Tuesday, February 28, 2006

From Russia with love.

I got this message in my friendster mail. i wanted to share the comady with the rest of you. what can i say, she loves my structure. i wish this was real so i could get more yoda speak.

hi
Message:
HI from Russia! My name is Liliya. I loved your structure. You very good the man. I want to learn you better. Probably we can find the general future and go on a footpath of the general future. I never was in USA and I shall like to learn a lot of interesting to me. Also I to you shall tell a lot of interesting about Russia. Now at us to become coldly and the temperature of air has decreased to-3 degrees. I know that in USA to be approximately at the same breadth as well as Russia and you test the same climatic cold. You love heat? I have still more many questions for you and I want to learn you better. Write to me on e-mail:lonelyliliya1976@mail.ru
PS:
Please forgive me for imperfect English language. My English the second, which I studied at university. I shall be improved so we can understand each other better. My colloquial English on much better, I can well speak

Thursday, February 23, 2006

Mormons and politics

This is in responce to an isolated mormon/liberal. i posted this here. As i was writing this I thought it would be a good statment about myself and mt view on polatics.

Frankly, I am surprised when Mormons are surprised to find politically like minded members of "the faith". Maybe I have been lucky, I experience members of the church that lean left in school, at work, and in my ward. Of course we don't agree exactly, but I think there are more of us out there than it might seem. I do admit we are an obvious minority. We, the liberal Mormon, find ourselves aligned politically with the “uncircumcised of heart”. Many members of the church conceder our politicking to be an act of rebellion.
Personally, the difference I see between liberal and conservative philosophy seems to be economic verses social issues. People that are passionate about feeding their family and controlling their money seem to fall on the conservative side. They seem to be practical and a bit pessimistic. The people that seem to be globally minded and interested in human rights fall on the liberal side. Liberals are idealistic and hopeful but they can be naive. One might read this and say “Wait a minute; I care about all of these things”. I would say “I should hope you care about those issues.” But it is all about priorities. What is most important? What can you live with? What will get you off your butt and stand up and say “these floors are dirty as hell and I’m not going to take it anymore”? Stanley Spudousky UHF
The trouble with the local Mormon is we are not challenged. We are not challenged about what we think. We are always asked how we feel about something. We are rarely asked what we think. Rarer still is the query "why". Why do we believe something? Members of the church use a word like feel. We do use the word know but it is based on a feeling. This is not wrong. Faith is important. But I think it is a mistake to approach politics the same way.
No form of government is The Truth. Unless Christ has come and we are now living the law of consecration. Our government was founded by enlightened men. Though the source of light is God the actual light is Science. I think we as Americans should use logic as we choose our political opinions. Our system is not perfect. Until it is we have to make our best guess. I am keeping in mind this guess could be backed up by the Holy Ghost. What I want to say is not so novel. We need to come to our decision with the tools God gave like our brain science and logic and then get a confirmation from God. I am not sure how this turned religious. But there you go.
Here is an example that illistrates the problems with Mormons and politics. Personally I think members of the church are not really pro life. I think most members of the church could find a scenario where abortion would be the right choice. I don't think they have really considered the issue. Like all issues it is not a simple yes or no answer. I will change my mind when someone will argue with some knowledge on the topic. But until then I will continue to think that someone that is pro choice is that way because they simply think abortion is bad.
I am still thinking about this idea. It is not set in stone. I am open to what everyone is thinking.

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

Have you all heard of Tom Friedman?


Globalization technology and mulit-culture if this isn't post-modern i don't know what is.

Empty Pockets, Angry Minds
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
MUMBAI, India
I have no doubt that the Danish cartoons mocking the Prophet Muhammad have caused real offense to many Muslims. I'm glad my newspaper didn't publish them. But there is something in the worldwide Muslim reaction to these cartoons that is excessive, and suggests that something else is at work in this story. It's time we talked about it.
To understand this Danish affair, you can't just read Samuel Huntington's classic, "The Clash of Civilizations." You also need to read Karl Marx, because this explosion of Muslim rage is not just about some Western insult. It's also about an Eastern failure. It is about the failure of many Muslim countries to build economies that prepare young people for modernity — and all the insult, humiliation and frustration that has produced.
Today's world has become so wired together, so flattened, that you can't avoid seeing just where you stand on the planet — just where the caravan is and just how far ahead or behind you are. In this flat world you get your humiliation fiber-optically, at 56K or via broadband, whether you're in the Muslim suburbs of Paris or Kabul. Today, Muslim youth are enraged by cartoons in Denmark. Earlier, it was a Newsweek story about a desecrated Koran. Why? When you're already feeling left behind, even the tiniest insult from afar goes to the very core of your being — because your skin is so thin.
India is the second-largest Muslim country in the world, but the cartoon protests here, unlike those in Pakistan, have been largely peaceful. One reason for the difference is surely that Indian Muslims are empowered and live in a flourishing democracy. India's richest man is a Muslim software entrepreneur. But so many young Arabs and Muslims live in nations that have deprived them of any chance to realize their full potential.
The Middle East Media Research Institute, called Memri, just published an analysis of the latest employment figures issued by the U.N.'s International Labor Office. The I.L.O. study, Memri reported, found that "the Middle East and North Africa stand out as the region with the highest rate of unemployment in the world": 13.2 percent. That is worse than in sub-Saharan Africa.
While G.D.P. in the Middle East-North Africa region registered an annual increase of 5.5 percent from 1993 to 2003, productivity, the measure of how efficiently these resources were used, increased by only about 0.1 percent annually — better than only one region, sub-Saharan Africa.
The Arab world is the only area in the world where productivity did not increase with G.D.P. growth. That's because so much of the G.D.P. growth in this region was driven by oil revenues, not by educating workers to do new things with new technologies.Nearly 60 percent of the Arab world is under the age of 25. With limited job growth to absorb them, the I.L.O. estimates, the region is spinning out about 500,000 more unemployed people each year. At a time when India and China are focused on getting their children to be more scientific, innovative thinkers, educational standards in much of the Muslim world — particularly when it comes to science and critical inquiry — are not keeping pace.
Pervez Hoodbhoy, a professor of nuclear physics at Quaid-i-Azam University in Islamabad, Pakistan, bluntly wrote the following in Global Agenda 2006, the journal of the recent Davos World Economic Forum:"Pakistan's public (and all but a handful of private) universities are intellectual rubble, their degrees of little consequence. ... According to the Pakistan Council for Science and Technology, Pakistanis have succeeded in registering only eight patents internationally in 57 years. ..."[Today] you seldom encounter a Muslim name in scientific journals. Muslim contributions to pure and applied science — measured in terms of discoveries, publications, patents and processes — are marginal. ... The harsh truth is that science and Islam parted ways many centuries ago. In a nutshell, the Muslim experience consists of a golden age of science from the ninth to the 14th centuries, subsequent collapse, modest rebirth in the 19th century, and a profound reversal from science and modernity, beginning in the last decades of the 20th century. This reversal appears, if anything, to be gaining speed."No wonder so many young people in this part of the world are unprepared, and therefore easily enraged, as they encounter modernity. And no wonder backward religious leaders and dictators in places like Syria and Iran — who have miserably failed their youth — are so quick to turn their young people's anger against an insulting cartoon and away from themselves and the rot they have wrought.

more


i found this on the myspace site.

Monday, February 20, 2006

We had a great last show



Thank you all for coming and being so supportive. I am a bit sad it is over. It is also a relief that it is done. Mixed feelings about the whole thing I guess. The beginning went really well. It was cool to have the sheets up for all of the first song. The beam of light trick worked without a hitch. I even got to tear down the sheets to revile the rest of the band. Chris, our stand in drummer, played very well. I remembered most of my lyrics. When the show was over the crowed asked for more, we where in the back thinking we don't have any more. It was a little bit embarrassing. We came back out and played a Gang of Four cover. We hadn't practiced it at all. We just sort of winged it. It turned out pretty good. I think we all surprised ourselves.

you can hear us if you clisk here.

Thursday, February 16, 2006

I HAVE BEEN TAGGED!

Thank you marsh for letting me in on your blog click.

4 jobs I have had:

1. Trench digger for sprinkler systems. I would swing a pick ax and develop clauses on my thin sixteen year old hands.
2. Flower delivery boy would be my next employ. I got to see many interesting reactions. Some women would squeal with glee, others would have a fear behind there eyes that read "why is he stalking me?" my favorite reaction would be the sike out. Sometimes if the person wasn’t home I would ask a neighbor to give them the flowers when the recipient would get home. The face on the person answering the door was so happy. I would promptly have to nip that feeling in the bud and explain that the flowers where for someone else.
3. A T-shirt printer is always asked to help someone with a t-shirt idea. Everyone has an idea for a t-shirt. My introduction in the persons life has given them a vehicle to achieve there t-shirt dreams. I say “hop on, lets ride.”
4. Drugstore liquor and lotto corner is where I worked in Michigan. My regulars where a guy that came in every other morning to buy a pint of Mohawk vodka. I also had a grey haired man that would buy fifty dollars worth of powerball tickets on his credit card. He came in twice a week.

Movies I could watch over and over

Kill Bill 1 and 2
Big Labouski
The Thin Red Line
the office (not a movie I realize. There is nothing else)

Four places I have lived

Provo Utah
Dillon Montana
Rochester Hills Michigan
Paso Robles California

Four TV shows

BBC’s The Office
Lost
24
Curb

Four highly regarded and recommended TV shows that I've never watched a single minute of

Gray’s Anatomy
Deadwood
American Idol
Gilmore Girls

Four Places I've Vacationed

San Francisco
Maryland
England
Catalina Island

Four of my favorite dishes

Tom Kagi
Sushi
Gnocchi
Pasta

Four sites I visit daily

C-SPAN.com
Blogger.com
Hotmail
Gmail.com

Four Places I'd rather be right now

Turino Italy
Chernobyl Russia
Wales
Split Croatia

Human rights, how far are we?








This is a cool interview about where we are as a country. Kenji Yoshino brings out how we act and how we treat each other in his lates book Covering: The Hidden Assault on Our Civil Rights.


you can hear the interview here.
http://www.c-span.org/Search/basic.asp?ResultStart=1&ResultCount=10&BasicQueryText=Kenji+Yoshino+autobiography

Provo Pod Cast interview

You can hear an interview with mike, Tim, Neil, grant and me. There are a few laughs. Not much insight to the band. I think it might be fun to listen to. I become an ego maniac when ever I get in this band situation. frontmans disease is rampant with me. Though I don't feel very contrite about my attitude. I guess I am a stereotype.

http://provopodcast.com/

Thursday, February 02, 2006

The band is dead


Let me lighten up a bit. So I have this band called Midwife Crisis. I know, I know, worst name ever. Maybe it is so bad it is good. I really doubt it though. So some friends and I did this dance rock thing. I was really into doing theatrics. I was just so board going to shows. I didn't want to be a band that demanded that people take us seriously. Lets face it, we are just a rock band we aren't going to change the world. We just want to entertain. I must admit this attitude afforded us and the crowd to have fun. This is why we go to shows.

We had some good times. The band is dead now. But, we will be doing a CD release final show. It will happen on Feb 18th at Velour in Provo Utah. Be there at 8:00... If you want to be there on time.

I can't deny my excitement to perform. I just get nervous just thinking about it.

Okay, now we are getting somewhere

The State of this Union is addicted to oil. I must admit that Bushes speech is a step in the right direction. My first reaction was "hey, republicans don't say things like this, do they?" I got a little territorial. I think that reaction shows I am caught up in the Bi-partisan conflict. An interesting thing happened the day after the speech. My wife Andrea's class mates talked about our dependence on oil, like Bush came up with the idea. Republicans around me magically became aware of our responsibility to the environment. Maybe they where aware but didn't vocalize it. Interesting thing number two, was the local news. They started talking about fuel alternatives. They where exposing alternatives that would allow people to say close to there life styles. Maybe we as a country had to hear this from a conservative president. I hope this is something both sides can get behind. We can change. With that change, we can be better.