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Conventional wisdom

“Conventional wisdom” refers to widely accepted, often unexamined, beliefs within a society or field. While appearing as early as 1838 to mean common knowledge, the phrase was popularized and defined in its modern context by economist John Kenneth Galbraith in his 1958 book The Affluent Society to describe ideas favored for their acceptability rather than their accuracy. 

History and Evolution

  • Early Usage (1838): The phrase appeared as a synonym for “commonplace knowledge” or “accepted beliefs,” used in various contexts before the 20th century.
  • Galbraith’s Coining (1958): Economist John Kenneth Galbraith is widely credited with coining the modern usage in The Affluent Society. He specifically used it to describe how ideas become “esteemed at any time for their acceptability”.
  • Refinement of Meaning: Galbraith emphasized that “The” conventional wisdom refers to ideas that are comfortable and predictable, often resisting new facts that might challenge them.
  • Modern Usage: Today, the term is used in political, economic, and social contexts to represent the dominant, often unchallenged, consensus. 

Key Characteristics

  • Resistance to Change: The conventional wisdom is often defended with intense loyalty and is used to explain complex topics through simple, widely accepted narratives.
  • Institutional Adoption: It can represent long-accepted expert opinions within institutions, sometimes restricting creative, new solutions.
  • Drawbacks: Because it is accepted without question, it can make it difficult to think creatively, leading to reliance on outdated information.

Six Months After I Finally Ditched the Contacts 👀

It’s been six and a half months since I had LASIK on both eyes, and honestly, it’s hard to believe how fast the time has flown. Looking back, making the decision to go under the laser was easily one of the best moves I’ve ever made.

If you’re tired of the “contact lens struggle,” here’s what my journey looked like—from a stressful surgery day to waking up with 20/20 vision.

A Rocky Start to a Smooth Procedure

The day of the procedure started with a bit of a headache—literally. My bus never showed up, so I ended up having to drive my truck to the clinic and leave it there overnight. Despite the stress of showing up late for the big snip, the actual procedure was quick and surprisingly painless.

Recovery started immediately. I got a ride home that afternoon, kept my eyes shut the whole way, and was knocked out by 3 PM thanks to the prescribed sleep aid. By the next morning, the goggles were off. I caught a 6 AM bus back to the doctor to recover my truck left overnight and—for the first time in years—drove my truck home as the sun rose without a single pair of glasses or contacts.

The Recovery Phase

The first two weeks weren’t perfect. I had to deal with:

  • The “Scratchy” Phase: My eyes felt irritated and dry, similar to the feeling many contact lens wearers know too well.
  • Protection: I wore anti-itch goggles for a week and rocked sunglasses every time I jumped on my bike.
  • The Drop Routine: I was supposed to use eye drops for six weeks. Admittedly, I wasn’t the most consistent (especially during my October road trip!), but by week two, the major dryness had already faded.

The “Wow” Moment

The real game-changer was my night vision. It took a little while to strengthen, but once it did? Wow. Everything became clearer and brighter. The excessive road glare and eye strain I used to get while driving at night in my big jacked up truck with contacts simply vanished.

Freedom from the Costly Ritual

Before LASIK, my life involved a constant cycle of ordering lenses, packing glasses for camping trips, and the endless hunt for soap and hand sanitizer to make sure I didn’t get an eye infection while poking my pupils.

Now? I just wake up and see.

I rarely experience dry eyes anymore—far less than I did during those final, irritating months of wearing contacts. Most days, I almost forget I ever needed vision correction at all.

Was Is It Worth It?

Contacts are fine, but let’s be real—they kind of suck. If you’re on the fence, I can tell you that the freedom of putting glasses behind you permanently is worth every penny. Life is just better when you can just see.

I guess they better tune up that OGS Steam Plant in Albany, it’s snowing out in April 🌨️

I guess technically the snow the steam plant produces is usually black in color, but it’s still kind of that unusual April snow, though it’s not sticking to the pavement in Delmar, and supposed to warm up but get very windy by afternoon.

Perfect weather for riding my bike to work, 🚲 actually the snow stopped a few minutes ago, though I’ll probably get somewhat wet riding in. Better make sure I have those other set of socks 🧦 in my office desk when I get to Assembly’s World Data Headquarters. A very unhappy looking Mourning Dove 🕊️ is peering in my window (what a pervert!), looking down on the rather white grass from the dusting of wet snow we got a few minutes ago. Honestly, I just don’t want to have to deal with the CDTA App now that my Navigator card 💳 is expired. Or the protestors at the Capitol. Wind is expected to be roaring by afternoon. 🌬️ If it’s too bad I can catch a bus home, but it’s usually not too bad in the hollow riding back.

Yesterday was a Monday and I was surprisingly tired 😫 all day at work, but I kept pushing on. Only one more majority district to update. 📂 The two supervisors were out, so I was managing everything besides my other normal responsibilities as director. I was asleep last night I don’t know around 7:30 PM as it was cold, 🛏️ and I was tired. Stopped at Hannaford on my bike ride home, got milk, and two impulse purchases – edmame and spinach. I do like edmame, I was told you’re not supposed to eat the shells, but I do as I like to maximize the fiber in my diet. But I also eat the skins on potatoes 🥔 and sometimes bananas 🍌. It helps move the crap through your pooper, 💩 and fills your stomach without a lot of calories. The world is built on manure. Stanton’s got their tanks of cow shit 🐮 rolling down past my parents house, as they prepare the fields for spring. I remember walking home, 🚶 ducking off the road and plugging my noise as they came rolling down the road, spewing diesel smoke and flakes of cow poop off tanker trucks.

It will be interesting to see how much gas prices go up today, ⛽ with the Trumpster threatening to blow up the bridges and power plants in Iran 🇮🇷 as part of his war criming scheme, that nobody seems to understand outside of the President’s form of public masterbastion. I guess it feels good and is groovy. I was too busy holding the multiple hats 🎩 at work yesterday to research and build truck caps, I think I will most likely go with an ARE Cap assuming that Ruth’s thinks I can take delivery before July. Kind of a bad time of year to get one built, as I’m sure it’s their busy time, but I couldn’t order one until I was 💯 percent sure of what truck I was going to get. The operators at work were asking when I would take the SuperDuty to work. See the first sentence of this paragraph, plus I want to keep it new as long as possible. Plus driving a SuperDuty in traffic doesn’t sound like much fun, as the 6.8L rumbles and slurps down fuel – it’s not Godzilla but it’s still an HD truck.

Why Iran’s Best Weapon is Cyber-Terrorism  🧑🏽‍💻 🏭 💥

Higher gas prices and rising food costs are now a given following President Trump’s escalation with Iran. But if the administration moves to bomb Iranian power plants and bridges tonight, we must ask: how will Iran retaliate? While a conventional strike on U.S. soil is unlikely, a digital offensive against our “soft targets” is a much more credible threat.

The Vulnerability of Soft Targets

I am skeptical that Iran could successfully launch a drone or bomber against the continental United States. However, they could effectively engage in cyber-terrorism against secondary infrastructure—places where security is lax and monitoring software is outdated.

While most critical infrastructure is not directly connected to the internet, many systems maintain some level of connectivity for remote monitoring. Iranian hackers could exploit these links in water treatment facilities or small chemical plants to trigger equipment failure, mismanage processes, or incite public alarm.

The Strategy of Small-Scale Disruption

To be effective, cyber-terrorism doesn’t need to destroy a major power grid or cause mass casualties. It only needs to prove that a breach is possible. The most likely targets aren’t the high-security hubs, but the “forgotten” infrastructure:

  • Small, family-run chemical plants.
  • Rural water treatment facilities.
  • Aging, sub-100 megawatt coal-fired power plants.

In these environments, 9/11-era vigilance has faded. Security is often as weak as a “1234” password. By manipulating sensors or feeding false data to plant managers, hackers could trick operators into making catastrophic decisions that create dangerous conditions.

The Real Cost: Our Response

The true danger of Iranian cyber-attacks isn’t the physical damage; it is the cost of our own reaction. If Iran successfully “messes” with obscure systems, the ripple effects would be massive:

  • Economic Impact: Skyrocketing water rates and the cost of mandatory security upgrades.
  • Operational Strain: Temporary shutdowns of factories and utility plants.
  • Loss of Liberty: New restrictions on public access to lands, reservoirs, and power plant grounds.

We have only recently regained the public rights and transparency that were lost in the wake of September 11th. By targeting small-scale infrastructure, Iran could force the U.S. into a state of defensive overreaction—inflicting massive economic and social impact without firing a single shot on American soil.


In the news this afternoon … U.S. warns of cyberattacks tied to Iran on water and energy systems.

“A vaguely worded warning from the Trump administration on Tuesday said that hackers backed by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps had begun a series of cyberattacks on water and energy systems across the United States. But the warning, issued by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, known as CISA, did not name specific facilities that had been struck or say whether any damage had been done. It said only that the attacks were focusing on equipment made by a major American producer of computer controllers.

The report was issued in conjunction with the F.B.I., the National Security Agency and the Energy Department, and said that the purpose of the Iranian-affiliated attacks was “to cause disruptive effects within the United States.” Most of the equipment targeted by the group, the report said, were “programmable logic controllers” made by Rockwell Automation, which turns out a widely used line of what are known as Allen-Bradley controllers.”