Sunday, July 27, 2014

Let go your earthly tether

In the episode The Metal Clan, an interesting work within a work appears:

























出尘世羁绊,入虚无如风

Let go your earthly tether. Enter the void and become emptiness, like the wind.

Wednesday, July 09, 2014

Starving artist as an aesthetic and all round excuse for being an asshole

There was a time when artists and writers flocked to inexpensive cities to allow themselves the trials of making art over the trials of making a living. In North America today, the main site of literary activity or literary business – which more and more amount to the same thing – is Brooklyn. Yet it’s probably one of the toughest places for a writer to live cheaply and noodle about, wearing rags. What happens when artists gravitate to places where they can make art only with great financial effort; where writers have to be journalists, adjunct professors, or work in cafés to pay the rent, leaving little time to write their novel, while learning every few months that one of their herd has secured a six-figure advance for their first book? What do their relationships and values look like, and how do their love stories unfold? This is the world of Adelle Waldman’s first book.
 
Starving artist as an aesthetic and all round excuse for being an asshole



Saturday, June 21, 2014

Class war

"Thailand’s political crisis is a sorry tale of bad losers... their responsibility, and their disgrace, are very great."
 Thailand’s political crisis

Sunday, June 15, 2014

Friday, May 30, 2014

Beauty and the Beast


Friday, May 23, 2014

Red


Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Thursday, May 08, 2014

Sunday, April 20, 2014

Thursday, April 17, 2014

Reactionary thought in contemporary China

From China Airborne: The Test of China's Future, by James Fallows (Pantheon, 2012), Kindle Loc. 3326 of 3816
"All reactionary thought in contemporary China is of the same tradition," that philosopher, Ai Siqi, wrote in 1940. "It emphasizes China's 'national characteristics,' harps on China's 'special nature,' and wipes aside the general principles of humanity, arguing that China's social development can only follow China's own path."
 

Sunday, April 13, 2014

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Wednesday, April 09, 2014

The Forgotten Resources of Space


The Forgotten Resources of Space

There are no unique raw materials waiting for us in space (possible exception of 3He). There are a lot of hydrocarbons on Titan, but because of delta-v costs, it will always be cheaper to derive them from marginal locations on Earth, like oil shales or biofuels. Even if a platinum-rich asteroid were found, platinum would be obtained cheaper by re-opening a depleted low grade mine on Earth.

If extraterrestrial raw imports will never be economical, is there any motivation for going there? Increasingly, it is processes rather than raw materials that are important for industry. Space processes can control the gravity, vacuum, radiation, temperature, and energy density to a degree impossible on Earth. These characteristics, the forgotten resources of space, can produce high-strength membranes using surface tension effects, long whiskers and gigantic laser crystals grown in microgravity, nano-engineering using ultra pure vapor deposition, strong glassy materials produced by exploiting a steep temperature gradient, and alloys mixed by diffusion alone. Relatively small machinofactured and nano-produced objects, including pharmaceuticals and bio-tech, will be the first space imports to Earth.

Phil Eklund, 2009

High Frontiers is an interesting example in the way how high science diffuses through culture and make accessible concepts and ideas that were once the preserve of the specialized few.




Tuesday, April 08, 2014

The application process

Sometimes I feel that the application process is a bit like FTL. You go into the final stage feeling you have a chance (after all, you've made this far). And then...


Monday, April 07, 2014

Sunday, March 23, 2014

Something to watch for the weekend



Beats watching.... say, Whitechapel.



the trailer music

Thursday, March 20, 2014

A war within the Chinese internet autarky

"Each of the big three is so big, so wired in politically and so vital to the Chinese economy that its survival is assured. An employee at one of the companies likened BAT (Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent) to Oceania, Eurasia and Eastasia, the superstates of George Orwell’s novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, which are so big as to be undefeatable and permanently at war."
 

Sunday, March 16, 2014

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Saturday, March 08, 2014

云宮音


Forest Green


Tales of English justice


"[L]ong before 1825, when they were professionalised by being removed from everything except the administration of justice and put on salaries of £5500 or more a year, the judges had been wealthy men. On George I’s accession the puisne – i.e. ordinary – judges had been put on £1500 a year, with large periodic increases until, by 1800, they were on £3000 a year ‘free and clear from all taxes and deductions whatever’, and by 1810 on £4000. The purpose of the Hanoverian introduction of automatic knighthoods for the judiciary was probably to elevate the status of the honour rather than of the bench, and was reportedly resented by the latter. The further pay rise of 1825 may not therefore have been the massive buying-out it is sometimes said to have been; but it does mark a cleansing of the constitutional stables. In 1832 the basic judicial salary was brought down to £5000 a year, and there it remained until 1954, when it was still a pretty good wage in spite of inflation, but was finally raised by £3000 in one go. By then, as the Lord Advocate had written to the Lord Chancellor, it was ‘most unsuitable for a High Court Judge to travel in a public conveyance’. This is why many of them now cycle to work."
Above it all

Friday, March 07, 2014

Tales of English justice


"Mr Justice Hallett... was sent for and asked to resign for ‘asking too many questions’... I was once told by a very old lady what the source of the problem was. ‘We used to be taken to the Halletts’ when we were children,’ she said. ‘My sisters and I would be put in the nursery to play with Hugh, and he would line us all up at one end of the room and lecture us. I could have told the Lord Chancellor he was making a mistake appointing Hugh Hallett."

Above it all

Monday, March 03, 2014

Tony Blair 1987

Tony wrote once for the LRB. Who knew?

In it he spoke about the North Sea oil driven success of Thatcherism, Tories' rule based on ~41% of the votes and a divided opposition, and a vision for government in which power was not simply devolved to the markets.

Then the prophet turned into a preacher on a tank.

Tony Blair - diary

Saturday, March 01, 2014

Dragonfall

"You look at a moth and barely perceive sentience. You glance its way, amused, as it flutters towards a bright light in a vain attempt to... what?

To enter? To draw strength? To burn? It doesn't know. Its epic struggle is barely one-hundredth of your lifespan. The sum total of its existence is nothing against the vast scale of your struggles, your hopes, your dreams - which it could not fathom in a thousand thousand years.

Poor moth."

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

What not to do as a retail investor

Why would anyone trade forex?

It's even harder than making a return trading bonds.

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Crime and punishment

I take one look at that picture of her and think she should be sent to bed without any supper.

US woman arrested over nine-year overdue rental video

Thursday, February 06, 2014

Damages

Beautiful montage






Wednesday, February 05, 2014

Bauklötze (original)



And a better enunciated version:


Morant Bay Uprising, Jamaica - 1865

From Sedley, Stephen. Ashes and Sparks: Essays on Law and Justice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011. 56-57.  

"[T]he uprising was put down within a week, in the month that passed before the decree expired the military was allowed an orgy of shooting, flogging and more or less arbitrary executions. The Cornhill Magazine put the number of deaths at 439 and floggings at 600.

If this had been all, there would probably have been a transient fuss in England, after which (Governor) Eyre's career would have continued to flourish..."

However,

"The controversy was not about whether there had been a necessity for martial law to be invoked at Morant Bay: there almost certainly had been. It was ostensibly about the unnecessary duration of the decree and the abuse of the powers it created; but neither of these features distinguished it from the measures adopted in response to other such risings. What gave the outrage a focus was that Eyre had personally authorised the arrest in Kingston of a man named George Gordon, and what today would be called his extraordinary rendition to Morant Bay. Arriving there on a Saturday, Gordon was given an instant trial without access to counsel and hanged two days later."

"Gordon was that dangerous thing, a rogue member of the ruling elite: but he was racially and economically compromised, and that made him not only dispensable but serviceable as an example to others. All Eyre needed was an excuse and an opportunity to sweep him into the net of bloody reprisal..."

Monday, February 03, 2014

The Levellers

From Sedley, Stephen. Ashes and Sparks: Essays on Law and Justice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011. 89-90.  

"[T]he power of the Leveller programme - the first true political programme of a modern kind - lay in its amalgam of principle and realism. That principle rapidly becomes unrealistic and that realism is too often a betrayal of principle was the dilemma of the Levellers as it is of all politics. But their thinking and action show a clear consciousness of the dilemma and a serious endeavour to meet it. In this, and in their combination of a thought-out political programme with grassroots organisation, lies their modernity."

Saturday, February 01, 2014

Thursday, January 30, 2014

Tales of English justice

"[I]n 1746 the Chief Justice of the Common Pleas gave judgment for £1000 damages in favour of a Lieutenant Frye against the president of a court martial which had wronged him, and then encouraged Frye to sue the other members. When they protested through the Lords of the Admiralty to the King, the Chief Justice had the whole lot of them arrested for contempt and released them, when they apologised, with the warning: ‘Whosoever set themselves up in opposition to the law or think themselves above the law will find themselves mistaken.’"

Above it all

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Wir sind die Nacht 我们是夜晚

From a 'language learning' site:




"Wenn du wüsstest , dass

如果你知道

es auf dieser Welt nur einen einzigen Menschen gibt ,

在这个世界上只存在唯一一个

Der dich glücklich macht , 

能让你幸福的人

Der für dich bestimmt ist , 

为你注定的人

Was würdest du opfern , um ihn zu finden? 


为了找到他你会舍弃什么

Wie viele Jahrhunderte würdest du nach ihm suchen?

你是否会用几百年去寻找他

Und wenn du ihn dann gefunden hättest ,

然后当你找到他之后

würdest du ihn je wieder gehen lassen?

你会让他再次离开你吗


Würdest du ihn nicht auch mit


你是不是也会

beiden Armen so fest umklammern , wie du nur kannst , 

紧紧地把他拥在怀里

und ihn nie , nie , nie wieder loslassen? "

绝对绝对绝不会再放手

Dumpfe Träume





Kalte
Kalte
Nächte
Nächte
Lass deine Augen leuchten...
Dumpfe
Dumpfe
Träume
Träume
Und meine Seele fordert...

Kalte
Kalte
Nächte
Nächte
Lass deine Augen leuchten...
Dumpfe
Dumpfe
Träume
Träume
Und meine Seele fordert...

Schneller
Schneller
Atmen
Atmen
Unsere Körper beben...
Leises
Leises
Zittern
Zittern
Und meine Seele lodert...

Süsse Bisse
Kaltes Schaudern...
Und meine Seele lodert...
Kalte
Kalte
Nächte
Nächte
Lass deine Augen leuchten...
Dumpfe
Dumpfe
Träume
Träume
Und meine Seele fordert...

Friday, January 24, 2014

Who judges the judges?

‘His Majesty’s Judges are satisfied with the almost universal admiration in which they are held.’

‘Her Majesty’s judges have a greater understanding of human nature than any other body of men in the world.’ 

Above it all

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Configuration of international justice

From Sedley, Stephen. Ashes and Sparks: Essays on Law and Justice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011. 15-16. 

In speaking of a 'consensus [that] is eroding the old impunities afforded by statehood and state office':

"If this epoch-making jurisdiction is not simply to degenerate into the twenty-first century's version of victor's justice, into a regime in which the war criminals of the lesser nations get their deserts while nationals of the greatest power are shielded from all process except that which their own state elects to deploy against them, the long arm of international law has to be able to reach everyone against whom there is a triable case, and the mailed fist has to be there to punish those who are found guilty by due process. A system which replicates the very insolence of office from which human rights abuses spring cannot properly call itself a system of justice. One law for the powerful and another for the weak is no law at all."

It is unclear...
"whether internationals criminal jurisdiction is instead to slide back into its ambivalent twentieth century role as a secondary and localised manifestation of military and political power."


Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Some reflections

Perhaps what makes ABCs successful is their ability to focus on an artificial goal that is set in front of them and pursue it with great focus and drive. Even if that goal doesn't turn out to be particularly useful, having some direction is better than flailing around.

Success doesn't bring them any particular joy or happiness. The unlucky ones, After realizing that the goal is not what they want,  take it to mean that it has all been in vain and are set adrift. The lucky ones are able to switch the goal with some other.

Sunday, December 01, 2013

Wednesday, November 06, 2013

Operación Masacre

"The city (like the country) can be loved as long as the light is fading and there aren’t any people in the view..."


- Operation Massacre

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Tuesday, October 08, 2013

GRAVITY, Soyuz & Shenzhou


It is interesting if you think about why the Soyuz and the Shenzhou would be similar: consumer electronics differ greatly between manufacturers, and cars and planes do, too. But there's enormous value to actually simplifying and unifying the control schemes for these spaceships. One can interpret the comment that the two are similar as a testament to the impressive engineering that goes into spaceflight. That we have these totally distinct bespoke creations, but that the creators expended enormous effort to unify their control mechanisms as a result of an actual, practical need. And that this practical need is precisely what we see in this movie.

Even if Shenzhou were an exact copy of Soyuz, the control schemes are actually unlikely to be similar without a lot of effort involved. These control schemes were so precisely thought out that a pilot with familiarity with only one of them could pilot both, even when the pilot could not understand either language. This is one area where this movie excelled. It entertained complexity.


Further reading: GE Apollo D-2 vs Soyuz vs Shenzhou
GE Apollo D-2 vs Soyuz vs Shenzhou (cached link)

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Rent seeking

"No one believes [The big French, German and British energy companies who sell Britons their gas and electricity] compete with each other: the test of that is that they are unable to demonstrate, in a way anyone can understand, that they do. They are more like farmers who have acquired land on which to grow crops in perpetuity... the land they own is us, their customers, and the crop is our bills."

Energy Tax

Saturday, September 07, 2013

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Wednesday, August 07, 2013

Tiny Times



I'm somewhat removed from Chinese popular culture, and from popular culture in general. But I was intrigued by this movie. Partly because the critics' voices were so boisterous, their farts so loud, that I can't help but feel that I need to find out what the stink is all about. Well, I watched the movie and thought that it was not bad.

From the vantage point of a viewer living in a society of abundance, the movie doesn't seem extraordinary. The shots are glossy, but nobody would mistake the set for the level of luxury that one would find in places without so much fanfare in the U.S.

But there is a very simple premise from the movie: Chinese people want what everybody else want, mainly love and money. Is this too much to ask? Would it be so out of place to suggest that the pursue of wealth and prosperity should be the governing mission of mankind?

I find that this normality, this baseline familiarity, may itself be significant. I once thought to myself that the day when movies coming out of China are no longer considered exotic or 'auteur', only then would China truly have arrived in the international stage in a more significant sense, because it would then have arrived culturally. I think those days may be starting.

This movie is in many ways limited, but I think it would be a mistake to wait for a more grant debut to realize what is happening. Ultimately, to have Chinese culture walk out of the alley of history and speak more about the universal present, to have an entirely different society with the critical mass to ponder the expanding possibilities of reality: that would be exciting. That would be electrifying.


The movie will be remembered as a signifier of the continuing normalization of China. I am happy to see such signs, because what Chinese culture has come to mean to me is the continued improvement and actualization of a people. It has, in some ways, come to meant progress itself.

Tuesday, August 06, 2013

The Politics of Relationships

V
So I ran across a photo album of a girl I knew at college
She got fat

me
oh?

V
Yeah
Got fat
Well, I think I know why, too
My theory is that... 

me
that she ate too much?


V
Well...


Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Awkward conversations

FT: The Great Pornwall of Britain


Sit back and take a moment to imagine what the future might sound like.

“Hello, you’re through to BT. This call may be recorded for training purposes. How may I help you, Mr Smith?”

“Uhhh, I, errr… filters… ummm…”

“Would you like to view adult content, Mr Smith?”

“Oh uh, no! I mean, I think it’s blocking some educational material, you see I…”

“Sure, Mr Smith. Do you have the approval of the other account holder, Mrs Smith?”

Click!

Saturday, July 20, 2013

The Legend of Korra Book 2

Really excited.

The reason? Because the previous shows were so good: "The show's internal consistency, long story arcs, and inventiveness with its basic premise illustrate a lot of love and care on the part of its creators. They cared enough to pay this kind of attention to detail."


Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Efficiency at the wrong end

V
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=6051041

me
so, what do you make of it?

V
It's great link bait for the HN crowd
It's a tough choice, though
On the one hand, you can be a robot, working 12 and 14 hour days at your iBanking job, slaving away at the system making a 250k$ pittance
Or you can be one of the free thinkers, working your part-time Starbucks job for 10$/hr between house parties, oh, and, by the way, no health insurance

V
The speech is actually quite self-aggrandising
It hints at all these truths we know but won't admit
Like how the slackers who lived a better life probably are mostly losers and only 1% hidden geniuses

me
I think the original intent was to question the industrial process of education

V
But clearly the industrial process reflects an industrial thinking about society
This is the thinking that the people who will love this speech will also espouse
The utilitarian approach

me
it may be questioning the efficacy of this process, after all, there's only one valedictorian
the industrial education process may or may not be dehumanizing, but the larger problem is that it is actually incredibly inefficient

V
How do we improve efficiency?

me
I don't know, but I think that is where a lot of the angst is really coming from

V
But the HN appeal seems to show that the angst is at efficiency at the wrong end
Who cares if the gifted & talented are underserved by the system?
They'll probably succeed anyway
The slightly gifted may be left behind
But they're really not as special as they want us to think
But at the other end, you have direr situation, and there seems to be less focus or interest on what to do about them

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

The desperate and the dissembling

V
See, this open letter is fantastic:

me
 that seems to be missing the point.
 isn't the point that the capability exists to forego these legal formalities and access confidential data by executive fiat with little or no proper oversight?
the fact that such executive power is declared "legal" by a legislative body like Congress does nothing to dampen its menace and abusive potential
if Google is serious about privacy, then it would take action to strengthen end-to-end protection of data
unless I'm missing something I'm entirely unsure why this piece of spin is fantastic
it seems desperate and dissembling

V
 I think that desperation is good
 In fact, I think it's excellent.

me
 I think the pleading tone belies the fact that it is always groveling to certain powers
 why does't it go ahead and make a grand gesture and pull out of business operations in the U.S. indignantly? Oh wait, because it can't afford to

V
 Well, I think an even better part of it is that it pulled out of overseas operations on proof of malfeasance.
 This is not the same. This is the company suffering for an appearance of overeager complicity with a programme that is, itself, of unclear legality.
 This is better, though. It really doesn't matter if the charges are true or false. It matters that the appearance or implication that the charges are true is enough to make the company squirm. And I think that it is wrong to say that the situations are identical. 
What is an organisation overseas that has equivalent political influence? The same lobbying structures don't really exist, as I understand.
 So they withdraw and take the hit
 Here, the lobbying structures are very advanced
 Twitter apparently refused to participate in this programme. I think it's a positive thing if the organisations who agreed to participate are penalised in the market for the mere implication.
 If this intensifies, which I hope it does, then I think the only way to fight this implication is to prove noncompliance, which means doing what they should have done from the start and allow end-to-end encryption.

me
 I guess the company is now in a position in which it will have to say something, anything, and make some gesture, any gesture - however empty (and hoping that the reader doesn't notice), to get away from the implication

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

A corridor of power

The US Attorney’s Office of the Southern District of New York

Those who serve power, and those who are served by it.

Monday, May 13, 2013

Children's books. French children's books.

I was going to write about a wedding scene in a movie I liked, but the embed option for the movie clip was disabled, so I guess I'll just have to blog about children's books.

Voilà


























































Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Two modern fairy tales

Tale 1
Tale 2

Each left her own world for his.

Saturday, April 27, 2013

I'm upset

8:30 PM me: just found out x is getting married 

9:20 PM me: I wonder if she is happy 
but more to the point, I feel quite upset 

11:09 PM V: Why upset?

me: for her getting married, but not to me 

V: Why do you want to marry a girl you don't even know? 

11:34 PM me: Yes, you do have a point 
but I'm still upset

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

But that's a sadder story

"And the mystery knight should defeat all challengers and name the wolf maid the queen of love and beauty."  
"She was," said Meera. "But that's a sadder story."

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Checking in






















‘Who really spoke? Is it really he and not someone else? With what authenticity or originality? And what part of his deepest self did he express in his discourse?’

Sunday, March 03, 2013

An Entire Order Converted into What It Was Intended to End

The Decline of Italy
"In 1992-94 Italy was widely held to have been reborn. The parties that had long ruled – latterly misruled – the country were all but wiped out, after their corruption had been exposed by a fearless group of magistrates, in an election under a new and, so it was felt, more functional system, even if the government that emerged from the polls was a surprise to many who celebrated the end of the old regime. The country could now make a fresh start, in its way comparable to that of 1945."

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Return to Algiers

First there was the Battle of Algiers:



"La France doit-elle rester en Algèrie?"

"Si vous rèpondez encore oui, vous devez en accepter toutes les consèquences nècessaires."


30 years later:

Sunday, January 06, 2013

Some translations

A well translated poem looks something like this. I take as an example the foreword to the Romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong, as translated from the Chinese by Moss Roberts:

滚滚长江东逝水,浪花淘尽英雄。是非成败转头空。
青山依旧在,几度夕阳红。
白发渔樵江渚上,惯看秋月春风。一壶浊酒喜相逢。
古今多少事,都付笑谈中。
              ——调寄《临江仙》

On and on the Great River rolls, racing east.
Of proud and gallant heroes its white-tops leave no trace,
As right and wrong, pride and fall turn all at once unreal.
Yet ever the green hills stay
To blaze in the west-waning day.

Fishers and woodsmen comb the river isles.
White-crowned, they've seen enough of spring and autumn tide
To make good company over the wine jar,
Where many a famed event
Provides their merriment.

                                                         - From ershiwu shi tanci

Moss attributes the authorship of the poem to a collection of works "ershiwu shi tanci" (二十五史弹词??)  rather than specifically to 调寄《临江仙》.It is interesting in that this provides a wider context for people unfamiliar the genre (or the language).

A search into "ershiwu shi tanci" reveals that it is "a collection of popular songs on historical themes compiled during the Ming dynasty by Yang Shen (d. 1559)". Personally I had to look up what 调寄 means.

Wednesday, January 02, 2013

Alas, poor Simone

"Drama of my affections, pathos of life . . . . Indeed, I have a more complicated, more nuanced sensibility than his and a more exhausting power of love. Those problems that he lives in his mind, I live them with my arms and my legs. Has he ever known months when all the days were only tears? I do not want to lose all that . . . . Only I must make myself stronger in order to walk on despite my burden. Two cowardly attitudes: keep the burden and sit down - (this is very cowardly) - throw off the burden and walk on. One good one: keep the burden and walk on. I will walk on." 

Friday, December 14, 2012

Marketizing universities

[Marketising universities] rests on a fundamental misconception of the market and its functions: a misconception that could only be held by people who have not thought seriously about the market or its history. 
The market itself, for example, rarely drives innovation; on the contrary it usually reacts. Entrepreneurs certainly have a sense of what might be profitable, but the market does not tell them what will and what won’t. They rely, largely, on guesswork; they put something on the market and keep their fingers crossed. There is no certainty in the market. Nor does it necessarily signal what needs to be done. The market did not synthesise penicillin or put communications satellites into the heavens or discover how cholera is spread. In many cases the market can resist innovation. Businessmen get set in their ways or simply make the wrong guess. Nor are consumers natural innovators. On the contrary they are often very conservative and have to be induced to change their habits by the enormous engine of advertising.

In Defense of British Universities

Monday, December 03, 2012

Normalization by the virtue of "values"



12:51 AM me: TTV does give an impression of Taiwan as a normalized liberal society in keeping with the spirit of the times 
12:59 AM V: You talk about normalisation so skeptically, but what other perspective would they have?
1:00 AM It's like saying, boy, you can tell those Mainland TV shows are up to trouble by how hard they try to hide how naturally inscrutable and untrustworthy Chinese people are
1:04 AM me: it's like... Zhang Ailing writing about being love stricken in WW2 Japanese occupied Shanghai. One also gets the sense then that Republican China was modern and normalized, when it was actually mired in corruption and faced existential threats from the outside
1:06 AM Think about Shame...Amah! (which was published in 1944, before the war ended)
1:07 AM did you get the sense from the story that China was/or was about to be engaged in a struggle for its national survival?
1:10 AM I think normalization is meant to speak to a universal audience. In any age you would have people talking about love, nostalgia, childhood, innocence, remembrance
1:11 AM intentionally or unintentionally placed, it exists; it's reassuring
1:12 AM me: but it is tempting to think that the people on these TV shows reflect a society that has privileged access to normalization by the virtue of its "values", when another society under very different circumstances and values did experience it, as have others1:13 AM that is the skepticism I am trying to convey

Sunday, December 02, 2012

View on Age of Fracture

One of the consequences of the disunity of a dominant idea is counter-revolution.

Corey Robin on Age of Fracture by Daniel Rodgers

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Archie and the zombies


7:46 PM V: Sadly, `The Walking Dead' is as stupid and occassionally repulsive as ever
 It's all plot-based but the plotting and writing are very weak
7:51 PM It is also pretentious: it thinks its a platform for discussing serious issues on the human condition, but it aggressively shies away from having any real opinion or approaching any topic with any depth
7:58 PM       The show is also totally oblivious
8:00 PM Why does it just happen that, for a show set in the deep south, there is no attention paid to any of the minority characters, and that all the attention is paid to the white male characters?
  Who knows!
8:01 PM Why is the Asian guy an errand boy who has to prove his masculinity to the group, at which point he is rewarded with a white girlfriend?
  Who knows!
  The show is also fundamentally boring
8:02 PM There is, for example, a settlement of humans living safely under the control of an insane dictator
8:03 PM But this character is just a regular crazed villain, like an Indiana Jones Nazi
  This is an opportunity, however, where the show could delve into power structures
8:04 PM Instead of this bland one-dimensional villain, it could try something more clever and more thoughtful
8:05 PM For example, it might suggest something more fundamental about power structures: maybe this megalomania or this paranoia is actually a product of the circumstances or some necessary component of human organisation under such stressed conditions
8:06 PM Nope! He's just a mustache-twirling bad guy
8:07 PM And he's not even particularly smart in his evilness, and he's surrounded by the same old incompetent, cruel henchmen
8:08 PM One other problem with this entire genre is, well, what next?
  We have seen the devastation and gruesomeness of the zombie aftermath, great
  And this show's appeal is, supposedly, that any character could die at any time
  So what's the point? What is it building to?
8:09 PM It's like a soap opera: a new love interest appears, lingers for a few episodes, a couple of shocking revelations, then suddenly meets tragedy just in time for the next plotline to start
8:10 PM Of course, I don't think the writers really think these things through at all
  It's all very last minute, thrown together, soap operatic plotting
8:11 PM What does the world look like five years after the appearance of zombies?
  What about ten years?
  Clearly, this band of travellers running around schtick will have gotten very old, and either everyone would have died or some people would have survived.
8:12 PM How do the survivors create a new world with all the existing structures of our world destroyed?
8:13 PM This is a very interesting topic, but it's beyond the capabilities of these writers to imagine and design
8:15 PM You can see how exceptionally boring this show is in its insistence on the most trivial plot points
  It's like an Archie comic with a comet hurtling toward earth?
  Who cares if Archie goes on a date with Betty or Veronica when the world is ending on page 10?
8:16 PM How utterly trivial and pointless

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Proof

Monday, October 29, 2012

Make the call

How are we getting out of here?

1) Submarine
2) Experimental teleporter
3) Let's leave by the front door.

Sunday, October 28, 2012

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

The smartest show on television

10:35 PM VHomeland is the smartest show on television
10:37 PM V: I'm actually too tired right now to go into why this show is so offensive
  Not just intellectually offensive
  I'll just give you an example
10:38 PM The first few episodes are all about this is-he-or-isn't-he-a-terrorist for Damien Lewis's character.
  This is a Showtime show, so it's hour-long episodes forming a season-long arc.
10:39 PM Viewership is driven by cliffhangers.
  So the cliffhanger at the end of one of this episodes is that Lewis's character, a recently returned POW whose motives are suspect, goes into his garage, takes out a prayer mat... and prays to Allah.
10:40 PM How offensive is that?
  OMG, he's a MUSLIM... THAT answers it: he MUST be a terrorist
10:41 PM Additionally, the season-long arc is that there is this incredibly detailed and complex terrorist plot to target senior political figures.
  Now, recall that this show is trying to be `The Wire' of the technothriller terrorism genre
  So we, as an audience, are supposed to believe that what we're seeing is real
10:42 PM So the aesthetics are out of `The Wire' but the sensibilities are straight out of `24'
  Again, extremely offensive (intellectually)
  In the newest episode, it turns out that Damien Lewis (who we now know to be a repentant terrorist) has become a congressman is being put on the vice presidential ticket
10:44 PM I can't tell if this is intellectually offensive (lazily ripping of `Manchurian Candidate') or offensive to our sensibilities (I seem to recall a certain political figure subject to such accusations as a result of little more than peurile racism)
10:46 PM Even the political scenes are like watching CNN political coverage
10:48 PM The writers are way too impressed with their ability to present thoughts that would be controversial and counterintuitive if they weren't already so mundane and so hackneyed
  `Veep' is a better look into the political process than `Homeland' and it's a comedy!
10:49 PM You should watch this show to see modern, post-colonial racialism at work
10:50 PM The entire cast is this supposedly hyper-competent white CIA analysts who are experts on intelligence and the middle east
10:51 PM Also, what a bad actress, Claire Danes

6 minutes
10:58 PM V: Her only acting mode is bitchy high school girl

17 minutes
11:15 PM V: hahahaha
  So Damian Lewis's character, candidate for vice president, is a secret muslim
  hmm
  Not quite offensive enough yet

Friday, October 05, 2012

From myths to national self-appraisal

I nearly broke down altogether when I entered the lofty gallery where the blessed goddess of beauty, Our Lady of Milo, stands on her pedestal. I lay prostrate at her feet for a long time, and I wept so bitterly that it would have melted a heart of stone. And indeed the goddess did look down pitifully upon me, yet at the same time so hopelessly as if she were trying to say: But don’t you see that I have no arms and that therefore I cannot help you.
Hölderlin ‘grew up in the arms of the gods’; Heine’s goddess didn’t have any. The Greeks, Heine said, were of no use to Europe’s revolutions; genuine political reform required a much more mundane form of national self-appraisal.
Thomas Meaney: Germany Imagines Hellas

Tuesday, October 02, 2012

Monday, July 16, 2012

Retracing the life and times of one man in the Chinese Maritime Customs during the early 20th century

and something of a love story...
"It had been one of those peculiar relationships – common enough, or a by-product of alien circumstances? – like a broken figure of eight. She had fallen passionately in love with him; he married her with his mind elsewhere. She frustrated him physically, he disappointed her emotionally. Attachment frayed, they twisted away from each other. Yet her company became essential to him, and she accepted displacement for it. Tender and insensible, he certainly ended by loving her more than she did him, yet practically she gave up more for him, with only intermittent intensity of regret. When she was alive, he once said to her: ‘I wonder if you have ever really treated me as an equal.’ "


Part I

Part II

Thursday, July 05, 2012

Friday, May 11, 2012

Korra

Really like how Avatar: Legend of Korra is starting out. It has the same internal consistency and production values that made the original Avatar: The Last Airbender such a great show beyond its intended audience. Things like the intrepid usage of Chinese characters (intrepid because the show is aired on an All-American children's TV network and marketed primarily to American audience [with Asian heritage or otherwise] who may or may not relate to such exoticism) and detailed martial arts fighting sequences set high standards for all future Asian mythology inspired animations.

The choreography of Republic City is simply fantastic. The scale gives a cinematic quality to the animation.

V: Korra is good but it is missing a bit of charm. It needs time to get its feet, (it feels) very action-y. Also, it's missing some themes that made the original very compelling: (that of) these three children thrust into an adult world, and the subplots of all the secondary characters, like Zuko.











Monday, May 07, 2012

The Life of Eleanor Marx, whom translated Madame Bovary

.. and whom shared similar elements with the book's protagonist.

From FT
Rather than take the path of Ibsen’s Nora, who abandons her home in order to save herself, Eleanor had submitted to the fate of Emma Bovary, a woman consumed by her own desires. 

Monday, April 23, 2012

Happiness in times post-modern

I must have felt an inescapable loneliness when I first read this a few months ago to recall it even now. 

From Cosmic Neutrality, by Fredric Jameson. London Review of Books. Vol. 33 No. 20 · 20 October 2011 pages 17-18:

[T]his particular fairytale is perhaps not so affirmative when it comes to the value of chance meetings. It tells of a country boy who seeks, not to make his fortune, but only to return home with it (he has just served an apprenticeship of the traditional seven years and received his accumulated savings in the form of a lump of gold). In the first of many chance meetings, admiring the alacrity of a passing horseman, Hans is offered the horse itself in exchange for the troublesome lump of gold, an offer he is happy to accept. Then, after being thrown by the horse, he is not unwilling to exchange it for a cow, led by a farmer who explains the advantages of its sustenance, in the form of milk, butter and cheese. But it milks poorly, and a passing butcher persuades him of the benefits of a young pig, for which he gladly exchanges it; a bargain then soon enough replaced by the swap of a fat goose; and so on and so forth until he loses the final avatar – a grindstone – in a well and, no longer burdened by that weight either, joyously reaches home with nothing left in his pockets at all. ‘There is no man under the sun so fortunate as I,’ he cries happily as he greets his mother. We should take into consideration the possibility that this really is a happy ending...

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

The beginning of world history

From: The Age of Capital, 1848 - 1875, by Eric Hobsbawm (Vintage, 1996), pp 46 -47.
The period from the late 1840s to the mid-1870s proved to be not so much, as the conventional wisdom of the time held, the model of economic growth, political development, intellectual progress and cultural achievement, which would persist, no doubt with suitable improvements, into the indefinite future, but rather a special kind of interlude. But its achievements were nevertheless extremely impressive. In this era industrial capitalism became a genuine world economy and the globe was therefore transformed from a geographical expression into a constant operational reality. History from now on became world history.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Dragon-Slayers

Robin, Corey. "Dragon-Slayers." London Review of Books 29.1 (2007): 18-20.
Imagining themselves as ‘dragon-slayers who went enthusiastically into far and curious lands to strange and naive peoples to slay the numerous dragons that had plagued them for centuries’, colonial administrators and secret agents – the empire’s emblematic figures – took on ‘a responsibility that no man can bear for his fellow-man and no people for another people’: to protect those who are ‘hopelessly one’s inferiors’...

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Atavistic monks and nationalism

Using religion as a talisman of conflict is a bad sign, but this perhaps has more to do with a barely concealed ethnocentrism - Vietnam to send Buddhist monks to Spratly Islands

Wednesday, March 07, 2012

Waking from a dream

I woke up last night, confused and disorientated. Like Zhuang Zi, I could not determine the direction in which I had been dreaming.

I recalled the various dreams I have lived in and tried to trace a continuity of memory to establish which must be real, but I was tired and scattered.

Kind

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Friday, February 24, 2012

I experience this at work...

Speaking of the British

I recently went on a business trip with three members of the British ruling classes. The late-night banter over drinks was predictably excellent. Sometimes, though, we had to work. When that happened, my companions showed up unprepared and without notes – and did just fine. No wonder, because their entire education had been a lesson in winging it. They knew that all you need to succeed is to speak well, and that’s what the British ruling classes do: they speak well.

What motivates achievers



Monday, February 20, 2012

Whither the judiciary

I wonder how the US and UK judiciaries differ. The U.S. Supreme Court judges are (expected to be) political actors. Judicial activism goes by many guises (it is easier to defend a static "original" constitution when one's goal is to defend inequality, and make acceptable the status quo)...
A young couple fall in love and marry. She is British; he is Chilean. Because they are both under 21, immigration rules, which set out Home Office policy, forbid him to settle here with his wife, who has a university place and a promising career ahead. The purpose of the rule is to inhibit the importation of spouses by forced marriage. Forced marriage is a serious matter meriting determined government action, but there is nothing to link the vast majority of young couples affected by the rule with it. The young couple bring judicial review proceedings. The impact of the rule on their right to marry and to live as a family is manifest. The rule itself has a lawful purpose, but the Home Office accepts that it has no bearing on them. How could the courts decide whether the impact on the couple was legitimate without considering in detail the justification for the rule itself? That is what both the Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court did. Had they not done so, the home secretary’s case would have gone unheard. All but one of the judges decided that the impact on the individuals before them was out of proportion to the policy objective. The result was not to stifle policy initiatives designed to inhibit forced marriages; these remain a matter for government alone. It was to ensure that such initiatives conformed to the law by not impacting disproportionately on individuals. This is a critical linkage which recurs in the now well developed law of legitimate expectation, which sometimes requires government to honour its promises even when its policy has legitimately shifted.

Judicial Politics

Sunday, February 05, 2012

Political and Economic Exigencies in Republican China

From Sino-Americana, by Perry Anderson (London Review of Books, 2012), Vol. 34 No. 3 · 9 February 2012, pages 20-22
"The historical reality was that no outstanding leaders emerged from the confused morass of the KMT in the Republican period. "
"The military clique that ruled Guangxi, on the border with Indochina, were better generals and ran a more progressive and efficient government, but their province was too poor and remote for them to be able to compete successfully against Chiang." ( whom was based in Shanghai and Zhejiang, and the surrounding Yangtze delta region, where he cultivated connections in both criminal and business worlds, in what was by far the richest and most industrialised zone in China)."

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Space opera never looked so delicious

I've just started re-watching the 110 episode Legend of the Galactic Heroes and all its prequels.

























Legend of the Galactic Heroes Café

Saturday, January 14, 2012

The Plight of the Poor in the Midst of Plenty

A well-ordered society advances the good of each and all of its members, so that there is no one from whose gaze or plight we have to avert our eyes, no one whose complaints can be met only with lies or pious nonsense about following one’s dream.
The Plight of the Poor in the Midst of Plenty
‘Well-ordered’ does not mean docile or regimented. Quite the contrary, it means a society whose members – all of them, individual men and women of every creed, class and background – are prepared to raise awkward questions about how things are organised and to justify their laws and institutions to one another in good faith, without any myths or illusions.

Saturday, January 07, 2012