Bush: 'Our Long National Nightmare Of Peace And Prosperity Is Finally Over'
good predictions
Friday, December 22, 2006
Will be traveling until January 12th. Guangzhou, Ningbo, Shanghai, Hangzhou, Gaozhou
In the meanwhile, the reader can engage in a voyage of the imagination, imaging the protagonist of this blog encountering exotic roadsigns and confronting the memories of his past.
Happy holidays! I will bring back lots of pictures. I would bring back love too, but we all know that my heart is an engine forged from the remnants of a supernova.
Kindest regards,
In the meanwhile, the reader can engage in a voyage of the imagination, imaging the protagonist of this blog encountering exotic roadsigns and confronting the memories of his past.
Happy holidays! I will bring back lots of pictures. I would bring back love too, but we all know that my heart is an engine forged from the remnants of a supernova.
Kindest regards,
Thursday, December 21, 2006
Tuesday, December 19, 2006
China Tightens Adoption Rules for Foreigners
Professor Murray is single and she adopted Bin from China. In our business law class we would hear hilarious stories from her, such as how Bin developed a Shreveport accent (Professor Murray is from Louisiana). I am glad the professor adopted Bin before these rules are coming into being.
Professor Murray is single and she adopted Bin from China. In our business law class we would hear hilarious stories from her, such as how Bin developed a Shreveport accent (Professor Murray is from Louisiana). I am glad the professor adopted Bin before these rules are coming into being.
Wednesday, December 13, 2006
Just finished watching Days of Being Wild. Leslie Cheung is simply incredible with his acting. Another one of his movie that I also liked is Farewell My Concubine. His death is truly a great lost to cinema.
Tuesday, December 12, 2006
Monday, December 11, 2006
birthday
Have you ever experienced waking up, but it is too late for breakfast? How about after eating lunch, you watch an old HK film and then when you set foot out of your apartment, the sky is already dark. Oh how time passes us by...
Perhaps I should move to Antarctica. I hear it has light 24 hours a day, it never rains, and there is never darkness.
Have you ever experienced waking up, but it is too late for breakfast? How about after eating lunch, you watch an old HK film and then when you set foot out of your apartment, the sky is already dark. Oh how time passes us by...
Perhaps I should move to Antarctica. I hear it has light 24 hours a day, it never rains, and there is never darkness.
Sunday, December 10, 2006
Cooked for myself, the beef actually turned out pretty well, and watched a HK film (Chungking Express), feel like I am being spoiled.
Thursday, December 07, 2006
Wednesday, December 06, 2006
I wrote the story of O
Read this article while I was in France.
It piqued my interest, so I went to Shakespeare's and ask them where I can find The History of "O"?
The ever helpful response I got was, "Look in the history section."
Read this article while I was in France.
It piqued my interest, so I went to Shakespeare's and ask them where I can find The History of "O"?
The ever helpful response I got was, "Look in the history section."
Monday, December 04, 2006
Saturday, December 02, 2006
Sunday, November 26, 2006
Friday, November 24, 2006
Getting Rich - Pankaj Mishra reports from Shanghai
‘Alternative modernity’ and ‘institutional innovation’ may also sound like mere slogans. The New Left belongs, after all, to a very small and powerless minority of intellectuals. But its growing appeal suggests that the post-Mao reversals of ideology and politics – based on a simple moral opposition between socialism and capitalism, the free market and the state, private and public property – are beginning to lose their force as the storm of progress blowing through China continues to scatter debris everywhere.
Is this what the final frontier has become? A golf course?
It is a troubling symbol of humanity's aspiration: the latest installment in our great space quest saw an astronaut tee off
It is a troubling symbol of humanity's aspiration: the latest installment in our great space quest saw an astronaut tee off
Thursday, November 23, 2006
Dégringolade
Union Sucrée
The first article I read about the decline of France. The scholarship of which, and many more self critiques made me believe that there is still hope for France in the future. If it wasn't for the alacrity with which these authors continue to seize the problems at hand, I would have given up on French long ago.
Union Sucrée
The first article I read about the decline of France. The scholarship of which, and many more self critiques made me believe that there is still hope for France in the future. If it wasn't for the alacrity with which these authors continue to seize the problems at hand, I would have given up on French long ago.
Sunday, November 19, 2006
I offer something more with these thoughts, which only you will notice. Do you remember that moment by the banks of the Ganga? That silent dark? Those wanderings in imagined worlds? Those deep discussions in low, serious voices? The two of us sitting silently, saying nothing? That breeze at sunrise, that evening shadow! And, once, those rain-bearing clouds, Sravan’s downpour, the songs of Vidyapati? . . . I have concealed a handful of contentment and grief in these thoughts; open these pages once in a while and look upon them with affection, no one but you will be able to see what’s in them! The message inscribed into these words is – there’s one writing that you and I shall read. And there’s another writing for everyone else.
Selected Poems by Rabindranath Tagore
Saturday, November 11, 2006
The prophecy of Saro-Wiwa
11 years after the Ogoni leader's brutal hanging, violence is erupting in the Niger delta region
11 years after the Ogoni leader's brutal hanging, violence is erupting in the Niger delta region
Friday, October 20, 2006

SHOCK-WORKERS AND LOAFERS.
"Как живут ударники?
Ударники живут хорошо.
How do shock-workers live?
Shock-workers live well."
Alexander Lipson. A Russian Course
Tuesday, October 17, 2006
A Tell-All’s Tale: French Politicians Stray Early and Often
“When I was president of the republic, I was in love with 17 million French women,” Mr. Giscard d’Estaing said in an interview taped for the television show “Private Life, Public Life” to be broadcast Wednesday. He added, “When I saw them in the crowd, they felt it and then they voted for me.”
“When I was president of the republic, I was in love with 17 million French women,” Mr. Giscard d’Estaing said in an interview taped for the television show “Private Life, Public Life” to be broadcast Wednesday. He added, “When I saw them in the crowd, they felt it and then they voted for me.”
Monday, October 16, 2006
Defcon: Everybody Dies has one of the best ambient atmospheres for a game.
You must listen to the soundtrack. It is a background of recycled air, radio chatter, static, and a soprano singing... perhaps of your loneliness. You can't help but feel like you are in a remote bunker pushing the button to end millions of lives. Then suddenly, you hear the faith sounds of a women crying... is she crying about someone who just died?
Disturbing.
Sunday, October 15, 2006
Saturday, October 14, 2006
Saturday, September 30, 2006
On Gentlemen Giving
iPods as Gifts
I am speechless, how could I have been so foolish all along! Miss Keira you are mein guardian angel!~
iPods as Gifts
I am speechless, how could I have been so foolish all along! Miss Keira you are mein guardian angel!~
Portal
You maybe required to perform simple tasks... these tasks will be supplemented with insurmontable obstacles...
French try woman as president - but first on a sitcom
The president of France has problems: plummeting approval ratings, few political allies, an outbreak of pimples before an important speech, and now this. She's barely past her first 100 days in office and she's pregnant.
Catastrophe!
Sunday, September 24, 2006
Internet's future in 2020 debated
"The less one is powerful, the more transparent his or her life. The powerful will remain much less transparent."
"The less one is powerful, the more transparent his or her life. The powerful will remain much less transparent."
Saturday, September 23, 2006
Biofuels: Green energy or grim reaper?
Competition in the food market by biofuels is an interesting point that I hadn't thought about.
"Governments also need to provide leadership in the form of economic incentives to minimise competition between food and fuel crops, and ensure that water, high-quality agricultural land, and biodiversity are not sacrificed on the altar of our convenience."
Competition in the food market by biofuels is an interesting point that I hadn't thought about.
"Governments also need to provide leadership in the form of economic incentives to minimise competition between food and fuel crops, and ensure that water, high-quality agricultural land, and biodiversity are not sacrificed on the altar of our convenience."
Friday, September 22, 2006
In China, Children of the Rich Learn Class, Minus the Struggle
“At the top of the pyramid will be exceptionally strong graduates from top American or European universities who become a sort of ‘international freemen,’ ” said Qiu Huadong, an author and editor who has written about the new elite. “They work several years in China, and then they go abroad for a while, shifting locations every few years. At the bottom of the pyramid will be those who didn’t get such an outstanding education, and they’ll be sweating and bleeding for China and globalization.”
“At the top of the pyramid will be exceptionally strong graduates from top American or European universities who become a sort of ‘international freemen,’ ” said Qiu Huadong, an author and editor who has written about the new elite. “They work several years in China, and then they go abroad for a while, shifting locations every few years. At the bottom of the pyramid will be those who didn’t get such an outstanding education, and they’ll be sweating and bleeding for China and globalization.”
Sunday, September 17, 2006
China and U.S. involvement in Sudan
Unable to explain its awkward, unrealistic, and now disintegrating flirtation with this terrorist state, the White House understandably looks for a scapegoat:
China.
The title of the Washington Post’s September 6 editorial Responsible China? Darfur exposes Chinese hypocrisy pretty much conveys the political line of frustrated administration policymakers.
The United States and its European partners have called upon Sudan to let the U.N. force in. But China, which has enormous leverage over Sudan because of its investment in Sudanese oil fields, has failed to push the Sudanese into accepting the "realistic option" of a U.N. deployment.
Rather ironic that Sudan, which was supposed to serve as the keystone of Bush administration engagement with Africa, has turned into an exclusive sandbox for the Yellow Peril.
Tuesday, September 12, 2006
Sunday, September 10, 2006
Tuesday, August 22, 2006
Wednesday, August 16, 2006
A symphony of civilizations
"It is the studio of an artist in the 17th-century Netherlands. In the foreground there are a tapestry, an empty chair and a table. A seated painter is trying to catch the essence of his model, a demure young woman, Clio, the Greek muse of history. On the wall, as a backdrop, is a large map of the Seventeen Provinces printed in Amsterdam. The scene is quiet but inspiring."
"It is the studio of an artist in the 17th-century Netherlands. In the foreground there are a tapestry, an empty chair and a table. A seated painter is trying to catch the essence of his model, a demure young woman, Clio, the Greek muse of history. On the wall, as a backdrop, is a large map of the Seventeen Provinces printed in Amsterdam. The scene is quiet but inspiring."
Monday, August 14, 2006
Friday, July 28, 2006
Thursday, July 20, 2006
Wednesday, July 19, 2006
Tuesday, July 18, 2006
Sunday, July 16, 2006
Friday, July 14, 2006
Monday, July 10, 2006
As a most irksome matter, I fired my memory module with manual memory timing. Now I must RMA both the motherboard and the memory. Curses! Why must my attempts to build a new computer be foiled at every turn?!
Currently contemplating getting a black 13.3" Mac Book sometime in August when Merom comes out.
Currently contemplating getting a black 13.3" Mac Book sometime in August when Merom comes out.
Went to Chicago this last weekend. Tried Taste of Chicago, which is good but expensive. Got soaked in the two public fountain columns. The faces on them reminded me of Bladerunner. The city is lovely. I wouldn't mind living here if I am working for the right company. Unlike other city archtectures of empty downtowns, Chicago has residential complexes throughout the entire city. Which translates into more public events, more social gatherings, and more culture. At night, watched the Orchestra play "Battleship Potemkin" in the open air concert stage. Later watched fireworks at Navy Pier.
Repaired to a suburb of Chicago at dawn and slept wondering when was the last time I went to bed with the windows open.
Went to Chinatown the next morning and ate at Joy Yee's, which tastes even better than the food in Houston. The picturesque buildings of the Chinatown unsettled me somehow. Especially this one building facing the new plaza... There is something about it that gives me pause. Old Chinatown reminded me of the non-existent spaces between the buildings.
Repaired to a suburb of Chicago at dawn and slept wondering when was the last time I went to bed with the windows open.
Went to Chinatown the next morning and ate at Joy Yee's, which tastes even better than the food in Houston. The picturesque buildings of the Chinatown unsettled me somehow. Especially this one building facing the new plaza... There is something about it that gives me pause. Old Chinatown reminded me of the non-existent spaces between the buildings.
Sunday, June 25, 2006
Saturday, June 17, 2006
Thursday, June 15, 2006
LRB | Alain Supiot : The Condition of France
"Having made the fight against delinquency the main plank of his electoral programme, he (Nicolas Sarkozy) had referred to young people in the banlieues as ‘riff-raff’ whom he intended to ‘power-hose’ off the streets. The fact that a minister could talk like a gangster and so put a match to the powder that had long been collecting in the most deprived neighbourhoods of the Republic, is not simply a sign of incompetence. It is first and foremost a sign that an age-old achievement of our Western juridical systems – the distinction between a public office and the person who occupies it – is being called into question."
"Having made the fight against delinquency the main plank of his electoral programme, he (Nicolas Sarkozy) had referred to young people in the banlieues as ‘riff-raff’ whom he intended to ‘power-hose’ off the streets. The fact that a minister could talk like a gangster and so put a match to the powder that had long been collecting in the most deprived neighbourhoods of the Republic, is not simply a sign of incompetence. It is first and foremost a sign that an age-old achievement of our Western juridical systems – the distinction between a public office and the person who occupies it – is being called into question."
Learning Arabic in France
But the ‘first true Orientalist’ according to Irwin was Guillaume Postel, who travelled to Constantinople in 1535 on a French royal commission to collect Eastern manuscripts, and promptly learned Arabic, Turkish and Coptic (among other languages) to add to the Hebrew he had mastered as a schoolboy. Postel wasn’t a Christian evangelist: his beliefs were weirder. They included the opinion that world peace could be achieved if everybody spoke Hebrew; and a conviction that he had met the Shekinah (a manifestation of divinity) in the form of a Venetian woman whose X-ray vision allowed her to look into the Earth’s core and see Satan. For this he was officially declared insane (but not a heretic) by the Inquisition in Venice. He spent much of his tenure as the Collège de France’s first professor of Arabic comfortably incarcerated in a Paris asylum.
Two hundred years later, it was not much easier to learn Arabic in France.
Two hundred years later, it was not much easier to learn Arabic in France.
Sunday, June 11, 2006
Wednesday, June 07, 2006
Tuesday, May 30, 2006
Lost in translation
"An English couple have a child. After the birth, medical tests reveal that the child is normal, apart from the fact that it is German. This, however, should not be a problem. There is nothing to worry about. As the child grows older, it dresses in lederhosen and has a pudding bowl haircut, but all its basic functions develop normally. It can walk, eat, sleep, read and so on, but for some reason the German child never speaks. The concerned parents take it to the doctor, who reassures them that as the German child is perfectly developed in all other areas, there is nothing to worry about and that he is sure the speech faculty will eventually blossom. Years pass. The German child enters its teens, and still it is not speaking, though in all other respects it is fully functional. The German child's mother is especially distressed by this, but attempts to conceal her sadness. One day she makes the German child, who is now 17 years old and still silent, a bowl of tomato soup, and takes it through to him in the parlour where he is listening to a wind-up gramophone record player. Soon, the German child appears in the kitchen and suddenly declares, "Mother. This soup is a little tepid." The German child's mother is astonished. "All these years," she exclaims, "we assumed you could not speak. And yet all along it appears you could. Why? Why did you never say anything before?" "Because, mother," answers the German child, "up until now, everything has been satisfactory."
"An English couple have a child. After the birth, medical tests reveal that the child is normal, apart from the fact that it is German. This, however, should not be a problem. There is nothing to worry about. As the child grows older, it dresses in lederhosen and has a pudding bowl haircut, but all its basic functions develop normally. It can walk, eat, sleep, read and so on, but for some reason the German child never speaks. The concerned parents take it to the doctor, who reassures them that as the German child is perfectly developed in all other areas, there is nothing to worry about and that he is sure the speech faculty will eventually blossom. Years pass. The German child enters its teens, and still it is not speaking, though in all other respects it is fully functional. The German child's mother is especially distressed by this, but attempts to conceal her sadness. One day she makes the German child, who is now 17 years old and still silent, a bowl of tomato soup, and takes it through to him in the parlour where he is listening to a wind-up gramophone record player. Soon, the German child appears in the kitchen and suddenly declares, "Mother. This soup is a little tepid." The German child's mother is astonished. "All these years," she exclaims, "we assumed you could not speak. And yet all along it appears you could. Why? Why did you never say anything before?" "Because, mother," answers the German child, "up until now, everything has been satisfactory."
Monday, May 22, 2006
Wednesday, May 17, 2006
Monday, May 08, 2006
Last word - Books - Times Online
"Tightly plotted Has a beginning and a middle, and you find out whodunnit at the end."
"Tightly plotted Has a beginning and a middle, and you find out whodunnit at the end."
Tuesday, May 02, 2006
Essays: 'Hammer & tickle' by Ben Lewis | Prospect Magazine May 2006 issue 122
"It was in Romania, while making a film about Ceausescu, that I first stumbled across the historical legacy of the communist joke. There I learned that a clerk from the Bucharest transport system, Calin Bogdan Stefanescu, had spent the last ten years of Ceausescu's regime collecting political jokes. He noted down which joke he heard and when, and analysed his total of over 900 jokes statistically. He measured the time gap between a political event and a joke about that event, and then drew up a graph measuring the varying velocity of Romanian communist jokes. He was also able to assert—somewhat tenuously—that there was a link between jokes and the fall of Ceausescu, since jokes about the leader doubled in the last three years of the regime. The story of Stefanescu, the statistician of jokes, was, ironically, much funnier than the jokes themselves."
"It was in Romania, while making a film about Ceausescu, that I first stumbled across the historical legacy of the communist joke. There I learned that a clerk from the Bucharest transport system, Calin Bogdan Stefanescu, had spent the last ten years of Ceausescu's regime collecting political jokes. He noted down which joke he heard and when, and analysed his total of over 900 jokes statistically. He measured the time gap between a political event and a joke about that event, and then drew up a graph measuring the varying velocity of Romanian communist jokes. He was also able to assert—somewhat tenuously—that there was a link between jokes and the fall of Ceausescu, since jokes about the leader doubled in the last three years of the regime. The story of Stefanescu, the statistician of jokes, was, ironically, much funnier than the jokes themselves."
Tuesday, April 25, 2006
Monday, April 17, 2006
Registration time
A time of farewells. Even though we've been only here for 3 years, people are already leaving. The sad part is that they became good friends just recently. And just like that, we meet and then we disburse into the world. I hate saying goodbyes, especially when you might never see them again in this life time.
A time of farewells. Even though we've been only here for 3 years, people are already leaving. The sad part is that they became good friends just recently. And just like that, we meet and then we disburse into the world. I hate saying goodbyes, especially when you might never see them again in this life time.
Saturday, April 15, 2006
Wednesday, April 12, 2006
Stravinsky, Schoenberg and Alan Berg in class. Heard "Rite of Spring", No. 8 "Night" and watched parts of "Wozzeck". I can't help but be fascinated by these three pieces, especially the scene in wozzeck when the protagonist returns to the river bank:
"Murder! Murder!"
"They are on to me! Wait, that was my own voice, ha..haha"
"Murder! Murder!"
Death is a master from Germany indeed.
"Murder! Murder!"
"They are on to me! Wait, that was my own voice, ha..haha"
"Murder! Murder!"
Death is a master from Germany indeed.
Monday, April 10, 2006
Sunday, April 09, 2006
Elfen Lied and Gustav Klimt
Elfen Lied and Gustav Klimt
Elfen Lied (pronounced 'lead') it is an anime redemption story with your typical senseless dismembered body parts and a love triangle that (conveiently) keeps the protagonist safe. In actuality the whole series is a gigantic fan service with pathetic attempts to build a plot. It suffers the same problems that animes today seems to suffer. They include, but not exclusively: attempts to build humor by showing women in various stages of undressing, use of German to cover ignorance and superficiality of the artists, and flashbacks.
The only redeeming quality is the opening music cutscene with the main characters transposed into Gustav Klimt's pictures.




Elfen Lied (pronounced 'lead') it is an anime redemption story with your typical senseless dismembered body parts and a love triangle that (conveiently) keeps the protagonist safe. In actuality the whole series is a gigantic fan service with pathetic attempts to build a plot. It suffers the same problems that animes today seems to suffer. They include, but not exclusively: attempts to build humor by showing women in various stages of undressing, use of German to cover ignorance and superficiality of the artists, and flashbacks.
The only redeeming quality is the opening music cutscene with the main characters transposed into Gustav Klimt's pictures.




Tuesday, April 04, 2006
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