Friday, February 29

Thought bubbles...

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Thoughts over the last few weeks:

There is little better then a giant golden moon hanging low in the eastern sky. It is in fact better when it is peaking out from around the corner of a 18th century barn.

Politics really grinds my gears (a phrase that comes up a lot around school). Seriously. I know that it's important, I am political science/theory major after all. But I have had it with the American political system, if system it can be called.

I was accepted to grad school! Wee! I was actually the first in my class to receive their acceptance. So it looks like it's Catholic University of America in the fall, for Library Science and Information Studies. Hopefully this leads to museum work. I adore museums. But if I have to spend the rest of my life in a library helping people learn stuff? I'm ok with that ^_^

This also means that my wedding won't be for two summers-- 2010 ya'll. Mark it!

Apparently the Rome students have hit the point where they hate each other and want to hear from someone not their class. I don't ever remember that happening, but then, I didn't have many friends in the class. I hung out with everyone.

Sunday, February 10

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Well, Super Tuesday has come and gone, and what we're left with is rather surprising. Certainly no one expected John McCain to come out on top. There are very few conservatives that I met that would vote for him. Apparently, the Democratic game plan is to paint him as a cronie of G. W. Bush's. How they'll do that, I don't know, but I'm assuming it involves magic, since, although I am no fan of either McCain or Bush, I wouldn't really put them in the same category. And Romney dropped out, which is unfortunate, because that was the "lesser of two evils" I was gonna end up voting for. Oh well. I'll just find myself a Bahamanian island to live on for the next 4-8 years.

Also, the Hollywood Writer's strike is finally nearing it's end, which is good news to those of us who crave TV as a small bit of escapism. Funnily enough, unions came up in political economy the other day, and the question of whether strikes were effective anymore was raised. The only one any of us could think of was the Writer's Strike. Unfortunately, people don't think that picket lines are serious within the union anymore. I don't know but that I can't justify paying a bagger at a grocery store 9 bucks an hour with a 401k, and I don't understand why people are actually threatened with violence for disagreeing (before you say I'm wrong and exaggerating, it's a real example from the grocery worker's strike in San Diego about ten or twelve years ago. I didn't give a damn at the time, I just wanted my stinking Oreos...) It's something that stuck in my head, because I wonder about organized labor every now and again. Starbucks isn't unionized, and while I'd like to get paid more then 7.20 an hour to make your drink, I know it's hard to justify it to anyone who hasn't done the job, and the benefits, had I wanted them, were really good, especially for a part time job. We got that without a union, and I know full well that it was because the unions swept through all industries in the 20's and 30's that the company didn't think twice before laying out a good benefits package. But I wonder, sometimes, if we out grow our secondary institutions, like unions. And I wonder if such speculation is even worth it, because, after all, it's the intellectuals that seem to start the wars. That's what I get for being immersed in the Enlightenment and French Revolution in humanities I guess.

Two other quick notes: This I'm just not sure about. I understand that the modern man likes his deep thought, when at all possible, in the quickest easiest form (just look at network news). But cutting the Sermon on the Mount out of your version of the Bible because there's not enough action? I'm wondering about the wisdom of that....

Other quick note? It's nothing really... I got engaged Friday night.

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