Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Mephistopheles is just beneath - 03 Jan 2008 - 7 views

Current mood:handsome

I fully intended to write about my adventures in the Metropolis of America today, but I just now finished cleaning my apartment, and I know it'll take me a good two hours to write it out - so tomorrow then.

The current Biblioalbum

The Letters of JRR Tolkien by JRR Tolkien
Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky
Autobiography of a Yogi by Paramahanda Yogananda
The Loom of Language by Frederick Boomer
Ancient Pagan and Christian Symbolism by Thomas Inman MD
Arguing the Just War in Islam by John Kelsay

Has the lights gone out for you?
Because the light's gone out for me.

I'm fucked - 27 Dec 2007 - 7 views

Current mood:weird

...Here's the charts I made. "Minimum" represents the realistic minimum I could possibly live (how I am currently living – it does not include things like health care, vacation, internet, etc.). "Maximum" is supposed to represent the maximum of how I'd like to live, but really it's far more realistic and not really a maximum at all. I did some research and came up with pre-tax salaries for the various occupations – and I think for the most part they're pretty realistic. I also adjusted loans based on occupation type (for example: if I receive funding then current debt stays constant (125,000), but if not then it increases (185,000)). My costs of living in Britain are rather approximate, but I think not at all inaccurate. Furthermore, all data assumes that my status is static and that I have no dependants. After taxes (assumed to be 35%) the only values that were positive (in red) were Funds-US Minimum (although barely) and both Physician Minimum and Maximum. If Maximum is the realistic criterion then the only solution (other than occupation switch – which is another can of worms altogether – in that I am only qualified for academic work, and the values I used for Assistant Professor salaries was generic to the field and not subject specific) then it looks like Medical School (even though it is another 125,000 – and assuming I can even get in) is the only real option....

There Will Be Blood - 18 Dec 2007 - 5 views

Current mood:devious
Something interesting caught my eye in the half second of credits I saw during the trailer for the upcoming film There Will Be Blood. Maybe you see it too; maybe you do not...







Deus Sol Invinctus - 17 Dec 2007 - 3 views

Current mood:silly
I thought this was clever so I'm posting it on here. Backgroud: my brother has to work on the 26th, which means he would have to take the train from my parents house back to his apartment on the 25th! So he wants to celebrate Christmas on the 24th and asked my family for their opinion. Here was my response:

"This year, 22 Dec.marks the death of the sun and its rebirth is on the 25th. However, I am not a follower of Horus-Dionysus, but rather of Sol, and so, for me, the main concern is Fimbulwinter and the bite of the Wolf. Also, since the beginning of the days of the Ram the stars shifted and it is difficult to align the Dog, the two Centaurs, amongst others. Therefore, I am more than happy to recognise the assent of Mithra, or Shabe Yalde, on the 24th."

Lots of respect to anyone who gets even half of those references! Cheers

Delenda est Carthago - 17 Dec 2007 - 1 view

Current mood:impervious
From The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien letter 77, 31 July 1944
"… I should have hated the Roman Empire in its day (as I do), and remained a patriotic Roman citizen, while preferring a free Gaul and seeing good in Carthaginians. Delenda est Carthago… I was actually taught at school that that was a fine saying… There lies still some hope that… propaganda defeats itself, and even produces the opposite effect."

lying in a coffin - 14 Dec 2007 - 0 views

Current mood:tired
I'm done with the semester finally - almost. I still have to finish grading papers (only 6 more though). Annihilated Endocrinology and hopefully Biostats. Now I can sleep for the next month!

So I was asked to sign a petition to get Mike Huckabee on the ballot... - 07 Dec 2007 - 5 views

Current mood:working
Mike Huckabee supporters were soliciting signatures outside my office today. When asked for mine I replied, "No. I support Ron Paul."
"But Mike Huckabee is a Republican too."
"I'm not a Republican."
I dislike Huchabee. I feel he is a politics as usual politician and represents the worst of the Republican party (with the exception of the Neo-Conservative movement which admittedly is much worse), who if given the chance would eliminate separation of church and state, heap heavy doses of Christianity upon the populace and government, while simultaneously stripping us of our civil liberties. This was the real reason I refused to sign the petition.
I do feel mildly guilty for not signing it though. The reason is that I believe in free fare open electoral competition. I may dislike Huckabee, but that still does not mean he should not be able to run for office, and he certainly does deserve a fair chance. By refusing to sign I hinder that fair chance and swing the vote in the favour of my candidate or another candidate – which I do not have the right to do (my vote cannot have more value than another citizen's vote). So in complete fairness, and mathematical randomness, I should be ballot agnostic and sign all petitions that come my way.
But I know that I will not. Perhaps I lack the fortitude, or perhaps I am too jaded by inept government and culture in America to bother. But I do know this, the next election is important – the mishaps to the last 8 years are permanent, the US will never again be the dominant social force that it once was. And while I am consistent in my insistence that the executive branch needs to be greatly weakened in favour of the legislative branch I know that this is unrealistic and is an inherent flaw in the design of government. Because of this, it is important that we choose a leader who will maintain the obligations of the social contract to the people, and not try to guide them to a vision of the nation that represents ideological fitness.
Kennedy's statement, "…ask not what your country can do for you -- ask what can you do for your country" affirms the trend that the nation is more important than the people who comprise it; a trend that has reached a climax with the current administration. But this is not true – the people are always more important than the idea, and for this reason it is imperative that we elect a chief executive who will recognise this and support us, the living entities, over the abstract fiction that is the nation.