Thursday, May 14, 2009

Creepy

So, I'm kind of sick and tired of banner ads for TheGodMovie.com that keep cropping up on nytimes.com. Sorry, but, as much of a sceptic as I am, I'm not an atheist, and I'm really sick and tired of seeing this ad float onto my webpages. I don't want to suppress freedom of speech, either, but, at my wits end, I clicked on "Feedback" to see if there was something to report along the lines of "This ad really pisses me off."

No such luck. Out of curiosity, however, (and having read a reference to it a few days earlier) I click on "Visit the Ads Preferences Manager to learn more and customize which interest-based ads you see." I figured it would bring up some general categories of ads that Google put on pages that I could opt out of in case I really didn't particularly like cooking or something like that. Here's what I got instead:

Ford makes pretty good cars that, with the exception of the Mustang, are pretty lame. So they're wrong about that. But not much else. I guess they culled this from my New York Times traffic--not that difficult, considering they run the ads on the site, and plenty of other sites I must have surfed. But now I'm starting to understand why people freak out over Googleistic monopolies and privacy rights. 'Cause this is a pretty good list of my interests. I honestly, for all my nerdiness, never knew they could actually pull this stuff off.

You can opt out of tracking (at least with your current cookie) with Google, which I will do NOW, but Big Brother is still out there. It wouldn't surprise me if the tracking starts up again if I delete my cookie and surf a Google site again. Or if Yahoo, Microsoft, and God knows who else can do this kind of information tracking. Or if Google combines my Gmail, search data, maybe even Blogger to create a real good picture of me. It's not paranoid to think like that anymore. Now, right now, they aren't doing anything other than compiling data for ads and marketing. But what nefarious deeds does that leave the door open to?

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

AP Rage

So, after my lovely AP testing experience, I decided to take out some of my AP Rage by mowing large sections of the lawn with my non-self-propelled push mower. Then, sore and exhausted, I decided to finish the job in Grand Theft Auto IV, where I released more AP Rage in bullets and grenades for an hour and a half. All in all, I had two instances of six star wanted levels--very impressive feats, but then again, 1000+ rounds of SMG ammo in a (virtual) fast food restaurant will really take you places.

Now you must think I am a serial killer. All those violent video games---Halo, GTA, Mario Kart--must be getting to my head, and, as we all know, anything fun is subversive, immoral, and indicative of a serious mental disorder. But before you call in the cops and have me arrested or sent off to the loony bin, I want the opportunity to at least present my proposal for the next four weeks...please don't spoil my fun...

Friday, May 1, 2009

A Modest Proposal as to a Solution of the Plight of Women

Even after the enactment of equal rights laws for women, prohibiting many forms of official and unofficial discrimination; even after decades of efforts by leagues of feminists to attack sexism and misogyny in society; even after women, living and competing as de jure equals among men, do we find a lingering disparity between the sexes in American society. Unequal pay is merely the harbinger of what lies beneath the surface, in the minds of men and, indeed, many woman—a society where woman are still subjected to injury and perversion before altars and in bedrooms. The American society maintains a culture than housing artifacts of previous eras, so that now women are still, more often than not, portrayed submissive and docile, to defer to their bold, courageous, decisive men. Then, with this private sexism, it is only inevitable that it should spill into public and professional behavior—which it does, running the gamut from “glass ceilings” to workplace sexual harassment.

Nor should we expect that these evils of mankind shall come to pass soon. The height of feminism has come and gone. American conservatism, even if weakened in this economic downturn, has seen a rebirth ever since Reagan, and, while maintaining comparable existence in the wax-and-wane cycle of politics, has since has moved farther towards the right, where in the final analysis, platforms on “family” or “traditional” values will inevitably seek turn the clock back on the feminism. Feminism, too, has become negatively stigmatized and has even perhaps lost its stomach when facing a less and less egregious state of misogyny and discrimination, where finer distinctions are the subject of increased debate and litigation. If advocacy and politics have been the sources of positive change for women, then women face a serious crisis.

Women, if they are to protect themselves—for that, in essence, is the purpose of our rights and freedoms—must do more than “find a new tack.” There is nothing more I believe we can do to advance the feminism along the path it has taken without inciting damaging reactions against feminism. Heretofore, women have asked men to change themselves or force other men to act differently. But change is the source of the feminist reaction—and we cannot alter this fundamental aversion of man to change. Women, then, must protect themselves without inducing change. Let, then, men be themselves.

Women demanded rights and equality to protect them while under male domination, and perhaps men did not treat them fairly. There was, after all, neither a complete liberation of women nor a complete subjugation. Where liberation has to be achieved, subjugation might be realistic and successful, as it only reverses the fragile, resented liberative changes in society, returning to the comfortable subjugate attitudes that have dominated much of history, with the sole exception that men must be much more careful to treat women as they deserve. It would be self-defeating if women were allowed any semblance of recognized rights or dignity, for then that would negate the nature existence of such.

For example, any reasonable proposal (for, given the degree to which society has assimilated feminine involvement, however resented, there may be, justly so, competing plans as to the actual defemininezation of America) would probably keep women at home for most of their lives, where they might clean houses, please husbands, and bear children. Certainly such a demand would automatically resolve much of our sexist issues. If a woman is not to leave her house, then she does not obtain work—unequal pay and discrimination will no longer be an issue. If she does not receive an education, then concerns over opportunity and equality are moot. Not only is this extremely simple to implement, but also, in terms of women, the protection from the ills of society are only heightened through repression. In any state between the extremes of liberation and repression—such as the state of feminism in our society—women may be granted work or an education, but, being unequal in treatment in these places, women might suffer as they face the cruel world while it is slanted against them. On the other hand, if women, in the words of the great statesmen Adlai Stevenson, are “in the living-room with a baby in…[the] lap or in the kitchen with a can opener in…[the] hand,” their husbands inevitably provides for them and thus eliminate women’s perils of an independent existence.

Similarly, we might expect reductions in violence or harassment against women through their suppression. For example, in concurrence with many a expert opinion, I might suggest that women be reduced to the level of private property, on the thinking that men will treat them better, and defend them better, than if women were independent. If women are considered independent entities of their husbands, then a man can strike a woman; the woman is the only victim. But if women are extensions of their husbands—or, more appropriately, owners—like all other private property, then the man, if he should abuse his woman or allow other men to do so, would be, in effect, a victim through the damage of his property. Facing this sort of personal injury, he might vigorously protect and defend the women in his possession.

A Danish acquaintance of mine, a good-humored gentleman of much learning, upon hearing my suggestion for women, recommended that we ought to keep them in cages, releasing them only when needed, as has been common practice in Denmark for generations. And, as I told my good friend in earnest, while I respect the good Danish people and their nation, it was my feeling that women, even confined within the household, contributed much to the economic productivity of the country. At home, by cleaning, cooking, and tending to the children, women under my scheme would be freeing men from such responsibilities and thus allowing men to work longer and harder. In addition, with one of the primary responsibilities of women being to bear children, keeping women in cages might increase stress during pregnancy, and would also reduce, by their confinement, their physical health—for even the Spartans of antiquity trained their daughters vigorously so that strong women might bear strong children.

Some have questions the nature of my proposal and its similarity, in one respect, to that of the current situation of feminism. They note that, in both cases, women place their ultimate fates in men, and imply that perhaps women should assert control over their own fate—that in a move of solidarity, women quit crafting the image of allure and otherwise playing into the male fantasy; that they should show strength and dignity in place of vulnerable lewdness; that through what they do by themselves as women, they make themselves free as fact, not as a condition of male courtesy. As great as this potential state might be, I find little faith in the human will and determination, that it should run counter to currents and against what nature or practice would have them. And even if I could have such faith, what good would it be if I, a man, were to make such a scornful suggestion of women, only to be rejected in my ideas and ostracized as an individual? Thus, I resign and place my hopes not in men or women, but in the frailty and sentiments of humanity, whose natural course, I pray, might deliver men and women from the injustice in the sexes’ relations.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Maybe I should double-check the 'ole transcript...

Grades Fixed: An Allegation Shocks No One

Thoughts, anyone? Has the college game gone too far? Is this an epidemic? Why? What's the solution?

Monday, March 9, 2009

Orwell's World

In Huxley’s Brave New World, “social stability” is the foundational tenant for this society dictated by the state. To suppress the individual, and the problems that result from this inherently ego-centric construct, is to make the citizens members of a communal society, enslaved by their vices. Technology, consumerism, and promiscuity satisfy the desires of the flesh and the shallow needs of the mind, but there is no deep satisfaction, no purpose to life other than the cycle of work and pleasure. The vices of these peoples and their fulfillment will, for the most part, suppress the deeper thoughts and desires of man, for if man were to experience a sense that the shallow stimulation is not enough, and that if he were to pursue something much harder to obtain, like truth, faith, or love, then social stability would be compromised.

For “the Party” in Orwell’s 1984, power is the first and final objective. The Party seeks to maintain its dominance and thus the continuity of the current social order—a social stability to protect the outer and inner party, just as Huxley’s social stability protects the society of Alphas and their blissful ignorance. The Party also seeks to maintain power by crushing the individual; however, rather than providing immense luxury and escapism to suppress deep thoughts and sensations, the Party uses the forces of nationalism, hatred, fear, and manipulation to take the independent individual and make him wholly subject to the party will. By creating a state where the individual does not think, act, or even exist on his own accord, the individual is absolutely powerless and dependent on the all-powerful party; in turn, the individual, from his dependence, is driven back to the party, further reducing his individual power.

With the 1950’s, and the Cold War, 1984 seemed much more imminent than the light and carefree Brave New World. With the world always on the brink of destruction and, in the meantime, perceived enemies at home and abroad, the prosperity of the 1950’s could do nothing about the cloud of fear and insecurity hovered over Americans in the 1950’s. If nuclear war did not destroy America first, or if the Soviets didn’t subvert the free world and in its place, prop up autocratic communism, the Americans themselves, in loyalty programs and Senators named McCarthy, would bring 1984 to America. As the decades passed, nuclear Armageddon and subversion would be gradually replaced by real war and turmoil. The threat of autocracy would lessen and seemingly wither away with the Soviets. 1984, and the year 1984, came and went.

And in the years that Orwell’s vision was strong, American society was, ironically enough, sowing the seeds for Huxley’s world. The age of consumerism began in the 1950’s, and it has hardly faltered since then. While Orwell and his world declined, Huxley’s came to the forefront. For a book written in the 1930’s, Huxley is startling in his technological and social predictions. True, the world today is not nearly as grotesque as that in Brave New World, but American society has become more liberalized in its tastes and consumerized in its economics. Is there a downside to this, a blow to our individuality as in Brave New World? Is it not reasonable to see a suppression of deep individual considerations with the comforts and pleasures afforded by modern consumerism and liberality?

Those who would declare a Huxleyian crisis must take into consideration the enormous social and economic progress this country has made. Look at our schools. Look at our colleges. Look at our opportunity and prosperity. This is certainly a better world than at most other points in recent and not-so-recent history. More people know how to read and write. More people go to college, get jobs, own homes, and raise children with prospects better than that of their parents. Those who might enjoy the latest smut in Cosmopolitan or internet porn—phenomenon twenty or thirty years ago—may include those people who, had they lived earlier in the century, could not have read or operated machinery, let alone purchase such articles through discretionary spending. What these newly empowered people might be seeking is simply the modern form of persistent vice. Even Victorian heads of households—men, of course—sought sexual outlets outside of the home—namely, in brothels—in what was a socially accepted practice. These new sexual and sensual developments of the late 20th and early 21st centuries are not necessarily the harbingers of a new gluttonous, gaudy, promiscuous world order—it could simply be affording new avenues of participation in elemental desires to those who could not attain them in such a way before, reflecting the literacy and prosperity achieved. In other words, technology and industry has simply illuminated the dark ways of man, whereas before he satisfied his needs in subtler ways.

But is the prosperity of the past coming to an end? Have hard times come upon us? It is still too premature to make prophecies, but we known that the current economic crisis is one of the worst we have seen in a very long time. This world’s attempts at vibrovacs and scent organs and an infantile lifestyle have met the harsh economic reality, which tells us that such luxury is not yet tenable. Certainly, this blow to consumerism is a blow to a Huxleyian vision of the world, and the impact of the economic collapse on the everyday lives of the people is profound. Such an impact may cause political repercussions.

Hard times bring misery. And in the past, hard times have brought demands for relief, for answers, for solutions—and the demands of the people have been met by men imported straight from Oceania. Rallying hatred and nationalism, stamping the boot into the face of humanity, the Hitlers and Stalins of the world make 1984 as real as it will ever become. While, for now, this nation and the world have yet to reach the depths of Depression desperation, we must still be ever vigilant against tyranny. And as an exposition of the autocracy and its methods, we find 1984 to be relevant in these times.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Against Capital Punishment

If a person was killed or raped, it would be just for the victim or the victim’s family to seek revenge, to have the satisfaction of seeing those responsible put to death.

If we should have apprehended a criminal guilty of capital crimes, it would be just of us to execute the criminal for the protection of society and for deterrence against further capital crimes.

But not all just things should be done. Anything that we can justify can be considered just. It is the ultimate justice—the justice of a particular course of action when all the good and evil merits are taken into consideration— that should compel us to act.

The human being is not infallible; he may err in knowledge and action. Thus, a jury of men and women are tasked to determine guilt, expecting that a deliberative body might be less prone, as a whole, to making mistakes and showing bias. Then, in reaching a verdict, we ask them to convict only when guilt is known beyond any reasonable doubt, not absolute certainty; we acknowledge that we can never know the absolute truth. Even after a conviction, appeals can be made, resulting in a new trial or a reversal of guilt if innocence can be shown or, at a minimum, the guilt of an individual is dubious from the nature of the court proceedings. Juries and the rest of the justice system treat the accused unfairly, as it has in the past and will, no doubt, in the future. This can be the consequence of any number of things. In additional to the obvious vagueness and ambiguity that may be present in evidence and testimony, there can be corruption, tampering, and interference throughout the process. It is not difficult—rather, it is impossible to deem a criminal proceeding to be without error, nor is it ever certain that there will not be any new, exonerating details after the fact. For any convict, there is always the opportunity for him to prove his innocence, any convict except those condemned to death.

The death sentence ends the appeals and any possibility that the condemned will ever be innocent. We would hope that the many appeals and reviews the condemned always receive might be sufficient to root out the innocent, and that during the intervening time between conviction and execution, any new evidence would come to light—but we cannot be sure. There has never been a dead man exonerated (under the present system), but the opponents of executions are not at a loss to come up with suspect cases, and some condemned have been set free—prior to execution—based on new evidence that has come to light. How can we ever be certain that tomorrow’s forensic technology will not yield new insight? How can we discount the keen ability of time to settle men’s passions and subsequent bias over crimes? How can we say that there will never be a retraction, confession, conspiracy, that changes the way we should have seen the case? We cannot make such definitive assertions—we are only human. An imprisonment for life allows us to be ever skeptical and ready to see the truth; an execution requires that we be as definitive as the sentence imposed.

It would be in the best interests of the protection of the public if the threat of the repeat offender were definitely removed, but we must juxtapose the protective value of an execution against the threat it poses to the potential innocents on death row. We cannot say definitively that an individual in solitary confinement in a maximum security prison would not pose a threat to the public; human error could let him escape, just as human error could convict him wrongly. But could we not agree that the potential for human error is greater, much greater in the emotionally charged, arbitrary proceedings in a court of law than in the brick-and-mortal jail?

The public might also be protected if capital punishment acted as a deterrent against capital crimes. It might act as a deterrent to some individuals under some circumstances, or it might not. How can we tell? Obviously, those who commit capital crimes don’t think about the consequences that would follow in the likely event they are discovered and arrested. The capital criminals could be a special class of delusional people who ignore the inevitable consequences (while everyone else is deterred by them); or, they could also be normal people who would normally be deterred had it not been for the extraordinary circumstances under which they committed a capital crime. How can we justify capital punishment on the premise of a deterrent effect that may or may no exist?

When a person or a loved one is attacked or killed, it is understandable that victim or their loved ones should be enraged. We should alleviate their pain as much as we can. We can find the individual with whom we believe guilt lies, we can try him, and we can punish him. We cannot, however, kill the guilty. Grief is a terrible thing, but it will not kill the grieving. Death of the criminal will not restore their dead victims to life, nor erase the crime that has been committed. We should not, we cannot execute anyone with whom there is any shadow of innocence—which, in human justice, will always be cast. We must give dignity to life, and show respect to innocence.