Friday, July 31, 2009

Night Emissions

Sing to me o muse, of restless nights, tossing in twisted sheets,
Sing to me of dark enfolding night, of hot dry dusty lusty night,
Of the crump, crump, crump of rap artillery,
Of bouncing low-riders and the bouncing walk of latin boys,
Mingling with the whores and the homeless husks,
Under the glare of street-lights,
Of dry, dusty hot nights, or the cool clamminess of a lovers sweet sweat.

Sing to me of boys and girls dancing in hidden rooms,
with low ceilings and dirty floors,
of cheap beer and painfully sweet embraces,
dangerous encounters in back alleys sweet and hot and strong as brandy,
of quick encounters, made sweeter than any fruit sold in the hot, sunny day.

Sing to me of young first loves and of the hollow remembrances of love lost long ago,
That reflected glory of past days in an old man's eyes,
Sing of the whores and the trick, of quick passionless acts, of cruelty and addiction.
Sing of all the dusty, sun-burned, burned out people, of love lost, or never found .
of the desperate clinging to each other like the night clings to the earth at 2:38 AM.

Sing of violent acts in the cold first light, of the wail of sirens,
of bloodied faces and drunken men in the backs of police cars.
Sing of pretty young boys on the streets without family, of shame and fear.
Sing of a pretty girls first kiss, of proms, of telling her friends, "He loves me."
Of old couples, passionless, but still loving, holding wizened hands,
and waiting till only one remains.




Saturday, May 30, 2009

dud blogz r 2 asum 4 w0rdz!!!1!!!

If you ever read the comment sections of youtube or digg, you've
probably run across a posting like this:

dud dats totly asum u ar gr8!!!!!!

I know that more and more people are busy texting and chatting in IRC
and ICQ, and talk mode is totally acceptable there because, if you
were to compose grammatical sentences, or to spell out long words, it
would totally ruin the flow of the conversation.

Same goes for in game chatting. Rubbing it in when you totally pwnd
some noob in deathmatch is an appropriate use of talk mode. I'll even
go so far as to admit that talk mode is acceptable on twitter, after
all abbreviations allow you to pack more inane drivel into 140
characters.

A related peeve is the over use of 1337 speak in internet forums. if
you spell elite 1337 or even leet, you loose off of alt.2600:

ITZ TOT41Y 14|\/|3R D00DZ!!!!11!!!

If the last line of text looked like line noise to you, then you know
how annoying it is to read this crap.

Oh, by the way, why is the signal to noise ratio so low on Youtube. I
run into this crap everywhere, but Youtube is the absolute worse
effected site.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

"Your Inner Fish": A book review

In Your Inner Fish, A Journey Into the 3.5 - Billion - Year History of the Human Body, Dr. Neil Shubin details how evolutionary adaptations in the early history of life on earth helped to shape, and left their stamp on the human form.

Professor Shubin begins the book with a chapter detailing his discovery of Tiktaalik roseae, an important transitional fish species, fossilized in a remote region of northern Canada. He then proceeds to show how important aspects of human anatomy can be traced back to the limbs of this primitive fish, how discoveries about stages of embryo development can shine a light on how genes work to build our bodies, and how our current body structures evolved from our more primitive ancestors, all the way, comparing parts of human anatomy with earlier, more primitive forms in other animals, from fish to jellyfish, to anemones to bacteria.

Shubin may well be one of the best writers of popular science today. I recommend this book heartily to anyone who wants to learn a lot more about themselves and the natural world.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Why We Should Argue More

There is strong social pressure put on individuals to "not argue"
particularly about important things like politics, religion and
ethics. We are pressured not to discuss these subjects because people
may become upset if foundational beliefs are questioned.

But which is worse, becoming upset, or basing one's life on false
precepts. There are several reasons why we have this taboo, and I
hope to address each that I am aware of.

First roadblock is the word "argue" itself. This is a troubling word
with several different meanings. First it means "give reasons or cite
evidence in support of an idea, action, or theory, typically with the
aim of persuading others to share one's view", this is the definition
I am referring to. The other (perhaps more common definition) is
"exchange or express diverging or opposite views, typically in a
heated or angry way." In other words, to verbally battle.

If we use a more verbally neutral word, for instance "discuss" rather
than "argue," the objections don't, however, go away. It seems to me
that we each have two competing social needs that vary from individual
to individual. One is a need to share our beliefs with others, and
another is the need to blend in and just get along. Different
cultures may encourage one more than the other, but all have strong
taboos that favor and encourage the latter need.

It is my belief that these taboos arose out of the need for "unit
cohesion" amongst the small bands of hunter gatherers. Where survival
required all the members to act together without delays while
individuals debated the relative strengths of one course of action
over another.

Indeed those organisations that most restrict individual opinion and
debate today are those military and paramilitary organisations where
quick cooperative action can make the difference in life and death.

However, outside of a few unusual circumstances, we do not need to
make those sacrifices in our daily lives. In fact, I argue we would
be better served to encourage open argument about all subjects.

Argument benefits us in 2 ways, First it helps us to see errors in our
understanding and therefor create a more accurate model
with which to base our decisions on. Having a flawed model of
political systems, the universe, or ethics can have profound negative
effects on decision making. Second it helps us to flesh out our
current understanding of our own beliefs. Someone's opposing beliefs
may help us to better understand our own beliefs by putting them to
the test.

So whether You win or loose, you win.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Panic Over Non-Fatal Condition Puts Children's Lives At Risk

Whilst quietly sipping my coffee and reading the paper today, I came across this story in the LA Times, California schools' risks rise as vaccinations drop.

What is happening to our nation, when parents are so afraid of a non-fatal condition (that there is NO evidence is caused by immunization) that they will put the lives of their children, at risk? I could understand it if these were uneducated hillbillies with no concept of germ theory and an unhealthy fear of outsiders, but the core of these people are college educated professionals who have no excuse for this stupidity. I wish I could say more, I wanted to write a longer, more coherent piece, but the overpowering vastness of man's potential for stupidity has me awed. I am sorry, I'm just speechless.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

I am not Left, Right or Center!

It bothers me when Democrats accuse me of being right-wing, or when Republicans accuse me of being leftist. Which is true, neither. Furthermore, I am not a centrist, nor am I in anyway middle of the road. In-fact I'm firmly not anywhere on your road, I'm off blazing my own trail. If you ask me nicely, rather than assuming you know, I'll gladly tell you what my politics are, I am a liberal.

All of my politics are informed by my deep belief in the importance of the individual's rights. I believe laws are only acceptable for the defense of the individual's liberty.

I am for ending drug prohibition because all consenting adults have the right to do whatsoever they want with their own bodies. If you want to do stupid things to yourself, that is your right, and I'm ethically required to act in defense of that even though I think it's stupid.

Likewise, passing laws against suicide are not only absurd (in reality you cannot punish suicides, only attempted suicides), but abhorrent. Not because taking your life is good, but because its your own damn business.

While I don't condone marriage, I believe that if the government is going to support heterosexual marriage, it should also support and recognize homosexual and polygamous marriage, so long as all individuals are consenting adults. The best thing would be to remove marriage from government control, they have no place in peoples relationships.

Nor should the government, nor anyone else for that matter, be able to coerce individuals into spending their hard earned money for things they don't want. If I want to help financially support someone, I'll do it of my own free will thank you. If I want to pay for someone's medical bill, I'm able to make up my own mind about that. Nor should I be able to use the government to shake down others to help clothe, feed and heal me when I'm in need. We all have the right to fail too.


Friday, April 17, 2009

"Carbon Dioxide Considered Harmful" Considered Harmful

I was reading the New York Times website, when I came upon this story: E.P.A. Clears the Way for Regulation of Warming Gases. This inspired me to pose the following question.

Is carbon dioxide in the atmosphere bad?

Let me start off by stating that I personally believe that global warming is a real phenomenon, and that its cause is the buildup of green-house gasses in the atmosphere. I don't know to what extent that buildup is the cause of human agencies, and I don't care. I do not care if it is natural, or unnatural. The natural/unnatural dichotomy is essentially meaningless in nearly every case.

I also believe that reducing the amount of carbon dioxide released by our industries is a good idea, and may reverse or at least mitigate the effects of global warming. I don't know that it would, but it is certainly worth a try. This is however not the reason I posed the opening question.

What I want to know, is if it is wise to instill a negative connotation on greenhouse gasses. After all, if we know anything from the geological history of our planet we know that drastic climate change is truly the norm. What may be now a beneficial policy of reduction of green-house gasses could be detrimental down the road a few hundred years if we demonize carbon dioxide whole cloth.

Nor should we delude ourselves into thinking that what we want is the natural balance. Geological history tells us the planet has no "normal" climate. Instead, I propose that we admit to ourselves that what we ideally need to do is take the global climate under human control, to keep it in the zone that is most beneficial to us. Us being the majority of the species that are extant on the planet at the moment. Because we know that these major shifts in climate that have occurred in the past correlate with mass extinctions.