Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Finals!!
Aghhh finals! They hath arriveth! That means zombie hall mates walking slowly down the hall in the wee hours of the night with giant cups of coffee in hand, that means piles of papers and trash building up slowly in the study lounge because every moment cleaning is a moment that could be spent studying, that means Wawa business revenue going way, way, way up and peaking just in the hours of 2-4 a.m. in the morning. It is a crazy alterna-world where people who have spent the precious year building up some level of social skill quickly revert back to their true nerd, hermit form. Aghhh finals? Ahhh, finals!
Behind TV Analysts, Pentagon’s Hidden Hand
Saw the article in the Washington Post today, saw it again in the New York Times, and this frankly upsets me to no small degree. I have to say that the Bush Administration has just lost all credibility with this one - going as far as to plant military analysts in in order to shine a good light on what is clearly a war that went wrong long, long ago? Yeah, good luck with that one fellows, how much are these analysts being paid again?
This situation along with the situation at Guantanamo Bay outline the hypocrisy of the Bush Administration's policies that have made the United States lose its credibility in the international world - after all, how can we justify fighting for democracy in Iraq and uprooting hundreds of thousands of people in the process when our own democratic system seems to be so, so flawed right now? The worst part of this though, is that the international community holds us in disdain when in fact international cooperation is what we need most right now in order to effectively fight terrorism. When our President tries to bend the rules, seems like we all lose.
This situation along with the situation at Guantanamo Bay outline the hypocrisy of the Bush Administration's policies that have made the United States lose its credibility in the international world - after all, how can we justify fighting for democracy in Iraq and uprooting hundreds of thousands of people in the process when our own democratic system seems to be so, so flawed right now? The worst part of this though, is that the international community holds us in disdain when in fact international cooperation is what we need most right now in order to effectively fight terrorism. When our President tries to bend the rules, seems like we all lose.
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
A Brief Wonderous Review of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao
If you haven't heard of this book yet, you need to get on this stuff NOW. The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao is touching, tragic, and, most importantly, laugh-out-loud nerdy. Oscar De Leon, aka Oscar Wao (a bastardization of Oscar Wilde) is a and I quote, "fat nerd from the ghettos." As if a book about such an apparent anomaly of a human stereotype could not be good? Pffttt, throw in a super feminist sister, a super hot mama, boyish pheromones, otaku-ness, a prostitute-lover, Star Trek references, and a fast-talking narrator that isn't afraid to ask how does a boy like Oscar end up so fucked up and we get tears, hilarity, and more than a little bit of humanity. =)
Notes on Fair Use (Warning: this may be a copyright infringement)
When I first began to read the article about a company that sells bundles of notes taken from a professor's class and books, my immediate thought was that that was wrong, it was clearly a copyright infringement. But then, the article drew attention to the fact that if doing so was a copyright infringement, then a student taking down notes in class and long-standing companies such as CliffNotes would also be in murky water - things that don't seem like copyright infringement to me necessarily. So that's when I realized that what I felt was really wrong with buying notes from a company was that it was an ethical infringement more so than a copyright infringement. But, ethics aside and sticking the the lay of the law, I would say that selling notes taken from a professor's class is not a copyright infringement. However, I am no law expert and this whole issue of "fair use" seems to me to be a very gray area. I propose this instead, how about we avoid this whole (very) gray and messy situation by letting professors who want their work "protected" have all potential students sign a waiver saying that they will not sell their notes for profit. That way, there were be a legally binding contract between the professor and the student so both know what they are getting into.
Just...tired
I can't seem to get fully "awake" these past few weeks. Really, I feel like I walk around and go to class in zombie mode half the time - eyes half-open, barely conscious. True, the late nights doing all the many essays that seem to pile up toward the end of the year hasn't been helping, but I think the real culprit is what I call the "end-of-the-year blues." That's what it is, I foresee the end of the year coming ever closer, and my motivation to do work drops coordinately. Meanwhile, my amount of work is increasing exponentially. In the past two weeks, I think these two things peaked in the opposite directions at the same time (no I'm not high, if I could draw you a little graph, you would understand, bah!) ... aaaannnddd so, I'm dead. Har, har! No.
It's actually not funny at all, I have straight A-'s in ALL my classes. Before you groan and start hating on me, let me explain! Granted, A-'s are not BAD, but they are the dead man's land of grades, really. You're just barely close enough to an A but you're not there yet and there is a long, long way to fall, yet the only way you could possibly bring your grade up is to get...well, an A (which obviously has been a problem for me since I only have an A-). Now the pressure's on me to get ridiculously high scores on ALL my final exams so I can bring my grade up. Otherwise, my grade will drop - all or nothing is where I am at. To be honest, sometimes I'd prefer to have a B or C just so I can have more leeway to bring my grade up or to just give up. Ughhh....
It's actually not funny at all, I have straight A-'s in ALL my classes. Before you groan and start hating on me, let me explain! Granted, A-'s are not BAD, but they are the dead man's land of grades, really. You're just barely close enough to an A but you're not there yet and there is a long, long way to fall, yet the only way you could possibly bring your grade up is to get...well, an A (which obviously has been a problem for me since I only have an A-). Now the pressure's on me to get ridiculously high scores on ALL my final exams so I can bring my grade up. Otherwise, my grade will drop - all or nothing is where I am at. To be honest, sometimes I'd prefer to have a B or C just so I can have more leeway to bring my grade up or to just give up. Ughhh....
Censorship
I just read the two articles on the censorship of the word "abortion" in a government-funded database and its subsequent removal and could not agree more with the removal of the censorship. Not like this should matter, but I'll say right now that I am personally anti-abortion - I myself would never get an abortion but either way though, I have to say that I am adamantly against the censorship of the keyword "abortion." After all, what can possibly be achieved by denying people who are thinking about a possible abortion, access to information on said abortion? As Melissa Just says in the first article and I quote, "Even if you were trying to make an argument to someone that abortion is a bad idea for them -- whether it's a health risk, or you're concerned about their mental well being, you wouldn't be able to find articles about your claim," she notes. "It's shutting off both the pro and the con access." I think everybody has the right to get access to objective, scientific information about abortion and let them come to their decisions - that is their right. Furthermore, if we had let this one slide, what next? Censorship of any terms that may possibly contradict the Bush Administration's agenda? All for the sake of federal funding? It is a slippery slope my friends and before you know it, we'll be no better than, say, Nroth Korea.
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