Blog

  • Rice Tea… Almost done.

    My mom has finished going through Rice Tea. Not only is she a talented English teacher, but she’s reading the book through fresh eyes. She can spot sentences which made sense to me, and apparently, only me.

    Now all that’s left is consolidating those changes into the document itself, and I’m done! I fancy I’ll have copies printed by mid-January, in time for the February 2600 meeting.

    In other news, I love my job. I’m programming a large software suite, alone. I’m not being sarcastic here – I dig the challenge. I also get to interface with some very cool hardware, which includes linking up to satellite communication systems and with the local cellular network. Every day is different, and its required all of my knowledge to get me where I am now in the development phase. I’ve also learned learned tons about C, POSIX system calls, and networking.

  • Liberal Party Prepares to Topple Government

    The latest news just came in: the Liberal party and the NDP have reached a deal to form a coalition government in order to topple the Conservative Party’s current rule.

    There are a number of reasons why I think this would be a bad thing for our nation. For one, the Liberal party is still divided and weak. Their interim leader (Dion) is weak. We saw that in the elections. For them to rule our nation, at this stage, when it needs political consistency would weaken our abiliy to implement effective policy.

    Secondly, the Liberals approve of a stimulus package. Basically, to follow in the footsteps of the Americans. The American government is well known for making knee-jerk fiscal packages, which can actually do more harm than good. We can already see the cracks in the American implementation of the stimulus, so why follow in their footsteps? It will not hurt to at least wait and spend wisely, rather than be brash and just have those funds wither away into nothingness.

    Thirdly, I’m opposed to the Liberals taking power because just over a month ago Canada voted, and they wanted them there even less than in 2006. Those voters shouldn’t be so easily discounted. If at least six months had passed, I could agree. But a month?

    Fourthly, Harper hasn’t been a bad leader. He speaks well. He does well in multinational talks.  The scandals have been few and far between, and quite minor. Politically, he’s also been pretty centrist, to win support from the left as well as the right. We’ve seen his compromises all throughout his first mandate. I think he’s been one of the best PMs this nation’s ever had.

    Lastly, I don’t want the Liberals in because they’ve moved too far to the left. They were centrist under Chretien and Martin. But in an effort to distance themselves from the current Tories, they’ve moved left. When you go too far either left or right, you enter the realm of adventurous and potentially catastrophic policies. The Republican party in the states is an example of too far to the right. It’s bad all around.

  • Undermining Democracy

    One of the things I truly enjoy about Canada is how we treat the political views of others. Reguardless of which side of the political fence you’re on, discussions on the matter tend to be civil. It’s only really in naive university settings where you tend to see blind adhesion to a political leaning. And even then, its limited. As a consequence, you can have meaningful discussions. The respect we have means that on a Parliamentary level, that we’re able to move ahead in a way that balances the views of all Canadians.

    It is discourse based on issues. Which is why its always shocking for me when I see American political attack books at Chapter’s. The likes of “Treason: Liberal Treachery,” or “How to Talk to a Liberal, If you Must.” Books like these aren’t about societal progress, they are not about attacking issues, but about discrediting a whole political spectrum. By doing so, you’re getting rid of the meat of politics – issues and discussion. Instead, what you’re left with, is its shell. The shell is brainless attacks back and forth. The PR part of politics.

    What’s particularly dangerous about this movement is that its undermining the ability to conduct political discussion, the ability to compromise, and therefore the ability for democracy to function. Because that’s what democracy is: listening to all citizens, of all viewpoints, to move the country ahead.

    You don’t see this radicalism just with books. I get FOX News, which thankfully is one of those far reaching channels that no one ever gets to. That channel is nothing more than an espousement of intolerance for political diversity. The CNN that Americans get inside their country is not much better. What’s amusing is that if you look at CNN International, you don’t see that. They’re pretty much like BBC World News. It’s as if this kind of radicalism is targeted to the American audience, because they want it.

    So it is little surprise then that the lack of understanding that such radicalism pushes forth seeds hate. And with that, I’d like you to check out this link.

  • Docks is dead.

    So, Docks is dead. It’s official. The hard drive that had all the tapes died. I still have all of the original tapes, but they’re messed up because of the skipping issue. Fuck. I can’t tell you how disapointed I am. I was really looking forward to trying to salvage this.

    Here’s the script.

  • More Rice Tea news…

    On page 33 of editing the latest Rice Tea draft. When its done, this will be the last draft. The changes are very minor this time round, having to do with correcting the grammar and sentence structure. My mom’s quite busy for the coming weeks, so her further editing of the book has been put on hold.

    Meanwhile, I changed the page structure of the book. The first page of each chapter now has the page number on the bottom. There’s more spacing on the insides of the pages, facing towards the spine. I thought it would be a bitch to implement these measures, but OpenOffice makes it all very easy (once you know how to do it.)