Tuesday, March 30, 2010
Your life as a Control Chart
Monday, March 22, 2010
A Giant Leap for Human Rights and Democracy
Where is it all coming from.
- A more equal distribution of wealth and greater international fiscal equality.
- A ceaseless flood of money from the first world will finance extremism and terrorism in unstable countries around the world. Ultimately fueling a 'war' targeted at its very financiers.
Sunday, March 21, 2010
Why I care about the Draft
NFL 2010 Mock Draft
- 1. St Louis Rams: Sam Bradford, QB Oklahoma – The rams need everything and could easily justify any of a half dozen players but at the end of the day the decision to pick QB is purely economics. They simply can’t justify that the investment on a position of lesser value.
- 2. Detroit Lions: Ndamukong Suh, DT, Nebraska – The offensive is in reasonable condition and likely to get better as Stafford matures. The temptation here is to pick an offensive tackle here, namely Okung, but I think it’s more likely that they fill that need in the second round and upgrade their defence.
- 3. Tamp Bay Buccaneers: Gerald McCoy, DT, Oklahoma – Easy pick. I’m not even going to justify it.
- 4. Washington Redskins: Russell Okung, OT, Oklahoma State – The pick here is Clausen or Okung, it’s that simple. I don’t think Shannahan is sold on the young Notre Dame diva and will opt to secure his left side for a decade. Who knows, maybe Campbell can salvage his once promising career with a decent system and protection
- 5. Kansas City Chiefs: Bryan Bulaga, OT, Iowa – Let’s face it, Cassel isn’t a franchise QB, but he’s paid like it and now he should be protected like it. Berry is a possibility but frankly, its position value again and a great LT > Excellent Safety.
- 6. Seattle Seahawks: Jimmy Clausen, QB, Notre Dame – Seattle’s needed a QB for a while and they’ll finally address that need.
- 7. Cleveland Browns: Eric Berry, S, Tennessee – While the value of OTs has kept Berry available, Cleveland has one of the best in the league already. With Clausen and Bradford off the board there are no excuses to take my favourite player in the draft.
- 8. Oakland Raiders: Jason Pierre-Paul, DE, South Florida – The Undead will pick the best athlete regardless of if it makes sense. That’s what happens here.
- 9. Buffalo Bills: Dez Bryant, WR, Oklahoma State – This team needs someone that can take the ball to the end zone and make plays. Dez Bryant is the best in the draft at that and should help them score some points.
- 10. Jacksonville Jaguars: Rolando McClain, ILB, Alabama – Jacksonville needs to put butts in seats and I think they do so by getting the captain of their defence and the captain of their offence in the same draft. Yup, they’re taking Tebow at pick 42, you can bank on that.
- 11. Denver Broncos: Dan Williams, NT, Tennessee – Big men this good are too hard to come by so despite signing another Williams they’re still going to take Dan for the future.
- 12. Miami Dolphins: Sergio Kindle, OLB, Texas – The thing about 3-4 teams is you can never have enough NT or linebackers that can get after the QB. Kindle is the latter, and he is very, very good at it.
- 13. San Francisco 49ers: Joe Haden, CB, Florida – I see Haden as this year’s Malcolm Jenkins. Quick but not fast, excellent tape, long arms and physical. I see them drafted at about the same spot too.
- 14. Seattle Seahawks: Anthony Davis, OT Rutgers – Easily a top 10 talents slips a little bit. Seattle walks away from this draft with the basis of their offense for the next decade.
- 15. New York Giants: Derrick Morgan, DE, Georgia – It’s the Giants and it’s an excellent 4-3 DE that just happens to also be BPA. Perfect.
- 16. Tennessee Titans: Kyle Wilson, CB, Boise State – A bit of a reach, but when Manning beats you like a drum twice a year, you have no choice but to reach on defense.
- 17. San Francisco 49ers: Trent Williams, OT, Oklahoma – Singletary can’t believe his luck. He believes in the trenches and Williams certainly offers that.
- 18. Pittsburgh Steelers: Mike Iupati, G, Idaho – With their first choices of Dan Williams and Sergio Kindle long gone, they pick up a road grater, one of the safest picks in the draft, just poor positional value.
- 19. Atlanta Falcons: Brandon Graham, DE, Michigan – Although Weatherspoon was the plan, if Graham falls to them, they take him. He’ll look great opposite Abraham, and latter replacing him.
- 20. Houston Texans: Earl Thomas, FS, Texas – Houston has needed a Safety forever, this is finally taken care of with a great value pick.
- 21. Cincinnati Bengals: CJ Spiller, RB, Clemson – Adds a valuable dimension to their offense and is frankly too good to pass up.
- 22. New England Patriots: Jared Odrick, DT, Penn State – An athletic warrior, look for him to be moved around a lot and even replace the great DL of old.
- 23. Green Bay Packers: Bruce Campbell, OT, Maryland – He doesn’t need to start right away, which is good as he shouldn’t start, but he is clearly the most athletic tackle in the draft and the potential is too good to pass up. Green Bay is comfortable drafting a player that won’t immediately start because their defence was surprisingly good in its first year at 3-4 and the key components of their offense are set.
- 24. Philadelphia Eagles: Ryan Mathews, RB, Fresno State – Although CJ Spiller is a better fit to replace Westbrook, Mathews is more than capable and will bring a little more attitude.
- 25. Baltimore Ravens: Jermaine Gresham, TE, Oklahoma – Baltimore is finally giving Flacco a weapon other than Ray Rice.
- 26. Arizona Cardinals: Sean Weatherspoon, OLB, Missouri - After the worst offseason in team history they desperately need a good draft. Weatherspoon is excellent value here and can try to replace Dansby.
- 27. Dallas Cowboys: Taylor Mays, S, USC – Jerry Jones is Al Davis with Dan Snyders money.
- 28. San Diego Chargers: Terrance Cody, NT, Alabama – With Williams gone the chargers have no legitimate replacements for the middle of their 3-4. Sure they could try the kid from Western but instead they decide to reach on the mountain. It will probably pay off.
- 29. New York Jets: Demaryius Thomas, WR, Georgia Tech – Braylon Edwards isn’t the answer. The Jets get to choose between Thomas and Golden Tate, both of which would be great but Thomas has better tape and Big Rex doesn’t get distracted by 40s.
- 30. Minnesota Vikings: Devin McCourty, CB, Rutgers – The Rutgers corner is purely an insurance policy.
- 31. Indianapolis Colts: Maurkice Pouncey, C, Florida – While Manning calls the offense, Saturday calls the protection and that is an invaluable part of the audible offense. Indy needs to make sure they have a well trained replacement when the time comes and until it does Pouncey is versatile enough to play all three interior OL positions and maybe even RT.
- 32. New Orleans Saints: Carlos Dunlap, DE, Florida – Charles Grant’s replacements. If anyone of Dunlap, Graham, Weatherspoon, Mays or Earl Thomas last until the last pick, they’ll run to the podium.
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Influences.
In the same way that musicians list their influences, I list mine here in the fields of debate, speech, rational thought, intellectual fortitude and discipline:
Christopher Hitchen is perhaps one of the most skilled debaters of his generation, and a personal favourite. It has nothing to do with his appearance, his constant fidgeting or his excessive sweating; rather his arguments are extremely engaging and so cleverly woven that the trap closes before his debate opponent realises it was even being made. His mastery of words is only surpassed but his unrivalled cleverness and complete devotion to a rational debate on irrational subjects. It is these three attributes that I admire and draw from.
Glenn Beck is a truly remarkably stupid man with few if any valuable ideas. Listening to what he has to say revolts my most basic sensibilities and contradicts the concept of universal logic. However, he is a uniquely skilled individual, able to captivate hundreds of thousands of sheep with utter garbage and convince them that his ideas are their own. His ability to brainwash the masses with blatant hate mongering and stupidity is near Hitler-esk and I am simultaneously in awe and terrified of him.
Stephen Hawking has come up with some of the most brilliant ideas of our generation, wrote about theoretical physics in a palatable form, plans to write a children’s book and is a main stay in modern culture as the most intelligent man alive. He did most of this with a single finger to communicate. A brain so uniquely brilliant that it can both achieve to his level and simultaneously have the patience to communicate them one letter at a time is truly one in a generation, if not once in a species. I admire this scientist for above all his patience, but also his clarity and surpassing intellectual prowess.
Friedrich Nietzsche was a persuasive idealist who cared little if any for what the opposition thought of his ideas. He wrote what he believed was right and made no apologies for it. While not particularly persuasive in his era, it didn’t take long for the most influential figure of the 20th century to pick up his work and corrupt it, forever giving this honest philosopher a bad name. At the core of Nietzsche teachings are morality outside of religion and the will to power and success as the driving forces of man; ideas that I consider both important in their own right, and the basis of a whole new line of thought. Just ignore the fact that he went stark raving mad.
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
I Hate St. Patrick's Day
Monday, March 15, 2010
Saturday, March 13, 2010
The 'Iggy' heard around the world.
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
Eighty Thousand Dollars and 4 Years but not Friday Night?
So why are there so many people that refuse to put this effort it? I think the problem is concentrated on those that are here on their parent’s dime. Those individuals are not really spending eighty thousand dollars; they are having eighty thousand given to them, and therefore have no motivation to make that money work for them, to maximize their utility. Just as they don’t appreciate the value of having their tuition, rent, books, food, entertainment paid for them now, they don’t consider a life in which their own efforts dictate their consumption. These individuals are cognitively trained to rely on their parent’s cheque books to satisfy their wants. 200 bucks a week for food and beer? Check! A new TV? Check! Steak or Salmon for dinner every night? Check! They have everything they want, why work for more?
I argue that if these individuals had to pay for at least a few of their own expenses they would be more motivated in their studies so they could realise perks that make their life comfortable. Individuals that are incapable of developing their own work ethic and discipline must be shown that there is a correlation between effort and consumption if they are ever to truly be motivated. Otherwise, they will continue to waste the gift that was given to them and spit in the face of those kids that would work 16 hours a day, 7 days a week but cannot afford to be here.
Monday, March 8, 2010
God(s) Should be Feared Above All
I fear the concept of Gods (as discussed earlier) above all else. This is not because I’m particularly worried about the apocalypse, a flood, spontaneous targeted lightning, locus, the Angel of Death or any other Divine punishment. No, I fear God because of what people are willing to do in his name.
The most prominent modern example of heinous acts done in the name of God are the horrific suicide bombings that have become seemingly commonplace since September 11th, 2001. In the granddaddy of all jihadist suicide bombings, 16 devoted men sacrificed themselves with the understanding that they would be rewarded with eternal paradise and never ending sex with 70 virgin women. Their martyrdom and those of the countless others in Iraq, Afghanistan and Israel would never have happened without the divine reward. These actions, carried out to forward an ideology, are solely to blame on the deluded concept that killing civilians can earn God’s favour and heaven.
In American schools it is a daily battle for the right to teach evolution. In the name of God, there is a legitimate movement to eradicate real science in the science classroom and replace it with what can only be called a myth. While the story of Genesis has undoubted power, and religious meaning to many people, it has absolutely no scientific meaning. The blind devotion of a few are trying to limit the capacity for education in the world’s most developed country.
I believe today that my conduct is in accordance with the will of the Almighty Creator.
- Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf, Vol. 1 Chapter 2
While I am by no means saying that what Hitler done was accepted or supported by your God of choice, it is an undeniable fact that history’s greatest mass murderer thought he was. The Second World War and the Holocaust would not have happened without this belief.
A personal favourite example of mine is slavery. African slavery was thought to be acceptable because the bible implied that black people weren’t as good as white people. Without this incredible arrogance, with which those at the time thought was divinely given, slavery would likely have never happened.
The list of absolute horrors that have occurred through history because people thought “This is God’s work” or excused their crimes in the name of God is horrendously long and impossible to summarise. However, I have compiled the greatest hits as they occur to me:
- The Crusades (all 9 of them)
- Anything that begins in Inquisition
- The spread of Aids, due to the Catholic Church preaching the evils of condoms
- Booming population is developing countries that can ill afford to feed or educate more citizens, for the same reason as above
- Genocide in Rwanda: Catholic Priests called for mass murder from the pulpits, inspiring horrendous acts that most thought were the work of God
- The Dark Ages: the repression of science is largely attributable to the power of organized religion and their active anti-science pursuits (see the Roman Inquisition and Galilei, Galileo)
- The crimes of the Ku Klux Klan
- The sexual exploitation and abuse of countless young buys
- Oppression of women throughout Muslim countries, and stoning of women who were raped for being unclean
- Mountain Meadows Massacre
- The cruel and unusual punishment of Alan Turing, leading to his eventual suicide
- The crimes of Nadal Malik Hasan, the Fort Hood shooter
Sunday, March 7, 2010
The Ice Melts at Sunset
Saturday, March 6, 2010
God is Real.
God is real. Allah is real. Yahweh is real. So are Rama and Krishna. You can add Waheguru, Melek Tawus, Khawandagar and Haneullim to the list as well. These deities are all real and they, as well as their followers, must be treated with understanding, respect and yes, even a degree of reverence. Indeed, countless examples of history prove there is nothing so powerful or motivating to humanity as a divine, omnipotent power. As long as a single individual believes in any of the above, they are for all tangible and measurable purposes real.
Let us be clear though, I am not suggesting the presence of these God’s (and I use this word only for the convenience of the English language, but with the intention of including all divine beings) nor any others. In fact, I abstain from passing judgement on their existence all together, since from my perspective it simply does not matter. I understand that it is impossible to convince anyone of anything they are not willing to accept, and chief among those topics is religion. Nor do I wish to, it is an individual’s right to believe in what they wish. What I am saying is that to people on this earth, these God’s are real and they follow their teachings every day; placing everything from their families’ well being to their eternal souls in those figurative hands. That level of belief and trust is not to be mocked, belittled or disbelieved, regardless of one’s personal views. Rather it should be admired, cherished and respected for what it means to the believer.
Friday, March 5, 2010
Your weekly link spam
Thursday, March 4, 2010
Footprints in the Ice
On a lighter note...
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
Switzerland at War!
Granted they did vote to ban the construction of Minarets, which is roughly the equivalent of voting to ban crosses on churches. Expect for the obnoxious call to prayers (sorry Muslims, but its horribly annoying to those not of faith). An unnecessary move, but one that warrants a call for suicide bombers and civilian attacks? Certainly not.
The Swiss response? To ignore it. The Swiss-Muslim response? To rise above the issue, stay neutral and poke the blubbering idiot back.
“it did not shock us, as he often says such nonsense.” - Yasar Ozdemir, member of the Zurich-based Swiss Federation of Muslim Associations
[1] - http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/27/world/europe/27swiss.html
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
Looting in Chile and Haiti prove that Hobbes was Right
The looting seen in Haiti and more recently, Chile,[1] are astounding, horrifying and predicted long ago by none other than Thomas Hobbes, whom I’m sure most of you are unfamiliar with. However, his works are just as important as Voltaire, Montesquieu and Locke. Oh, you don’t know those either? Well they came up with Freedom of Speech, Separation of Power in Government and Liberalism, respectively. Lofty company to say the least.
Hobbes’ claim it fame is no less impressive, he wrote passionately in Leviathan about a social contract between government and its people which is a powerful democratic concept day. In constructing his argument for the need for government he said that if left uncheck the lives of men are “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short”. He viewed man as inherently prone to violence and disorder and that it required a strong government to keep them in check, and ensure a prosperous society.
He would have told you that if a catastrophic event occurs, and the foundation of government is shaken, people will react by entering a free for all frenzy. That is exactly what has happened. Instead of respecting the rule of law, trusting their government to uphold order for just a few days and acting in a civilized manner for when the first time in their lives society and the police weren’t mandating it, they acted nasty and brutish. Their actions shortened many more lives.
Until such a time as looting isn’t a concern in the wake of a disaster, but rather delivering aid and rebuilding are the priorities we cannot call ourselves, as individuals and a species civilized but rather held to a level of respectability by the threat of imprisonment. It is a goal that our species must prove it can obtain to truly be considered humane and advanced.
Monday, March 1, 2010
22 Million Watch History
Two thirds of all Canadians, around 22 million, were watching on TV when Sidney Crosby scored GWG in OT. Two thirds!!
[1]-http://twitter.com/tsnbobmckenzie
Israel is an Evil State… But I still Sympathize with them
History, and particularly recent history is filled with atrocities committed by the Israelis. Violence in the west bank, ruthless shelling of Lebanon, construction of a wall (ala Germany) and most recently: the well coordinated and highly successful assassination on foreign soil[1]. This list could spill over many pages and still not cover the atrocities that are committed by the Jewish State, little less blamed on them. It would be very hard to defend these as actions of a country seeking peace, or anything short of evil for that matter, particularly to the Palestinians. So I won’t.
I condemn Israel and many of her policies and actions as those of a war mongering nation, perpetuating a cycle of violence, refusing to seek compromise for the good of everyone involved.
I do not question the necessity of their actions.
Since its inception in Israel has been involved in the following wars:
1948 Arab-Israeli War. Shortly have surviving an attempted Genocide the Jewish people had to fight to have land to call their own.
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1956 Suez Crisis. Although not a direct attack on their sovereignty, left unchecked it would have very likely evolved into one.
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1967 Six Day War. Jordan, Syria and Egypt amassed troops, fully capable and motivated to crush Israel. A pre-emptive attacked against the Egyptian air force was perhaps the most brilliant tactical decision of the last half century and saved the country.
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1967-1970 War of Attrition. Israel’s moral and economy was attacked. But they did what they always do, survived.
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1973 Yom Kippur War. Why is it called the Yom Kippur war? Well that’s because Syria and Egypt attacked on the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur, in an attempt to surprise the deeply religious state and crush them they could respond. It didn’t work. In two weeks the Syrian forces had lost all of the ground that they had gained and shortly after that a cease-fire was declared.
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1978 Operation Litani. Israel pushed the PLO back, protecting its citizens from relentless shelling.
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1987-1990 Intifada. An uprising of the young laid the ground work for later discontent.
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2000 Intifada, again. Marked by suicide bombings and daily unrest, no citizen could consider themselves safe.
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2006 Lebanon War. After withstanding literally hundreds of mortars launched into their country, the Israelis finally got tired and cleared out Hezbollah launch points to the north.
Needless to say, had they lost any of these, they would have lost their country, their identity, their long sought after freedom. The most persecuted group of people in modern history acted repeatedly in self defence.
When survival is on the line, and Holocaust is your experience, how can any sympathetic person ask the Israel to lie down and effectively surrender to their enemies? While their proactive approach may be debatable, the need for action was not.
I do not agree with their tactics, but I do agree with their right to defend themselves, and yes, perhaps even their tendency to use excessive force. What’s at stake is too important to risk to anything less.