Wednesday, September 29, 2004

Got game? Not anymore!

And now, the moment you have all been waiting for... for six years now? It's truly a sad day in Canada if you care anything about sports, but in a way it's almost a relief. The Expos franchise has been living on a few years of borrowed time anyway and it's almost a relief to see them go. No more anxious waiting and hoping to see if its fortunes will get any better. But look at where they're going. Washington D.C.! Out of the frying pan... Here's a modest proposal for Canadian cinema. From A & L, an inspirational portrait of a Russian writer, and a long post of the beginning of modernism as we know it, according to one man, another long post, which doesn't matter if you can't read it anyway, and the American government's report. One review of one person's explanation of the decline of journalistic standards (strangely no mention of Geraldo Rivera), and what was so great about Che Guevera anyway? One detractor's view. Any memories you would like to share about the Expos? Feel free to say so.

Thursday, September 23, 2004

Still in the pits

The school paper forgot to include the right link. Small details, I guess, so apparantly it's just me reading this for now. So I got to meet retired amateur boxer Rickey Anderson on Sunday at the Word On The Street Festival, where he was reading from a book he had written. Plenty of inspirational stuff in there. Also, I bought a bunch of things, like a new bag and T-shirt and a bunch of magazines. I don't know if I'll ever get around to reading them. Afterward, I walked up to Park Lane, where I saw some short documentaries. A couple of them affected me in a sort of personal way, one nearly put me to sleep. It was the one on bluegrass music here on the east coast. I don't wish to disrespect it in any way as an art form, it's just a little slow for my taste. The first two docs involved people with whom I am acquainted with. One was by someone who documented her grandmother's recovery from a fall, which showed her brothers who are local musicians, and the other one was about the "Jest In Time" troupe. One of them is a cousin of a cousin, and I saw one of their shows, but I must confess that I didn't get it. Tuesday, I went to some other short films. This time, they were not docs, well, a couple of mock-docs, one of which goofed on a certain Mr. MacIsaac, the other was an admittedly lame, cliche ridden short about a boy born with one eye in the centre. As for the others, one was a disturbing and surrealistic portrait of a family tragedy, ... and one which I can't really comment on because it involved some people I know personally. As to what's going online at the moment, first, an excerpt from Jon Stewart's new book. It's LOL without compromising history (not too badly anyway). John Kerry is taking a position and sticking to it, but the day is not over yet, George W. Bush's apparently pure intent, not compromised by facts, and just how bad of a waffler is Kerry anyway? Here is a back and forth memo between two scribes, one on either side. The speech W gave the other day was not as bad as last years'. On the other hand, a ray of hope, and an example hopefully others will follow.

Thursday, September 16, 2004

No title today

I must respectfully disagree with Mr. Annan. While the Gulf War may have been a lot of things, one thing it wasn't was illegal. Even though it is increasingly clear that Saddam had only intended to restart his weapons programme, but wasn't able to. So what am I to make of Harper's Magazine?Apparently it's getting too extreme. Here's a book review of someone who seems a little too sure of himself, a tract of someone who believes in social safety nets, much to the consternation of free market purists; a view of Michael Moore from a truly egalitarian source, and what does Islam really need anyway?

Tuesday, September 14, 2004

What I learned in school today

Dr. Peter March asked why anybody bothers to get married, because as an institution, it doesn't really work. I often think that myself. People change too much over time, and ultimately grow apart. Actually, I've often thought about settling down and having some children myself, just not anytime in the near future. I would need to be totally self-dependant and be able to provide a stable home like I had. In the meantime, I'm happy being single and there seems to be no stigma attached to it these days. Changing gears, this is a review about a book on Abu Ghraib, which apparantly does not answer one important question, but does the reviewer condone torture? What do you think?

Tuesday, September 07, 2004

OOPS! Classes start tomorrow (for me, the day after)

Apparently, I read something wrong, again. I was worried that I was getting late for class even though I was sure that I was in the right place. So I had to go to the info desk to ask where my class was, but it was she who told me that classes actually begin tomorrow. Ah well. Today's menu consists of: a positive review on a book on the Holocaust which tries to explain how it happened as opposed to why, second, what I consider to be a very important history lesson, a really independant voice, sometimes so independant he feels defensive and alienated from everyone, and another independant with his counter-point. This is a convincing argument for American hegemony by Niall Ferguson, even though the U.S. tends not to learn even from her own history, and an interview of Peter Singer. On Newsweek, some other dissenting views on what I believe to be a guerilla type of war, where the rules of engagement do not apply, and an apparently empty vision by Dubya, the cause of the spike in oil prices that has nothing to do with the Saudis, and where did the occupation of Iraq go right anyway?

Thursday, September 02, 2004

School's in, next Tuesday

I'm registered for two courses this coming semester, and the next semester as well, and my mind is more ready than ever. It already feels like fall outside, and it wasn't even that good a summer. Oh well, 'tis time to begin anew. From Arts and Leters Daily, a roofing contractor in Brooklyn, NY makes a case against the gun lobby, not that he intended to, it's just that he was suprised with the ease with which he was able to acquire high-powered weapons and ship them to the former Yugoslavia, the appearance of impotence or indifference of world powers of Iran's quest to get the Bomb, and the often quotable Winston Churchill, a man whom I admire greatly, but with serious reservations. One of which is quite relevant at the present time, his opinion on Arabs and Iraq. So who the hell is Leo Strauss, and why does he have such a devout and powerful following? This is one man's unflattering opinion, and an ongoing saga of a tale of two countries, which increasingly seem to have more similarities than differences.