The Future

During my lunch break, I walked over to the library to return a book. I walked through a park and saw two big groups of children playing. They must have been 5 or 6 years old. And I thought – it’s conceivable that some of them could live into the 22nd century. There are undoubtedly people alive today who will live until at least the year 2100.

There are times when I find myself thinking, wow, I’m 31 years old? I remember when 30, let alone 31, seemed OLD. Old old. So often I live in the present – or at least in the present phase of my life, i.e. Newark and New York City in the first decade of this century – that I forget the other lives I’ve lived in the past. A high school student in Japan. A college student in Virginia. A little kid in the suburbs. Wow, I’ve lived a lot so far.

I will turn 80 in 2053. I hope I manage to live until at least the halfway point of this century. It would be nice to live even into the 2060s. Of course, by then, barring unforeseen (albeit likely) technological advances, I’ll be a doddering old fool, out of sync with the times, just like how Miss Daisy seems much more suited to those big elegant 1940s Buicks than those ugly early 1970s cars. The kids will be cyberporting around with their identity chips in their heads, and I will be old and lost, pining for the old pre-millennial days, while people laugh at me.

Hopefully, in the 2000s and 2010s and 2020s and 2030s and 2040s and into the 2050s, lots of great stuff will have happened over my lifetime to make it all worthwhile.

Google AdSense II

You may recall that a few days ago I was denied acceptance by Google AdSense. After reading some of the comments to that entry, I emailed Google AdSense yesterday afternoon.

I ask you to reconsider your decision not to allow my site (http://www.tinmanic.com) to use Google AdSense. Your program policies list “excessive profanity” as a reason to deny use of Google AdSense. Yet a search of other sites that use Google AdSense reveals that exceptions are being made to this policy: see http://www.dooce.com, for instance. Do a Google search on “site:dooce.com f**k” or “site:epenthesis.org f**k” and you will find profanity on such sites.

My blog was named last week by The Advocate magazine, the nation’s foremost gay and lesbian magazine, as one of ten “must-read blogs” – see this list: http://www.advocate.com/current_story_1_w.asp?id=15772

I write about personal issues, political issues, social issues, theater, and more. And my use of profanity is sparing.

Therefore, I ask that you please reconsider the decision not to allow my site to make use of Google AdSense.

Thank you,
[me]

I received the following response this afternoon:

Hello Jeff,

Thank you for your continued interest in Adsense. Our AdSense representatives review all AdSense applications according to our Terms and Conditions (http://www.google.com/adsense/terms) and our program policies (http://www.google.com/adsense/policies). I apologize if the prior disapproval of your application was made in error.

I have now reviewed and confirmed that www.tinmanic.com meets all of our policies. Your application has been approved. Please check for a separate application approval email for your records. The approval email also includes detailed instructions on how to access your new account and get started.

And the official approval email is in my inbox as well.

I’m pretty impressed that they took my appeal seriously. It’s nice that organizations have a mechanism to re-examine such things. Thanks, Google AdSense!