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Jun. 7th, 2008 @ 12:37 am A Brief Democratic Primary Retrospective
Current Mood: blah
Tags: ,
I'm happy that Obama is the nominee after all. It's been a long and close campaign between extremely solid and historic candidates.

But putting a damper on this is the justified pain of Clinton supporters and the gloating of those who feel (or hope) this is the end of women in politics (it's not).
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Wings
May. 8th, 2008 @ 03:09 pm On Affirmative Action for Colleges
Current Mood: thoughtful
A conversation I had this afternoon inspired the following thoughts:

The basic argument against affirmative action for colleges is as follows:
1. If a "less qualified" minority student is accepted and a "more qualified" non-minority student is rejected, this is racial discrimination, which is wrong.
2. A student with lower test scores, worse grades, fewer extra-curricular activities, less "intelligence", etc. is "less qualified".

The weakness in this position is not the logical argument in point one. When selecting applicants for a job, one should (both morally and pragmatically) pick the most qualified candidates. If college admissions is analogous to this process, the "job" of students is learning.

Rather, I would contest the second point of the argument. A student with more room for improvement may be in a better position to learn than someone ostensibly "more qualified". Likewise, the "more qualified" student is not necessarily better at learning, they may simply be better at the games of memorization and regurgitation, manipulating teachers, and managing standardized tests. Deciding which student is in fact better qualified is difficult, so I would expect admissions departments to make mistakes. Thus, the knee-jerk accusations of "reverse racism" seem suspiciously hasty and certain.

A college must also consider interactions between students when selecting a student body. Diversity of perspectives is an advantage in many team-based tasks, and education is an exemplary case.

One could argue that education is not the job of colleges, that they are a business like any other, with profit as their sole objective. In that case, schools would certainly be wise to favor wealthy students (less need to pay aid, more family wealth to give) and to look for qualifications which predict success after graduation. Whether those students learn doesn't matter, as the college can list them as alumni and receive their tuition and donations either way. That might make the matter of who is "more qualified" as obvious as people seem to think... or closer to it, anyways.

Certainly the simplicity of this perspective must be tempting for college administrators, and even benevolent administrators want to attract donations (think how much educational good could be done with all that money). Still, I hope that colleges will not become mired in that perspective. Doing so means becoming pure reputation brokers, without that reputation being the side effect of an actual productive activity. During my college search, I asked the head of one of the departments at MIT what made the school better than its competitors, and she stated (paraphrased): "Our good name attracts the best students, those students ensure our good name." This left me with a sour taste in my mouth, as I had been hoping to hear at least something about academics.
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Bookhead (Nagi)
May. 1st, 2008 @ 11:55 am Last Day of Class
Current Mood: bored
Tags: , ,
Gave blood yesterday, had a cavity filled today. Wrapping up work along with the medical stuff.

Sketchy cab-driver guy apparently thinks Barack Obama is "communist", "anti-semetic", "arrogant", and "unelectable". Seems ludicrous to me, but I hope this doesn't represent the opinion of the "average American voter". Scott Adams seems to think it does (more or less).

Things left to wrap up:
SCOPE - Report, expo presentation, code walkthrough
OSS - Code cleanup, video demo
Software Systems - Final project report, final exam
Japanese - Final exam
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L33t
Apr. 22nd, 2008 @ 09:09 pm Earth Day: Thinking Win-Win
Current Mood: optimistic
Earlier this week, I watched Affluenza, which suggests that saving the world may just be a matter of detaching from consumer culture, chillaxing our way into a better future. Of course that's not enough, things aren't that simple. Still, it's important to remember the win-wins.

Think of how business and government will change when measures of economic progress measure more than quantitative growth. Or of the public space reclaimed when parking lots turn to parks. How children will be happier and healthier when they're actually allowed to play outdoors, beyond the featureless yard. How enjoyable cities will be when free public transit gets as much attention as the freeway system does today.

In other news, they commissioned a power-generating wind turbine on the Babson campus today, oil is over $118 after almost touching $120, and Hillary is winning in Pennsylvania... though not by nearly enough, fortunately.
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Carpool
Jan. 30th, 2008 @ 09:55 pm More of the Best, Programming and Otherwise
Current Mood: chipper
Programming:Other:
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L33t
Jan. 8th, 2008 @ 10:18 pm Pleasant
Current Mood: cheerful
Beautiful weather today, I was comfortable walking outside in short sleeves without my coat on my way to work.

My job has transitioned from improving messy Perl code to improving really messy Python code. Still pretty interesting.

I stopped by the arcade after work, and (not far from literally) ran into Xave on the street on my way back to the train. So we had dinner together at Cinderella's, which was nice.

I'm following the New Hampshire primary results with interest. On the Republican side, McCain seems to have this one in the bag. Giuliani is in fourth (behind Huckabee, even), so I think his chances of winning the nomination are good and shot. Ditto for Ron Paul (if that wasn't a given before); if the token libertarian does that poorly in New Hampshire, he can't win anywhere. On the Democratic side, Hillary is leading with Obama in second and Edwards a distant third.
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L33t
Jan. 7th, 2008 @ 11:07 pm Slightly Piss-Hued
Current Mood: amused
Tags: ,
I should be getting to bed, but I don't want to miss the chance to share this strongly worded editorial from today's Boston Metro, the journalistic quality (not in the favorable sense) of which quite surprised me when I read it on the subway this morning.

The editorial mentions (straw-Iowan's) Obama with references to Marx and Mao, and accuses him of "political cowardice" (with an ironically impersonal wording). Hillary is compared to Lucrezia, Bonnie Parker, a defecting spy, and a sadist.

Anyways, I was surprised the Metro published the thing, but I guess journalism still has its old flair. Also, you get what you pay for, and the Metro's hawkers are a hard-working bunch; I've never seen anyone else work so hard to sell something free.
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Lies
Jan. 7th, 2008 @ 11:14 am Candidate Matching Quiz
Current Mood: restless
Tags: ,
80% Chris Dodd
78% Barack Obama
77% John Edwards
77% Joe Biden
76% Dennis Kucinich
75% Hillary Clinton
75% Mike Gravel
66% Bill Richardson
30% Rudy Giuliani
23% John McCain
19% Tom Tancredo
18% Mike Huckabee
18% Ron Paul
17% Mitt Romney
7% Fred Thompson

2008 Presidential Candidate Matching Quiz
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Fools
Jan. 6th, 2008 @ 09:20 pm Need to Post More
Current Mood: thoughtful
It's been an eventful week. Hard work, good food, random musing, a pleasant New Year's Day, more Oliners (Ray and Carl) moving into the enclave, getting back to studying Japanese (especially kanji), watching all of Coyote Ragtime Show, playing a bunch of DDR on double, renewing my MITSFS membership, playing some DnD over IM. Oil hit $100. The results of the Iowa Caucuses were interesting, to say the least (Obama in first? Hillary in third? Huckabee in first? Giuliani in sixth?), and I'm excited about Obama's win.

I spent a lot of time this weekend reading this fantastic blog. I also went to see Sweeney Todd today, and that was as good as I'd expect a musical about a homicidal barber starring Johnny Depp to be (i.e. quite).

I really ought to write down more of my random thoughts. I keep thinking of interesting things, meaning to write them down, and failing to recall them later.
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Wings
Dec. 7th, 2007 @ 12:50 pm Why You Should Support Barack Obama over Hillary Clinton
Current Mood: energetic
Tags:
1. Hillary Clinton currently trails behind every Republican candidate in head-to-head polls. Obama leads every Republican candidate by solid margins.

2. Do we really need Bush-Clinton-Bush-Clinton?

3. Hillary Clinton is very much about playing the political game, and does questionable things like moving to another state just to run for office. Barack Obama has more integrity.

4. Obama has shown an excellent ability to achieve real compromise with reasonable conservatives. Hillary, on the other hand, is super-divisive. We need a uniter.

5. A Hillary candidacy will inspire the most effort from the worst parts of the Republican party during the presidential election. She's a woman and a Clinton. They hate her. (Hell, they're already selling misogynistic anti-Hillary knick-knacks in Borders Bookstore.)

6. Hillary is very much part of the Washington establishment. And those guys have done a great job. Sure, "establishment" means experienced, but experienced at messing things up.

7. Hillary voted for one of the greatest foreign policy blunders in American history. Obama was one of the few that kept his head.

8. Obama is more charismatic. For a president (head of state and chief diplomat), that's a job qualification.

9. On the issues, Hillary and Obama are actually rather similar. The question would be who would be able to make the compromises (and not mere trades or political deals) necessary to get such policies implemented. Who would be able to effectively listen to criticism and strengthen their proposals based on it?

(Of course, this only applies to my friends voting in the Democratic primary. Of the Republican candidates, I think Ron Paul is the best, although I strongly disagree with many of his policy positions.)
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Fools
Nov. 22nd, 2007 @ 02:32 pm Thanksgiving Misgivings
Current Mood: thoughtful
On this Thanksgiving day, here's some food for thought.
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Drink
Oct. 4th, 2007 @ 11:52 pm Remanded
Current Mood: cheerful
Tags: ,
Had jury duty today. David was able to give me a ride to the courthouse (many thanks for that), and a random fellow-juror gave me a ride home. After orientation (jury duty = serious business; jurors determine the facts and apply the law; even if you're not put on a jury you're still useful, since having a jury pool ready to go lets them squeeze out those last-minute plea bargains / dispute resolutions), the first seventy-some of us were taken aside and told that we were remanded (i.e. rescheduled at the last minute, so we have to come back and serve on Tuesday, but only for jury selection on one case).

My cold continues to fade, but after class, I was feeling rather rotten. Then I took an epic nap and felt much improved. I'm hoping that I'll be totally better in time for the three-day weekend.
Entry Links
Carpool
Jun. 27th, 2007 @ 05:40 pm Consolidated Links
Current Mood: restless
Tags: , , , ,
Been a while since my last links post. Here's the niftiest of the nifty I've encountered over the past few weeks:
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Error
May. 21st, 2007 @ 11:02 pm Feeling Forgetful
Current Mood: blah
Current Music: The Ultimates - Aftermath
Tags: , , ,
Today was a rather lousy day. I had a test in kaiwa, did all right on the listening but totally screwed up the conversation part. Definitely didn't practice enough. Conversation teaches you how hard a language is... up the speed a bit and everything you learned has a tendency to get lost in the wake. I also missed taking a kanji test that I need to take today on account of missing the next kanji class on Friday (due to being away in Okinawa with the IESers). I'll have to track down Inaba-sensei and apologize tomorrow.

Also, a random political snippet: Ohio 17th district congressman Tim Ryan is trying to live for a week on only food stamps (a week's worth is $21 of food). On the fifth day, he gets most of his remaining food (jars of peanut butter and jelly) confiscated by the TSA. Not sure what to facepalm about first...
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L33t zombie
May. 16th, 2007 @ 10:13 am Falwell Kicks the Bucket
Current Mood: apathetic
In case you haven't heard the news, Jerry Falwell is dead. Apparently, the Phelps clan is planning to picket his funeral (link not safe for sanity, though fortunately lacking the Phelpses' usual amateur pornography).
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L33t
May. 3rd, 2007 @ 10:55 am LOLZ, DRM
Current Mood: amused
AACS (the content protection system for HD-DVD and Blu-Ray movies) has been cracked. Cory Doctorow's analysis is right on: DRM costs years and billions and is rendered totally useless by some hackers in a week or so of spare time.

To make the story more amusing, the AACS is now sending bogus legal threats against everyone who posts a number. Specifically, this number:
9-f9-11-02-9d-74-e3-5b-d8-41-56-c5-63-56-88-c0

Amusingly, Digg (a popular social link-sharing site) tried to censor the story, but gave in after that provoked a virtual riot from its users.

Update: The number is now on over 700,000 webpages and has sparked a variety of artistic renditions, including this song. It's really hard for anyone to suppress information on the internet once it starts to spread.
Entry Links
Skilled
Apr. 25th, 2007 @ 10:39 am The G-Word
Current Mood: contemplative
In the comment threads two posts ago, I used the word "gaijin" (lit. outside person; outsider, foreigner) as opposed to "gaikokujin" (lit. outside country person; foreign national, foreigner), and a fellow IESer chewed me out for that, asking me (politely, if somewhat condescendingly) to stop using the word. I'm not sure I have an informed opinion on the subject, so I'll just open the floor to discussion.

So, "gaijin": When is it acceptable for foreigners to use the word referring to themselves? What about referring to other foreigners? Does it make a difference if they're expats as opposed to those staying more temporarily? Is it acceptable for Japanese people to use it ever? In what contexts is it pejorative? Is using the word "culturally insensitive"? Is it equivalent to "nigger" (and therefore deserving to meet the business end of the PC ban-hammer), or is that an overreaction? Is it better for racist epithets to be co-opted or excluded by the group that they refer to?

Food for thought:Update: I asked my host mom 外人と話すのは失礼ですか (gaijin-to hanasu-no-wa shitsurei desu-ka; "is it rude to say 'gaijin'?" [although "hanasu" is probably not quite the right verb, among other problems]), and her response was that it wasn't, although she noted that the word makes some older Japanese people uncomfortable (that's heavily paraphrased, though... I may have missed some of the details of her explanation).

Update 2: The above is totally wrong (wrong verb, can be misinterpreted as "is it rude to talk to outsiders". The correct phrase is apparently 外人の言葉は失礼ですか (gaijin-no kotoba-wa shitsurei desu-ka; "is the word 'gaijin' rude"). According to Kyoko-san (again heavily paraphrased) the word is impolite because it seems to imply that there is some fundamental difference between "nihonjin" and "gaijin" (Japanese people and all other people).
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L33t
Mar. 15th, 2007 @ 12:05 am Not Much, Yet Again
Current Mood: awake
The only thing eventful about this week is that my passport is still not here yet. It was going to arrive today, now the expediter says Friday. Everything's still going to be done on time, but the U.S. Dept of State seems determined to get things done at the last possible minute. (To be fair, they're probably trying to minimize the amount of people who are really angry, at the cost of raising the number of people who are somewhat pissed off.) I'm not worried, but my mom is, which makes my life less pleasant (she feels compelled to point out all my faults (along the lines of "you can't do that in Japan") and worries out loud in my general direction).

I saw 300 with Markos last weekend. It was awesome, but not for everyone. If this review makes you want to see it, then you'll probably enjoy it.

I also read World War Z. In one sitting (~350 pages). At Markos house, after the movie. For that, I stayed up all night. I also watched Marcos play all of Half Life: Blue Shift. Yeah...

I'm still sleeping far too much, odd hours... I hope I'll be able to adjust to Japan schedule all right.

Other random things:
  • There's an atheist in congress. Which is cool, I would have guessed there weren't any. The Secular Coalition has more on that story.
  • Xepher and So Deep on the piano. Nifty.
  • This game seems like a cool enough concept that it might motivate me to buy a 360. Wonder how it will turn out... (If I got a 360, I'd probably get Mass Effect, too. It looks like they're getting a lot of good RPGs.)
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L33t
Dec. 27th, 2006 @ 10:04 pm Gerald Ford, RIP
Current Mood: quixotic
Tags: , ,
Gerald Ford died today at age 93 (although the announcement was done well in advance). I hear he was a decent guy (although compared to Nixon and Agnew, that's an easy target).
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L33t
Nov. 13th, 2006 @ 05:33 pm Did YouTube Win the Senate?
Current Mood: thoughtful
I'm a big fan of [info]liberalviewer's videos (they're fairly insightful and a good example of some of the benefits of fair use), and I thought this was particularly interesting.
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Colbert