Vegas

I returned a few days ago from a weekend in Vegas.  Tim’s bachelor party.  31 guys, 2 days.  Of course, it was pretty extreme.  Well, as you know, what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas.  So there’s not much more to say!
Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments

May

I can’t wait for May to be over.  Need sleep.
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Talking about the election is depressing.

So many thoughts about the election – but they all make me depressed.  So instead, a few bold predictions.
 
1. By 2008, Apple will be the equivalent of Palm.  Their OS business will be floundering while they continue to make great hardware (that runs Windows).  Apple will become a high-end Dell.
 
2. By far, the greatest health concern of the 2010s (in the Western World) will not be HIV but obesity.  Fatty foods will obtain the same stigma that smoking has today.
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Conservative != Liberal Lite

The conservative campaign team has done an incredible job of making their party leader and party platform as boring and non-confrontational as possible.  I’m exteremely bewildered to see the types of swings that I’ve witnessed throughout this campaign so far.
 
In 2000, George W Bush ran a campaign that was boring and pretty short on details as well.  He convinced the American public that he was pretty much the same as Al Gore, but with a shorter stick stuck up his-ass.  Everyone knows how that turned out.
 
The point of a campaign team is to convince the public to vote for you at all costs.  It’s not to educate the public about party platform so that they can make an informed decision.  In fact, this recent campaign has been mostly about the conservative team making grandiose annoucements that have very little significance in the grand scheme of things, just so that they can hide the real details about what the party actually stands for.
 
The reform/alliance neo-con platform is, and always has been to weaken/shrink the federal government, transfer power to the provinces, and equalize taxes so that the poorest members pay proportionally more than the rich (all under the pretense of ‘stimulating economic growth’).  This same platform believes that national programs such as healthcare, daycare, pharmacare, or regulations to protect the poor, powerless, and disenfranchised are worthless national goals.  This platform is in stark contrast to the Liberal Treadeau Charter of Rights and the NDP Tommy Douglas healtcare system.  Thus the conservatives are ABSOLUTELY NOT to be confused with an alternative to the liberals, despite what you think you may have learned by watching the news for the past few weeks.
 
A campaign is all about marketing and spin.  It does not represent truth.  When people are complacent and fail to really seek out the truth, the result is chaos.  The result is George Bush, the war, the environmental destruction, the growing poverty, the growing numbers of disenrfanchised, increased social tensions, increased crime, rising deficits, an economy that is spirallling out of control.
 
Despite what many people think about the conservatives having a decent financial plan, it’s JUST NOT TRUE.  It’s not supported by economists and it’s not supported by history.  Cutting taxes without cutting spending causes deficits.  Deficits cause a reduction in confidence in the country, and causes a consequent slowing of growth.  Transferring payments to the rich (whether it be by increasing the lowest tax rate from 15% to 16% or cutting the GST) causes money to be transferred from people who will SPEND it to people who will SAVE it.  This again slows down the economy.  It’s absolutely no coincidence that the US over the last 6 years have had a stagnant economy, record deficits, and have generally been the laughing stock of the financial world – even while they had record low interest rates.  All this while the Canadian economy has been chugging right along.
 
Anyway – Tim’s here – must cut this post short.
 
Moral: Conservatives are not an alternative to the liberals.  Voting conservative is not punishing the liberals.  Voting conservative is punishing yourself and punishing your children.
Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Harper’s Hypocrisy (Part I)

The taunts of "Kerry is a flip flopper" during the 2004 election annoyed me to no end.  Firstly they were annoying because they were obviously exaggerated – all politicians say things that might contradict earlier statements.  But mainly, it was annoying because the taunts were repeated ad nauseam by the media with the implication that changing your mind is somehow a bad characteristic – and the general public took it at face value that flip-flopping was bad without even exploring the actual statements or the motivations behind them.  People change; they learn and they grow.  When I was younger, I was a huge fan of Mike Harris’s Common Sense Revolution.  Yet, today, after traveling the world and learning more about how people live and cope, I can’t believe I ever supported his government. 
 
However, saying that, there ARE times when a politician’s change in stance is troublesome.  When someone is so ideologically set in his ways that he is willing to write articles, face courts, and head up advocacy groups to fight for his opinion, it’s hard to believe that within a few short years that he is able to change his mind so drastically as to fight for a position opposite to his original opinion.  There is a reason Harper is accused of having a hidden agenda – because his opinions are so ideologically extreme that any Canadian who follows politics knows that what he represents himself to be is the exact opposite of what he truly believes.  Here are three examples:
 
Harper and corporate political donations – Harper lead a pro-business anti-government political advocacy group.  There he *consistently* fought bans against corporate political donations, calling one such proposal "the most dangerous and oppressive gag law in Canadian history."  Maybe he fought so hard because it was NCC donations that helped him get elected in the first place.  He fought against the limits knowing full well that 93% of Canadians supported limits on corporate political donations. (I wonder why the opinions of the majority don’t matter to Harper when the majority disagrees with his ideology.)  Yet today, Harper is flaunting his "Federal Accountability Act designed to end the influence of big money in Ottawa".  It’s a plan that calls for banning corporate and union donations.  Knowing this history, how can anyone believe that Harper is the right person to bring honour and respect to the Canadian government.  PLEASE search for Harper, NCC
 
Well… I’d love to write Part II and Part III, but I have to wake up in less than 5 hours for ASCM – and I haven’t even started preparing.  Stupid Baycrest.  Stay tuned for more… 
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Harper, Bush, and Leo (not Levis) Strauss

An interesting read – he’s probably stretched his arguments a bit, but some interesting revelations… I really should stop procrastinating from studying – I have to get up in 3 hours to go to baycrest :(
 
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

The Craziest Week

Okay – I may be a bit late in writing about this.  But that’s how long it took me to get my head around what just happened.  Running orientation was definitley one of the biggest challenges in my life.  I honestly can’t recall any other time when I went to bed at 4 a.m. in night sweats, trembling because of all the things I had to do the next morning, and then waking up at 7 ready to go.  Okay, maybe a couple of nights in Engineering because I procrastinated so long.  And possibly the night before our DOCH essay was due.  But never for a full week straight!  I told everyone who asked that helping run o-week wasn’t worth the effort, stress, time commitment, etc.  — but maybe I’m starting to change my mind.  I made new friends, discovered new things about myself (good and bad), and had a few fun nights during our "o-week meetings".  Most importantly, there’s a sense of accomplishement that you feel that would be hard to match doing anything else.  I guess the best measure is the inner smile that I get everytime I hear someone talk about how much fun they had that week.  So what — I didn’t get published and totally messed up my summer research… some things are just more important in life.
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment