Thursday, December 8, 2011

So does cocaine

Absinthe makes the heart grow strong

Wednesday, December 7, 2011


My blood, my dark brown hair, and my blended light brown skin will never be one individual. I am a world of different flowers. I can trace my roots back to the original Peñas who lived on a rocky cliff in Castilla, Spain, but the light skin that my ancestors gave me isn’t how I identify. Both of my parents came from Central America (Guatemala, and El Salvador) escaping governmental persecution and mass poverty. In their pockets that only contained bread crumbs, they managed to bring their culture to the United States. I am a world of different flowers. On one side I stand as a Central American that feels excited when asked about his nationality, but what most people never see, and what most people never understand is my true identity.
 Like the elders in my family who told me stories of Quetzalcoatl, and showed the struggle of the beautiful Rigoberta Menchu, I am Ki’Chi.  I want to show the world that the Ki’Che live on.

 My skin color carries a history of oppression , while my blood carries the depressing stories of massacres and poverty. These stories that cry red awake the Ki’Chi warrior within. Ruben Dario said “ we are a million cubs from the original Lion”, and when I first laid eyes on his poetic verse, the tears, and the ancestral pain spoke to me, and said “ you will help your people”. My identity helps me understand why I have the need to stop the unfair wealth distribution in my community. My identity allows me to understand that I have an obligation and a mission to develop a powerful voice to speak up for the mothers, children, and anyone who has had to decide between purchasing groceries and paying for rent.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Give immigration reform a chance


It's All Politics banner
 
When new GOP presidential front-runner Newt Gingrich recently advocated a "humane" approach to addressing illegal immigrants in America, some conservatives questioned whether it would fatally damage the former House Speaker's campaign.
After all, Texas Gov. Rick Perry saw his bid for the GOP nomination falter in part because of his support for a program that allows children of illegal immigrants to pay in-state tuition at state colleges and universities.
But a new survey in Iowa of some of the most conservative voters in the nation — that state's likely GOP caucus-goers — suggests that a wider swath of Republicans than previously believed support changes to immigration law that would help young people, as well as businesses and foreign-born entrepreneurs.
The survey, released Tuesday, showed that just 16 percent of likely Iowa GOP caucus attendees surveyed for a coalition of conservative Republicans said they were "outright opposed to proposals" that would modernize and expand legal immigration.
 
"This survey demonstrates that while opinions are strong on tough enforcement for illegal immigration, it is not the top-tier, hot-button issue among Republican caucus-goers it's often made out to be," says John Stineman, spokesman for the coalition of Iowa Republicans who are working with Partnership for a New American Economy, a national organization that supports immigration reform and sponsored the poll.
"It's eye-opening," Stineman says, and "resets" perceptions of how Iowa Republican caucus-goers view the issue.
Stineman, a GOP strategist who is not working for any of the Republican candidates, said: "There is clearly an appetite for working to solve problems with our legal immigration system, and Iowa Republicans make that connection that doing so can help grow our economy."
Des Moines pollster J. Ann Selzer conducted the survey Nov. 16-19. Selzer conducts the respected Iowa Poll for the Des Moines Register and polls for Bloomberg News.
Reducing government spending and creating jobs "best reflects the mood" of caucus-goers this year, she says, and topped the list of issues important to Iowa Republicans. Fewer than half said that halting illegal immigration is a critical issue.
Social issues, including abortion, were seen by only 35 percent of those surveyed as critical this election year.
"This is a different year, this is a different mood, this is a different agenda," Selzer said.
Iowa Republicans, the survey found, overwhelmingly support tough border security, systems that verify the immigration status of new hires and punishment for businesses that hire those in the country illegally.
But they indicated in the survey that they are open to policies that help foreign-born young people educated in the U.S. to enter the workforce, as well as those that help companies hire seasonal and permanent employees for vacant jobs Americans are not filling.
They also expressed strong support for increasing opportunities for highly-skilled legal immigrants and entrepreneurs to come to the United States.
When asked about legal immigration, 57 percent of Iowa Republican caucus-goers surveyed said that it would be a "good idea" for the U.S. to expand legal immigration in a way that would create jobs.
"Likely Iowa caucus-goers separate concerns with illegal immigration from the potential opportunity of legal immigration," Selzer says.
There's an openness to modernizing the nation's visa policies, she says, including devising a temporary visa program for workers, both low- and high-skilled.
Of those surveyed, 83 percent described themselves as very or mostly conservative. Most had some college or a college degree, and skewed a little older.
"We all know that immigration can be controversial," Stineman says. "We wanted to dig a little deeper and get away from tired talking points."
Iowa Republicans get that immigration reform and visa reform can create jobs, he said.
What that means for Mitt Romney, recently overtaken by Gingrich in Iowa caucus polls as well as national polls, remains to be seen.
Romney has fashioned himself as a tough-on-illegal-immigration candidate, criticizing both Perry for his tuition stand and Gingrich for suggesting that illegal immigrants who have been here a long time, "paying taxes and obeying the law" should be allowed to stay.
The Partnership for a New American Economy describes itself as a bipartisan group of mayors and business leaders working to "raise awareness of the economic benefits of sensible immigration reform."
Its co-chairs include Steven Ballmer of Microsoft Corporation, Mayor Michael Bloomberg of New York City, Bob Iger of the Walt Disney Co., and Rupert Murdoch of News Corp.
 


Monday, December 5, 2011

If the government ever compiles a list of activists/liberals/intellectuals/organizers that are a threat to capitalism,  I, among many of my colleagues and friends would be on it.
This is by far one of Led Zeppelins under-appreciated song, and by default one of their best. Zeppelin, is one of the greatest bands to ever assemble, and to think otherwise is stupidity.

Two Finger Camera!

Doing it the Apple way, Air Camera strips away all the unnecessary aspects to a digital camera design. It leaves us with a Bluetooth enabled camera lens and a motion-sensor shutter button mounted on two rubber bands. Precious moments are captured with a simple click gesture and the images get transferred to your synced smartphone immediately.
This is how it works: if you want to click pictures, wear the camera band on your thumb and the shutter button on your forefinger and gesture to click a pic. To take videos, simply curve your fingers to mimic a video camera grip and shoot. The tension from the finger movement triggers the shutter button to operate.
I think it’s a clever and fun concept!
Designer: Yeon Su Kim

 
Dr. Alfredo Quiñones-Hinojosa picked tomatoes, shoveled sulfur and scraped fish lard before becoming one of America's most respected neurosurgeons.
Enlarge Keith Weller Dr. Alfredo Quiñones-Hinojosa picked tomatoes, shoveled sulfur and scraped fish lard before becoming one of America's most respected neurosurgeons.
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December 5, 2011
Immigration continues to spark intense and emotional political debates between people who favor expansive immigration policies and those who want more restrictions.
But what is often left out of the conversation is the experience of being in the middle space – between being legal and illegal. All this week Tell Me More will focus on those in that position (or who is related to someone who is) in a series titled "In Limbo."
"In Limbo" begins with the story of Alfredo Quiñones-Hinojosa. His life is like a classic rags-to-riches tale scripted for a Hollywood film. He grew up in the small village of Palaco, Mexico. As a bright young man, he wanted to become a teacher. But he had to overcome many obstacles first, including hunger.
"I am not talking about hungry for success; I was literally hungry for food. My stomach was empty," he says.
Quiñones- Hinojosa was determined to put food on the table for his family, so he did the only thing he could possibly think of: literally jumped over a fence between his native Mexico and the United States and became a farm worker in southern California.
He started by picking tomatoes, corn and broccoli. Later, he operated dangerous machinery in the fields. But things changed for him after a conversation with his cousin.
"The critical portion that got me out of the fields was my own cousin telling me that I was going to spend the rest of my life working as a migrant farm worker," Quiñones- Hinojosa says.
He could not imagine that life. He left the fields and headed north. To pay for community college, he shoveled sulfur and scraped fish lard from tankers — an excruciating job that almost cost him his life.
His journey then took him to University of California, Berkeley, and later Harvard Medical School. After 10 years, since first jumping over that fence into America, he became a U.S. citizen.
Now, Dr. Alfredo Quiñones- Hinojosa is a respected brain surgeon who directs the Brain Tumor Program at John Hopkins Bayview Hospital. He says more needs to be done to help those who can follow in his footsteps.
"Among people who come to the United States today — whether they come from privileged backgrounds or humble backgrounds — is our next Einstein, is our next Nobel laureate, but we just have failed to identify," he says.
More Around the Natio
 
 

I'm feeling a delayed depression this afternoon. R.E.M broke up on September 21st of 2011, and as soon as I heard the news I silently walked away and ignored the computer screen. I played Collapse Into Now on the cd player, and began to remember the moments R.E.M saved me.  How should I deal with this? It isn't fair knowing that R.E.M, being one of the most genuinely talented musicians of our age, have split up, while bands like Blink 182 still roam their capital surface. "It's sweet, and it's sad, and it's true," R.E.M will live in our hearts while be sing " Oh, My Heart" from the top of our lungs. R.E.M gave its fans something to cling on, a dash of hope, a swift meaning to the question of art, and most importantly - a step into the unknown. The minutes I spend online always progress and roam  while I backtrack and admire musical history. This is my day, the end of the world as I know it.

http://laughingsquid.com/evolution-portrait-series-of-people-and-the-fish-they-look-like/

Evolution, Portrait Series of People and The Fish They Look Like

Evolution by Ted Sabarese
Evolution by Ted Sabarese
Evolution by Ted Sabarese
Evolution by Ted Sabarese
Evolution by Ted Sabarese
“Evolution” by photographer Ted Sabarese is a portrait series that compares people to their fish lookalikes.
With all the recent, fiery controversy between evolution, creationism, intelligent design, science, religion, the political left, right, etc., I thought it might be provocative to throw my visual two-cents into the ring. The images beg the question, is it really so difficult to believe we came out from the sea millions and millions of years ago?
via Curiosity Counts


The Legend of Zelda

The youth who draws forth the guiding sword shall be known as the goddess’s chosen hero, and it is he who possesses an unbreakable spirit. He shall be burdened with the task of abolishing the shadow of apocalypse from the land. Such is his destiny. With the spirit of the blade at his side, he shall soar over the clouds and plummet below…And united with the spirit maiden shall bring forth a piercing light that resurrects the land.
The Legend of Zelda - Skyward Sword

Me.

My poetry is hardly a poetic. My writing is barely understandable, and rarely talented. I continue writing for numerous reasons, my feelings need to speak. The words smell like bad cheese, but the feeling I feel is youthful and whimsical. The love I feel, and the moody blues I sometimes experience are all
blaghhh - i need to pee.

the future

I love overhearing Latin American folk speak Spanish in locations that lack diversity. These moments exude pride, and remind me that the status quo will be altered, and that in a few years, Latinoamericanos/hispanos/Latinos...will be the grand majority.

Roots

I “love” Starbucks. Aside from their below par customer service, and just a tad below decent coffee quality my favorite thing about Starbucks is seeing Guatemalan coffee sold at a very high price. Starbucks is a corporations regardless of any angle you view it, so it must have purchased the Guatemalan coffee at a very low rate. What’s the funny to me, in a comical but perverse way is the high priced Guatemalan coffee is from Atitlan - which is where my indigenous roots preside, and also where my family’s coffee plantation awaits. Starbucks is of course ripping you off, but the beans are quality - when fresh.

Dante's Inferno

Through me the way into the suffering city, Through me the way to the eternal pain, Through me the way that runs among the lost. Justice urged on my high artificer; My maker was divine authority, The highest wisdom, and the primal love. Before me nothing but eternal things were made, And I endure eternally. Abandon every hope, ye who enter here.
Dante’s Inferno, Canto 1

depressing

One of my friends joined the marines, and the changes in his personality have been noticeable now more than ever. It’s a bit frightening, and even more frightening when I try to imagine my mind in that grind. I wouldn’t survive.
A lot of people question why I purchase hard copies of books when the internet has made literature so accesible through e-book files. I stand by my choice. I believe nothing beats a hard copy. The ability to write small notes about what you feel, what you think, what you think might happen at the curve of the chapter is unlike any experience I’ve ever had with an e-book file. Like people who collect records and albums ( which is awesome) I collect books. My library is continually growing, and so is the number of books I’ve read and my ability to read stronger works.
Lols, if who I have in mind reads this, she’ll call me a hipster.
Jack London drinking his life away while
writing of strange and heroic men.
Eugene O’Neill drinking himself oblivious
while writing his dark and poetic
works.

now our moderns
lecture at universities
in tie and suit,
the little boys soberly studious,
the little girls with glazed eyes
looking
up,
the lawns so green, the books so dull,
the life so dying of
thirst.
What is it about her that makes me mad?
Is it her interest in cheesy flicks?
What is it?
what we both find it to be - seemingly seems
whatever we might think
that never dispels
her warm hearted vigor
who
calms the thousand polychrome memories
of fated distraught.
She’s more than beautiful
every damned superlative
and even a kind of magic Snape doesn’t understand.
Eres.
Enter, stranger, but take heed
Of what awaits the sin of greed,
For those who take, but do not earn,
Must pay most dearly in their turn.
So if you seek beneath our floors
A treasure that was never yours,
Thief, you have been warned, beware

Gringotts Bank
I can’t comprehend why people dislike reading. Reading is soothing, and calms my nerves. My mind honestly travels through fantastic journeys that can only exist in our imagination or in the dark ink of a pen. I suppose it isn’t for anyone, just like numbers have never been my shindig.

MTV, Rolling Stone list top 100 pop songs since 1963

November 19, 2000
A list of the 100 greatest pop songs since 1963, as determined by experts at MTV and Rolling Stone magazine.
1. "Yesterday," The Beatles
2. "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction," The Rolling Stones
3. "Smells Like Teen Spirit," Nirvana
4. "Like a Virgin," Madonna
5. "Billie Jean," Michael Jackson
6. "I Want to Hold Your Hand," The Beatles
7. "Respect," Aretha Franklin
8. "One," U2
9. "I Want You Back," The Jackson 5
10. "I Want it That Way," Backstreet Boys
11. "Hotel California," The Eagles
12. "Where Did Our Love Go?" The Supremes
13. "Sweet Child O' Mine," Guns N' Roses
14. "Brown Sugar," The Rolling Stones
15. "Imagine," John Lennon
16. "Nothing Compares 2 U," Sinead O'Connor
17. "Superstition," Stevie Wonder
18. "Losing My Religion," R.E.M.
19. "Vogue," Madonna (1990).
20. "Like a Rolling Stone," Bob Dylan
21. "Brown Eyed Girl," Van Morrison
22. "Beat It," Michael Jackson
23. "Oh, Pretty Woman," Roy Orbison
24. "What's Going On," Marvin Gaye
25. " ... Baby One More Time," Britney Spears
26. "Go Your Own Way," Fleetwood Mac
27. "When Doves Cry," Prince
28. "In My Life," The Beatles
29. "Bohemian Rhapsody," Queen
30. "Your Song," Elton John
31. "Smooth," Santana featuring Rob Thomas
32. "(Sittin' on) the Dock of the Bay," Otis Redding
33. "My Generation," The Who
34. "You Oughta Know," Alanis Morissette
35. "Born to Run," Bruce Springsteen
36. "Waterfalls," TLC
37. "O.P.P.," Naughty By Nature
38. "Changes," David Bowie
39. "Iris," Goo Goo Dolls
40. "I Will Always Love You," Whitney Houston
41. "Proud Mary," Creedence Clearwater Revival
42. "Every Breath You Take," The Police
43. "Miss You," The Rolling Stones
44. "Dancing Queen," ABBA
45. "Tears in Heaven," Eric Clapton
46. "The Tracks of My Tears," Smokey Robinson & The Miracles
47. "Jump," Van Halen
48. "Jeremy," Pearl Jam
49. "Tangled Up in Blue," Bob Dylan
50. "Little Red Corvette," Prince
51. "Just My Imagination (Running Away With Me)," The Temptations
52. "Maybe I'm Amazed," Paul McCartney
53. "Faith," George Michael
54. "Under the Bridge," Red Hot Chili Peppers
55. "Bye Bye Bye," 'N Sync
56. "I Will Survive," Gloria Gaynor
57. "Our Lips Are Sealed," Go-Go's
58. "One Headlight," The Wallflowers
59. "You Are the Sunshine of My Life," Stevie Wonder
60. "Just the Way You Are," Billy Joel
61. "The One I Love," R.E.M.
62. "Papa Don't Preach," Madonna
63. "MMMbop," Hanson
64. "Bennie and the Jets," Elton John
65. "Just What I Needed," The Cars
66. "Time After Time," Cyndi Lauper
67. "My Name Is," Eminem
68. "Only Happy When it Rains," Garbage
69. "Just Can't Get Enough," Depeche Mode
70. "Good Vibrations," The Beach Boys
71. "I Wanna Be Sedated," The Ramones
72. "Free Fallin'," Tom Petty
73. "Do You Really Want to Hurt Me?" Culture Club
74. "Tiny Dancer," Elton John
75. "Hot Fun in the Summertime," Sly & The Family Stone
76. "Creep," Radiohead
77. "Let's Stay Together," Al Green
78. "Longview," Green Day
79. "Nasty," Janet Jackson
80. "I Need Love," LL Cool J
81. "Don't Speak," No Doubt
82. "Rock With You," Michael Jackson
83. "I Want to Know What Love Is," Foreigner
84. "Wonderwall," Oasis
85. "Surrender," Cheap Trick
86. "Don't You Want Me," The Human League
87. "Brass in Pocket (I'm Special)," The Pretenders
88. "Gone Til November," Wyclef Jean
89. "Careless Whisper," Wham! Featuring George Michael
90. "The Boy Is Mine," Brandy & Monica
91. "No Diggity," Blackstreet
92. "You Shook Me All Night Long," AC/DC
93. "Stayin' Alive," The Bee Gees
94. "All the Small Things," Blink-182
95. "Good Times," Chic
96. "Photograph," Def Leppard
97. "Love Shack," the B-52's
98. "She Drives Me Crazy," Fine Young Cannibals
99. "Just a Friend," Biz Markie
100. "Tainted Love," Soft Cell

Wednesday, November 23: 3 p.m.
Posted by Rock Hall
Paul McCartney inducts John Lennon
In 1994, John Lennon was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a solo artist. His longtime friend and musical collaboratorPaul McCartney, making his first Hall of Fame appearance, inducted Lennon. More personal than the traditional induction speech, McCartney read a "letter" to Lennon, recounting a number of moving memories and thanking Lennon.
McCartney shared stories from their earliest attempts at writing songs together, teaching Lennon guitar chords and visiting Lennon's "Mum's house." He talked of their hotel visits with Little Richard and Gene Vincent, and spending time with Elvis Presley. He recalled Lennon's advice for handling the vocals on the Beatles' "Kansas City" and the "sneaky little look" they shared during the writing of "A Day In The Life." McCartney discussed meeting "this girl called Yoko Ono" – who later accepted Lennon's Hall of Fame Award on behalf of her late husband. The heartfelt letter moved many to tears.
"The joys you told me about how you were baking bread now and how you were playing with your little baby Sean," said McCartney of reconnecting with Lennon later in life. "That was great for me, because it gave me something to hold on to."
WATCH: Paul McCartney Inducts John Lennon into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame