Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Last American Hero

Friday, July 11th, 2003

This is our new Seinfeld-inspired answering machine message:

Click here

It’s only 156k. “Believe it or not, the Shorts aren’t at home….”

Thursday, July 3rd, 2003

Today is July 4, the day of American Independence. Perhaps it is not the day that our soldiers — weary, shaken, but filled with resolve — emerged victorious over the British troops, but it is the day that the thirteen colonies stood up with one voice, declaring that

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

Declaring that we were fit to govern ourselves and not be shackled by chains thousands of miles long.

It is a great day. Never before had a nation been founded upon principles of freedom. Principles of free speech, in which dissent was encoraged and not frowned upon. Principles of free religion, where men and women could believe what they chose to believe and could not be persecuted simply for why they thought the world existed. Principles that made us (more or less) equal. Never before has a nation been created because of these principles. There was no economic motivation, no motivation of power, or fear, or defense. We came together to be together. And to do so freely.

And I have to wonder, watching the news, seeing this country slipping into a faceless sleep of the ignorantly oppressed, what our founding fathers would think. Yes, the image is corney, but hardly inapplicable. If they could see us shouting down others for expressing opinions, or pouring wine down the drain merely because it’s French, what would they say? Did not George Washington warn us of the evils of political parties, of divisiveness, of petty bickering?

Don’t get me wrong. This is still a great nation. How can one founded against the principles of tyranny, oppression, and inequality not be? But it is slipping. Inperceptibly, but it is slipping. And we can stop the gradual downhill slipe, if we only open our eyes. If we would only stop thinking about just ourselves and our families, and realized that there are others out there who need our help.

In short, if only we would stop bandying under our patriotic false idol, nationalism, and start uniting not only with, but for each other.

Update

Saturday, June 21st, 2003

What Kind of Girlfriend Am I?

You're a Motherly little Girlfriend
-Motherly- You’re the motherly type. You love to
take care of the one you love, and generally
you can be a bit overprotective and possessive,
but you know, that isn’t always such a bad
thing. At least you’ll be a good mom in the
future.

What Kind of Girlfriend Are You?
brought to you by Quizilla

Update

Sunday, February 9th, 2003

Yes, I’m alive. I’ve just been delving into the exciting world of poetry. I wish I knew a publication to which I could submit some of my poems. It’d be a delight to be ‘published.’

Dad and I went to Wade’s for a chili thing. There was supposed to be jamming, but no jammers jammed, jammit!

We watched Stand By Me tonight. “When the night, has come…”

Update

Thursday, February 6th, 2003

Well, I overslept a little today. My alarm clock went off, but it took me about twenty minutes to get up. I really need some sort of backup alarm clock, put in some out-of-the-way place where I’d have to actually get up to switch it off. It would work, because it takes a lot of effort to climb back into bed.

I talked to Brenner and told him that Mr. Kane sends his regards. He’s a really cool guy, and I’m really looking forward to having the class this semester. For one thing, the reading isn’t as voluminous as in my other English class. We read about one short story a day. More time is spent actually thinking about the text. It also turns out one of my roommate’s friends is in the class, too.

Then came the other English class. I find myself writing a lot of poetry there. Today I wrote four poems: “Moth”, “Having Observed Upon a Sunset”, “The Anti-Sonnet”, and “Holden.” Why do I feel so creative when I’m supposed to be learning?

I finally got my financial aid dealt with. Turns out my bill comes to $360.84.

Other than that, I’ve been working on the novel I started in October. I finished it last night (at around two-thirty in the morning) and am now going over it and editing, re-writing, and generally fixing it. It’s amazing how much I’ve improved as a writer in just five months. I’ll probably never publish it, but it’s nice to know I’ve actually written a novel. Working on the novel is a nice distraction from my other concerns.

Anyway, I don’t want to waste any more of my writing energy on some silly blog. 😉

Update

Sunday, February 2nd, 2003

I really need to start writing these things earlier in the night, if only to make the dates match the day about which I’m writing.

I went for a stroll down my road today. It’s pretty serene, even with the highway a quarter-mile away. Usually I walk and listen to a Walkman, but this time I just walked and thought. I thought and thought, about a lot — and not. Sorry, switched into Seuss-mode there for a while. I did have a lot to think about, yes, and it was nice not having my dog to babysit. It was cold, but the cold was that crisp, refreshing cold you can only feel in your lungs. Strolls through Missoula’s streets just can’t match it.

I just finished my first AIS for an English class. The instructor is interesting, and for the first time (possibly in recorded history), I am really, really interested in my assignment. I gotta go to bed now.

Update

Sunday, February 2nd, 2003

Al Gore on Saturday Night Live. Somehow, it didn’t improve his image much. Now, instead of seeing him as a stiff, emotionless politician (a “Gorebot”, as Tom Tomorrow took to calling him), I see him as a stiff, emotionless politician who once appeared on a sketch show that has seen better days.

I am, of course, at my parents’ house, a fact one can infer from my having seen television. The TV I brought to my dorm room quit soon after the State of the Union address, which doesn’t bother me much. That’s also why I wrote nothing here yesterday. Last night I stayed over at Shawn’s house. We rented This is Spinal Tap, a movie which neither Shawn nor Aaron found as funny as I did.

Friday’s classes came and went, with only two noticeable incidents. The first was in History of Rock ‘n Roll, when professor Leadbetter played some different early blues songs. I got this urge to go back to my room and hammer some of my own out on the guitar. And I did. Later, in my British Lit class, I wrote a couple of poems which may or may not make it onto my main website. I had to walk to downtown Missoula because my bike is still here at my parents’ house, but the stroll was pleasant. The weather was a bit drizzly and the fog clinging to the air almost made the usually dingy Missoula streets almost pretty. Even the turbid Clark Fork was something to look at as countless drops of rain speckled its smooth surface.

I finished reading “Apt Pupil”, a story which I found quite disgusting. Now I’ve started in on “The Body”, which in the popular mass-media world goes by the movie title Stand By Me. Is there anything Stephen King has written which hasn’t been made into a movie?

Tomorrow, I have to write an AIS for Brenner’s class, an assignment which tickles me pink. For the first time, I am looking forward to something in my college classes. I looked forward to some stuff in my acting class, but I’ve considered that more of a diversion than a bona fide course. I need to e-mail my Senior English teacher, Mr. Kane, about Brenner. Shawn tells me that Kane had Brenner and I’m not at all surprised.

It’s a bitch about the Challenger. But you know what really pisses me off? The fact that nobody cared a donkey’s ass about the space program until a shuttle blew up.

Anyway, something important might happen tomorrow. I’ve done my best to steel myself, but there really is no speech for me to write, I guess. I have a feeling I know of what’s going to happen. I can hope against it, but I have to face overwhelming facts.

That’s all for now. Mr. King’s prose calls.

Religion and Politics

Thursday, January 30th, 2003

My earliest memory of religion was, when in sixth grade, I lost my Social Studies book. The cost to replace it was $20, which was, in my adolescent world, a king’s ransom (it still is… heee heee heee). So I remember praying to God each night that I would find the book by the end of the year. And find it I did, close to the end of the year. That was the only time I can recall when I’ve called upon God. Needless to say, it did not do much to my religious perspective.

I grew up believing that there was a God because that’s what you’re supposed to do, as a Christian in this blessed-by-God nation of the U.S. of A. It’s kind of like the Economy: everybody is always taking about it, so it must be there. Even though you can’t see it. I remember having a catholic friend in Walla Walla who lived down the street from me. The crucifixes hanging in his house, replete with a crucified Jesus, scared the shit out of me (pardon my French). I remember thinking of being put up on that cross as a punishment, maybe for not believing in God. So I thought, what the hell, everybody say’s he’s real, if I’m right, golden ticket, if I’m wrong and there is no God, no harm done. This is called Pascal’s Gamble, and it’s a very cowardly way to go through life.

Now, somebody might say it’s awfully crummy to have one’s only religious experience be to have prayed to avoid a fee for a book, and I can’t agree mmore. By eighth grade, I had become an athiest. There was no resistence from my parents because I believe they both are athiests or close, at least. I have never been to church a day in my life, but I have no regrets. I had to keep quiet about my leanings at school, because I think pretty much every kid in Corvallis is some sort of Christian, with the exception of a few friends. I stayed that way for quite a while.

During my senior year of high school I realized that flatly stating that there was no God, no matter what, was almost as ignorant and pig-headed as stating that there was a God, no matter what. I changed my absolute stance to one of question; I do not believe there is a God, but if I see something to convince me otherwise, my mind is open. My views even evolved a little during my last year of high school to allow for a tiny bit of spiritualism. If you believe there is no God then it’s really hard to believe in free will, for example. I believe we have free will, so there’s got to be some sort of mystical or spiritual force somewhere. I just don’t believe it has much pull on our lives. Perhaps there is no “God”, but we are all our own Gods. If I could pick any religion, it would probably be Buddhism, as evinced by the presence of the Bhagavad-Gita on my bookshelf and not the Holy Bible.

The only thing I am fervent about when it comes to religion is that people should leave everyone else alone. It’s flat-out wrong to try to force somebody to switch religions or to call someone else’s religion wrong (paradox time: was it wrong of me to say that, since someone’s religion may be based on making other people switch? The mind reels).

I mention this because I read an article in the Independent today about a bill some Dems in the Montana legislature want to pass which would legalize same-sex marriages. It should come as no surprise to anyone that this bill will, quite frankly, piss a lot of people off. But I want to know why?

The usual conservative response is that legalizing gay marriages will endanger the family. How? These people are already gay. Gay people in love are probably going to be living with each other. Many people can attest to the relative worthlessness of marriage today. What difference is a piece of paper, besides a few tax reasons? (Note: I’m not saying that I don’t believe in marriage; I want to marry someday. I’m just pointing out the facts. Please don’t take me for a heartless cynic!) And what difference is it if a marriage liscence says ‘Mike and Tim’ instead of ‘Mike and Judy’?

A long time ago, marriage was the business of the Church. This was to, among other thing, keep blood ‘pure’ and to keep people from having sex. Nowadays marriage is the business of the state. And church and state are supposed to be separate. So what’s the big deal? As far as I can tell, gay marriages would hurt nobody. There might even be benefits. I’m not sure about the facts when it comes to adoption, but it seems to me that a child is better off with two parents than one. Still with me? An unmarried gay couple probably can’t adopt, but a married couple is more likely to be able to raise a child. Now, if they weren’t married, there wouldn’t be a straight couple to to take their place. What I’m saying is that there are not a number of possible marriages. So, a child is raised with two parents of the same sex. He will probably grow up to tolerate the beauty of love, regardless of its form. Trying to keep gays from marrying is just a form of spite, equivalent to putting up a huge fence on your lakeside property so that your neighbor, who lives closer to the shore, cannot see the view.

Let me put it this way:

I would rather see a child raised by a tolerant, gay couple than by a close-minded, bigoted, “normal” family.

But don’t listen to me. I’m a hellbound, godless agnostic. 😉