Posted in Blog, Issues

Bully Me This [Academic Essay]

[Writer’s note: I’m quite proud of the way this essay came out, and I thought I’d share it. It’s nine pages plus a works cited page, so buckle up]

The bell rang, and it was immediately obvious that Ms. Greb was going to be late again. It was hard to blame her; her office was at the other side of the middle school, and her waddle wasn’t speedy, to say the least. The picture of studious, I opened my Spanish text to look over the vocabulary again. “Bookshelf” was giving me a problem. Estantería, estantería, estantería. I silently repeated. Continue reading “Bully Me This [Academic Essay]”

Posted in Entertainment, Issues

I swear I don’t just see Zac Efron everywhere

Last night Ellen, Colton, and I had a movie marathon in Ellen’s dorm’s lounge. First, Mega Shark Vs. Giant Octopus (yes, it was as fantastic as it sounds). Second, Air Bud. Now, I haven’t seen Air Bud in YEARS, although I still hold it as one of my all time favorite childhood movies. But me and the rest of the people that ended up watching (Ellen, Colton, Kevin, and Jackson) had a disagreement that I think needs to be addressed. Continue reading “I swear I don’t just see Zac Efron everywhere”

Posted in Issues, Politics, Various Ramblings

Bashing Warheads

Berke Breathed's Bloom County

Bashing warheads, Well what did you think? Atomic Bombs? That is a little to dangerous. But we need to find a way to get rid of the nukes. there are around 20,000 atomic or hydrogen bombs and weapons worldwide, and that number isn’t getting much smaller. When a nuke is decommissioned it’s not always destroyed or dismantled, it is just stored. the US alone had 9,400, the only country with more is Russia with around 13,000, and most of those disappeared onto the black market when the USSR went out.

Even thought nuclear war is no longer a huge threat it still is a concern, India and Pakistan both have weapons but they are not part of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty which means that the keep making more bombs.

But don’t worry, As Tom Leher says,We Wil All Go Together When We Go!

Posted in Issues, Politics, Various Ramblings

To the supporters of gay marriage…

First off, I would like to clarify that this post, unlike many in the past, does not primarily concern gay marriage. I merely wish to target a certain type of audience- one which can think unbiasedly, as the topic of this post is… touchy. It has to do with  a topic that, in my opinion, is met with more thoughtless bigotry than any other. It is as well a topic that has more in common with gay marriage than any other civil rights issue, which is why I am interested to hear the supporters of gay marriages’ thoughts on it. The topic? Incest. Continue reading “To the supporters of gay marriage…”

Posted in Issues

I know, I know, I’m obsessed

First off, how do you all like the new logo? I like it, but I think I need a different color for the background, instead of orange. Thoughts?

So I just though I’d share this little tid bit of Jason Mraz with everyone. I found his blog last night and got really excited. But shhh. It’s (mostly) healthy.

“My mom sings in the Choir [in her church] and I volunteered my time to sit in at a later service and do the same. If I believe in any God at all, my God exists in music. I know this because music makes me happy and that’s the point of having a God. God isn’t responsible for Wal-Mart or for the War on terror; therefore, I don’t blame God. I believe those things happen by people who forget to look up and see what God is. They kind of ruin it for the rest of us. But then again, maybe their God gives them riches and power and that makes them happy, so who am I to judge?”
-Jason Mraz, 2007

Posted in Issues

Something Corporate

…Is a good band.

But that’s not the issue I want to talk about today. Because it’s the holiday season, I want to talk about a more festive topic.

Santa.

I am one of the millions of kids around the US that believed in Santa. Heck, I believed up until 6th grade, when my [younger!] brother’s guitar teacher ruined it for me. Granted, I was leaning towards disbelief, having figured out the tooth fairy and the Easter bunny, but Santa was real for the longest time.

Recently, a reporter for the Chicago Tribune was unable to publish an article about the existence of Santa in the newspaper, so the Tribune posted it online instead. This was because many readers expressed that their children read the newspaper and didn’t want their childhoods crushed. Also, acclaimed author of A Great and Terrible Beauty, Libba Bray posted a blog on her LiveJournal about breaking the news of Santa’s fictional character to her ten year old son. She talked about how hard that was, for the both of them.

So I ask you, you few readers of BOW, is Santa a good idea? I know that I for one was not particularly crushed when I found out he wasn’t real, and it has not caused me to distrust my parents any more than before (hah. hah. I joke). It did make Christmas Eve a lot less fun and exciting, I suppose. However, I also know that some kids do feel duped to be lied to, and hold that against their parents. Even Bray’s son, although her forgave his mother, said “I don’t like it when you lie to me. It makes me not trust you,” then said “Well, I’ve told you some lies, too. Little ones. I mean, we’re just people. People do that.”

And he’s right. People do lie. So is the Santa lie one that we should be willing to risk? I’m torn on the subject, since it depends on the kid how vehemently they respond to the news, but also since I enjoyed being lied to for those eleven-odd years and don’t really hold it against anyone.

We’ll discuss the holiness of the holiday tomorrow. Today, it’s Santa. Talk! Discuss!

Posted in Issues, Politics

A change in pace (capital punishment)

Well, although I don’t think we can ever thoroughly exhaust the topics of gay rights, it really is time for a chance of pace in the social issues department. This week’s topic of discussion: Capital Punishment (aka, the death penalty).
This is an extremely controversial topic, but it seems to get a bit drowned-out in all the noise from other social issues, such as gay rights and abortion. This is a very delicate subject, and there are many facets to it. Many argue such things as “eye for an eye” and justice, as well as what a civilized community should do, the right to life, the chance to repent before death, the mortal sin of murder, and many other things. It may take hours to explain them all, so I won’t even try.
Personally, I find the idea of capital punishment primitive. It doesn’t matter how “painless” and efficient the process becomes, it is, in it’s raw form, the most primitive legal act of our society. It goes by the “moral” that humans have upheld for centuries: “an eye for an eye.” It is one of those morals (like gay rights) that needs to be rethought. We may have rethought it on the lower levels: we constantly teach our children to never respond to violence with violence: always talk it out; always forgive. But when it comes to our harshest sentence, we are blatantly hypocritical.
Another thing worth mentioning is that this is one of the few social issues (if not the only social issue) where I concur with the Roman Catholic Church. Murder is a mortal sin, and that not only goes, of course, for the murderer himself, but for the executioner, who really is forced to murder by the job description. I do not doubt that most executioners kill more people than any murderers they have put to death. The emotional toll must be rather horrific, as well.
Also on the matter of mortal sin: those who are subjected to the death penalty never really get the chance to repent (even though I am agnostic, I still think that you really ought to have the chance to reconcile with yourself and the people whom you have hurt before the inevitable end: it gives a sense of finality to the whole matter). Sure, criminals end up on death row for years and years, but I don’t know if I would be able to come to any conclusion whilst berating my horrible demise day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year, and, in some cases, decade after decade.
Now this brings up the point of the sense of justice that the family of the victim often desires. I can understand their anguish, but what they really desire is nothing more than petty revenge (this is assuming that they really believe that the person who killed their relative truly deserves death). I cannot begin to think what it would be like to loose a family member at the hands of a murderer, but I would certainly hope that I would retain my current outlook if I do: which is that I need to be the better person and allow that person to reconcile with himself, the victim’s family, and their god (if they believe in one). I don’t think I could ever truly forgive that person for what they did, but I would hope that I would not stoop to their level by thinking that capital punishment would be a just compromise for the loss of my own family member.

Well, I think that’s about the sum of my beliefs (and it truly is a summary – if you want to argue on the subject then you may hear more), so let’s hear your beliefs. What do you think of capital punishment? Good or bad? Necessary or primitive? Just or unjust? Whatever you’ve got to say, let’s hear it.

For now, this is Aardvarki, signing out.