Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Santana


I had expected to write a long dissertation analyzing the recently reported trade for Johan Santana, the Twins' beloved ace and the best pitcher on the planet. But Jim Souhan, of the venerable Star Tribune, seems to have practically written exactly what I was going to say here. So, read his story.

My feelings on this? Well, I'm pissed off, I feel betrayed, and I feel like crying. Additionally, I sort of feel like bombing Shea Stadium, as well as their pansy-ass little new stadium going up next door (the new Twins ballpark would waste it). But also, I have to see this from a business perspective. The Twins gave Santana a fair deal, 4 years, 80 million. He didn't bite. He wanted a longer contract. A longer contract means a riskier move on the part of the team especially for a pitcher. Look at the Kevin Brown fiasco a few years ago. Heck, look at Liriano in 2006. So many things can go wrong with a pitcher. It's such a risky proposition. So, you have to sort of give the Twins credit for making a smart decision there.

But as Souhan points out, if a trade was necessary, did the Twins get the best package? Probably not, and that pisses me off. If the Twins are to trade the best pitcher on the planet, they damn well better get all they can. It seems they probably didn't, especially compared to the Yankees' earlier offer with Phil Hughes and Melky Cabrera. That is exceedingly irritating. But it is good he didn't go to the unholy Yankees. They are a team crafted with pure evil.

The biggest losers, no doubt, are the legions of loyal Twins fans (see writer). We go to the games, we buy the "Santana" merchandise, we do all of that. But most importantly, we invest parts of ourselves in this team, in this unifying ideal. And when good things leave, we get sad. Especially when someone like Johan leaves, someone the community adopted. Especially when we are buying the Twins a beautiful new ballpark in downtown Minneapolis. I mean, I know the trade was a smart move. All practical reasoning points to it. But why then am I so angry and sad about it? It's because baseball far transcends practical reasoning, or the petty squabbling of business. Baseball is an intensely personal game, the love of which is passed down from fathers to sons, mothers to daughters. And when something is intensely personal, of course consequences are going to hit hard. Especially when you are cursed to be in love with a baseball team from Minnesota. Aside from a few sublimely glorious seasons (see 1987, 1991), there hasn't been a whole lot to get genuinely excited about. And when yet another star leaves on exodus to bigger markets and higher salaries, it's just a little depressing. So I'm sad. And that's the end of it.

Except for the fact that spring training starts in less than three weeks....

And the Twins are definitely going to win it all this season.


If not for blind optimism, why even bother?

Saturday, January 26, 2008

Yes We Can

Yes we can.



Wednesday, January 23, 2008

At Last

Two significant things happened to me today. First of all, I held a human heart in my hands. Secondly, we won our final broomball game.

For the first event, my science class got a tour of the Luther cadaver lab today. I must say, it was fairly interesting. I mean, it was a bit macabre, but stuff happens. I mean, we'll all look like that someday (maybe not medical body donors, but in general). And after we looked at the organ-less donors, I held the heart in my hands. Pretty intense.

Secondly, we won in broomball. No, we dominated in broomball. No, we mercilessly smote our opponent upon the frozen wastes of Lindeman Pond in broomball. It was a good feeling. I wore my Wild jersey, and I must say, I think it helped. I played very well today. Proudest moment? An opposing player got on a breakaway towards are goal. I sprinted off after him down the ice. Right as I was catching up, he was rearing back to fire on goal. Just as he struck the ball, I went down in a slide, which propelled me into the line of the broomball, deflecting it from our goal. I then (still lying on the ice), swung my stick in a mighty arch and rocketed the ball down into enemy territory. It was glorious. I felt very sporty, very worthy of my Minnesotan heritage. Hockey gods smile upon me today.

Time to watch Arrested Development.

Sunday, January 20, 2008

Music Videos

I really don't have a whole lot to say tonight, but I felt like blogging a bit. So instead, I'm going to post a selection of music videos (or songs, I find them interchangeable) which I currently enjoy, in no particular order. Get excited!

1. Sigur Rós- Glósóli
A very beautiful, haunting melody with a fairly inventive video. I would say the visuals fit the music quite well. Love this group. For real.



2. Beirut- Elephant Gun
Sort of a strange video, but I'm a real fan of this gypsy-rock fusion. I especially appreciate the mandolin and trumpet.



3. Nirvana- The Man Who Sold the World
To be fair, I haven't really listened to Nirvana until about two days ago, and I really don't know much about their music yet. But this unplugged stuff is amazing.



4. Led Zeppelin- The Battle of Evermore
This video isn't official, but it's an interesting juxtaposition of the song and the battle of the Pelannor Fields from Lord of the Rings, which the song is based on. Favorite Zepp song ever.



5. Led Zeppelin- Black Dog
Here's a real video, just for good measure. Hear and see the amazing visceral power of true rock artistry at its zenith.



6. Damien Rice- The Blower's Daughter
One of my favorite Damien Rice songs. He has the most haunting voice, just cannot get enough.



7. Arcade Fire- Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels)
I'm a big fan of Arcade Fire, particularly their first album, "Funeral." This is probably my favorite song from that album.



8. Rage Against The Machine- Killing in the Name Of
Are you really pissed off? Do you want to overthrow the established political order? Do you like sick funky beats? Then listen to this.



9. Jimi Hendrix- All Along the Watchtower
Sort of a cliché song, but this album is changing my life. This is probably the most popular song off of it.



10. Patti Smith- Smells Like Teen Spirit
No real video with this, but a frekkin' sweet cover instead. I'm a closet bluegrass fan, and I think this is really really cool.



So yeah, here are 10 songs for your listening and viewing pleasure. Like I was told this weekend, music is my vice. Not a bad vice to have, until you look at your Visa bill from the Electric Fetus or Amazon. Off to Milwaukee tomorrow to see the Bodyworlds exhibition. Should be pretty fun.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Clarity

Every once in a while, people experience what I might call a moment of clarity. Where suddenly everything comes into focus, one becomes aware of that around them. I think I may have had a moment of clarity tonight. I have been blessed with amazing friends, the best I could ever ask or hope for. And I'm so grateful for that. So so grateful.

Monday, January 14, 2008

Review: A Walk in the Woods



I don't know if I've ever reviewed a book (or anything else for that matter) in blog form before. In fact, I don't know if I've reviewed a book since Mrs. Victoria made me do it in 5th grade. Life is full of re-discoveries.

Over Christmas break, I purchased Bill Bryson's A Walk in the Woods, which is Bill's account of walking the Appalachian Trail in 1996. He had recently returned to live in New Hampshire after spending 20 or so years living in Yorkshire, England, and thought the trail would be a wonderful way to reacquaint himself with his homeland. For those of you not in the know, I'm practically in love with Bryson's book Notes from a Small Island, which is his account of a "farewell tour" he took around Britain before moving back to the United States. Travel literature fascinates me, probably formed by the fact that I read said book while traveling myself. But, that's not the point. The point is, I'm reviewing this with unashamed bias. And since this is my personal slice of cyberspace (as Kevin has so duly noted in his happily reactivated blog), I'll do whatever the hell I want.

Let's review the premise. The Appalachian Trail is a 2,100 mile footpath that stretches from Georgia to Maine, terminating at Mt. Katahdin. That's 2,100 miles through the mountains, mountains being the operative word. The two fellows hiking this magnificent wilderness are Bryson, who has been trained on day trips in the Cotswalds and Lake District, and Stephen Katz, an old school friend of Bryson's who he hasn't seen in 25 years. Here is a good indication of Katz's fitness (taken from page 23), as he arrived in New Hampshire to prepare for the trip
We drove home by way of Dunkin Donuts. My wife and I sat with him at the kitchen table and watched him eat five Boston cream doughnuts, which he washed down with two glasses of milk. Then he said he wanted to go and lie down a while. It took him whole minutes to get up the stairs.
My wife turned to me with a look of serene blankness.
"Please just don't say anything," I said.

There's the general idea. Two out of shape guys decide to try and hike 2,100 miles through the wilderness with 50 lb. packs on their back.

I found the book to be wonderfully well written. In Notes from a Small Island, the latter half of the book tends to grow a bit tedious. It is in fact, a rather lengthy read. A Walk in the Woods however, checks in at a toit 274 pages, and makes a very pleasant read. Bryson definitely keeps the action moving, and keeps the reader engrossed in the quest. One thing that amazes me about Bill's works is the amazing amount of extra research that goes into them. Any schmuck can write about cavorting off in the woods. It takes a true writer to inject meaningful fact into a story about cavorting in the woods. I honestly don't know where he digs most of this stuff up, but it certainly impresses me.

Perhaps the most important bits of little information and such are the copious amount devoted to bringing attention to conservation. Reading Notes, it was clear that Bill was in some ways a reactionary, he would much prefer to live in the small producers society of Jefferson, complete with quaint stone bridges and happy little main streets. In that vein, he devotes a considerable amount of pages to shedding light not only on the history of the Appalachian Trail, but also on the tragedies that have befallen America's wildernesses. He isn't shy on sharing his views on what he considers the correct use and conservation of the outdoors. In a sense, this book is as much a plea for the natural beauty of America as it is a travel narrative. The lively interplay between information and narrative keeps the reader interested, as well as providing "breaks" in the action.

Probably my favorite aspect of Bryson's writing is his incredibly wit and powers of observation. In Notes, he seemed to perfectly capture the feelings I felt about the idiosyncrasies of Britain. Here, he assuredly captures the idiosyncrasies of the AT and the completely ludicrous idea that a person would attempt to walk 2,100 miles for no real point except to walk 2,100 miles. I'm consistently impressed with the amazing language used, it just seems to flow off the page, transforming the woods into a tangible thing. The teeming life of the trees is transferred to the lively prose. To add to this, he is just so damn funny. As with his previous book, I openly laughed as I read. It really is a gift to have a wit like that, and to be able to perfectly relate the humor of nearly any given situation. Bryson has a unique ability to pull back and see the ridiculousness of life, but never seem to critique it too much. His observations nearly always show how much he cares, rather than how much he spites.

In summary, I would highly recommend A Walk in the Woods, both for entertainment and knowledge. Myself, I feel enriched by having read the book, especially in terms of learning about the AT and the challenges faced by America's wilderness. Plus, it's just a great time to hear about Bryson and Katz' exploits in the woods. Reading it, it sort of felt like having a conversation with an old friend. And if you haven't had the pleasure of reading Bryson's work in the past, this is a great introduction. Having been written mainly for an American audience, Bill really focuses on the experience of the AT, and keeps mention of his English heritage to a minimum. He also uses a much more Americanized English in comparison to Notes, but still packs some Brit-speak for when he needs it. Wonderful words like "trifle." Needless to say, it's very accessible. So, for a good introduction to Bill Bryson and one of America's greatest wildernesses, A Walk in the Woods will not disappoint.

Sunday, January 13, 2008

La Crosse

On Saturday I went to La Crosse, which is in Wisconsin. Sort of Rochester-sized. I've never been before, and a few friends of mine were taking a bit of a road trip, so I decided to tag along. Primarily, I was interested in a long revered used record shop, which I was promised, held all sorts of unknown (and cheap) wonders. Sort of like that cave in Aladdin.



It turned out to be a little less than the Cave of Wonders, in my humble opinion. I did walk off with some stuff, some Hendrix, Dylan, and Zepp, but it all seemed a titch overpriced for used stuff, and it sort of lacked in selection. Of course my usual record haunt is the Electric Fetus, which is perhaps the world's most perfect record store (although Easy Street in Seattle gives it a run). Anyways, we also had some coffee, and checked out a bookstore. The bookstore, it impressed me. The walls were filled to the ceilings with stacks and stacks of books, with ladders on rollers throughout the whole place. There was literally a dizzying amount of books, I started to feel sort of disorientated after a while. In a way, it was sort of sobering. Us college students like to think of ourselves as smart, as possessing some sort of intelligence. But looking in that store, stacked to the ceiling with repositories of knowledge and experience, it put me in my place. Especially recently, I've been trying to be a bit more productive in my leisure time, but I'm still reminded of how much there really is out there. It's intimidating.

Anyways, we left the bookstore, had some dinner at a Mexican place (good salsa, depressing decor), and went to a mall in search of a birthday gift for Michael's brother. All in all, it was a successful day. It was a little awkward though. I can't quite put my finger on what it was. One of the individuals I went with, I would probably consider my best friend at Luther. The other one was a guy who is simply a friend. And the other two are very close. So, it was a set of conflicting dynamics at work, and maybe it created some sort of invisible, unseen, unscented tension. Or maybe that's just my social awkwardness at work. Who knows.

It's late, I have to wake up at 6:40 to get a hard body. I'll talk to everyone later. Look forward to my upcoming book review of Bill Bryson's "A Walk in the Woods."

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

Planet Broomball

Ho hum. It's Wednesday night, and we're over the proverbial hump. Although I don't really have anything taxing that really has necessitated looking towards today. My J-term class is really quite ridiculous. But I suppose, that can be okay as well. It's sort of a nice break after a hellish fall semester. But it really does sort of transport me back to 8th grade or so. I can just imagine Mr. Hillenbrand teaching us about inertia and force by nailing things into wood. Now it's Dale Nimrod using terms like "notion" and "sort of bonds" to describe chemistry. That's alright though.



I've been watching this BBC documentary entitled "Planet Earth" in my spare time, in a sort of effort to be both entertained but still feel like I'm doing something. And let me tell you, it is freaking amazing. Not only is it narrated by Sir David Attenborough, a legendary BBC naturalist, whose accent appeals to my desperate missing of England, but it has some of the most absolutely captivating imagery I've maybe ever seen on film. It's completely gorgeous. Each episode corresponds to a different geological zone. For instance, the first three episodes are "Pole to Pole" (the pilot), "Mountains," and "Fresh Water." The mountains episode was amazing, I could have been satisfied just watching the soaring film of the Himalayas and Rockies. But add in a rare snow leopard chasing a mountain goat and you got yourself a crazy night. In the pilot, they have this image of a GIGANTIC great white shark eating a seal. The damn thing jumped completely out of the water, and it looked like it could have quite literally swallowed me whole and thought that maybe it accidentally ate a bug. Bottom line, I can't sing the praises of this show enough. Can't wait to get the next disc from the library.

In other news, I've joined my Farwell cluster in playing intramural broomball for J-term. For those not in the know, broomball is like hockey except without skates and a puck. Instead you run on ice in shoes and bash about a miniature football (soccer ball) with a plastic broom handle. Quite exciting. On Sunday, with this disgustingly mild weather, we played on a pond with about 2 inches of water on top of the ice. Sucked balls. I don't know the last time my feet have felt so miserable. It was maybe one of the most singularly idiotic things I've ever done. But I did score a goal. But then again, we ended up losing 3-2, so it was in vain. Today we had the luxury of a frozen rink, but lacked a rather important component of the game, namely offense. And we ended up losing 2-1 in sudden death overtime. It was quite frustrating, as you are only allowed 6 people on the ice at once, and we had like, 11 people there. So I sat out for at least 2/3 of the match, which was unfun. Especially since I feel I have something to offer, having a rudimentary knowledge of hockey, and the willingness to run on ice. Similar to the overwhelming feeling I felt in my British amateur baseball days last year, I just wanted to participate. The thrill of competition, the soaring joy of victory, the distinct winter sport need to bash someone's skull in with a stick-like object. So our completely larger than necessary team irritated the hell out of me. In an effort to boost my own morale, as well as perhaps rally my teammates, my mom is sending me my hockey jersey. That'll show em', right?



It's late, I should probably go to bed soon so I can awaken and create a hard body. I'm having fun blogging again, as long as I keep it interesting to myself. I remember how much fun I had last year. Good times.

Monday, January 7, 2008

Blowin' in the Wind

Sorry about the lack of photos on the previous post. This damn internet, I tell ya...

So I looked in my SPO today and realized I had a card for an oversized envelope. Convinced it was my letter either accepting or denying me to the University of Minnesota, my shaking fingers handed the slip over to the attendant. My pulse raced, my palms sweated, my life flashed before my eyes. Then I realized the envelope in question was not from the University of Minnesota, but the University of St. Thomas, and they were sending me a "St. Thomas School of Law" t-shirt. A very kind gesture (this from the same folks who sent me the delightful snowy Minneapolis Christmas card), but one would think that as students going to study law would base their decisions to attend a school on more factors than a free t-shirt.

It's January. My j-term class is almost unbearably easy. I have much time on my hands. Similar to last January, I am facing something of a crisis of effective time management. Last year, save the highly enjoyable and culturally stimulating six days I spent in Vienna, I utterly failed this test. My days, which could have been spent exploring Nottingham or the surrounding countryside, were mostly spent inside the flat watching 24 and enjoying copious bowls of multi-grain Cheerios. This January, spurned by my science teacher's admonition to make j-term a "free exercise in the liberal arts," I have resolved to do otherwise. First of all, I've decided to spend my days not playing video games or simply watching TV, but keeping track of the news and reading. To further the reading point, I checked out Beyond Good and Evil (Nietzche), Lyrical Ballads (Wordsworth), A Passage to India (Forster), and The Mother Tongue (Bryson). I'm still working on good ol' Bill's A Walk in the Woods. I pretty much almost went into a diabetic coma laughing at it today. If I would one day have the wit, broad knowledge, incredible mastery of the English language, and observational prowess of Bill Bryson, I would die a happy man. In addition to all of these, I've been working on practicing trombone for my spring recital.

Of course, j-term can't be all intellectual mumbo-jumbo. I've been watching a lot of Arrested Development. Damn it is funny. Maybe not quite so as The Office, but in the same plane. My three friends and I have started a 12 WEEK PROGRAM TO A HARD BODY. This entails punishing our muscle groups to the point where I'm collapsed on the floor gasping desperately for air. This morning, we did arms, and I sort of felt like I was enduring a session on a torture rack. But I suppose the benefits of a certified hard body will be apparent when I'm chilling out at the Copacabana in Rio in May.

Even as I struggle to remain productive during j-term, I can't seem to shake off a certain sense of directionless-ness. I don't know what it is. It might be next year's uncertainty, the contrast with the comfort of Luther. But I think to myself, I've defeated leaving the comfort of Luther once before, in much more drastic circumstances. So maybe that's not really it. Maybe it's just the anxiety that in 5 months, that fundamental shift is coming again. I can no longer see my best friends every day, don't have the luxury of this unique Luther environment. Who knows. When I look inward though, I sense that something is stirring within me, a sense of restlessness. Maybe it's for the city. Maybe it's for England.

I've tried to distance my English thoughts from this blog. That was last year, its been documented. I wasn't planning on having these emotions remain, these flashes of feeling, of an almost tangible relationship to a place. Like every event that occurred in the past, Nottingham flows farther back into time by the second. Things that were there possible then are no longer possible, and vice versa. But somehow, a part of me was left at 67 Homefield Rd. I have to go back, someday. But what will it be like? So much of my England experience is inextricably tied to a group of people who can be called nothing less than family. It's impossible to separate the physical space with the 9, plus Mark and Carol. These people, as I see them around Luther, as we bump into each other in the bustle of our daily lives, I see them not as friends, but as cousins, or some sort of relative. And that's the truth, something elemental bonds us together. But I worry, do I really miss England, or do I miss that constant family? And it's a little of both. I miss spending time with Kevin, Brandon, Ryan, all the girls, Mark and Carol. Sometimes I miss it so much that I can barely contain myself, tears threaten to burst forth, like water through a collapsing dam. Other times, I absolutely yearn for little bits of England, for Lucozade, or a double decker bus, the confident heft of a pound in my hand. Real ale in a pub. I think maybe, I miss a combination of the two. The 9 of us shared in experiences that caused us to individually fall in love with England, to become addicted to the rolling green and dry stone of the countryside, intoxicated by the heaviness of the damp air, touched and confused by the people. It will be hard to return without the rest, but it will be possible. Not ever quite the same, but possible.

And I hate to live in the past, I really do. I love my native land, I love so many things about it, what it stands for. And I love the people I'm surrounded with today. And I'm excited for what is to come, in our nation and in my own journey. But the past is an integral part, and England is a part that refuses to pass into the annals of "oh, that's just something I did." It's a part of me. I feel like a British-American, or an American Briton, or something. And maybe it just aches that I don't know when, if ever, I'll be able to reconcile these two parts of my life. I think I'll be a good lawyer. I think it's a profession where I can do something good, where I can use the talents God gave me. But I worry that maybe I'll make a wrong step, make a wrong choice. Maybe my values will be compromised. Maybe my career won't allow me to return to England. Maybe money will take a hold of me. So many things are just so frightening, so uncertain, it's hard to stay centered at times. I want to do good, I want to move back to England for a time, I want to find what exactly it is I'm supposed to do. I want to have a family, to raise children that will (hopefully) represent all that is good in the world. Life is a challenge.

Sorry that got so rambling, but I actually feel it's therapeutic to get this stuff out, to try and flesh out the wordlessness I'm feeling. But that's how January is going. Hopefully this blog can get up and running a bit more too. Intelligently. Wittily. All that jazz.



P.S.- In response to a comment left on my post about Coffee Cups, I made coffee last night in my cafetiere. And it was absolutely delicious. Much better than the tea I tried to brew tonight. The water here, it's just not the same. That's what I'll blame it on.

Saturday, January 5, 2008

Cups of Coffee

What is different about these two photos? (photos are forthcoming because of technical difficulties)

The bottom photo contains a paper cup, that's what's different. In a sit-in situation. This is a problem to rank with health care reform, the war in Iraq, and global warming.

When one goes to a coffeehouse and intends to sit down, I think there should be a constitutional amendment that they be given their coffee in a ceramic mug. Numerous reasons abound for this sort of legal requirement. First of all, it would cut down tremendously on waste. But more importantly, it would help revive the coffeehouse of old. It would help revive the soul of what a coffeehouse actually is. The ill-lit space awash in the haze of cigarette smoke and intellectual conversation, well worn cups being titillated by excitable fingers as animated discussion mingles with the scent of freshly brewed coffee. Maybe the cigarette smoke aspect doesn't quite apply to our American conception, but it still applies in Vienna. Maybe the politically correct description would be a space where the richly colored green and red walls are illuminated by dimly lit lamps, as jazz or alt-rock plays over an intercom, an individual kisses a cup with their lips as they read a paperback in their other hand, eyes drifting lazily to the bustle of the espresso bar.

Too dramatic.

But if I'm sitting down at an establishment, I want, nay I demand, a tangible mug to hold my coffee. It just, it just doesn't seem right to sit down with a paper cup (which is exactly what happened to me today). In England, at the Starbucks I so frequented, I was never insulted with a paper cup. In America, maybe Starbucks didn't get the memo. Or maybe Sarah and the good people of the Clumber St. Starbucks just respected me more in Notts. They obviously don't respect me here, since they chose not to hire me this summer (bad move Howard Schultz). But I haven't seen any of the mugs here in the US regardless, which is so sad. It really makes me rethink whether I truly want to live here. Coffee goes in mugs. If I wanted a paper cup, I would leave the establishment. Or I would go to Burger King and order some burned out sludge from the bottom of the pot with my Whopper.

Mugs and cups are just part of the essential pulse of coffee culture. French cafés. Italian espresso bars. American diners. Viennese coffeehouses. Though they choose to serve what is possibly one of God's most perfect drinks in different ways, they all serve them in tangible, non-paper cups. Coffee is such a unique beverage experience, it brings out so many connotations and emotions, it can't afford to be bastardized or insulted by something like a paper cup. Part of the excitement of the coffee ritual is the conversation involved, conversation that takes place in the coffeehouse or in the home. And it's not drive-thru conversation. It's "let's sit down and really talk" conversation. I mean, shit, that's what coffee is for, to allow people to just relax a bit and communicate. I think to the countless hours I spent in my Starbucks at my table, all the things I said and listened to, all over a cup of coffee, hours which are some of my most cherished memories from England. It's just what needs to happen. We can't attempt to distill the whole experience into something that can be contained by a paper cup. I mean, I could rip a paper cup in half, and I don't even have a hard body yet. It's simply outrageous. HOW CAN A PAPER CUP CONTAIN ALL THAT REAL COFFEE HAS TO OFFER?! Why is it that America is so concerned with this sort of drive-thru, we must always be convenienced and will never slow down way of life? We should take a cue from the French and learn to slow down a bit, breathe a bit deeper, chill out just a little bit more, sit down, and have a cup of coffee. In a real cup. I truly think we would be a healthier people.

Anyway, that's my rant for the day. Maybe I just miss my mug o'latte at the Notts Starbucks (which I most assuredly do, far more than is healthy), or maybe I was so incensed at the paper cup Magpie so indignantly foisted upon me, or maybe I just want to be witty and incensed at stupid things like Bill Bryson (which I do). Coffee, when drunk sitting down in an establishment, can only be properly respected in mugs or real cups. Anything less is simply unacceptable.


As a quick add on, why is it also that we Americans insult ourselves with Folgers coffee? My mom bought me some, and I was unfortunate enough to make a pot the other day. I might as well have drank a liter of toxic waste. It would have gone great with my Whopper.

Buy good coffee, take care of it, brew it well, and drink it in a mug.

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Suffice to Say...

I don't want to go on another depressing rant about how much I miss England. Suffice it to say, I still do, and that will be the end of today's talk on the topic.

In other news, I've been accepted to both William Mitchell and St. Thomas schools of law. Still waiting on the U of M, but I know have a bit of variety to work with, which will be very nice. I'm pretty sure if not Minnesota, I'll end up at WM or Hamline, but I'm not quite sure which one yet. St. Thomas did send me a very nice Christmas card from their admissions staff, but I don't know if it sweetens the deal that much.

Well, I started this post at like, 2 in the afternoon. It's now 10:45. So I've participated in my first caucus, my first foray into a more active political awareness. It was definitely an interesting process, something I've never encountered before. A ton of people showed up, which coincides with the huge turnout across Iowa. Sort of a populist, grassroots feel.

Myself, I caucused for Barack Obama, along with most of Luther College. However, I didn't choose the way I did to fit in with the cliché image of the pseudo-intellectual yet easily swayed liberal college student, wowed over by Obama's slickly packaged appeal to the young and educated. I truly believe he is the best candidate to lead in November. I think his most appealing characteristic is what I would deem the "JFK factor." Call it the politics of hope, call it change we can believe in, call it whatever you want. Obama is a breath of fresh air, something that is desperately needed in this country. Since 1988 (two decades ago for the mathematically challenged), the US has been led by a series of Bushes and Clintons. We're stuck in a war that smells of Vietnam. The economy is lagging. Our international standing has been destroyed. Politics as usual in the US are like a musty attic, or some sort of crusty old loaf of bread long past its expiration date. We need politics of hope. We need to find that spark that makes America great, that makes it a special place, a unique place. We have to regain respect from our allies, and we need to have dialogue with those who might not be our best friends. Bottom line, we need change. Hope.

What is wrong with hope? Why do people pass it off as naive or unrealistic? It's only naive and unrealistic when people have become so calloused and numb that hope is snuffed out. And that is a sad, sad day indeed. I mean, hope is one of the things we need to hold on to. And we need to be ready to seize the moment to turn hope into reality, to radically better ourselves, to raise ourselves out of complacency and corruption.

It's time to stop all the partisan bitching and start getting some stuff done. Stuff like health care, ending the war in Iraq, global warming, our own oil dependence, ethics, all of that. If there's one person out of all the Democrats and all the Republicans who can accomplish that, it's Barack Obama. I'd encourage all of you to check his ideas out. He might not have the laundry list political resume of Clinton or Romney or whoever. But Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney had sterling political backgrounds, and look at what they've gotten us into. Change is needed, change to make America great once again. I think that change can come from Obama. So, that's my spiel. I'm so happy he's won Iowa. It's not over yet though. It'll be an interesting 11 months. I hope I can continue to play a role.