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Posts tagged "politics"

You've probably heard that there's been rioting all over London, as well as some other cities. Just thought I'd post a quick note to say I'm alright. The shopping centre near us was looted (Tim, who stayed up all night watching the news, had a look around earlier and tweeted about the damage) but otherwise it was quiet.

I'm really pissed off, both at the people looting, and at all of the people commenting on this on the news harping on about what "pure, senseless criminality" it all was. No-one is excusing the people burning, stealing, and mugging, but just because it wasn't a political protest doesn't mean there aren't political and social underlying factors. Looking at the reasons doesn't make the things going on any less horrible and stupid, or the people perpetrating them any less at fault, but it means that maybe we can try to make people's lives better and make this less likely in the future. The demonisation of youth, poor people, and ethnic minorities people jump to so quickly make me rage.

Anyway, I'm going in to uni for a bit. I need to go to the library, and I want to visit Gay's the Word to buy a book in support after they had their window smashed in over the weekend. I'm going to head home around lunchtime, though, in case there are any transport disruptions later on.

Links that I've been getting my news from:

[personal profile] cobweb_diamond has some more links, as well.

Obviously be suitably sceptical towards any unconfirmed rumours.

I feel almost guilty about how much attention is being paid to this, when there's war and famine and other worse things elsewhere, and I'm not even affected apart from having to walk to a different grocery shop, but man. This is where I live. Feels weird.

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Do you know how much I love you?



I've had a post with half a review of volume 1 of Ōoku sitting in my drafts since the halcyon days of December 4th. It's a little end of term crunch-time-y around here at the moment, so I'll finish and post it when I've handed in my essay on the 16th. Short version: OMG I AM IN LOVE WITH EVERYTHING. Why are my copies of volume 2 - 4 not here yet, Amazon?

I also took the JLPT N4 on the 5th. It was pretty easy, actually, considering that I haven't studied that much in the last month. Unless of course I did terribly and don't realise it. :P

Oh, and the government hates students. Great. I considered going to the demo, but decided in favour of essay work and tutor meetings in the end. At least I didn't get hit in the head with a horse this way. :/

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10. 12. 2010 11:17 pm | Personal, Syndicated | Tags: , , | Comment
You know how I think teaching kids history is really important? I read in the Guardian today (and I really tried to find a more neutral source to read up on it on, but no-one but the Guardian and the Daily Mail cares at the moment) that the Tories want an historian called Niall Ferguson to help re-write the history syllabus.

I think getting down a general chronology of what order things happened in is probably a good idea, if that's not being done already, but then there's this:

He said the syllabus was "bound to be Eurocentric" because the world was Eurocentric.

I've heard his name for the first time today, and already I dislike him.


In other historical news, I am totally excited for this on TV tonight:

The Secret Diaries of Miss Anne Lister on BBC2 at 9pm! It sounds like it's going to be pretty great. You should watch it, guys.

(Also there's a documentary about Anne Lister directly afterwards presented by Sue Perkins :3)
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31. 5. 2010 7:25 pm | Personal, Syndicated | Tags: , , , | Comment
I accumulate topics to blog about inbetween posts, each too short for a post of its own—in my opinion, anyway—but I keep collecting them for so long that if I were to write them up all at once they'd end up a hugely long disjointed monstrosity. So I'm gonna write about one or two things now, and some more later.

I took the Political Compass test the other day. Here's my result:


I was kind of surprised how far down it is, since I am, you know, quite a fan of governments existing, in general.

But I wouldn't treat the result as terribly accurate, anyway, because it was such a frustrating test to take. More than half of the questions left me sitting there for ages going "well, I kind of agree with this, but under some circumstances I would definitely disagree, too" or puzzling over semantics. Except for the religion and sex ones. Those were really easy.

Me: "'Today's society is too open about sex'... strongly disagree; we're by far not open enough."
Tim: "I knew you were going to say that, pervert."

I also obviously don't know enough about economics. One of the questions asked whether inflation or unemployment were more important to deal with. I do not know enough about the causes of inflation and unemployment and how they affect each other to answer that. Though apparently it's just code for "do you think rich people's or poor people's problems are more important". Rrrrrgh, simplistic questioning! I'm pretty sure you can't disregard the rich or the poor if you want a healthy economy. Maybe I'll move on to economics when I'm a bit further through the maths section at Khan Academy.


Oh yeah, I've been (re)teaching myself math using the videos at Khan Academy (at the recomendation of... FY!Math, I think, or possibly FY!Space). Because, thanks in part to some of those awesome science panels at Eastercon, I remembered that I've always enjoyed it (despite those IB external assessments. What's the point of a test if they don't tell you what you did wrong afterwards? Bastards), and that I've forgotten rather a lot of it of it. And also it'll be useful for me to know my way around statistics for my MA* (which is the reason that seems to fly best in non-geek circles, but they're all equally legit).

I wasn't sure what I still remembered, so I'm just making my way through it all starting at Algebra, doing a problem or two in each section to make sure I can still solve equations and so on. (I can.)


I've noticed the way I enjoy math is a lot like the way I enjoy language. Okay, the rules of any language probably have a lot more irregularities than math, but they're both structured ways of conveying information. They make sense and are aesthetically pleasing in the same way. Translating something or constructing a sentence feels a lot like a mathematical operation: putting words in the correct order so they transform each other's meaning in the way that will result in the overall intended message. And when you read a sentence you solve it, bit for bit, dividing the words into their types, applying the verbs to the objects and subjects and the adjectives to the nouns, and in the end you have a meaning, which is the solution. I'm sure other people have described this in more eloquent ways, but you know what I mean.


Aside: I never know whether to say "math" or "maths". My spell-check says "maths", but "math" sounds more natural to me. Maybe I'll just start saying "mathematics" all the time.


I didn't intend to divide by fiction/non-fiction, but I guess in my next post I'll talk about what I've been reading and watching lately! \o/

And now I'm gonna go watch the new Star Trek film on blu-ray. Again. :3


*What's that, you say, some understanding of economics will probably also be useful for me academically? Why yes, that is correct. So will linguistics, and a number of other things. Fuck, I love my subject so much.
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The French government: fighting sexism by... um... restricting what women are allowed to wear on their heads.

I am not a great fan of repressive religiosity either, but in nothing that I've read or heard on the radio today has anyone stated a good reason for the government to get involved in what people are wearing. Are the 1900 French women who cover their faces all secretly members of a bank-robbing gang that can't be caught because no-one knows what they look like? Are they? Oh no, they're just ~*un-French*~.

Fuck off.


Anyway, sketchdump:

I found a website called Pose Maniacs a while ago. It's pretty good for some life-drawing practice.




I swear half of the female poses on that site are unnecessarily sexy.



This is pretty much my favourite thing I've drawn this year so far.




Still practicing with the brush pen.


Oh, and I got my official offer letter from UCL. Hee. Start date: 27 September 2010. *starts counting down the days*
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I leave the internet alone for a day or two, and suddenly the NHS is, to his own and everyone else's great surprise killing Stephen Hawking, and recruiting terrorists. (I don't really know what's worse about that video, the stupidity about socialised healthcare or the unbelievable xenophobia.)

Also someone in the house of lords doesn't approve of porn that is written down. Though the Dangerous Text amendments were dropped, apparently, so fanfic is safe, but my favourite pervy manga is presumably still in trouble. :| This is so stupid, guys. You must have better things to do than making it criminal to be turned on by weird things.


Anyway. I finally put all my postcards and pictures up on the wall the other day, so with the new desk and all it feels even more like a proper room, now:


I also got my JLPT application in the mail this morning. :3 Exciting!


In other news, job searching is still a pain. I can't even think of a bullshit made up reason for wanting to go into a "exciting career in sales", never mind a real one. >_< I'm tempted to just give up on job-finding websites and just look if there's a museum or a library or any interesting place that has a vacancy I'm qualified for*. Or apply for the assistant manager position at Costa in Cobham. -_-

*I know this is sot of obvious, but I've been so focused on the fact that it's so hard to get jobs and that I can't afford to be picky etc. etc. that it actually only occurred to me just now that I might want focus on things that I am actually interested in and suited for. ¬_¬
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