Tuesday, August 04, 2009

Clinton Day


What a shock. It's too early to understand exactly what this means.


John Bolton is calling this a moment of weakness for the Obama administration. --Clinton's Visit Over There


The Times is covering it as a representation of the Clinton's enduring role of The Clintons in America -- New York Times


WSJ asks the important question-- how will the North Korean leadership really view this? Despite telling their own people they're meeting with a key US diplomat (which is actually an arguable position since The Obama Administration was aware of what was going on the whole time) Wall Street Journal


Two things: Kim Jong-Il is not knocking on heaven's door, and did Obama really want this? How could he?




Monday, August 03, 2009

The Top Chinese Sea Monster



I've just finished reading William H. Overholt's tremendously objective overview on the changes taking place in Asia's political structure. Given my inexperience in this field, I found myself surprised by many of his insights. What surprised me most was the continued momentum of the American leaderships' shared images of The Cold War -- this energy continues to drive our policies in Asia, despite a reality far removed from the circumstances of that conflict which ended twenty years ago. According to Overholt, it is the basic human desire to justify our own positions that drives these leaders in the opposite direction of reality. According to Overholt and most others who have dealt extensively in China, the Chinese government shows no indication of threatening The United States, now ,or ever. However, the Cold War apparatus exists, and it must justify this existence. So far, with plenty of resources at hand, it has done just that.


Another basic human desire is the need for an adversary. In China, many of America's elite find their justification not only for the continuation of the massive Cold War era military apparatus,but also for a convenient ideological adversary-- down with the USSR, up with China. This transition couldn't have been more natural, or more misdirected. China has adapted, opened its markets, and strives to provide for its people in a progressive, pragmatic manner, not at all reminiscent of the awkward ideologically strapped way the USSR conducted its policies in the 1970s and 80s. China wants to feed its people, then become more democratic, and history shows there is absolutely nothing wrong with this.


The influence of these basic human desires reaches far beyond these contemporary international issues-- the yearnings for self-justification and adversarial conflict create the foundation of the stories which inform our sense of right or wrong. Overholt doesn't spend much time contemplating the universality of these elements, but a recent article on China's top 5 Sea Monsters caught my attention-- all people share these a priori mythological desires. The symbols that represent these desires change over time. Though these symbols begin in the internal, ideological realm, once they have been accepted by a society, they often lead to seismic real world consequences.


We'll always need real bodies to fill these eternal mythological templates-- however, in the case of China we have unfortunately abandoned the most vital of those qualities which make us human during this pursuit. Instead of being reasonable, we've allowed the non-intelligent energies of bureaucratic collectives to dictate our foreign policy.


Oh, and the top Chinese Sea Monster?



'Qinghai Lake is located in the north of Qinghai-Tibet Plateau in China. It is the largest landlocked lake in China. Its area is 4583 square kilometers. The elevation of Qinghai Lake is 3196 meters; depth is 32.8 meters. The lake water is azure. Several dozen people have already witnessed the lake monster, but the Qinghai Lake monster is still a mystery. In 1947, a lama saw a monster like a dragon swimming in the Qinghai Lake. In 1949, a peasant saw a monster with snakes head in Qinghai Lake. The monsters scales glistened under the sunshine.'
-- Top Chinese Sea Monster



William H. Overholt

Wednesday, May 06, 2009

And today we drove to find my sister in Johnson City.

And this was probably the last time I will ever go to Johnson City.
But here are a few things I wish I had visited:
I wanted to try the drive-through Pal's burger and fries.
I also wanted to go to this BBQ place with multi-colored walls along the main stretch.
I'm not going to miss anything about that city.

Well, besides the scenery for the fifteen miles before entering it.

And today I ate a Monte Cristo sandwich and brought some of it home to Emily.

She liked it but thought the texture of the sauce was a bit strange-- whuuuuut?

Busby was home when I got here. The thing about Busby is how she barks like Johnny Cash when she's got bones in her mouth; a thunderous baritone mock-bark.

I'm excited to get back to work, here's a psuedo-haiku about it:

working won't get me
to heaven or anything
but it's sorta fun.




It's finally Spring-- just in time for summer.

I received four of my five grades and have A's in every course so far, which is amazing and I'm trying to figure out if law school is a decent avenue to scamper down. What do you think?

Saturday, February 28, 2009




Good morning, how are you? Was President Bush the worst president ever? No, but this guy thinks Thomas Jefferson maybe was:


http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123578552846098603.html
What's a Thomas Jefferson to do to defend himself?

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

today we survived our fast and i took my first mid-term exam about politics and did pretty good too.
we got home and busby was still here so that was a relief.

I'm trying to design my business cards and I'm pretty bad at figuring out how to do that.
I bought some glasses but the place I bought them from is a scam so I'm not getting any, but maybe they'll give me a refun(d) ! That'd make my night.

AMERICAN IDOL RYAN SEACREST is on and it's time to pick a winner already; enough of this procrastination -- this is where my bad habits come from.

There's a new Macbook. It's battery lasts for like a week. It's pretty green, which means it won't cause global warming. Hey, what do ya know?

Home values are decreasing, but if you want to buy my home you can if you pay me a lot more than I bought it for-- it'd be a nice steal!


Well, it's time to listen to Michael Jackson and study a little. Bye.
It's Lent now this time; and we're fasting till dinner-- but what if we start to malnourish? Who will take care of two broken people then? We pray this can't happen.


I tried buying glasses from China but this company ZenniVision is cracked so I hope they refun(d) me my money and I can buy from a legit American company.

Sometime last night I began to dream into the future again and saw most of today's headlines, only I couldn't make them out and didn't have any impressions! So no, if you're wondering if I can 'tell' the future, I can't.
But...Do you ever read the future? Can you talk to people about it? Is this your super dark secret?

I haven't even decided if I should cut my hair or not, of course I don't predict the future, gracious...

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

This time we got a new dog and named her after the dance-maker Busby.
She is a morkie like:




She is the dance maker. She is a girl dog. Her nose is rubber like a pencil and her ears flop. She is white tipped like the French Alps, see?



Here are some things she's prettier than:

1. Otis Nixon





Well, that's all that's Busby.