My interest in this blog is primarily historical.

Sunday, February 28, 2010

Toyota

Edit: Blogger decided to post a blank post, so now I've added content for you to actually read. I don't expect any of you to really appreciate nothing on a page, except maybe Sam, who could probably find value in it as a break from studying.
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Found this online a bit ago:

http://www.caranddriver.com/news/car/10q1/toyota_recall_scandal_media_circus_and_stupid_drivers-editorial

I've been intrigued by the Toyota recall scandals lately. On one hand, when I see unsubstantiated claims of death and disaster and catastrophe because of automotive defects, I automatically assume that it boils down to stupid people and inconceivably bad driving (as the article suggests). This is particularly so because we're talking about Toyotas, which are traditionally about as well put-together as cars can be. On the other, it brings a very interesting question to the forefront: at what level are we willing to trust in technology, and specifically software, to perform perfectly in life-or-death situations?

I've been around software code most of my adult life, and it almost never performs totally up to spec, thanks to human error. Having said that, there are a lot of situations in which it had damn well better. On one end of the spectrum is Toyota, the utterly mundane -- at least until they race off at 15 million miles an hour because you're an idiot, and you have your foot on the wrong pedal, or you forget how neutral works or that you have a key that you can turn to make it, you know, stop. On the other end of the spectrum, to name one example, F-22 fighters pilots put their faith in highly complex machines that are so unstable in flight that they literally cannot be flown in anything approaching a straight line without enormous computer assistance. (A key point here is that if you cannot fly your advanced jet fighter aeroplane in a straight line, you are relatively more likely to die than in many other, more recreational pursuits. One of these pursuits may be that your car decides it wants to go faster for no better reason than it is feeling ornery that day.)

Luxury cars literally have over a million lines of code in them on average, and that one overlooked function in all those lines could kill you. That said, odds are you're more likely to get run over walking down the street by a car that works just fine. I can confidently state that I am unworried about software written by a bored technician off in a lab somewhere killing me directly or indirectly, but as time goes on, more and more everyday tasks and jobs and public functions will be handled by computers. They may not be as complex as fighter planes, but whether they're handled well or not may just depend on how hungover the coders / testers were the day they wrote the code that tells your car when the throttle is open. (This is not to mention lazy employees deciding they don't really need to test that one last edge case.)

Does that worry any of you? I'd be interested in your thoughts.


Thursday, February 25, 2010

On Call in Hell

You guys know about how I've been leaning heavily towards a military career after I get my medical degree, regardless of what I specialize in. My time wasters in between studying hemoglobinopathies and measles these days include a lot of mindless research about military medical careers and whether or not they will be like what I'm expecting or anticipating.

Consequently, I was reminded of an article that I had read back in undergrad (man, we can say that now - "back in college...") that kind of struck a cord. Jed and I were just talking about the show MASH (which is awesome) because I'm interested in the military medical track. I was hoping that he had brought up the subject of that show because there are Koreans in it. Like, a lot of Koreans. And I was hoping he thought "Hey, I know a Korean!" But no, he's a little more worldly than a backside-beaverdam-rednecked-bucktoothed huck finn.

So the point is that apparently after reading this article, I realized that I must be somewhat off-kilter because my first reaction was, "That's what I want to do! I want to be there!" Then after thinking about the ramifications of what this job would entail, ranging from getting my arms blown off to getting my face blown off, my desire and reactions didn't really change.

Here's the article. After reading it, would you want to be out there? Cause I think it's awesome.



On Call in Hell
He left a desk job for the front lines of Fallujah--and a horror show few doctors ever see. How Richard Jadick earned his Bronze Star.

By Pat Wingert and Evan Thomas | NEWSWEEK
From the magazine issue dated Mar 20, 2006

Then I heard the voice of the Lord saying, "Whom shall I send? And who will go for us?" And I said, "Here I am. Send me!"--Isaiah 7:8

Richard Jadick was bored. The Navy doctor was shuffling paper while Marines were heading out to Iraq. Once, many years before, Jadick had been a Marine officer, but he had missed the 1991 gulf war, stuck behind a recruiter's desk. Now he was looking forward to leading a comfortable life as what he called a "gentleman urologist." Jadick, with a Navy rank of lieutenant commander, was 38--too old, really, to be a combat surgeon.

But then a medical committee searching for help came knocking on his door. Because of an acute doctor shortage, they were having trouble finding a junior-grade Navy doctor to go with the First Battalion, Eighth Marine Regiment (the "1/8"), to Iraq. Jadick at the time was one of the senior medical officers at Camp Lejeune, N.C. "Who could we send?" they asked. Jadick thought for a moment. "Well," he said, "I could go."

His friends told him he was crazy, and his wife, a pediatrician nine months pregnant with their first child, was none too happy. But in the summer of 2004, five days after the birth of his child, Commander Jadick shipped out for Iraq. On the plane, he sat behind a gunnery staff sergeant named Ryan P. Shane. A 250-pound weight lifter, the massive Shane turned in his seat to look at Jadick. Slowly taking the measure of the 5-foot-10, 200-pound Jadick, the gunnery sergeant said, "So you're our new surgeon. That's one job I wouldn't want to have with the place where we're going." That night Jadick e-mailed his wife, "What have I gotten myself into?"

The place they were going was Fallujah. In Sunni territory west of Baghdad, the city seethed with insurgents. Jihadists had strung up the burned bodies of American contractors in the spring of 2004, and chaos had reigned ever since. By November, the United States was tired of waiting for the enemy to give up or clear out. "Over the past five months, [we] have been attacked by a faceless enemy. But the enemy has got a face. He's called Satan. He lives in Fallujah. And we're going to destroy him," said Marine Lt. Col. Gary Brandl on the eve of the attack. Jadick's regiment, the 1/8, was ordered to take what was, in effect, the Main Street of the city. For Jadick, who speaks in a gentle, matter-of-fact voice, occasionally strained by memories of the men he saved and lost, it was to be a journey to the other side of hell.

The night before the assault, Jadick hopped into a command Humvee taking a reconnaissance mission from the headquarters base outside the city. He wanted to --see what he was up against. In treating traumatic injuries, there is something known as the golden hour. A badly injured person who gets to the hospital within an hour is much more likely to be saved. But Jadick knew that in combat the "golden hour" doesn't exist. Left unaided, said Jadick, the wounded "could die in 15 minutes, and there are some things that could kill them in six minutes. If they had an arterial bleed, it could be three minutes." Jadick knew that helicopter evacuations were out of the question: there was too great a risk the choppers would get shot down. Casualties would have to be driven out of the city. It took Jadick 45 minutes to drive from the base hospital, where he would normally be stationed, to the city. Not close enough. Jadick wanted to push closer to the action.

Jadick, along with 54 Navy corpsmen, his young, sometimes teenage medical assistants, moved to the edge of the city as the assault began; the night sky was lit by tracers and rocket fire. The next morning a call came over the radio. A Navy SEAL with a sucking chest wound needed evacuation. A weapons company was heading in to rescue the man. Lacking much military training, doctors normally stay back in the rear area. But ex-Marine Jadick decided to go to the fight. As shots rang out around them, the weapons company ran and dodged down narrow alleyways toward the building where the SEAL lay wounded. Jadick was armed only with a small 9mm pistol. He thought: "If anyone actually gets close to me, I'm going to have to throw it at him." He felt slightly ridiculous, remembering a "MASH" episode in which Alan Alda tried to scare away the enemy.

In the rubble of a shot-up building, he found the SEAL conscious but bleeding badly. "Get me out of here," the man said. Helping to carry the man on a stretcher down the stairs, Jadick could hear rocket fire and shooting. The air was thick with fine dust and a familiar smell: cordite, from gunpowder. He had smelled cordite before at rifle ranges, but never like this. "It just hung in the air," he recalled.

The radio squawked. Two Marines had been wounded in an ambush in the center of the city. Jadick wanted to get his wounded SEAL back to base camp. But the voices on the radio were insisting that the two men down in the ambush were in even worse shape. It was Jadick's call. He loaded the SEAL into an armored ambulance and set off in the vehicle toward the scene of the shooting. He could hear the firing intensify. Jadick wondered, anxiously, if a rocket-propelled grenade could punch right through the ambulance's metal sides.

The ambulance stopped and Jadick peered out at the first real fire fight of his life. There were not two wounded men, but seven. As a middle-class kid growing up in upstate New York, Jadick had avidly read about war, and even applied to West Point. But he flunked the physical--poor depth perception--and went to Ithaca College on an ROTC scholarship instead. He had served as a communications officer in the Marines, but left the corps after seven years, bitter that he had been left out of the fighting in 1991. Attending medical school on a Navy scholarship, he had never seen or experienced real war--the kind of urban combat that can leave 30 to 40 percent of a unit wounded or dead.

"I can't tell you how scared I was," he recalled. "My legs wanted to stay in that vehicle, but I had to get off. I wanted to go back into that vehicle and lie under something and cry. I felt like a coward. I felt like it took me hours to make the decision to go."

But he got up and went. He felt as though he were "walking through water." Desperately seeking cover, he ran to a three-foot wall where the most badly wounded soldier lay. He lifted the man over the wall to safety. "I put him down on the ground, and he was looking at me," Jadick recalled. The man had a gaping wound in his groin. Jadick tried to "pack" the wound, stuffing sterile gauze packages into the hole torn by an AK-47 round, but he couldn't stop the bleeding. Jadick was forced to make the first of a thousand wretched decisions. "I knew I had six other people that I had to work on. So I don't know..." Jadick paused in the retelling. "I stopped and went on to someone else." It was Jadick's first experience in battlefield triage--forget the mortally or lightly wounded, save the rest--a concept easier to philosophize about than to practice.

Bullets were hissing around him. Afraid of dying, more afraid of failing his comrades, Jadick managed to treat the wounded, to stabilize them and stop the bleeding. As he began loading men into the ambulance, an RPG screamed in--and glanced off the roof without exploding. A second RPG slammed into the wall next to them; it didn't go off, either.

One of the wounded was Ryan Shane--the massive gunnery sergeant Jadick had met on the plane. Shane's abdomen was all shot up. Jadick was unable to lift him, so the sergeant had to crawl into the ambulance by himself. "I made room for him underneath the stretchers," Jadick recalled. But he had to turn away another Marine who had been shot in the foot. There was no more room.

As a urology resident at an inner-city trauma center in Baltimore, Jadick had spent a three-month rotation handling gunshot wounds. But the inside of the darkened ambulance, bathed in red light and blood from the wounded, echoing and rattling with the combat close by, seemed far away from the sterile, scrubbed world of a hospital ER. Working with a medic, Jadick pumped Hespan (a clear blood expander) into veins and tried to pack wounds. One --man was dead already. His body, on the top rack, was bleeding all over the patients below him and Jadick, too--"down my neck, everywhere," Jadick recalled.

Jadick was covered with gore by the time the ambulance reached a transfer point. People standing around the medical tent were staring at him, so he rubbed sand on his uniform. "It made it go dark," he said.

It was not yet noon on Jadick's first day in combat. A Humvee rolled up and a big, husky young Marine from Louisiana, Joel Dupuis, jumped out and began rambling on that his friend, Pvt. Paul Volpe, was going to die. Jadick ran with Dupuis to find a young Marine slumped over on the back hatch of the Humvee. Hit in the thigh, Volpe was "fluorescent-light white," recalled Jadick. His pulse was thin and weak; shock was setting in. Jadick figured the Marine had lost more than half his blood.

Jadick looked at Volpe and thought of the Marine who had died and bled all over him. "I can't let this happen again," he thought, "or there's no point in me being here." Turning to a young Navy doctor, Carlos Kennedy, Jadick instructed, "Pack him like you've never packed a guy before." Kennedy used his boot to stomp in the gauze stuffing. Meanwhile, Dupuis, who was a corpsman, found a vein to insert an IV, and a liter of Hespan started pumping into his unconscious friend. "All of a sudden, it was the most amazing thing," recalled Jadick. "It was like Frosty the Snowman come to life." Volpe opened his eyes, looked up and asked what was going on. When he saw Dupuis's anxious face, he joked, "I'm all right, I can see your ugly-ass face."

Jadick felt the need to get still closer to the battle. Even though Volpe had reached Jadick's aid station on the edge of the city, the Marine had almost died. In effect, Jadick wanted to set up an emergency room in the middle of the battlefield. Loading up two armored ambulances, he convoyed into the city in the dead of night to establish an aid station in the prayer room of an old government building. The night was quiet, save for the drone of a C-130 gunship searching for prey. Jadick and his men found some metal plates in the street, cleaned them and draped them with sterile gauze as trays for his scalpels. They stacked sandbags by the windows. As the sun rose, the silence was broken by sniper fire.

The casualty runs began arriving in the morning, depositing their grisly cargo. Bodies stacked up. At times Jadick couldn't sterilize his instruments fast enough. "You'd just have to throw some alcohol on the stuff and use it again. I didn't get a chance to wash my hands a lot. I wore gloves as much as possible, but they'd get all torn up and my body would just get covered in blood." Jadick was still afraid. "We were still getting shot at, and there were mortar attacks. But now it was OK somehow. Maybe I had gotten used to it, or maybe just calloused."

Kneeling over a wounded Marine, Jadick was startled to see a muzzle flash from a water tower about 50 yards away. He could clearly see a sniper, his face wrapped in cloth. For a moment, Jadick, the former Marine captain, replaced Jadick, the Navy doctor. A truckload of Marines had just pulled up. "Please go kill that guy," said Jadick, and their commander sent them out to silence the man. Jadick had a fleeting struggle with the Hippocratic Oath ("Do no harm") but thought, "At some point, it's either kill or be killed."

Jadick grew close to his young corpsmen, who were frightened, like him, but cared for the wounded like brothers. "If it would help, they would hold a guy's hand. They did those things to provide comfort, and they weren't afraid to do it. That's not something I taught them. They just did it," Jadick said.

Sometimes the corpsmen behaved like the 18- and 19-year-olds they were. Jadick was miffed at one young clerk, in charge of keeping proper records, who had apparently wandered off. Unable to find the man, Jadick began cursing him, when the clerk appeared around the corner. "Where were you?" Jadick angrily demanded. "Well," the clerk said, "some guys were trying to come across through the open gate, so I shot them." Jadick laughed as he recalled the story. "That's a pretty good excuse, so I'll let you go this time," he told the man.

On the third or fourth night, a vehicle pulled up with a badly wounded Marine named Jacob Knospler. A corporal with a rifle company, Knospler had dragged the shot-up Gunnery Sergeant Shane out of harm's way a few days before. Now, fighting house to house, he had been hit in the face with grenade shrapnel. There was a hole where his mouth and jaw had been. He was conscious and crying and trying to paw at his face. "We had to hold his hands and give him a lot of morphine, as much as he could tolerate," said Jadick. Unable to put a breathing tube down his throat, Jadick worried that Knospler would gag and suffocate on his own blood, tissue and mucus on his way to surgery. He jumped into the ambulance with the wounded corporal and, working with a female medic, kept suctioning the man's horribly wounded face. After 30 minutes, they arrived at a transfer station to hand him over to a new doctor. When the doctor saw the wound, his eyes bulged. "Are you going to be OK with this?" asked Jadick. The doctor said yes, and Jadick headed back to the inferno.

That was a bad night, Jadick recalled, but not the worst. A Marine came in shot in the head. Though he was still breathing, his skull was fractured and his eyeballs were hanging on either side of his face. When Jadick removed the Marine's helmet he could feel the plates of the man's skull moving. There was a distinctive, nauseating smell--of gray matter, brain tissue.

The man died, and so did many of his wounded comrades. But there were some remarkable survivors. A Marine walked over to Jadick and said, "Doc, I've got a headache." Jadick saw with a start that there was a hole in the guy's helmet. Gingerly, Jadick removed the helmet--and saw that a bullet had, in effect, scalped the young Marine, separating a flap of skin at the hairline, but not penetrating his skull. "You're pretty lucky," Jadick said. As both men laughed, Jadick stitched him up. "You don't need to be here anymore today," he told the man, and sent him to the rear.

The laughs were few and far between. A Marine arrived with a chest wound. Jadick had seen the man, Lance Cpl. Demarkus Brown, a few days before, when he showed up with a lip sliced by shrapnel. "Doc, do I get a Purple Heart for this?" Brown had asked. Jadick had assured him that he would, sewed up the lip, and sent him back to the fight. Now the man did not seem too badly wounded. He was breathing and his eyes were open. Still, Jadick was unable to get a breathing tube down his throat. For a moment, Brown seemed to perk up when Jadick inserted a needle in his chest for a tube, but suddenly the blood began to pulse out. A major blood vessel had ruptured inside him. The man's blood pressure was so low that Jadick couldn't get an IV line working.

Jadick talked to the man. "C'mon, Brown, don't give up on me," he gently pleaded. The young man died. He had been an especially well-liked leatherneck, tough but cheerful. "To this day, he's the kid I can't get out of my head," said Jadick, as he was interviewed two years later for this story. "It was one of those things..." Jadick paused and began to weep quietly.

For 11 days, Jadick worked night and day at his forward aid station. In late November, as the area around the government building quieted, Jadick moved his team to an abandoned pickle factory in an industrial area where fighting was still going on. The weather had turned bit-ter cold, so the corpsmen dug holes in the floor and built fireplaces out of rubble. Jadick worried that the IV fluids might become so chilled that the wounded would go into hypothermic shock. To try to warm the fluid to body temperature, corpsmen had the idea of taping pints to their legs and carrying them inside their cargo pockets.

The wounded kept coming. One hero was Matthew Palacios. Injured, he saw a grenade land beside him. Somehow, he had the presence of mind to fling it back, saving the men around him. Increasingly, the wounded were Marines ripped by booby traps and suicide bombers. The KIAs (Killed in Action) were so mangled that Jadick decided to build a morgue, so his young corpsmen wouldn't have to see the shattered bodies piling up.

The one injury Jadick did not see much of was posttraumatic stress disorder. One Marine had to be sent to the rear, and plenty of men complained that they didn't want to go back out and fight--but they did. The PTSD, Jadick knows, will show up for some men only after they're back home, safe but haunted by flashbacks and memories. "We all had PTSD at some level," said Jadick, who nevertheless has not sought treatment.

By mid-December, Fallujah was secured. It had been the worst urban fighting involving Americans since Vietnam. At least 53 Marines and Navy SEALs died, as did something like 1,600 insurgents. By mid-January, Jadick was home: there was an opening for a urology resident at the Medical College of Georgia. Jadick was eager to see his baby daughter and wife. Jadick was awarded a Bronze Star with a Combat V for valor. (The medal, pinned onto Jadick in January, is the only Combat V awarded a Navy doctor thus far in the Iraq war.) His commanding officer, Lt. Col. Mark Winn, estimated that without Jadick at the front, the Marines would have lost an additional 30 men. Of the hundreds of men treated by Jadick, only one died after reaching a hospital. "I have never seen a doctor display the kind of courage and bravery that Rich did during Fallujah," said Winn. Jadick still owes the Navy a couple of years as a doctor. He's thinking of staying in beyond that. "Being a battalion surgeon is one of the greatest jobs there is," he says, in his low-key way. "So, sure, I would do it again, yeah."

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

I Wish This Was a Joke

...but I'm pretty sure that it's not.

Seriously, even the P.E. teacher is being blamed for the school's performance?

Saturday, February 20, 2010

From the Economist, Feb issue

The Economist always has an interesting perspective on China. I am never quite convinced that they are seeing things clearly when it comes to the rising superpower. I have nothing but respect for the writing staff at The Economist. I think the overall quality of their work is significantly better than other weekly news magazines. But when it comes to China, I wonder if their strong capitalist bent makes them reluctant to recognize the successes of Chinese "communism." Where the rest of the American media seems to see inevitable growth and unstoppable strength in China, the Economist always emphasizes the underlying weakness of China's economy and the instability of her government. I am never certain if the Economist is uniquely insightful or obstinately myopic.
(On a separate note, I realized recently that I know almost nothing about the internal structure of Chinese government. I have a pretty good idea of their foreign policy priorities, at least as they are represented in American media. But as far as the internal workings of the Chinese government are concerned, I am almost entirely ignorant. I have always assumed that it is similar to Soviet government, with which I was at least passably familiar. Anyway, I intend to rectify this. I am going to start with Wikipedia and see where that takes me.)
Enjoy the article!


“THE forces pulling China toward integration and openness are more powerful today than ever before,” said President Bill Clinton in 1999. China then, though battered by the Asian financial crisis, was busy dismantling state-owned enterprises and pushing for admission to the World Trade Organisation. Today, however, those forces look much weaker.

A spate of recent events, from the heavy jail sentences passed on human-rights activists to an undiplomatic obduracy at the climate-change negotiations in Copenhagen last December, invite questions about the thinking of China’s leaders. Has their view of the outside world and dissent at home changed? Or were the forces detected by Mr Clinton and so many others after all not pulling so hard in the direction they were expecting?

The early years of what China calls its “reform and opening” after 1978 were marked by cycles of liberalisation and repression. The turning-points were usually marked by political crisis: dissent on the streets, leadership struggles, or both. Now, however, the only big protest movements are repressed ones among ethnic minorities in Tibet and Xinjiang. China’s big cities are hardly roiled by political turmoil. By the time Liu Xiaobo, an academic, was sentenced to 11 years in prison in December, dissident debate surrounding the reform manifesto he had issued a year earlier had long subsided. Yet it was the heaviest-known penalty imposed on any activist for “inciting subversion” since such a crime was written into law in 1997.

China has so far survived the global economic downturn with hardly any of the agitation many once feared it might cause among unemployed workers or jobless university graduates. The economy grew at a very robust-sounding 8.7% last year and is predicted by many to be on course for similar growth in 2010.

Sweeping changes are due in the senior leadership in 2012 and 2013, including the replacement of President Hu Jintao and of the prime minister, Wen Jiabao. But if a struggle is brewing, signs of it are hard to spot. An unusually high-profile campaign against organised crime by the party chief of Chongqing municipality, Bo Xilai, has raised eyebrows. Some speculate that it is part of a bid by Mr Bo, who is a Politburo member, to whip up popular support for his promotion to the Politburo’s all-powerful Standing Committee in 2012. An online poll by an official website chose Mr Bo as the “most inspiring voice” of 2009.

But Andrew Nathan of Columbia University in New York does not see this as a challenge to the expected shoo-in for Xi Jinping, the vice-president, as China’s next leader, despite Mr Xi’s failure last year to garner the leading military post analysts thought would form part of his grooming. Li Keqiang, a deputy prime minister, still looks set to take over from Mr Wen in 2013.

Against this backdrop of political stability and economic growth, the most credible interpretation of the government’s recent hard line is that the forces pushing its leaders towards greater liberalisation at home and sympathetic engagement with the West are weaker than had been hoped. Nor is there any sign that the next generation of leaders see their mission differently. As Russell Leigh Moses, a Beijing-based political analyst, puts it: “The argument in policy-making circles where reform is concerned is ‘how much more authoritarian should we be?’ not ‘how do we embark on Western-style democracy?’”

Tough though the recent sentences of activists have been, they are hardly out of keeping with the leadership’s approach to dissent in recent years. This has involved giving a bit of leeway to freethinking individuals, but occasionally punishing those seen as straying too far. Since late last year two activists have been jailed in an apparent attempt to deter people from organising the parents of children killed in shoddily built schools during an earthquake in Sichuan province in 2008. But another critic of the government’s handling of the parents’ grievances, Ai Weiwei, remains free in Beijing and just as outspoken.

The coming months are unlikely to see much change. Despite boasting of their country’s resilience in the face of the global economic crisis, China’s leaders still appear jittery. Mr Wen has forecast that 2010 will see “even greater complexity in the domestic and international situation”. China’s security chief, Zhou Yongkang, in a speech published this week said the task of maintaining social stability “was still extremely onerous”.

Some Chinese economists worry out loud that China’s massive stimulus-spending might have bought the country only a temporary reprieve. Bubbles, they fret, are forming in property markets, inflationary pressure is building up and reforms needed to promote sustained growth (including measures to promote urbanisation) are not being carried out fast enough. Occasionally, even the government’s worst nightmare is mooted as a possibility: stagflation. A combination of fast-rising prices and low growth might indeed be enough to send protesters on to the streets.

Abroad, Chinese leaders are struggling to cope with what they feel to be an accelerated shift in the global balance of power, in China’s favour. This has resulted in what Mr Moses describes as behaviour ranging from “strutting to outright stumbling”. They reacted with oratorical fury in January, when America announced a $6.4 billion arms deal with Taiwan. But while pandering to popular nationalism at home, they remain aware of China’s limitations. This week China allowed an American aircraft-carrier to pay a port call to Hong Kong, just a day before President Obama was due to defy grim warnings and meet the Dalai Lama in Washington.

Chinese leaders can be confident that the plight of dissidents and the ever-louder grumbles of foreign businessmen over the barriers they face in China will not keep the world away. From May China will be visited by a series of foreign leaders going to the World Expo in Shanghai. Among the first will be France’s president, Nicolas Sarkozy, much reviled by Chinese nationalists for his stance on Tibet. China sees the Expo, like the 2008 Beijing Olympics, as a chance to flaunt its strength. But, as Mr Clinton noted of China in 1999, “a tight grip is actually a sign of a weak hand”.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

WORLD CUP

Two dates we should be aware of.

1) The US team will play their final friendly before heading off to South Africa against Turkey at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia on Saturday, May 29th. Road trip, anyone?

2) The US will play their first WORLD CUP MATCH against ENGLAND on Saturday, JUNE 12th at 2:30 PM. WE MUST GATHER AND CHEER and DRINK!

Monday, February 15, 2010

Year of the Tiger

A belated Happy Chinese New Year to all you bitches. For those of us born in 1986, it's our year. For those of you born in 1985 (or in Sarah's case, 1973), you'll have to wait another 11 years for the Year of the Ox.

Friday, February 12, 2010

Vegas?

Hey, Dean and Amar, does this street intersection almost seem to look familiar? I thought at first it was the intersection next to that gas station and BJ's where we bought Vault and Bacardi. Except I remember the building across the street as being some sort of sketchy store with a different name. I wonder when this video was taken? Cause it still looks like there's a gas station on the side that they're on.

WHARRGARBL

WHARRGARBL

WHARRGARBL

Badass of the Week

Someone linked me to this guy and I subsequently began to read about all of the other badasses on this website.

"Aki realized he didn't have very much in the way of money or equipment. Still, this unstoppable powerhouse of mine-clearing insanity wasn't going to be deterred from accomplishing his newfound goal in life simply by something as stupid as "not having access to the sort of minesweeping gear you need in order to not die while removing mines"'

http://www.badassoftheweek.com/aki-ra.html

Tumblr

What do you guys know about Tumblr? From what I understand, it's taking off because it's lower maintenance than most blogs but allows far more flexible communication (updates, images, music, etc.) than Twitter.

http://www.tumblr.com/about

http://images.businessweek.com/ss/09/04/0421_best_young_entrepreneurs/11.htm

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Mixology

I just realized that I have 24 different combinations of whiskey, vermouth and bitters. Here, I am trying a few of them in a very scientific tasting session. Results to follow.

Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile

The sword.

I have been meaning to post this for a while. A few of you chipped in to buy me a Naval Officer's Sword as a wedding present. It was a truly wonderful gift. The gift of a sword is very significant in the service. In the old British navy, swords were given to officers as commendations for bravery in battle. Also, when a captain's ship was taken in battle, he surrendered his ship to the victorious ship's captain by ceremoniously handing over his sword. Cornwallis gave his sword to Washington at Yorktown. Lee surrendered his sword to Grant at Appomattox, which Grant then returned as a gesture of respect. So the first thing I would like to say to you all is: I accept your surrender, and no you won't be getting this sword back!
Seriously though, for an military officer, the sword represents the pride and dignity of command and a respect for the traditions of the service. To receive the gift of a sword from my closest friends on the occasion of my wedding could not have been more appropriate. I want to thank you all for this very special gift which I will cherish for a lifetime. It occurs to me that since the sword was mail-ordered (what, you couldn't find a decent sword-smith in C-ville?) you guys have never actually seen it. I took some pictures of it which I will post below so you guys can see how beautiful it is.



This is the handle. The guard is gold, and the handle is covered in tiny bumps, so small as to almost be sharp. It is made to simulate the original handle covering for naval officer's swords, which was ray skin (sting-? manta-? who knows?) This handle is bound by a wrapping of twisted gold wire.






The guard has beautifully wrought leaf-and-vine ornamentation.









...with a USN (for United States Navy) carved into it, in case I forget who I work for.







The scabbard is made of leather with gold fittings. The design of the gold fittings is meant to emulate the decorative rope-work which sailors have used on ships forever. We still use it on modern warships. If you were to visit my ship I could show you hand-railings and such which some enterprising seaman took it upon himself to decorate with elaborate knot-work.



The blade is etched with more leaves and vines and various highly significant (I am sure) crests and such. It really is very intricate!








There is an eagle etched into the butt of the handle. The golden eagle is significant as both a symbol of the United States but also as a long-standing symbol of the US military officer corps.






And there it is with the scabbard. You can get these things mounted on beautiful wooden plaques so you can hang them on the wall. I intend to do that so I can have something even larger than my UVA diploma to hang in my office. I truly will always cherish this sword, guys. Thank you so much!

Farooq Khan

I just heard an interview with Farooq Khan, who has been described as "the biggest movie star in the world." For the last 20 years, this guy has been the biggest star in Bollywood. It was a fantastic interview overall, but a couple of things really stood out for me. The first was that he is a Muslim. I am impressed that in a country which is mostly Hindu and with such a history of inter-religious conflict is able to elevate a Muslim to such heights of stardom. It is a particular characteristic of democracies that such things are possible. Hunkiness transcends all boundaries. The second thing about the interview which stood out for me was the comments he made about Bollywood films. I will transcribe his comments from memory as best I can.

"Western people always tell me that Bollywood films are so fantastical. That always makes me laugh. I think that it is Hollywood films that are fantastical. In Hollywood films there are superheroes, or races of blue aliens living on another planet. In Bollywood, yeah, we do a lot of singing and dancing, but at their core the films are about people falling in love. The most fantastic films are the ones where the characters go to America, make a nice wage, own a car and send their kids to school. Indian fantasies are very attainable. America is our Pandora."
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Khrushchev Goes to Hollywood

Wanted to pass along a rich historical account of Nikita Khruschev's visit to Hollywood in 1959. The article does a great job setting the scene in 1950s America, but I find it entertaining mostly because the situation is so ridiculous. It is surprising to me that Khrushchev toured the US at all, so banter between Khrushchev and Dean Martin or Marilyn Monroe reads like really creative historical fiction.

Twentieth Century Fox had invited Khrushchev to watch the filming of Can-Can, a risqué Broadway musical set among the dance hall girls of fin de siècle Paris, and he had accepted. It was an astounding feat: a Hollywood studio had persuaded the communist dictator of the world's largest nation to appear in a shameless publicity stunt for a second-rate musical. The studio sweetened the deal by arranging for a luncheon at its elegant commissary, the Café de Paris, where the great dictator could break bread with the biggest stars in Hollywood. But there was a problem: only 400 people could fit into the room, and nearly everybody in Hollywood wanted to be there.

"One of the angriest social free-for-alls in the uninhibited and colorful history of Hollywood is in the making about who is to be at the luncheon," Murray Schumach wrote in the New York Times.


http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history-archaeology/Nikita-in-Hollywood.html

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Honeydew! Chilled!

I found a great restaurant supply store near my house. Among my finds...

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Saturday, February 6, 2010

Can you guess what this is an ad for?

I liked the combination of words.

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PIG.

Per Jed's request, I'm posting pics of last night's pig adventure on the blog.

Dean R., Le-Anh and I had been planning this for months - but a last-minute slew of cancellations/sicknesses/snow in DC made it almost not happen. I actually called the restaurant to cancel and take the huge cancellation fee! My trusty roommate called and UNcanceled...I think the thought of letting that precious pig slip through his fingers was just too much to bear. He rounded up a motley crew of people (I don't know half the people in the pics, but we bonded over pig and beer...is there anything better?), and here is the result (I plead not responsible for the blurry pics!):



















































































































































































...I'm not eating for a while.

Friday, February 5, 2010

Remember DJ Chachi

The new years mix from Lotus is posted on Chachi's myspace. As in, New York, New York.

Kill Bill Vol. III

I did not know about this.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1521225/

Check this kid out.

This kid David Sills is a 7th-Grade Quarterback from Delaware who just verbally committed to USC. There is a link to a video of him playing in the article. He looks pretty sick, but who knows how he will mature? Lane Kiffin must be pretty confident because he offered the kid a scholarship.

http://sports.espn.go.com/los-angeles/ncf/news/story?id=4888515

Thursday, February 4, 2010

The name.

I really would like everyone's input on the name. After all, this is intended to be a communal blog, so I would like everyone to be comfortable with the name. If you would like it changed, please make your opinion known and I will change it without prejudice. But first I would like to explain my intention for the name "Dilettante Ball."

It is true that the word "dilettante" is generally used with negative connotations. It is used to describe "a person having a superficial interest in an art or branch of knowledge: a dabbler.(Webster's online)" However, there are other connotations. The etymology leads you back to the Latin word "dilectare" - which means "to delight." This is the same Latin root which gives us the word "delectable."
When taken in that context, I think the word takes on a much more pleasant connotation. It implies a person who delights in many branches of knowledge - an enthusiastic dabbler in multiple fields. I believe that we are all such people. In fact, that is one of my favorite things about the people who I have invited to participate in this blog. We all have our fields of expertise. I am a student of politics and a professional military officer, but I am constantly harassing Michelle, Dean and Amar with questions about finance and economics. Dean is a consultant and an economist by training, but probably knows more about Navy aircraft than I do. Steven is a doctor who should be a film director. Michelle is an investment banker who should be a chef. Sam is a doctor who should be a military officer and I am a military officer who should be...something else. God knows what. My point is, we all dabble...joyfully!
When coupled with the word "ball," the name not only achieves what I believed to be a pleasing and significant symmetry with the term "debutante ball" - a celebration of a young woman making her formal entrance into adult society - it also implies a celebratory gathering of like-minded dilettantes. It connotes a joyful assembly of people who take pleasure in dabbling in a wide variety of fields and an unrestricted array of ideas.

There you have it! If I have not convinced you that the title is worth keeping, then so be it. I have other ideas for titles. However, at the very least I hope I have convinced you that I chose my words for a reason and said exactly what I meant; Amar and Sam will recall our conversation at the Gibson and remember that that sort of thing is important to me. ;)

Love y'all! Please vote! Keep it or ditch it?

Google and the NSA

Google's teaming up with the NSA to investigate the cyber-attack that prompted Google to cease operation in China. Maybe it's just me, but I find any article with Google and the NSA in the same sentence unsettling.

Google to enlist NSA to help it ward off cyberattacks

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/02/03/AR2010020304057.html?hpid=topnews

An old dog

Is it possible to be a "diary person" despite having never regularly kept a diary? I may not have succeeded, but I've had at least a couple compelling failures.

In December 1993, I bought a one-year diary. It had 365 pages (marked Jan 1, Jan 2, etc.), and I was excited to fill them all.* By most accounts, this effort was a failure. Within a year, fewer than twenty pages were touched. I accepted the failure, but refused to accept that the irregularity of my entries condemned the diary. 16 years later, I'm still filling it in. Nothing more ambitious than a few entries a year, but it's become valuable to me.

I appreciated Diasporatic; the name, the people, the shared history. What I really loved about Diasporatic was that, for a time, the blog represented the commitment to stay close as our lives diverge. Some of you are better about communication than I am, but I was born an old dog. New tricks come slowly, and the fact that I posted on a blog at all was huge first step.

Apparently, Diasporatic is dead. I don't suppose that I did much to help. I haven't written an entry in eight months, and haven't actually posted one in twice that time. Still, now that it's dead, I miss it. So I'm going to give this new, unfortunately-named blog a whirl.** If I post too little, cut me some slack - I'm not a diary person. If I post too much, you asked for it bitches.


*For you film buffs, my first entry ("bye bye 1993") was a review of one of the great movies of our time: Beethoven 2.
**Seriously, name change anyone?

dilettante (plural dilettanti or (rarely) dilettantes)
  1. An amateur, someone who dabbles in a field out of casual interest rather than as a profession or serious interest.
  2. A person with a general but superficial interest in any art or a branch of knowledge. (Sometimes derogatory.)

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Amar hates the name...

Does everyone else? It is easily changed.

Verily

I eat my peas with honey.
I've done it all my life.
It makes the peas taste funny,
but it keeps them on my knife.

Hello!

The plea

"Diasporatic, alas, is dead. The only person who is still subscribed to it is Sarah Stuntz. She is also the only person who has posted anything on it with any kind of regularity. God bless her for that. BUT I AM NOT DAUNTED! I would like to try this again. I have started a new blog which I hope can be a sort of forum for us. I am determined to bring this group of friends into the 21st century. I will not ask you all to get Twitter accounts, but please subscribe to this blog and contribute whenever you can!
I think the failure of Diasporatic might have been that we set the bar too high for what is worthy of posting. I would like this new blog to be far less formal. You needn't write an essay (although feel free to do so!) You dont have to be sharing monumental, life-changing news in order to post. Rather, please feel free to post about anything and everything! Read an interesting article? Post a link and tell the group what you think! We will discuss it! Heard a particularly entertaining new song or seen a funny youtube video? Throw it up there and let everyone enjoy it together! And if you ever feel like writing an essay, God bless you - please do!
I think this can work. I believe this because as a group we are in more-or-less constant gmail communication as it is. If we can channel some portion of those email exchanges through this blog instead, we will achieve certain advantages. Chiefly, it creates a far more permanent record of our interaction as a group. Emails are transient. They disappear from our minds as soon as they are pushed off our home screen by newer messages. For reasons which I will enumerate in future posts, I have become very conscious of the importance of preserving communications between friends and loved ones. Friendships are precious, and whenever friends take the time to sit down and write to each other, no matter how briefly, it is a monumental act. Interactions which seem trivial in the moment become priceless when preserved and read later. I am hoping that this blog can help us create a more-or-less permanent record of our collective discourse. I know you guys are busy, but this is important! Trust me!"

A new trick

Is it possible to be a "diary person" despite having never regularly kept a diary? I may not have succeeded, but I've had at least a couple compelling failures.

In December 1993, I bought a one-year diary. It had 365 pages (marked Jan 1, Jan 2, etc.), and I was excited to fill them all.* By most accounts, this effort was a failure. Within a year, fewer than twenty pages were touched. I accepted the failure, but refused to accept that the irregularity of my entries condemned the diary. 16 years later, I'm still filling it in. Nothing more ambitious than a few entries a year, but it's become valuable to me.

I appreciated Diasporatic; the name, the people, the shared history. What I really loved about it was that, for a time, the blog represented the commitment to stay close as our lives diverge. Some of you are better about communication than I am, but I was born an old dog. New tricks come slowly, and the fact that I posted on a blog at all was huge first step.

Apparently, Diasporatic is dead. I don't suppose that I did much to help. I haven't written an entry in eight months, and haven't actually posted one in twice that time. If you've been unfortunate enough to subscribe to these posts, thanks for your willingness to read and my apologies for not actually writing anything. Now that it's officially dead, however, I miss it. So I'm going to give this new communal blog a whirl. Follow if you will.

Best,

Amar

*For you film buffs, my first entry ("bye bye 1993") was a review of one of the great movies of our time: Beethoven 2.

Hi, Everyone!

Come on in! Make yourselves at home! I will be posting a couple of things shortly, but in the meantime, pull up a chair, get settled in, have a scotch and relax. Kick your shoes off, you are among friends!