Apr. 24th, 2009

  • 1:13 AM
face v. GLASS, WHAT NOW
In my last Spring semester at Carolina, I led a three-day revolution which bucked the Daily Tarheel's trend of YWC fluff pieces, bringing level-headed critics out of the woodwork to explain how absurd this is. If I have done nothing else to advance society, I've at least accomplished this.

Okay. One class, four exams, two papers, one project. Then fake graduation. Then a semester of summer school. Then another semester of summer school. Then a fall semester.
THEN I GRADUATE FOR REAL!
THEN I GET A DOG!
THEN I GET A JOB OH GOD I HOPE!
THEN I GET MARRIED!

I'm hoping I'll see a horizon soon for this whole being-done-with-college thing. Granted, I technically have a semester and a half left to find some sort of glee and nostalgia, but I'm pretty ready to be done with this. I'll miss the occasionally raucous parties, some small sense of community, and being on that beautiful campus -- but it's nice to be pretty sure I have more things to look forward to than things I'll miss.

Jan. 19th, 2009

  • 6:40 PM
yeehaw omfg no
2-4 inches of snow, cross your fingers

I'm hoping that because tomorrow is also an INCREDIBLY HISTORIC PRESIDENTIAL INAUGURATION maybe, MAYBE that might be enough for UNC to say -- "okay, there are enough compounding factors here to cancel class..."

But that's incredibly unlikely.

We had a light ice storm at the end of my first semester at UNC, and Alyssa and I had to hold on to each other to keep from slipping on the sidewalk and breaking our backs on the way to our exams one day. It was pretty much the closest I've ever come to actually ice-skating.

Ehhh. Reading time.

Jan. 14th, 2009

  • 10:54 AM
LOL NOSEZORZ
Biggest jackasss I've ever heard on NPR on the Diane Rehms show right now: Stuart Taylor.

Better yet, he's written a book entitled "Until Proven Innocent: Political Correctness and the Shameful Injustices of the Duke Lacrosse Rape Case" -- and I don't even know what to do with that. The title of that book doesn't even fit in my mouth. He's got a huge hard-on for the Bush administration and his one piece of evidence that torture and illegal wiretapping and illegal everything the administration did is that there wasn't another 9/11. That's it.
To be fair in the slightest sense, there's another guy saying "LET'S TRY THE ENTIRE BUSH ADMINISTRATION FOR WAR CRIMES RIGHT NOW" as if the Obama administration was elected to do that, rather than fix the shitstorm which has developed over the last eight years.
And there's one dude who's like "can we talk about something else"


THANKS DIANE. Like I needed to wake up to this bullshit. I wanted to be in a good mood this morning. It's like listening to Hardball or some shit. On NPR.

WITH DIANE REHM.

Jan. 3rd, 2009

  • 5:05 PM
omfg where am i
wtf israel and gaza

this is fucking retarded already.

i'm about done with seeing dead babies on reddit because of this shit. i know the diplomacy route has fucking sucked for generations, but fuck -- like bombs are really going to make this situation any better.

i have israeli and palestinian friends and wtf, they are both totally rad. they are all totally intelligent and fucking responsible and NONE of them want wars and death and horrible shit like this. no one, anywhere, deserves to go through this bullshit.

2009. can we get some peace up in here?

Nov. 27th, 2008

  • 12:30 AM
apples r lol
Things I Am Thankful For : 2008 Edition
(not entirely inclusive, obviously)

- Mark Oniffrey
- and subsequently my family, of course
- President-Elect Barack Obama and the election
- Emily Clark-Kramer
- My cervical treatment, and that it was caught early
- My (eventually) successful wisdom tooth removal
- Aylim Castro, Dr. Glen Martin, Lizzette Potthoff, Kathleen Transue, Dr. Lisa Emrich, Dr. Jon Williams, and Dr. Jim Kurz
- Getting off antidepressants
- Reconciling with Ed
- Being able to be with Pete when he died
- Meeting (and now knowing) Mark's friends
- The beginning of the year, to figure out where I was going
- Rikki's health
- Turning 21
- Ann Coulter's jaw being wired shut
- Sarah Palin. Seriously.

finally,

- hope.

Nov. 20th, 2008

  • 1:13 AM
LOL NOSEZORZ
A Marriage Manifesto... Of Sorts
By Tom Ackerman
November 17, 2008

I no longer recognize marriage. It’s a new thing I’m trying.

Turns out it’s fun.

Yesterday I called a woman’s spouse her boyfriend.

She says, correcting me, “He’s my husband,”
“Oh,” I say, “I no longer recognize marriage.”

The impact is obvious. I tried it on a man who has been in a relationship for years,

“How’s your longtime companion, Jill?”
“She’s my wife!”
“Yeah, well, my beliefs don’t recognize marriage.”

Fun. And instant, eyebrow-raising recognition. Suddenly the majority gets to feel what the minority feels. In a moment they feel what it’s like to have their relationship downgraded, and to have a much taken-for-granted right called into question because of another’s beliefs.

Just replace the words husband, wife, spouse, or fiancé with boyfriend, girlfriend, special friend, or longtime companion. There is a reason we needed stronger words for more serious relationships. We know it; now they can see it.

A marriage is a lot of things. Culturally, it’s a declaration to the community that two people are now a unit, and that unity should be respected. Legally, it’s a set of rights and responsibilities. And spiritually, it’s whatever your beliefs think it is.

That’s what’s so great about America. As a constitutionally secular nation, or at least in reality a vaguely pluralistic nation, we can all have our own spiritual take on what marriage is. What’s troublesome is when one group’s spiritual beliefs deny the cultural and legal rights of another.

But, back to the point. They say their beliefs don’t recognize my marriage, I say my beliefs don’t recognize theirs. Simple. It may seem petty, and obviously the legal part of the cultural/legal/spiritual trilogy is flip-floppy, but it may be the cultural part that really matters.

People get married to be recognized as a permanent couple. To be acknowledged by friends, family, and strangers as being off the market, in a relationship, totally hooked up, yikes… it’s impossible to say without saying ‘married.’ We wear rings to declare this!

So, we can take this away. We can refuse to recognize marriage in the cultural sense. It is totally within our rights, as Americans, to follow our beliefs and recognize or not recognize what we like.

I guess this is a call out to all Americans with beliefs similar to mine.

If you believe that all people should have equal rights, and if you believe that marriage is one of the greatest destinations of a relationship, then perhaps you believe that nobody should have marriage, until everybody does.

That’s what I believe.


source

Nov. 4th, 2008

  • 8:06 AM
so fucking cool
BTW, the only Republican I have ever knowingly voted for (since you normally don't know party affiliations in non-partisan races) was, in fact, in a non-partisan race. It was in this election, and the Republican was, indeed, my father. However, I do happen to know that he is actually pretty well-qualified. I mean, he knows a lot about the issue, anyway. Psh.

So, if you are voting in Chatham County, write my dad's name in.

"M. Travis [my last name]" for Soil & Water Preservation District Supervisor (it's the last office on the ballot)

Unless you already planned on voting for one of the candidates on the ballot (as opposed to a lot of people, who just leave those circles blank).

I like making his life difficult. If you can't tell. I kind of just want him to get a few votes so he gets in the paper, and then I get to chuckle. I actually think he might find it funny, too (becaus he obviously wouldn't take the office, unless he has a vision or something).

ALSO NORTH CAROLINA IS A BATTLEGROUND AND IT IS EXCITING!!!

Unfortunately, I believe we will go for McCain and that makes panda sad, but omfg, this is something I'd never see happen. I kind of figured we'd be red balloon forever. Except Chatham county was pretty damn purple during the last election.

Tags:

Nov. 4th, 2008

  • 7:33 AM
LOL NOSEZORZ
I woke up *three hours* ago to go pee, and I still can't go to sleep because

OMFG IT'S ELECTION DAY

I am staying up ALL NIGHT. Maybe at Theresa's house. This is unknown. I am debating whether or not to watch Fox News. And this year I actually kind of want to watch MSNBC instead of CNN, because seriously, CNN has irritated the crap out of me over the last four years. And you know, being a dirty liberal, Keith Olbermann kind of makes me feel warm and fuzzy.

Anyway, the church directly across the street from my house is a polling site (Mark's, specifically). So I keep hearing doors shut and I hear cars driving around and people, like, half-yelling (you know, like "So-and-so for District Court!"). It makes me excited. In my pants. Okay maybe not in my pants, but definitely in my brain.


Yeah.

If you haven't voted early, VOTE NOW.

Oct. 27th, 2008

  • 7:41 PM
LOL NOSEZORZ
EMILY AND I ARE GOING TO SEE BARACK OBAMA IN LIKE 40 HOURS OMFG

edit: this is like, the first time i'm getting out of the house and doing something in.... a very long time. progress?

Oct. 27th, 2008

  • 2:58 PM
LOL NOSEZORZ
Okay, is this woman out of her mind?

ACORN? That shit is said and proven ridiculously retarded. Marxist? What??? The Great Depression started because of stratification between classes in the 20s, and it's like no one knows this. "Spreading the wealth around," the whole "Joe the Plumber" bullshit, is not Marxist, jesus christ. By the way, Joe the Plumber would get ridiculously awesome tax breaks running a small business. So, yes, his personal income tax will go up if he moves up into a higher tax bracket by owning the company and having a higher salary. But the federal taxes on his own business will be pretty awesomely reduced. His tax position really isn't shitty at all. Unless he fucks the business up. And that's up to him. Capitalism is still alive and well, buddy. Barack Obama may be promoting higher taxes for the upper class and tax breaks for the middle, but that hardly makes him a socialist. Much less a Marxist.

Regardless, for John McCain, it's sort of a bad sign when your running mate is "going rogue" in order to distance herself from you a week before the election in order to protect her own ass from your potential failure. That's just silly.

Anyway, Barbara West's husband is some Republican robot machine, and her interview with John McCain was all soft and cuddly. People are idiots.

Oct. 23rd, 2008

  • 2:50 PM
LOL NOSEZORZ
i voted and jake is here and it takes me 90 minutes to get to my parents' house and back now and i am tireddddddddddddd

oh also i wrote in my dad. so if you live in chatham county, and for any reason you don't care who wins that position, and you know my last name, for the soil & water conservation position (the last position on the ballot), write in "M. Travis [my last name]"

if he gets more than one vote he gets in the paper, and i think that would be hilarious.

Oct. 23rd, 2008

  • 1:31 AM
so fucking cool
Tomorrow (k, today), I'm voting in the Williams District of Chatham County. I have decided on which candidate I will vote for in every race, except for those in which there is an unapposed candidate about whom I cannot find a reasonable amount of information to actually vote for said candidate (if that sentence makes sense). That may seem silly on the surface, since they'll win anyway, but it makes sense to me.

President & Vice President of the United States: Barack Obama & Joe Biden

US Senate: Kay Hagan
US House of Representatives, District 4: David Price

Governor: Bev Perdue
Lieutenant Governor: Walter H. Dalton
Attorney General: Roy Cooper
Auditor: Beth A. Wood
Commissioner of Agriculture: Ronnie Ansley
Commissioner of Insurance: Wayne Goodwin
Commissioner of Labor: Mary Fant Donnan
Secretary of State: Elaine F. Marshall
Superintendent of Public Instruction: June St. Clair Atkinson
Treasurer: Janet Cowell
NC State Senate, District 18: Bob Atwater
NC House of Representatives, District 54: Joe Hackney

County Commissioner, District 1: Sally Kost
County Commissioner, District 2: Mike Cross
Register of Deeds: Treva B. Seagroves


Non-Partisan Races (if you like my politics and you're going to vote but you don't normally check up on non-partisan candidates, consider these my endorsements):

Supreme Court Associate Justice: Suzanne Reynolds
Court of Appeals Judge: no vote. [John C. Martin is unapposed.]
Court of Appeals Judge: James A. (Jim) Wynn
Court of Appeals Judge: Kristin Ruth
Court of Appeals Judge: Cheri Beasley
Court of Appeals Judge: Linda Stephens
Court of Appeals Judge: John S. Arrowood
District Court Judge, District 15B: Charles (Chuck) Anderson (unapposed)
District Court Judge, District 15B: Betsy J. Wolfenden
District Court Judge, District 15B: Page Vernon (now unapposed)
District Court Judge, District 15B: no vote. [Beverly A. Scarlett is unapposed.]
School Board, District 1: Flint O'Brien
School Board, District 2: Pete Rubinas
Soil & Water Conservation District Supervisor: TBA. This is my dad's area of expertise, so I'm trusting his opinion 100% -- but he hasn't gotten back to me. A lot of people in the Chatham County political machine have actually talked about writing him in for this position, and if he doesn't answer me, I'm going to do that. lollerskates, voting for my dad

edit: WRITE IN MY DAD, IT'LL BE FUN

NOVEMBER 4th IS ELECTION DAY. IF YOU ARE REGISTERED TO VOTE, YOU CAN VOTE EARLY.

la la la la la

Tags:

Sep. 26th, 2008

  • 9:41 PM
LOL NOSEZORZ
It is my general understanding that a debate is sort of like, I guess, a situation in which two sides kind of like... I guess, present their platforms and explain why their respective platforms are better. And, I think, most of these sort of platforms are made up of, I dunno, like, ideas.

This is totally not fair to John McCain; someone on his staff obviously left his ideas at home.

"I GOT THESE PLANS, I TOTALLY GOT 'EM, THEY'RE AWESOME, BUT THEY'RE AT HOME"

omfg Barack Obama just said "orgy" my life is complete.

Sep. 15th, 2008

  • 11:22 AM
LOL NOSEZORZ
MAN, our economy ROCKS! thank god our president and Republican presidential candidate are there to remind us! Oh, and remember that guy, Alan Greenspan?

Reuters:
Greenspan also said the chances of escaping a recession was "less than 50 percent."

"I can't believe we could have a once-in-a-century type of financial crisis without a significant impact on the real economy globally, and I think that indeed is what is in the process of occurring.


It's so awesome it's so unclear as to how the Fed plans to keep on keepin' on. There's a responsible way to let the market "correct itself," and an irresponsible way. Bailing out Bear Stearns, for instance: irresponsible. Letting the asshat CEOs at the head of the other national banks and lending companies see where their absurd bonuses and risks lead the company (hint: into the ground); well, that's capitalism. Though one can hardly blame the risk-takers -- the incentive sure as hell was there. It's just that there's some collateral damage. Like, jobs.

Sure, I'm pretty much a socialist, but if we're going to do the whole capitalism thing, it's kind of stupid for the government to reverse the market economy so as to "reward poor leadership" (thx Obamatron). I believe (and correct me if I'm wrong) I'm somewhat on par with my libertarian friends here. Local and regional banks, on the whole, are not weak institutions -- and they're not as tied up in the national banks as one might think. They're not in a bad position to step up as the national institutions fall.

But the foundation's there; we've been going downhill since BEFORE Sept. 11th 2001. I imagine the downward trend of the economy sort of like a falling pinball, simple physics: the longer that ball runs towards the bottom without obstacles, the more momentum it gains, and the the harder it is to follow it to defend against it. And then, over the past seven years, the ball has hit targets that just increase its momentum -- more industries take hits and more CEO asshattery is sanctioned by the government. Greenspan seems right on, in my opinion (although I'm certainly no economist). We're headed towards an epic reset which will might require something like 21st century FDRNewDeal-tokens. We can all hope for a ramp right before Game Over -- but that is a rapidly shrinking possibility, and it's idiocracy to lean on it like the second coming.

Anyway, that's what we call an overextended metaphor.

(funny coincidence, though)


But just as a final note, somewhat unrelated: when Karl Rove says your attack ads are going "too far" and are not "100% truthful" -- hell hath frozen over.

Sep. 11th, 2008

  • 10:48 AM
super serial
So, seven years ago, I was sitting in a biology classroom with two other classes crammed in with us, watching a battery-powered TV. The world had changed, for us, an hour and 20 minutes beforehand.

I don't have much to say about today, at least right now. Over the last seven years, this day has become so much less about what actually happened and so much more of a political talking point -- empty, and only used to cause anxiety and fear.

Unfortunately, we have not had the leadership over the last seven years to appropriately protect us, calm us, and speak honestly with us. I don't think this is a unique sentiment. And I reserve my right to be upset over this. I was a freshman in high school on 9/11. My class, in particular, became personally and politically aware completely in an era which was shaped by those attacks. But I was too young to vote in either the 2000 or 2004 elections, though by 2004 I knew where I would lend my support. This year, I will fill in what I believe to be the most important bubble sheet of my life.

So the only thing I really have right now is a quote from a much greater leader we once had; a quote which has been so incredibly relevant since 2001, in so many ways, yet so rarely spoken.


"The only thing we have to fear is fear itself."

-- Franklin D. Roosevelt, Inauguaral Address, 1929

Sep. 3rd, 2008

  • 2:57 PM
apples r lol
DUDE.
The tech that Dell sent over to replace my display (hopefully that'll work) is a Magistrate for Durham. WHICH IS SO COOL. We like, talked criminal justice and veteran support and OMG IT WAS SO AWESOME.

He gave me his card, which means I have like, VIP access to the Durham court system to see how it works and whatnot. I AM EXCITED, THIS IS NEAT.

Now I'm going to take a nap.