Man, I’m tired

Filed under: Miscellaneous, self referential — Tags: , , — Eike @ March 17, 2008 12:38 am

I very much like the german word Tagewerk – it’s a bit of an oldfashioned word (of course that’s why I like it) that literally translates to “a days work”. What it actually means is a man-day, or a billable day, and opposed to that other kind of day (chronological) it has only eight hours, which means that a freelancer like me can work a couple of days per day, provided he doesn’t attach great importance to mundane things like e.g. sleeping, eating or generally recreating.

I worked a number of Tagewerke over the weekend, and the coming week isn’t going to be much better (so still no merge feature for the place here module, I’m too busy). If you have asked a question about the module and haven’t received an answer yet you better ask again, chances are that I forgot about it.

    My time to be a smartarse

    Filed under: Miscellaneous, Science — Tags: , — Eike @ March 12, 2008 8:47 pm

    P.Z.Myers at the Pharyngula science blog relates a story how 50 indians got blind after looking at the sun while looking for an apparition of the holy virgin Mary. This would be very dumb if it were true.

    As a proud reader of Philip Plaits book I have to say this looks like a hoax since looking at the sun does not cause “retinal burns” (unless you do it through a telescope, or during an eclipse, or use a filter that blocks visible light while letting through UV, none of which is mentioned in the linked news article).

    Phil Plaits source is astronomer Andrew T. Young, who has a page on the topic at http://mintaka.sdsu.edu/GF/vision/Galileo.html (scroll down to “Naked-eye solar hazards”).

    This should neither encourage you to look at the sun nor should it stop you from making fun at the virgin Mary if you feel like it (personally I consider this a waste of time), but it should be a reminder not to easily trust things that you find on the internet.

      This is going to be fun

      Filed under: Miscellaneous, Science Fiction, self referential — Tags: , , , — Eike @ January 12, 2008 2:56 pm

      I’m a science fiction fan with a lot of surplus education (you don’t exactly need a background in social sciences to build websites), and sometimes I like to share my – well, it’s not really “wit”; I’m not a clever person, it’s just that I’m quite perseverant when I get interested in something. So when people let me I enjoy to share what I found out in my studies by doing public talks at smaller SciFi Cons. I just have received word that the funding for another such event has been approved, and I will talk about the way apocalyptical scenarios have been utilized over the years in SciFi-Novels to advance certain ideological points – working title is Das Ende der Welt im Wandel der Zeit (The End of the World in the Course of Time). The event will take place in December 2008, so there is plenty of time for me to prepare and who knows, maybe there will be stuff for a few blog posts.

        I’m getting old(er)

        Filed under: Miscellaneous, Science Fiction, self referential — Tags: , , — Eike @ January 12, 2008 12:33 am

        Today I was renting “Transformers” on DVD – I managed to watch about half the movie before I gave up. It’s not that I haven’t been warned – after all it said “A Michael Bay Movie” on the box and frankly, when it says “ACME” on the parachute you don’t expect a soft landing, do you. I really liked the fancy CGI work, but the coming-of-age and first-love stuff managed to bore me and annoy me at the same time (not even to mention what was probably supposed to be comic relief). I have never been particularly interested in juvenile romance (that is other than that I’ve been a juvenile romantic at an earlier point in my life, but that wasn’t part of any movie I know of) but like most genre fans I could easily put up with bad SciFi movies, if only because there are so few good ones. Not anymore, it would seem.

        A few weeks now and I will be thirty-eight. I have no children of my own, but a couple of nieces and nephews. The oldest one is eighteen by now and does not seriously believe the world existed before there was an internet. He liked “Transformers” – except for the romance parts obviously, but he was easily able to ignore that. I envy him for that.

        On the other hand I have 20 years more education and experience, my own job, my own money and most of my pimples have cleared up. I might not be able to enjoy a kids movie, but other than that going on forty beats being young all the time.

          Got all your presents?

          Filed under: Miscellaneous — Tags: — Eike @ December 21, 2007 2:29 pm

          If you look in the readme-file for the content item module you will find a line that asks you to donate a small amount to a charity – preferably a childrens fund – in your area if you liked the module. This is by no means mandatory – when I say free, as in beer I actually do mean free, as in beer – but since Christmas (Yule, Chanukka, DarwinisMas or whatever) is approaching I thought I might remind you that this is a good time to donate for a good cause. Being a child often sucks even if you’re in a middle class or rich family, so image how it must feel for the poor critters who’re poor or orphaned. So please do take a look if you have any small change that can go to charity.

          Happy holidays to all of you.

            The Darth Vader Problem

            Filed under: Miscellaneous — Tags: — Eike @ December 19, 2007 10:56 pm

            George Lukas’ movie The Return of the Jedi has one of the strangest redemption scenes ever to be shown in cinema: Inmidst of a battle in which thousands die, a man who has supposedly killed billions of sentinent beings and subjugated the survivors to tyranny gets his absolutions after he helps his offspring to defeat the vicious emporer (completly pointless btw. because the subsequent events would have killed the emporer in any case). Yes, I’m perfectly aware that Darth Vader is a fictional character, but emotional images like a scene of forgivness to the father by the son transports a message to to audience, an in this case the message is any kind of crime is ok as long as you say you’re really, really sorry.

            But is it, really? Can any crime be forgiven? And who is to grant forgiveness, is it the victims? And in that case is it okay when one victim forgives or do we need to round up a majority of them or all of them to arrange an orgy of absolution?

            Exodus International is a christian organisation aims to “cure” gay/lesbian christians from homosexuality. The name is probably meant to be some kind of allegory, like, Exodus will lead you from the barren desert of homosexualty to the promised land of post-maritial heterosexual sex for the purpose of procreation. The choice of name, while not inappropriate, is a bit strange given that the man who led the tribes through the desert never was allowed to enter the promised land himself.

            Exodus International cannot possibly “cure” homosexuality because homosexualty is not a disease. Exodus Internationals attempt to “cure” homosexuality is really an exercise in destroying peoples personalities by applying social pressure (we wash your brain so you can come clean, that kind of thing). And while their long term conversion rate from queer to straight is zero, Exodus leaves in it’s wake a visible trail of wrecked lives, and a couple of deaths.

            Beyond Ex-Gay - an online community for the survivors of ex-gay expericences – has a reprinted letter and video statements from some former Exodus leaders who stood down from their conviction that homosexuality needs cure and apologized for the damage they had done. Especially the video messages are emotionally powerful – these are a commited, no-nonsense type of people who underwent a significant change for the better. So, their redemption is at hand, or is it.

            One thing that puzzles me is that these people still cling to their christian faith. I usually do not like the more notorious atheists because, willfully confusing correlation and causation, they attribute every possible crime to faith if there is a chance that the perpetrator has been exposed to religion at some time of his life (as most people have been). But in this case there is no weasling out or dodging the issue: Almost every religion has instituted some insane policy toward sexuality, and when it comes to gay sex the idea to kill by cure is, horribile dictu, one of the more benevolent approaches. The only way to be a gay christ is to start, for all intents and purposes, your own christian sect that allows for “homosexual tendencys”. What is this religion thing, some kind of buffet where you can pick and choose (”I want some of that heavenly father and a pinch of bodily resurrection, but please hold the hellfire for sodomites”) ? And by the way what’s wrong with saying “gay and lesbian” – do I say I have a “heterosexual tendency”?

            But the more important question is the question of forgiveness. To say “I’m sorry” might work for tyrannical galactic overlords, but in real life we expect people to suffer punishment for their crimes before they are allowed to re-enter society (feeling very bad does not actually count as punishment). And most of them seem to have renounced their faith in Exodus when they fell in love with members of the same sex, so things get even worse when you muster a little cynicism and look at their motives: It seems they had little qualms about wrecking other peoples lives up to the point where they wanted to get laid themselves.

            I probably shouldn’t get upset about all of this. Some of the victims of anti-gay treatment have in their various blogs signalled forgivness to the penitents. I myself am neither gay nor religious. All this happened in a foreign country, and while most germans would claim to be religious very few would bother to actually do anything about it. But then I think of a friend, how she shook her fist in helpless anger at the TV screen when, just after a particularly nasty child rape scandal within the church, a catholic official declared that homosexuality is a sin. The church that could not even enforce enough self-restraint among it’s employees to spare children from sexual assault now denounced her sexuality as a lesbian? This whole idea that homosexuality needs a cure is a direct attack on people I love.

            To stay within in the Star Wars-metaphor from the first paragraph I now should write something on the nature of forgiveness and perhaps conclude with a quip about the death-star of Bethlehem and how it will eventually explode – but then, what would be the point (since it won’t, anyway). So believe whatever you like or even be anti-gay how much you like (this is, after all, free speech territory), but for what little it’s worth, if you go after my friends it’ll take a lot more than to say “I’m sorry” to make me stop being angry at you.

              I live in a country of hypocrites

              Filed under: Miscellaneous — Tags: — Eike @ December 12, 2007 12:16 am

              I was just watching the news on a private channel – they had a feature about climate change. It said (transcribed more or less verbatim) “Germany also suffers from climate change. The USA produce 25% of the world-wide CO2-Emissions and refuse to reduce their emissions”.

              The USA produces and Germany suffers. I’m glad that’s sorted out – I guess we now can continue to burn that cheap lignite coal.

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