Friday, January 02, 2009

Very Belated Election Day Comments

Originally written October 13th, 2008:

Aujourd’hui est la veille de la quarantième élection fédérale de l’histoire du Canada. Selon les résultats du sondage quotidien de l’intention de votes CPAC-Nanos, lequel que je suivais depuis avant le début de la campagne, les Conservateurs gagnent 34,2%, les Libéraux reçoivent 26,7%, le NPD a 21,4%, le Bloc commande 9,5% de l’électorat, et le Parti Vert apprécie 8,2%. C’est également important de reconnaître qu’une seizième des électeurs commis n’avaient pas encore choisi le 11 octobre.

Ce qui est important pour les gens de savoir est que si on a un amour pour ce pays, et des rêves pour son avenir, si ceux concernent des droits de la personne, les soins de santé, l’immigration, les droits des citoyens sur l’Internet, le respect pour des cultures et des fonds pour qu’elles puissent rester vivantes et vibrantes, pour la sécurité économique ou nationale ou environnementale, c’est la responsabilité du monde de voter. C’est une impérative de participer au grand jeu qui va déterminer le futur pour ce pays. Si on lutte contre les pouvoirs des multinationales ou des racistes, si on manifeste sur des campus ou des blogues, dans les rues ou en écrivant des mails ou des lettres de papier, on doit voter. Si on veut que des changements de n’importe quelle taille ou que les choses ne changent pas de tout, il faut qu’on s’exprime aux urnes demain.

J’ai entendu des plaintes des étudiants autour de la nation et sur mon propre campus à l’Université de Calgary et je les ai lues aussi. Parmi les commentaires, j’ai entendu il y a une semaine dans mon cours de Français qu’il y avait des gens qui ont décrit les politiciens comme étant corrompus et stupides et des autres qui n’ont pas voté puisqu’ils habitent au campus de l’Université de Calgary au lieu de leurs circonscriptions d’origine et n’ont pas cru pouvoir voter. Pendant les dernières cinq semaines, il y avait des reportages et éditoriaux sur l’Internet, la radio, la télé, aux journaux, aux journaux des campus, magazines et aux baladodiffusions. Des publicités des partis politiques et des groupes de citoyens ont remplis les sites et les pages et les écrans de Youtube et des télés et les espaces publiques ont connu des barrages de signes des candidats de plusieurs partis et campagnes individuels. Chaque matin des dernières semaines je voyais la publicité pour JustVoteDammit.com quand je montais au train. Avec tous ces opportunités pour s’informer, si on préfère de passer des heures à YouTube ou SurfTheChannel ou à lire des articles qui disputent les meilleurs façons d’appliquer le maquillage, c’est dommage. On devait consacrer quelques minutes pendant les trente-six journées depuis l’annonce par la gouverneur générale de l’élection pour chercher les nouvelles et les sujets importants liés à l’élection.

Si certains de mes camarades de classes n’ont pas pris le temps qu’il prend de boire un café pour en discuter ou de regarder un site web, je peux être confiant dans les faits suivants :

La Toronto Star a écrit que la proportion de Canadiens et Canadiennes qui ont regardé les débats des chefs dépasse le nombre qui ont vu le débat vice-présidentiel (3 millions de Canadiens ont regardé le débat des chefs versus 1,65 millions le débat vice-présidentiel selon la Star, article disponible à http://www.thestar.com/federalelection/article/511713);

Et j’ai au moins deux amis qui l’ont enregistré (même si un m’a avoué que le débat ne changerait pas sa choix) pour le voir plus tard parce qu’ils ont travaillé ce soir là;

J’ai au moins une amie qui a cherché de l’information pour savoir comment elle pourrait voter par la poste puisque sa circonscription est dans une autre province dans un village presque quatre heures de Calgary, et elle a voté il y a environs une semaine, et mes amis à Ottawa ont pu trouvé comment s’enregistrer et s’identifier avant la journée de scrutin et certains se sont rendus aux urnes pendant la période de votes avant l’élection propre.

Dans plusieurs régions du monde, les gens qui se mettent en ligne pour des heures pour pouvoir voter ont été attaqués, bouleversé ou ont marché pour des heures pour pouvoir profiter de leur droit. L’audace de dire que l’inconvenance qui pourrait accompagner l’expérience d’un électeur canadien est assez pour empêcher une voix à être entendue et comprise est ignorante et gifle la mémoire des anciens combattants et des soldats actuels qui soit ont battu pour préserver les droits à l’accès à la démocratie pour ce pays et ses citoyens soit luttent contre des groupes opprimants ailleurs.

Malgré le fait que le système pluraliste du Canada n’est pas sans ses problèmes, pour pouvoir les en changer, il faut que les voix dissidentes soient entendues.

——————————————————————————————————————————————

Tomorrow will be the fortieth federal election in this country’s history. According to the CPAC-Nanos Research final daily tracking poll of committed voters, 34.2% plan to vote Conservative, 26.7% support the Liberals, the NDP hold their own at 21.4%, the Bloc maintain a respectable 9.5% and the Green Party come in at 8.2%. An interesting feature of the October 11th poll is the number of undecided voters which clocks in at 16%.

What is important for the public to realize and recognize is that if they care about this country and dream about its future, whether their preoccupations and personal and political agenda include human rights, healthcare, immigration, internet rights, respect and appreciation for the country’s vibrant cultures and funding to maintain the life-blood of various communities, for security in all its forms (national, economic or environmental), they must vote. Participation in this grand jeu is absolutely necessary as it determines the future make-up of the country’s government, and with it, the country’s destiny. Whether one works against multinationals or racists, demonstrates on campuses or blogs, on the streets or by writing emails or letters, everyone must vote. If one wants to see any manner of change at any level, they have to visit their polling station tomorrow.

I’ve heard and read various students’ complaints from across the nation and on campus at the University of Calgary. Among these comments, some of my classmates in my French course called politicians corrupt or stupid and others believed they couldn’t vote because they live on campus at the University of Calgary and their home ridings were miles and miles away. Throughout the last five weeks, there have been news reports and editorials on the Web, the radio, the television, in the newspapers, in campus newspapers, news and other magazines and in podcasts. Political parties and citizens’ groups have filled the pages of internet sites and newspapers and YouTube and television screens with their campaign ads and public spaces have been flooded with candidates’ and parties’ signs. Every morning when I take the C-Train during this election, I’ve seen the JustVoteDammit.com ads on the train. With all these opportunities to inform one’s self, if hours of YouTube and SurfTheChannel and mindless magazines have eaten up free time, the only response to ignorance is disappointment. It isn’t unreasonable to have set aside a few minutes in the last thirty-six days since the writ has dropped to watch the news and look out for the key topics of the election.

And even if some of my fellow students and citizens haven’t taken the time it takes to have a coffee to talk politics or look at a website, I can find a measure of solace with the following facts:

According to the Toronto Star, Canadian viewers chose the English language federal leaders’ debate over the American vice presidential debate the same night by a margin of 2.65 million (3 million watched the Canadian debate compared to 1.65 million who saw the American debate) (http://www.thestar.com/federalelection/article/511713);

I have at least two friends who taped the leaders’ debate to watch later as they had to study and/or work the actual night (and one of them told me he would watch the debate even though it wouldn’t change his vote);

And finally, I have at least one friend who looked up and found information on how to mail in her ballot to vote in her home riding in another province at least four hours away from Calgary and voted at least a week ago, and friends in Ottawa registered and voted in the advanced polls.

In many of the world’s regions, people looking to cast their ballot have to wait for hours, sometimes after having walked for hours, and, under threat of violence or retribution, have lined up and registered their opinions. The audacity with which some people suggest that voting in Canada is an inconvenience is enough of a reason to stay home and not to vote at all is pure ignorance and disrespects the countless veterans and current soldiers who have fought to preserve the somewhat imperfect democratic system in which Canadians are lucky enough to have the chance to participate and who fight to preserve the rights of men and women abroad as well.

Although the Canadian plurality system is not without its faults, to be able to affect change, one’s voice must be heard.

Monday, October 29, 2007




Myanmar Junta Denounces US As 'Bully'


YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — Myanmar's military government stepped up its propaganda campaign against the United States on Sunday, accusing Washington of inciting last month's pro-democracy demonstrations in hopes of installing a puppet government.

Demonstrations that began Aug. 19 over high prices for fuel and consumer goods grew into a broad-based movement for democratic reform that attracted tens of thousands of people in Yangon, the country's biggest city.

Troops crushed the protests by shooting at demonstrators on Sept. 26-27 and arresting almost 3,000 protesters, including Buddhist monks. The government said 10 people were killed, but dissident groups put the toll at up to 200 and say thousands more people were arrested.

"Recent protests in the country were created by the loudmouthed bully, using the exiled dissidents and traitors together with communists, internal and external anti-government destructionists," said a commentary Sunday in the Myanmar-language Myanma Ahlin daily.

Myanmar state-media commonly uses the phrase "loudmouthed bully" without naming the nation it is referring to, but in a context that clearly points to the United States.

The author, who called himself Maung Pwint Lin — roughly meaning Mr. Frankly Speaking — said the U.S. had tried to revive the mass uprisings of 1988 in Myanmar in connivance with "exiled dissidents and internal axe-handles" in order to install a puppet government.

The commentary said the majority of people in Myanmar opposed the protests, but a gullible minority came out on the streets, instigated by foreign broadcasters such as the BBC and the U.S.-government funded Voice of America and Radio Free Asia.

The crackdown has ignited worldwide anger, and international demands have grown for the junta to release 62-year-old pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, a Nobel peace laureate, who is under house arrest.

The propaganda campaign includes billboard signs saying, "Those who rely on America are axe-handles." Axe-handle is jargon used by the junta to mean traitors or puppets.

Junta commentaries in the past have referred to the U.S. as "a super power nation," but articles in the state-run media have recently begun naming the U.S. and accusing it of instigating unrest.

Sunday's commentary said that although the United Nations and the international community wanted the U.S. and its allies to withdraw from Afghanistan and Iraq, the "neocolonialists" refused to leave these countries even after they had installed puppet governments.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

BBC NEWS
JK Rowling outs Dumbledore as gay
Harry Potter author JK Rowling has revealed that one of her characters, Hogwarts school headmaster Albus Dumbledore, is gay.

She made her revelation to a packed house in New York's Carnegie Hall on Friday, as part of her US book tour.

She took audience questions and was asked if Dumbledore found "true love".

"Dumbledore is gay," she said, adding he was smitten with rival Gellert Grindelwald, who he beat in a battle between good and bad wizards long ago.

The audience gasped, then applauded. "I would have told you earlier if I knew it would make you so happy," she said.

"Falling in love can blind us to an extent," she added, saying Dumbledore was "horribly, terribly let down" and his love for Grindelwald was his "great tragedy".

"Oh, my god," Rowling, 42, concluded with a laugh, "the fan fiction".

Fan sites have long speculated on Dumbledore's sexuality as he was known for having a mysterious, troubled past.

Rowling told the audience that while working on the planned sixth Potter film, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, she saw the script carried a reference to a girl who was once of interest to Dumbledore.

She said she ensured director David Yates was made aware of the truth about her character.

Gay rights campaigner Peter Tatchell welcomed the news about Dumbledore and said: "It's good that children's literature includes the reality of gay people, since we exist in every society.

"But I am disappointed that she did not make Dumbledore's sexuality explicit in the Harry Potter book. Making it obvious would have sent a much more powerful message of understanding and acceptance."

And a spokesman for gay rights group Stonewall added: "It's great that JK has said this. It shows that there's no limit to what gay and lesbian people can do, even being a wizard headmaster."

Rowling also did a brief reading from the seventh book in her best-selling series, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, as part of her Open Book Tour of the US - her first there for seven years.

She said she regarded her novels as a "prolonged argument for tolerance" and urged her fans to "question authority".

But she added that not everyone likes her work. Christian groups have alleged the books promote witchcraft. The author said her revelation about Dumbledore would give them one more reason.

The seventh Potter book broke sales records on both sides of the Atlantic when it was published in July, selling 11 million copies in 24 hours.

The fifth film adaptation of the series, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix was released this summer. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince is due for release late next year.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/entertainment/7053982.stm

Published: 2007/10/20 12:59:56 GMT

© BBC MMVII

Thursday, October 04, 2007

Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Appeal To Be Filed In Student's Lesbian Kiss Case



Appeal To Be Filed In Student's Lesbian Kiss Case
by 365Gay.com Newscenter Staff

Posted: October 2, 2007 - 11:00 am ET

(Los Angeles, California) A federal court judge has ruled that school officials did not violate the civil rights of a lesbian teen who was suspended and outed to her parents after she and another girl were caught kissing on campus.

Charlene Nguon's ACLU attorney says the ruling will be appealed.

Nguon was suing Santiago High School principal Ben Wolf and the Garden Grove Unified School District for allegedly violating her constitutional privacy rights and for engaging in an alleged terror campaign against her.

Nguon (pictured), who is now a college student, had sought between $300,000 to $1.3 million in damages.

The lawsuit alleged that Nguon was singled out for discipline a number of times for displaying affection with her girlfriend, that she was outed to her parents, was forced to transfer and that her grades suffered as a result of the harassment.

In addition to Nguon, the ACLU was representing her mother and the Gay-Straight Alliance Network in the case.

Nguon was an 'A' student, ranked in the top 5 percent of her class, but when she kissed her girlfriend on campus she was disciplined and told either she or the girlfriend would have to transfer to another school.

The teen, in addition to having straight 'A's, was enrolled in a number of advanced placement and honors classes and was a candidate for the National Honor Society until the offer was rescinded because of discipline, including one week-long suspension, for hugging her girlfriend on campus.

Nguon's grades slipped when she switched to Bolsa Grande High School as she struggled to catch up with that school's curriculum and her commute grew from a four block walk to a 4 and a half mile bike ride.

After the ACLU sent a letter to the district in late July, 2005, Nguon was allowed to return to Santiago High School where she had been enrolled since her freshman year. But the school has made no effort to improve the climate on campus or to ensure Nguon will not be targeted for discipline again, the ACLU said.

In his ruling, released Monday, U.S. District Judge James V. Selna said that Nguon was treated no differently than straight students who were caught kissing or other forms of intimacy.

"The School Defendant’s disciplining of Charlene was not motivated, either in whole or in part, by her sexual orientation," Selna wrote.

As for outing Nguon to her parents Selna said in the ruling that generally it would be prohibited but in this case it was the only way of explaining the discipline to her parents.

The ACLU of California called the ruling flawed and said it would appeal.

An attorney for the school district said the school will file a motion seeking nearly $400,000 in legal fees from Nguon and the ACLU.

©365Gay.com 2007
http://365gay.com/Newscon07/10/100207calcourt.htm

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Burma

I blogged about Aung San Suu Kyi on my old blog and she has remained one of my heroes. She is the rightful prime minister of Burma and I unquestionably support her eventual reinstatement as head of the Burmese government.

I have the utmost repect for the incredible Buddhist monks who have led demonstrations unprecedented since the 1988 crackdown in response to the 8888 democratic uprising mobilized up to 100 000 citizens, primarily in Yangon, the former Burmese capital (recently relocated to a practically fabricated city, originally a small village, Nay Pyi Taw), for the last several days.


Finally, after a reported 20 people have been killed, China has called on all sides in Burma to exercise restraint.


http://www.cbc.ca/photogallery/world/733/

Saturday, September 08, 2007

It's been ages since I've updated...

Hi all. It's been quite a while since I've updated so I think I should.
Summer's almost officially done, which kinda sucks and is kinda exciting. I start my university career in two days, Monday, September 10 at 1pm with a fifty-minute long linguistics course.
What's new since last post? I'm cutting back to a shift a week at Sears now, I have Alfred, my lovely blue 4GB iPod, and Zeke, my lovely red cellular telephone, who is a more recent acquisition. Zeke is, by the way, my first cell phone that I've paid for completely myself and that I actually own, rather than the two I've taken out when I've gone out with friends in the past and left at Caitlin's house two weeks ago for a few nights after forgetting it there. That phone isn't special enough to have a name.
I'm in love with Richard Dawkins' The God Delusion, which has been the book I've read fair consistently during my breaks for the last two weeks or so. It's refreshing to have my religious views supported and the omnipresent Judeo-Christian tradition picked apart and shown as flawed and impossible and validating the confusion I'd had for ages.
I also had a flash back to earlier times today when I found there are Old Time Radio podcasts available on iTunes today while I was poking around that venerable database/shop. I've downloaded shows I haven't heard in months and, while it might seem strange to some, I'm really happy to hear those familiar voices again and the familiar theme music from The Jack Benny Show and Suspense and Inner Sanctum. This probably means nothing to most of you but I love them so yay for me!

I have my first Sundays-only shift tomorrow at 10h15 and I still have some organizing to do in my room, so I should be toddling off.

Until later, sometime this month, don't worry,
Me.

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Defying Gravity Lyrics
GLINDA
(spoken) Elphaba - why couldn't you have stayed calm for
once, instead of flying off the handle!
(sung) I hope you're happy!
I hope you're happy now
I hope you're happy how you
Hurt your cause forever
I hope you think you're clever!

ELPHABA
I hope you're happy
I hope you're happy, too
I hope you're proud how you
Would grovel in submission
To feed your own ambition

BOTH
So though I can't imagine how
I hope you're happy right now

GLINDA
(spoken) Elphie, listen to me. Just say you're sorry:
(sung) You can still be with the Wizard
What you've worked and waited for
You can have all you ever wanted:

ELPHABA
(spoken) I know:
(sung) But I don't want it -
No - I can't want it
Anymore:

Something has changed within me
Something is not the same
I'm through with playing by the rules
Of someone else's game
Too late for second-guessing
Too late to go back to sleep
It's time to trust my instincts
Close my eyes: and leap!

It's time to try
Defying gravity
I think I'll try
Defying gravity
And you can't pull me down!

GLINDA
Can't I make you understand?
You're having delusions of grandeur:

ELPHABA
I'm through accepting limits
'Cuz someone says they're so
Some things I cannot change
But till I try, I'll never know!
Too long I've been afraid of
Losing love I guess I've lost
Well, if that's love
It comes at much too high a cost!
I'd sooner buy
Defying gravity
Kiss me goodbye
I'm defying gravity
And you can't pull me down:
(spoken) Glinda - come with me. Think of what we could
do: together.

(sung) Unlimited
Together we're unlimited
Together we'll be the greatest team
There's ever been
Glinda -
Dreams, the way we planned 'em

GLINDA
If we work in tandem:

BOTH
There's no fight we cannot win
Just you and I
Defying gravity
With you and I
Defying gravity

ELPHABA
They'll never bring us down!
(spoken) Well? Are you coming?

GLINDA
I hope you're happy
Now that you're choosing this

ELPHABA
(spoken) You too
(sung) I hope it brings you bliss

BOTH
I really hope you get it
And you don't live to regret it
I hope you're happy in the end
I hope you're happy, my friend:

ELPHABA
So if you care to find me
Look to the western sky!
As someone told me lately:
"Ev'ryone deserves the chance to fly!"
And if I'm flying solo
At least I'm flying free
To those who'd ground me
Take a message back from me
Tell them how I am
Defying gravity
I'm flying high
Defying gravity
And soon I'll match them in renown
And nobody in all of Oz
No Wizard that there is or was
Is ever gonna bring me down!

GLINDA
I hope you're happy!

CITIZENS OF OZ
Look at her, she's wicked!
Get her!

ELPHABA
:Bring me down!

CITIZENS OF OZ
No one mourns the wicked
So we've got to bring her

ELPHABA
Ahhh!

CITIZENS OF OZ
Down!

Friday, July 13, 2007

New Stars album?????????

Apparently Stars released a new album on the 10th and I hadn't noticed until just now when I was on iTunes. Sweet!

Saturday, June 30, 2007

Seriously disturbing.

The BBC
Saturday, 30 June 2007, 18:02 GMT 19:02 UK

Hamas 'Mickey Mouse' killed off



Farfur is making way for new programmes, al-Aqsa said

A Palestinian TV station has killed off a controversial Mickey Mouse lookalike that critics said was spreading anti-US and anti-Israeli messages to children.

The Hamas-affiliated al-Aqsa channel aired the last episode on Friday, showing the character, Farfur, being beaten to death by an "Israeli agent".

"Farfur was martyred defending his land," said the show's presenter Saraa.

Israeli critics had said the show was outrageous and some Palestinian ministers tried to get it shelved.

In the final broadcast an actor said to be an Israeli agent tries to buy the land of the squeaky-voiced Mickey Mouse lookalike.

Farfur brands the Israeli a "terrorist" and is beaten to death.

He was killed "by the killers of children", Saraa says.

Al-Aqsa television told the Associated Press news agency the show, Tomorrow's Pioneers, was making way for new programmes.

'Indoctrination'

The channel had ignored demands from Information Minister Mustafa Barghouti for the show to be stopped.

Mr Barghouti said it "was wrong to use a programme directed at children to convey political messages".

In an earlier show, Farfur had said: "You and I are laying the foundation for a world led by Islamists.

"We will return the Islamic community to its former greatness, and liberate Jerusalem, God willing, liberate Iraq, God willing, and liberate all the countries of the Muslims invaded by the murderers."

The Israeli organisation, Palestinian Media Watch, said Farfur took "every opportunity to indoctrinate young viewers with teachings of Islamic supremacy".

Thursday, June 14, 2007


Your Score: Cary Grant


You scored 9% Tough, 9% Roguish, 19% Friendly, and 61% Charming!




You are the epitome of charm and style, the smooth operator who steals the show with your sophisticated wit and quiet confidence. You are able to catch any woman you want just by flashing that disarming smile. When you walk into a room, the women are instantly intrigued and even the men are impressed. When you find yourself in trouble, you are easily able to charm your way out of it, or convince others to help you. You're seen as dashing, suave and romantic. Your co-stars include Katharine Hepburn, Irene Dunne, and Joan Fontaine, stylish women who know a class act when they see it.


Find out what kind of classic dame you'd make by taking the
Classic Dames Test.




Link: The Classic Leading Man Test written by gidgetgoes on OkCupid Free Online Dating, home of the The Dating Persona Test

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Alberta Tories lose Klein's old riding in byelection
Last Updated: Tuesday, June 12, 2007 | 10:17 PM MT
CBC News

Alberta's Progressive Conservatives suffered a political blow Tuesday night, losing a byelection in the affluent Calgary riding once held by former premier Ralph Klein.

In one of two byelections, Liberal candidate Craig Cheffins defeated Progressive Conservative rival Brian Heninger in the central Calgary seat that has been in Tory hands since it was created in 1971. Klein was first elected in the riding in 1989.

Tory Jack Hayden was able to win the rural riding of Drumheller-Stettler in another byelection, as voters picked a new MLA to replace former deputy premier Shirley McClellan.

Observers said the contest in Calgary-Elbow was the first real test of the popularity of Premier Ed Stelmach's government since critics accused it of not taking care of the city's needs.

Stelmach was chosen as party leader in December after Klein retired, taking the premier's title without a provincial election.

In the 2004 election, Klein held on to the riding by just over 2,000 votes from the nearest candidate, a Liberal.

Cheffins had said residents in Calgary-Elbow were telling him their needs aren't being heard by Stelmach's government.

In a flyer that hit city mailboxes last week, the premier countered that $5 billion was set aside for Calgary in this year's budget. And on Friday, Stelmach re-announced his government's commitment to building a new hospital in south Calgary.

With files from the Canadian Press
Today marks my last day in the public education system. My last day of school for grade 12, 13 years have come to an end.
Wow. I'll have to be an adult with something like responsibilities in just over a month, but not being a high school student makes me sad and unsure. It's a big future out there.

Until later,
Me.

Sunday, June 10, 2007

I don't know if this is a revelation for anyone else, but I'm just hanging out on iTunes and found that Stars has released a disc that has other artists covering their songs from Your Ex-Lover Is Dead and Final Fantasy is covering the title track. I'm listening to it now and it's awesome. I bought myself and iTunes card and I'm enjoying spending money.

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

I have walked across the stage and worn the robes and graduated. YAY GRAD!

Until later,
Me.

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

I'm graduating from high school tomorrow. Weird. I have to be an adult almost, with responsibilities and no obligatory school and university in front of me and people moving away and no more public school with my friends from yesterday and forever ago, relatively speaking. It'll be so indescribably great, the singing at the ceremony, the ceremony, the dressing up (one of my favourite parts), the anticipation, the photos, the toasts, the food, the dancing, the overall celebration. So excited.

Until later,
Me.

Sunday, May 20, 2007

I love the Philippines.

BBC NEWS
Coin toss decides Philippine poll
Two candidates in the Philippines who got the same number of votes in a local election have settled the issue of who won by tossing a coin.

Bryan Byrd Bellang and Benjamin Ngeteg tied for the last of eight council seats in Bontoc, a resort town some 280km (175 miles) north of Manila.

They agreed to the coin toss, set down in local election rules. Mr Bellang called heads and won the seat.

Crowds in the town hall clapped as the two men shook hands after the result.

"I asked them if they wanted to break the tie by tossing a coin or drawing lots, and somebody in the crowd wondered if I was cracking a joke," election supervisor Mary Umaming told the Associated Press news agency.

"I said those options were in the rules, and they agreed to flip a coin."

Provincial elections supervisor Dennis Dimalnat said that the two candidates had set a refreshing example.

"I hope others would see the beauty of this kind of peaceful resolution," he told AP.

Nationwide, Monday's local polls were marred by violence. In total, about 87,000 candidates were contesting nearly 18,000 positions.

Police said that dozens of people died over the three-month election period and at least three people were killed on polling day itself. Observers in some areas spoke of voter intimidation and electoral fraud.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/asia-pacific/6674373.stm

Published: 2007/05/20 14:46:24 GMT

© BBC MMVII

Monday, May 14, 2007

Well that sucks.

I just got this email. I <3 Pandora.com and have told loads of friends about it. Now I am sad.



Dear Pandora listener,

Today we have some extremely disappointing news to share with you. Due to international licensing constraints, we are deeply, deeply sorry to say that we must begin proactively preventing access to Pandora's streaming service from Canada. We began blocking access from almost all countries outside the U.S. last week and had originally hoped to maintain access to Canada. However, it has become clear in the last week that we just haven't been able to make enough progress to continue streaming.

It is difficult to convey just how disappointing this is for us. Our vision remains to eventually make Pandora a truly global service, but for the time being, we can no longer continue as we have been. As a small company, the best chance we have of realizing our dream of Pandora all around the world is to grow as the licensing landscape allows.

We show your IP address is '137.186.200.18', which indicates you are listening from Canada. If you believe you are seeing this by mistake, we offer our sincere apologies and ask that you please reply to this email.

Delivery of Pandora is based on proper licensing from the people who created the music - we have always believed in honoring the guidelines as determined by legislators and regulators, artists and songwriters, and the labels and publishers they work with. In the U.S. there is a federal statute that provides this license for all the music streamed on Pandora. Unfortunately, there is no equivalent license outside the U.S. and there is no global licensing organization to enable any webcaster to legitimately offer its service around the world. The volume of listening on Pandora makes it a very expensive service to run. Streaming costs are very high, and since our inception, we have been making publishing and performance royalty payments for every song we play.

Until last week, we have not been able to tell where a listener is based, relying only on zip code information provided upon registration. We are now able to recognize a listener's country of origin based on the IP address from which they are accessing the service. Consequently, on May 16th, we will begin blocking access to Pandora to listeners from Canada. We are very sad to have to do this, but there is no other alternative.

We will be posting updates on our blog regarding our ongoing effort to launch in other countries, so please stay in touch. We will keep a record of your existing stations and bookmarked artists and songs, so that when we are able to launch in your country, they will be waiting for you. We deeply share your sense of disappointment and greatly appreciate your understanding.

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-Tim Westergren
(Pandora founder)

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Sunday, May 13, 2007

Excerpts from fun Wiki articles

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas_Barbon

Nicholas Barbon (c. 1640-1698) was an English economist, physician and financial speculator. He is counted among the critics of mercantilism and was one of the first proponents of the free market.

He was born in London in 1640, probably the son of Praise-God Barbon, studied medicine at Leiden, graduated M.D. at Utrecht in 1661, and was admitted an honorary fellow of the College of Physicians in 1664. He took a considerable part in the rebuilding of London after the great fire of 1666, and has a claim to be considered the institutor of fire-insurance in England, which he started one year after the Great Fire in 1667. In 1680 his fire office formed the First London fire brigade. He was M.P. for Bramber in 1690 and 1695.[1]

He founded a land bank with John Asgill which, according to contemporaries, was fairly successful and was united with that of John Briscoe in 1696. His writings on political economy are interesting for expressing views much in advance of his time. The more important were Apology for the Builder; or a Discourse showing the Cause and Effects of the Increase of Building (1685); A Discourse of Trade (1690); and A Discourse Concerning Coining the New Money Lighter (1696).

In these books, he demanded wider economic freedom and supported fashion which, he believed, inclined people towards continuous purchasing of goods and therefore created constant demand. Being influenced by populationism, he identified country's wealth with its population. He also advocated paper and credit money and postulated the reduction of interest rates which he thought impeded the growth in manufacturing and trade. His works influenced the other critics of mercantilism and hence indirectly contributed to the development of the foundations of classical economics.

Barbon, like his father, had an unusual full name: Nicholas Unless-Jesus-Christ-Had-Died-For-Thee-Thou-Hadst-Been-Damned Barbon[2]. By all accounts, though, he went by Nicholas throughout his life.


Saturday, May 12, 2007

I love life.

I have not so thoroughly enjoyed a day in its almost entirety as I did today.
JHWICS, hanging out with Kelci and Gee in Kensington and in Riley Park and talking to canvassers and random passers-by and eating pita and dip on a bench, then going to Blockbuster with Gee and renting a hilarious movie, "Imagine You & Me" after having supper and having fun discussions with my mother and brother.
Life is grand.

Until later,
Me.