines “Change We Can Believe In”

(Editor's note: Due to the lack of timely editing, this post should have been posted on Tuesday morning. In light of Wednesday's news, Santiago must be credited for Obama's disowning of Mr. Tom Daschle. Thanks Santiago for keeping BO in check.)

It was reported in The New York Times yesterday that Barack Obama’s rhetoric of ushering in a new era of responsibility in ethics reform, etc., is at odds with his actions thusfar as president. As a side note, it makes for comical reading as The Times desperately tries to justify the obvious inconsistencies between the Anointed One’s rhetoric and his actions. But I digress…

From the New York Times:

Barack Obama vowed to slay the demons of Washington, bar lobbyists from his administration and usher in what he would later call in his Inaugural Address a “new era of responsibility..” What he did not talk much about were the asterisks.

Oh, those pesky asterisks. I’m sure the liberal nutroots and quasi-intellectuals who elected Obama thought the man really meant what he said. However, he has shown he had other things in mind when he spoke of his "new era of responsibility " in cleaning up the beltway. So far, his commitment to clean up Washington has resulted in two cabinet picks who neglected to pay their taxes–one of which has withdrawn in disgrace. The other, former Senator Tom Daschle, while not withdrawing his name from consideration, has assured the American people that he is deeply sorry for his failure to pay $128,000 in back taxes. That’s “comforting.” I’m feeling much better now, especially since Obama has tendered his unconditional support of Daschle.

If that weren’t enough, there is the lobbyist who is now set to become the No. 2 guy at the Pentagon, and there are others who have been brought onboard the O’Train which we could rightfully call unregistered lobbyists. And let’s not forget how Obama’s administration worked their butts off lobbying legislators in order to pass a trillion dollar bailout package.

Kind of makes you feel all warm and fuzzy inside. That’s what I call, “Change We Can Believe In.”