Paulie Hated Phones


There is a scene in “The Goodfellas” where Paul Cicero, the local mafia kingpin, would send his brother Tuddy who is also his off-sider, from house to house, relaying a message and receiving and passing on all kinds of messages.

Henry Hill said “Paulie hated phones”, and that was the reason the fat, almost squat Tuddy had to huff and puff from house to house and shop to shop, playing the role of a little bird in the mafia cauldron.

Paulie hated phones

I think how Paulie hated phone, is how some of us don’t take to emails these days. It makes for all sorts of difficulties. Henry Hill said of Paulie, “There were guys, that’s all they did all day long was to take care of Paulie’s phone call”.

 

I guess it’s either having those guys to take care of Paulie’s phone calls, or Paulie would never be in communication and the little local mafia in Brooklyn would never have functioned back in the 1950’s.

If we take to emails the way Paulie took to the phone, we too may never function and flourish.

There was an earlier entry on this:

Emails were the bane of my previous workplace. They would stream in throughout the day, regardless of the hour. Quite often they would come in late at night and some over-enthusiastic colleagues (including my erstwhile boss) would respond to them pronto.   In fact there was a time I too would be conscientious in responding to them regardless of the urgency. Those were the bad old days.

Nevertheless, emails can be and is still a very useful basic tool. It is the manner we use it which determines if it becomes a bane, pain or a very useful servant. While it can be a blunt tool, discarding it or even using it just sparingly can mean we are short changing ourselves and depriving ourselves of an efficient and effective communication tool.

Firstly, it is a fantastic tool for communicating data with some very quick commentary notes. Whereas I can for example send you a text with my colleague’s phone number, if I want to tell you that this colleague usually doesn’t look at his text message during work hours because he is on the road a lot and only checks his mobile for messages once every few hours and it is therefore better to give yourself at least half a day before expecting a response but if you need a quick response you may wish to call his wife who he calls every half an hour because she is very pregnant I might send you an email instead to convey all that extra bits of information.

I may also want to tell you that this colleague also has some quirks – it would helpful if you sent him that text either closer to noon or closer to the end of the day because that’s when he is most likely to check his mobile and he gets wound up if he checks his mobile and finds a message which is several hours old. Ideally however, this colleague prefers an email instead, which he checks around 6pm every day for sure and at the very least.

All of the above information may also be required by several other people. I know you will want that information straight away but Johnny only needs it later in the morning and Tom, maybe in the arvo. Instead of calling you now I’d send you an email and copy Johnny and Tom in. This way I spend one third of my time compared to if I called you, Johnny and Tom.

I can also forward that email to anyone else who may want to know the best way to contact my colleague. I can do this anytime and to as many people as I like and I can’t catch my intended recipient at a time he or she is available to speak with me – they can retrieve and read that information at their leisure and convenience.  Finally I also have a record of what sent and to whom I sent as well as when I sent them.

We can get a lot done through emails that way. At the very least we keep in touch, rope every relevant person into the loop, maintain a sense of momentum in the line of communications and stay abreast of things. Everyone in the loop share a common platform of information and everyone can expect all in the email loop, to have that common knowledge.  If we continuously provide information and commentary through that channel within that community, that community can become informed, vibrant and communicative.

How it is pitched


On the latest political polls… whereas Fairfax and News Limited are saying Labor is polling 26% down from its previous record low of 27%, 774 ABC piped that Julia Gillard has an approval rating of 35%, up from 34%. In that 10 minute window that was my drive to work, nothing was said about the record low Labor is polling.

So why isn’t the ABC made subject to the media inquiry being bandied about, if examples of bias occur so easily?

When Harry Trashed Kenny


 

When Harry Belted Kenny

Harry Redknapp that is, which makes it Kenny Dalglish of course.  4-0! I, and every man and his dog, had thought Liverpool was on the up. His signings, particularly of Suarez and Adams, were I thought inspirational. So how did they end up losing by that margin?I just read that result a short while ago – well done Harry!

United, Books and Poverty


I really thought I could wake up to watch the Chelsea game. It was supposed to be 1am, I went to bed just after 11pm and when I woke up, it was 3am. I flicked on the ScoreMobile App on the phone – 3-1. Brilliant! I went back to sleep, sort of regretting not waking up to watch it but happily curled up in bed.

Truth be told, after the mid-week bump against Benfica when we appeared to have descended onto a normal plane of playing field, I thought there was a chance we probably couldn’t sustain the level of wonderful and emphatic wins. Especially against a Chelsea side beaming with great new signings like Juan Mata, and the new (shrewd sounding) coach in VB (Villas Boas).

To win by scoring 3 first half goals was quite brilliant, Chelsea’s apparent profligacy notwithstanding. With the noisy neighbours managing only a draw in SW6 this win was particularly sweet, as it now means a 2 point gap ahead of Manchester City. All that remains now is for Ryan Giggs to score in the league to retain the record of scoring in every single season of the domestic league since its inception in 1992. Almost 38 years old and still producing the goods. What a legend.

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I was reading an article about how many suburban shopping centres no longer have any bookstores and people have to either travel to other suburbs or the city or shop online, to get books. It really sounds like as a society, we are chasing stuff like fashion, health, food, pets and electronic entertainment ahead of good old fashioned source of knowledge and entertainment found in books. Tress and I were at the Westfield Doncaster Shopping Centre yesterday arvo – I was looking for a pair of casual shoes – and the representations of fashion, health, food, pets and electronic entertainment are really pervasive. Personally, other than Koorong Book Shop and Amazon, I really don’t shop for books anywhere else. Apparently high rents in shopping centres exclude bookstores so it really is a reflection of our society now – how we price other things much more highly than books.

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We were at a forum on Friday night, on the topic of global poverty and christian social engagement. It was organised by World Vision and the speakers included John Dickson from the Centre for Public Christianity, Dr Jayakumar Christian from World Vision India. I thought it really gave a good foundation for the idea that our work in relation to poverty alleviation must be based on our understanding of God and His relationship with His creation. I will always have time for such truth based activities. Dr Jayakumar Christian’s talk was especially illuminating and I hope to follow up in finding out more about this – got a copy of his book, “God of the Empty-Handed“.

It was a good weekend.

Ward Robe Faux Pas


I was in a rush this morning and ended up wearing different coloured socks. That made me feel old. 😦

My socks!

I also forgot my cuff links and resorted to bull clips… really feeling old now!

bull clip for cuff links… sad

Gillard and Media Inquiry – More like Malaysia Everyday


Gillard looks more like Najib Razak every day

Step by step, the Gillard Government is becoming more and more like the UMNO Government in Malaysia. The issue now is control over media. Never mind what Senator Conroy said the inquiry is about – it is about shutting down criticism over the Gillard Government.

See this interview with Bob Brown, PM of Australia – at least he can be credited with honesty in this case. He said it is about controlling the Murdoch Press.

I dont like the Murdoch press myself – things like The Sun paper in the UK may be a lot of fun when you are young or drunk (or both) but it is appalling in all other respects. The way they (News of the World and Murdoch Press) go about getting leads and breaching privacy of the most vulnerable, is really disgraceful. There is no reason however, to think what happened in the UK is also a problem for Australia.

The only problem with the press in Australia is with Julia Gillard and Bob Brown, the Prime Minister of Australia. They dont want criticism. They want to shut down or control their critics. That is very Malaysian. Gillard and Najib Razak are looking more and more alike every day.

…to the setting down…


image

His name is to be praised

I was taking LBJ out again at the oval and again, I was taken by how lucky (or to be church PC – blessed) to have such great views literally at our doorstep. This oval has beautiful trees surrounding it, with a few (3-4) more picthes around just metres away, as well as nets just next to  the clubhouse at the edge of the oval. All this, directly across the road from where we are. Scenes like the above are just a few steps away. On a sunny day, the ending is a majestic bow of the sun which leaves great colours and hues. Even my lowly smartphone camera could capture a glimpse of such beauty.

Until recently, when such glorious splendor unveils itself, I would still be at my desk, cranking out some opinion or advice, and leave the office when the nature show’s all over, and trudge along in the dark, to get onto the tram and train. It has been magnificent to be able to visit this gift of nature, so accessible and so glorious, on a regular basis. I feel really rich indeed. And ever so grateful.

 

Protecting, and Journeying with Individual Versus Doing the Right Thing…


Senator Nick Xenophon has outed a senior catholic priest in relation to allegations of sexual misconduct against him. His reason? See this and the following extract:

‘The people of the Brighton parish have the right to know that for four years allegations have been outstanding that the priest, Ian Dempsey, raped John Hepworth and that church leadership has failed to make appropriate inquiries into this matter and that church leadership had failed to stand this priest down as a matter of course while inquiries take place.”

Was this the right thing to do on the part of the Senator? After all it was only an allegation, by someone who might have had reasons to be aggrieved in relation to a separate matter, someone who might have had an axe to grind. The priest had also categorically denied the allegation.
What it does show however, is the responsibilities of the leadership. That there was no inquiry, no apparent action taken in response to the allegation, was what disturbed many. If the inquiry had taken place and perhaps no standing down but some interim measures imposed on the priest while the inquiry is on foot, might have satisfied some, no least the parishioners.
The no-action response was a no-no. Church leadership should never be seen to have done nothing.
Protecting an individual must be taken into consideration but must never be the prime driver of most decisions.
Discerning what is right, must always be the first and prime process.

Refreshing change


Strangely, my decision to skip a church meeting tonight turned out to be brilliantly refreshing. Staying home to clear some work and then settling down to a Denton interview followed by a Clapton guitar festival, all accompanied by a Glen Moray single malt was precisely the break I needed from some mindless numbling and stumbling stuff.

Good Intentions and Passion – Not Always Right


The age old saying that “the path to hell is lined with good intentions” needs to be uttered every now and then. This is important to stress the importance of what is right and what is not, not just the attitude or intention. To wit, note David Gallop‘s very valid point, with which I agree, albeit reluctantly – being a Melburnian.

David Gallop is the rugby league chief who was booed recently by fans of Melbourne Storm rugby league team. Obviously this relates to the the punishment dished out to Melbourne Storm for breaching the salary cap restrictions. Storm cheated and paid the price. What did the fans expect – that because they have a passion for their team and because their team has equal passion and the best of intentions, their wrong action didnt matter?

David Gallop said the fans’ passion didnt justify booing him. He said even terrorists had passion and that passion could in no way justify their cause or actions. He is right. He is, I guess, not likening the fans to terrorists but their misplaced passion and allowing that misplaced passion to drive wrong outcomes. In that sense, their behaviour is no different from that of terrorists.

Good intentions and a passionate approach don’t always make things right. If there was a wrong, it needs to be called out, regardless of whether good intentions or passion drove that wrong.