Sunday, November 23, 2008

Yet another frivolous, but highly addicting, website.

So I have my own virtual country: I am the chief despot of "The Brewtown Empire," a country of about 4000 inhabitants centered on Milwaukee that includes most of Wisconsin, Lower Michigan, and northern Illinois and Indiana.

This all started from a virtual game website that my friend sent me, and from there, I found Cybernations.net. It's something that I've invested only a couple minutes a day at, but I find I can't stop. Check it out!

Friday, November 21, 2008

The Delicious

I have no idea what this is, but enjoy.

Part I:




Part II:

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Whoa... dude.

So I was at work, stumbling through teh intertubez (thanks, stumbleupon) and came across this conservative blog.

Please don't get me wrong. My parents, and I love them, are conservatives who probably would never ever vote for a Democrat ever. I have friends who are conservatives (seriously! Check my facebook friends!), but this blog just seems completely out of left field. Basically, they're saying that President Obama's plan for community service will serve to make a new Hitler Youth.

Why are they so afraid? Why is it that conservatives think we all want to make them into us?

More importantly, how can we get people like this to talk and listen to us? Have we really gotten that bad in America that we think that anyone who disagrees with us wants to nuke the country?

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

My brain is full

So last week I led discussion in my GEOG 870 (Contemporary Geographic Approaches), and then I wrote a rough draft for a research proposal for 810 (Methods in Geography). My outline and literature review for my 810 was pretty much savaged, so I made sure every step was done very very carefully, and I'm mostly happy with the result.

The upshot is that I spent all last week w0rking very hard, putting my 870 literature review (a rough draft, but still) on the back burner. That is due tomorrow, on Thursday. I also have 6 articles (these are scholarly articles, not the kind of think you find in the New Yorker) to read for the same class.

My brain is exhausted, and I've pretty much resigned that, for tomorrow, I'm going to suck, because I'm not at all prepared on any level.

Thank God for Thanksgiving holiday next weekend.

Of course, this is also my first Thanksgiving as a vegetarian. No idea how that'll go over.

I can has break plz?

Saturday, November 15, 2008

I just listened to this song on my iPod, and it totally made my day:



f we can call them friends then we can call them on their telephones
and they won't pretend that they're too busy or that they're not alone
and if we can call them friends then we can call
holler at them down these hallowed halls
just don't let the human factor fail to be a factor
at all

don't, don't you worry, about the atmosphere
or any sudden pressure change
cause i know
that it's starting to get warm in here
and things are starting to get strange

and did you, did you see how all of our friends were there
and they're drinking roses from the can?
and how, how i wish i, i had talked to them,
and i wish they fit into the plan

and we were tired of being mild
we were so tired of being mild
and we were tired...

i know we're going to meet some day
in the crumbled financial institutions of this land
there will be tables and chairs
there'll be pony rides and dancing bears
there'll even be a band
cause listen, after the fall there will be no more countries
no currencies at all, we're gonna live on our wits
we're gonna throw away survival kits,
trade butterfly-knives for adderal
and that's not all
ooh-ooh, there will be snacks there will
there will be snacks, there will be snacks.


and we were tired of being mild,
we were so tired of being mild,
and we were (we were so) tired...

so don't you,
don't you worry
about the atmosphere.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Getting back to less serious stuff:

Since there's no more election to worry about, here's a song by the Decemberists. I wish I could find better recordings of the Crane Wife, California One Youth and Beauty Brigade, or the Mariner's Revenge Song, but this is good too.



Anyways, I'm off to prepare for my class tomorrow. Why do I always spend the most time on the internet when I've got the most work for school?

Monday, November 10, 2008

Now what?

So now that the election is over, I do feel a bit let down. There's not a lot of buzz to follow, and now we have to concentrate on our real lives.

I guess that means I'll have to actually do work for school again.

My mom (who's a very conservative person) called me the day after the election to congratulate me on my guy winning. She's actually glad that we've got a president who seems to want to be everyone's president. She spent election night with a pro-life group and she actually defended Mr. Obama (and have you ever tried to speak well of a liberal to a really conservative person? It's not that easy!), even though she didn't vote for him... imagine that, mutual respect! Who'd'a thunk it?

So hats off to my mom for being cool about the election, even though her guy lost. I doubt I would have been so mature, and I think we all ought to be mature. But I digress.

I need to find something to obsess about now, and school doesn't seem to be it.

Oh, and I had to post this too, because I'm a mean person. I wish I could say where I found it so I could give credit where credit is due, but I can't, so please don't sue me if this is your artwork.


I respected McCain until I heard Palin speak. Her "real America" comments irked me the most, because it seemed to show a disdain for liberal and educated America. So my message to conservatives is this:

START ENCOURAGING SMART REPUBLICANS. GIVE US SOMEONE WE LIBERALS HAVE TO THINK ABOUT BEFORE WE VOTE. Stop giving us people who can't stand an education! Stop giving us people who have no respect for liberals! Give us someone that we can disagree with, but still respect! That's what's going to keep this country together!

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Thoughts on Election '08

So everything's over regarding the 2008 election (except for some recounting in Missouri and North Carolina, and a few congressional races), and now I'm trying to collect my thoughts on it.

First of all, I'm thrilled that the guy I voted for is actually in office. This is the third time I've been able to vote for president, and I voted for Nader in 2000 (although I regret not voting for Al Gore now) and Kerry in 2004. So I'm excited to be with the winning president for once!

Second of all, I'm excited that we'll have a progressive in office after 8 years of ignoring the poor, the black, the gay, the non-Christian, and everyone else. I'm hopeful that the Obama administration will treat immigrants more fairly, and I'm hopeful that we can rebuild our standing in Western Europe again.

I liked the tone that President-elect Obama set in his speech: Even though everyone else in Grant Park was exuberant, Obama set a serious, humble tone, and, unlike President Bush, acknowledged the opposition in his speech. So I hope that this new administration can make the United States united again, so that every American, Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Atheist, Buddhist, Hindu, black, white, Hispanic, Indian, Native American, Asian, gay, straight, or other, immigrant or native-born, young and old, rich or poor and whoever else, can be an integral part of America.

I'm excited that our new president is black. I live in Riverwest, which is one of the few neighborhoods in Milwaukee that's largely mixed between black and white. I think a big hindrance to solving the problems of the inner city is the fact that so many black leaders are frustrated and feel outside the system. Hopefully a black Chief Executive will at least give inner cities a voice. I think it's a hopeful sign that the Democrats owe this election to the huge black turnout: without the black vote, McCain might have won.

It's also a hopeful sign that our new president actually has a mandate. Clinton won both terms of his presidency without a 50% popular vote, as did Bush in 2000. So I'm glad that Barack Obama comes into the presidency with a clear majority and without allegations of voter fraud or disenfranchisement like in Ohio in 2004 and Florida in 2000. It's also a hopeful sign that this was the election with the highest voter turnout in 100 years. Everybody in America had a chance to speak up, and the choice was clear and fair.

I just hope that the opposition can remain loyal to the US Government. While I know that Republicans have a lot to disagree with, my wish is that everyone remains civil. Dissent is the heartbeat of a healthy democracy, so if you disagree, please speak up! I know I plan on it, since I have much higher standards for the guy I actually voted for. But at the same time, I hope that Republicans remember that we're all in this together, and despite what Sarah Palin says, we are ALL Real Americans. Remember that gay people still deserve to be treated like human beings, that immigrants love their families too, that Muslims also love this country, and even Socialists want people to be treated family. Everyone who lives in America IS American, and we ALL want justice and fairness and prosperity.

There are signs from the first days of building the Obama administration that are good: the buzz is that Obama wants to keep Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, a Republican, and his chief of staff will be Rahm Emanuel, an Orthodox Jew and son of an avid Zionist. So hopefully this shows that, yes, Republicans will have a voice, and that Obama is not anti-Jewish.

So I don't know how the next four years will turn out; only time will tell. So keep praying, keep speaking out, and let's all work together to make America a place we can all be proud of!

But what's your take? The whole idea of the internet is communication, so please post your ideas in the comments section. I want to hear from you!

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Les Misbarack

This was too good. Don't forget to vote on Tuesday!

PS: thanks to Kay at Blue Racine, where I found this!