Tuesday, July 26, 2005 

Ufda!

So, I moved. And apparently someone in this building doesn't know how to set up a wireless network. I'm using their connection right now.

Anyway, I'm almost all moved in to my new place. As soon as I get a chance I'll post some pics. It's really kinda cool.

--SHAKEITIFYOUGOTIT--

Tuesday, July 19, 2005 

Talkin' smack 'bout yo mama!

Wiggly Ass Shaking brings you to my blog.

Last week was a coffee and coke driven mess.

The first group of exchange students from China came on Monday so that day was kinda relaxed, except that I had to call and confirm all of our host families for that day. The next day I had to do the host family orientation and our second group, from Japan, arrived. The orientation went well and the students really enjoyed getting to meet the families. Afterward I got to play pool with the students. They really enjoyed that.

Wednesday I got to go to the orientation for the Japanese group and spent the rest of the day trying to figure out the host family situation. All the while I was running around doing little tasks for the department. In the late afternoon I went bowling with the Chinese group.

Thursday was wet and wild. The students got to go out with their host families that evening so I spent the day getting everything ready for it. By evening I was exhausted but since the guys wanted to go play laser tag so I figured what the hell, and went. It was fun but I was too tired and my senses were all f'd up.

Friday was better. I wore jeans to work and just kinda cut loose. Had a lot more fun.

On saturday I went to a wedding. I didn't know the couple and, honestly, I was dragged by the g/f. I'm really not a fan of weddings at all. They don't make sense to me and all I can think is, "why would they do this?" during the whole ceremony. I don't know, maybe there's something wrong with me but I can't figure out why people need to get married at all. To 'catch' someone? I think they should want to stay all on their own.

Anyway, ranting aside, I got a frantic phone call from my boss on Saturday saying that she was entertaining faculty and a group we thought had canceled was coming in Sunday afternoon. Someone needed to plan for the bus, hotel, and food. I borrowed the lovely g/f's car and ran to work to get things done. And boy did I do them. 45 mins later I had everything arranged and set up for the group. Damn I'm good.

Later that evening the g/f and I bought a bottle of reisling and went out to the beach to sit and watch the sunset. What a lovely evening.

On sunday morning I had a meeting at 10am. It went really well and we were able to plan out the entire stay for the group that had just shown up. My job was done by noon so i drove back to the house to clean up.

The g/f and I cleaned for about a couple hours and then I took off for darts in Seattle. I got all the way up there, but as I was pulling into my parking spot, I noticed that my radio spontaneously shut off. The oddness of that kinda freaked me out. I shot horrible and finally sobered up around midnight. I got out to my car and it started just fine. I sighed with relief and got out onto the freeway. As I was crossing the bridge over Lake Washington my lights dimmed and the car started to die. I quickly turned off the headlights but kept the running lights on. That let the car power up a little bit so I headed for the Mercer exit. I made it up onto Fairview then took a right onto Aloha. I found a parking spot and then the car died. Completely. I think it was the alternator but honestly, I don't have any idea.

So Ahniwa came and picked me up. At 1:30am. What a guy. I went to bed at about 3am and woke up at 6:30am for another 12 hour day. I got home last night and should have crashed, but didn't. I played video games until about 11pm. Then went to bed.

Now I'm at work and trying to focus. It's not working. I have to go up to Seattle today to pick up my car. I'm headed up at 11:30. Hopefully it won't be too expensive to fix. We'll see.

--THATKOOL-AIDGUYCREEPSMEOUT--

Monday, July 11, 2005 

On Free Speech and Moral Relativism

There are many things that govern life in the United States: our culture, our jobs, our morals, our religion, and our laws. One of these laws that has had a particularly strange effect on our lives is the First Amendment. We are the only country in the world whose government actually has a law that forces it to protect the expression of its populace, even to the detriment of that government. Stalin, Hitler, Mao, Pol Pot, Castro, Hussein, these leaders not only didn’t protect free speech but went so far as to execute any person giving their opinion of the government unless that opinion toed the party line.

The peculiarity of our situation is this: Do we allow criticism of our culture by radicals trying to incite their audiences to murder, and if we do not, how do we protect our right to free speech? The problem here is actually two fold. There are many in the U.S. who think that Democracy has produced nothing but evil set on conquering the world (this kind of self-hatred is particular to the West) and thusly these people think that the First Amendment should be taken literally and preachers of hate deserve the right to say what they want. If we say that democracy is not inherently evil and is in place to protect its voting citizens, then those protections should include the silencing of people preaching death to its citizens.

A prime example of this justified non-silencing is in the case of the Ku Klux Klan. For over a century the Klan has spread an agenda of absolute hatred among all those willing to listen. And yet we allow them to exist. They preach the same absolute non-acceptance of other beliefs that many Muslim clerics preach in England, Germany, and other European cities. Intolerance of other cultures because of religious fervor is something that has wrought war throughout the world since the beginning of religion. The Old Testament grew from subjugation of one religion by another and though there seems to be no more subjugation (slavery) due to religious discrimination, religions are clashing all over the world, fed by philosophies of intolerance. The KKK has the most basic elements of a terror organization, but it is definitely the best domestic example of this kind of religious fervor and our inability to interpret our laws to actually protect ourselves.

In the U.S. we have a fear of blaming Muslims for this round of terrorism. We don’t want to insult anyone and we are petrified of creating another Rooseveltian internment camp system for the war on terror. But we are a long way from going that far. Many people cite Guantanamo Bay as an example, but any place that feeds, clothes, provides Korans and medical assistance is a far cry from any other prison system existing in the world today. Dissidents in China, Iran, Syria, and Saudi Arabia are shot or publicly beheaded. Having a policy of free speech should also include the ability to call these terrorists what they are: Muslim. They aren’t freedom fighters; they aren’t rebels; they are trained to bring the West back to the 8th century, under caliphate rule. That is what al Quada fights for.

There is a bumper sticker I’m sure everyone has seen. It reads, “If you’re not angry, you’re not paying attention.” I believe that’s right, but not in the way that it was originally intended. It’s meant to be an anti-establishment slogan, a way of telling people they should be more engaged than they are, but from a left leaning perspective. I think that it should be taken at face value though. People should be angry about a national and international media that is strangely silent about the origins of all terrorist attacks when it’s not the United States. People should be angry about foreign governments harboring supposed ‘Holy Men’ who have nothing but hatred and anger for women, Jews and Christians. And yes, people should be angry about the government, but that anger should be about the things that aren’t being done to protect us (of the $600 million that was allocated to terror-proof New York’s metro system only $30 has been used since 2001, and most of it on studies).

But that still doesn’t solve the problem of Free Speech. The United States has an amazing body called The Supreme Court that is supposed to do just this. Its job is to interpret the Constitution and all of its amendments. What needs to be delineated is the fact that there is a sizable difference between preaching against a government you don’t believe in and trying to recruit young men who are already angry to become bombs. It is the government’s job to stop them and no amount of education is going to help. Age related angst is nothing new and the fact that Muslim clerics are using that rage to channel their message is a testament to the inadequacy of education as a deterrent of recruitment.

What I think all of this boils down to is the slow progress toward the relativism of morality that we seem to admire so much. The dissolution of absolutes sounds beautiful but belies a deep naiveté about how the world works. Saying that there is no such thing as evil or that one cannot call another human evil allows the Hitlers, Stalins, et al., to kill millions of people without interference in a time of peace. Freedom of speech isn’t meant to protect them, it’s meant to protect you when you speak out against them. It’s not meant to protect recruitment of jihadists, it’s meant as a way for this democracy to protect itself from people who would destroy it. Moral relativism muddies intellectual waters. It doesn’t present a clear argument but instead replaces intellectual debate with emotional statements which quickly become propaganda and are hypocritical.

Instead of worrying about an insult to the Muslim world (our very existence is just that) we need to worry about allowing their extreme hatred to boil over on our soil. Terror experts the world over are saying that what happened last week in London was bound to happen. With clerics in mosques throughout London recruiting soldiers to send to Iraq in order to fight as insurgents, and with London authorities trying to stop them, there was bound to be a conflict. And this is the best they can do. Because we not only have military might but also cultural might the world over, we are the prime target for attack. What has saved us thus far, since 9/11 is our geographical location and our security forces working overtime. Without the war in Iraq I am convinced that the war would be brought to us and as much as people use their freedom of speech to denounce the government that protects them, if those protections disappeared under the weight of the rights that terrorist are given, we wouldn’t live to enjoy them.

--GIVERYOURSELFAPATONTHEBACK--

Wednesday, July 06, 2005 

Where the Weeping Willow Wanders

So there really isn't a way I could be more tired this morning. Ok, there is. But it's hard to imagine that right now.

On to international news. It seems that the chinese really need something to bitch about. The response to U.S. House debate over the Chinese bid to take over Unocal by the Chinese themselves has been hot and heavy. The Chinese feel they have good reason: the current administration put their bid up for governmental review. Chevron's bid isn't.

The Washington Post has this editorial (requires registration) that is catagorically wrong. It assumes two things; the first is that China is bidding for the benefit of its people. The second is that by owning an oil producing company that it can do no harm. I think those are dangerous assumptions to make.

The Chinese government has never been concerned by the welfare of its people. That's the joy of a communist regime in any part of the world: the government is paid not to care. The Op/Ed piece claims that until the chinese have more oil than they need that they will be more concerned with producing more thus driving the world price down. That could possibly be true but would not follow ANY trend or precedent laid down by those in charge.

By owning a 1% share of the U.S. energy market and an even greater share of overall oil production, China would have a great ammount of sway in the international market. As evidenced by bids the world over, it seems that all China is doing is making bids and then pulling out of them or (as in the case of the U.S.) making bids they know won't go through, then putting up a fuss. This is odd, even for the Chinese, and makes me wonder about motives. That seems to be a point that the WA Post missed.

Red Nova had this Reuters article posted. A Chinese official is quoted as saying this:

"We demand that the U.S. Congress correct its mistaken way of politicizing economic and trade issues and stop interfering in the normal commercial exchanges between enterprises of the two countries."


This quote shows an incredible ammount of naivete about how the U.S. government works and the irony of a communist regime talking about the separation of government and commercial enterprise makes me scratch my head. Up until about 40 mins ago, Congress was simply debating whether or not to ask the administration to review CNOOC's bid. As of 40 mins ago, the administration decided it would review the bid, but that only happened after the Chinese government released the above quote.

I said earlier that the Chinese were looking for another way to bash the U.S., not make a legitimate bid for an international oil firm. I don't think that CNOOC should be allowed the bid, especially if it's sincere. The Chinese firm is looking more and more irresponsible as time goes on and in their effort to become friendlier with the U.S. they keep taking steps backward. Until they learn that they cannot bully their way into the international market, they should be treated as the free market debutants they are.

--THEYPEEDONYOURFUCKINGRUG--

Some Poor Schmuck

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