Sunday, August 11, 2024

If I Were in Charge of the Olympics

Source: Naomi Baker/Getty Images
I don't know a damned thing about gymnastics, and even less about scoring gymnastics, but there are some basic principles that any sport should adhere to, imo.
  1. If judges take several minutes to compute a score, the athlete should be given at least as long to review the judges' work.
  2. If the athlete is given only one minute to protest the scoring, the judges should be given no more than one minute to declare the protest came too late.
  3. If the athlete is given only one minute to protest the scoring, another athlete shouldn't be given a whole day to protest that the first athlete's protest came too late to be considered.
  4. If the athlete is given only one minute to protest the scoring, the governing body shouldn't be given five days to decide the original protest came too late to be considered.
  5. Someone with a sense of fairness should be given however long it takes to realize that if the original scoring was, in fact, wrong, then correcting *that* mistake should carry more weight than correcting the mistake of accepting a protest that was submitted a few seconds too late.
  6. Judges shouldn't be allowed to ruin what had been up to then a beautiful Olympics.

POTD: Art Against Apartheid

"Spiral staircase winds,
Apartheid’s dark turns to light,
Freedom's fervent fight."


— h/t ChatGPT
From 2023 10 23 South Africa - Part 1

Today's photo-of-the-day is from the Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa (MOCAA) in Cape Town, South Africa. I'm providing two photos. The first is an interior staircase, which I consider to be a work of art itself. The second, the bonus photo after the jump, is artwork from the long struggle against Apartheid. The museum has a large collection of such artwork.

Click for a bonus photo.

Saturday, August 10, 2024

POTD: V&A Waterfront

"Sunset paints the pier,
Alfred's legacy is here,
Past and present cheer."

— h/t ChatGPT

From 2023 10 23 South Africa - Part 1

Today's photo-of-the-day is from the V&A Waterfront (Victoria and Alfred Waterfront) in Cape Town, South Africa. It's "a mixed-use destination located in the oldest working harbour in the Southern Hemisphere. With Table Mountain as its backdrop, the neighborhood contains art, entrepreneurs, and sustainable design." If you know your history, you know that Queen Victoria's consort was named Prince Albert, not Alfred. So what's with the name, Victoria and Alfred? It's named after Queen Victoria and her son Prince Alfred. "Alfred, while serving in the British Royal Navy, visited Cape Town and ordered construction of a new harbour for the colony."

Ken Hutchenrider Defends Himself

Source: City of Richardson

The Richardson City Council held two days of meetings to hear City Manager Don Magner present his recommendations for the 2024-2025 City budget. I've had concerns about what impact a recent collapse in sales tax revenues and the cleanup costs from the May storm might have on the City's financial outlook. Magner listed high interest rates and lingering price increases from past inflation as additional concerns. Still, Magner pronounced, "I think it's a very good budget considering all of the factors that are working against us." I'll add, Whew! We escaped a budget catastrophe.

Thursday, August 8, 2024

A Different Proposal for Form-based Zoning

Source: Nest Wellness Village

Recently, in The Wheel I commented on a proposed redevelopment of Clay Cooley VW. I feared that it wouldn't foster the vision or conform with the form-based zoning for the Interurban District. It's adding a repair shop, a body shop, and a vehicle storage lot to its work underway to greatly enlarge the auto showroom already approved by the Richardson City Council.

Contrast that with another proposed redevelopment that came before the City Plan Commission on August 7. It's for "The Nest Wellness Village". This post is being written before that hearing, so by the time this is published, there will have been news that isn't included here. I just had some immediate thoughts that I wanted to get down on paper.