eftychia: Me in kilt and poofy shirt, facing away, playing acoustic guitar behind head (Default)
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posted by [personal profile] eftychia at 12:21pm on 2004-05-28
  • Some people will see this as silly. Others will understand why I find it significant and touching: Family of slain teen seeks posthumous name change (CNN/AP) "'She's Gwen to me, and I'm her mother,' Sylvia Guerrero said outside the courthouse. 'This is who she was. She's transgender and she's Gwen.'"
  • Unfortunately the link got stale before I got around to posting this, but I can still point to where I found out about it: "A Polish-Egyptian team has unearthed the site of the fabled University of Alexandria"> (Oakland Tribune; pointed out by [livejournal.com profile] redaxe)
  • HIV counter-virus -- fighting fire with fire (Wired). The good: it could be an important treatment, and pave the way for new medical developments. The little, worried voice in the back of the head: the treatment itself is transmissible just as HIV is, which is a good thing if it works and is safe, but could be a bad thing if it turns out to have nasty side effects down the road (or mutates in a bad direction). The downright scary: it took just three people (the two researchers and a grad student) and $200,000 to design a custom virus. As the article says, "bad guys can be brilliant too." (URL pointed out by Fred)
  • An image, small (31K), worksafe, possible to read various meanings into.
  • [livejournal.com profile] silmaril pointed out this entertaining list of disclaimers from a math textbook. "In the unlikely event of a water landing do not use this book as a flotation device." (I'm not going to give away the best ones, or you wouldn't need to go look.)
  • Most people who care have probably seen this already, but just in case: Teacher fired, student disciplined, parent threatened, and poetry club shut down over political peom. Note that the incident was in 2003, though the editorial is from this month. (Some people have used this as an example of the Bush administration's effects on freedom of speech; unless it's happening in lots of other schools and can be shown to be a recent trend, I'm more inclined to call it "merely" a case of one power-mad principal, but it's still infuriating.) [Edit: See additional links in comments.]
  • Whoa -- is this for real? According to The Moscow Times, the "secret launch codes" for U.S. nuclear missiles was 00000000 for the duration of the Cold War, because the SAC was "worried that a bunch of sissy safety features might slow things down." (link from Fred)
  • An S&M perspective on Abu Ghraib by Robert Davolt: "[...] their sloppy, stupid and juvenile antics give the art of sadomasochism a bad name. If they insist on making such awful, clumsy incursions into our territory, the least we can do is lend a little expertise." The expertise he offers includes advice on tops' responsibility. Also, a telling quote: "Some will justify any method of interrogation as long as it yields life-saving intelligence. Very well, except that in this case, no such vital information has been identified. There was reportedly little potential in these prisoners for the sort of overwhelming result that made it all worthwhile. The damage done by this scandal weighs against ... what? For the end to justify the means, there actually has to BE an end."
  • In the "so wrong it must be right" category, Echoart, a program to draw crude ASCII art in the results when someone pings your machine, assuming they're using Cisco's ping program or Nikhef ping.
  • And finally, a web site exposing the dark side of cicadas: Cicadaville.com, which reveals that contrary to what the television news has been telling us, cicadas actually eat human children, are often three feet tall, and can be altered to look like Ryan Seacrest. Be sure to check out the "anatomy of a cicada" diagram. (But what amused me most was the fact that they felt the need to include the disclaimer at the bottom of the page.)

And just as I was about to post this entry, a message on a mailing list arrived: A man who sent 850 million junk e-mails through accounts he opened with stolen identities was sentenced to up to seven years in prison on Thursday (AP) "Carmack told the judge he believed the case against him was overblown, saying there were no victims."

There are 12 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
 
posted by [identity profile] fiannaharpar.livejournal.com at 09:28am on 2004-05-28
I was amazingly touched by what Gwen's parents are trying to do for her. Thank you for sharing that link.
 
posted by [identity profile] vvalkyri.livejournal.com at 09:28am on 2004-05-28
I really love the picture. Look at the soldier's face. It's almost as though act of petting the kitten brings a mini vacation. I'm reminded of Ginmar's kitten..

Re the Robert Davolt article, I'd been intending on posting that one, too! Gkrikket linked to it, and I'd been intending on linking to it and a couple other articles as a "discussion redux" thread, given how it fits into some other discussions on my friendspage. May still do so :) I thought the repetition of 'don't fucking take pictures' was interesting, too.
ckd: small blue foam shark (Default)
posted by [personal profile] ckd at 09:48am on 2004-05-28
The HIV counter-virus reminds me of Norman Spinrad's Journals of the Plague Years, which I originally read in its Full Spectrum appearance.

There's a review of it at LambdaSF.
 
posted by [identity profile] merde.livejournal.com at 10:40am on 2004-05-28
She's transgender and she's Gwen.

i've been following the Gwen Araujo story since the beginning, and i'm also touched (and impressed) by how supportive her family has been to her, even after her murder.

but what i want to know is this: when did people stop having certain conditions and/or disorders (i don't want to categorize being transgendered as a disorder since it clearly isn't, but you'll see what i'm driving at in a minute) and start being them? they don't say "she's transgendered," they say "she's transgender." i constantly hear people saying "i'm ADD" instead of "i have ADD." i've yet to hear anyone say "i'm depression," but that's probably just because there isn't a snazzy acronym for it yet.

i'm not sure why, but this practice grates on my nerves like a rasp against a chalkboard. i keep wanting to say, "so, if i kill you, everyone else who has it will be cured?"

but anyway. is it laziness? is it ignorance? why must people torment me so?
 
posted by [identity profile] vvalkyri.livejournal.com at 10:56am on 2004-05-28
I think it's a self defnition thing. Not so sure it's a good thing, no.

And yes, it's touching that her parents are being so supportive, even after her death.
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 11:33am on 2004-05-28
I find it grating as well, and attribute it to laziness perhaps amplified by ignorance, but that's just a guess.

I consider "I'm ADD" to be idiomatic for "I have" or "I am a person with" (with the subtle subtext that it's become a part of one's identity, not merely a statement of diagnosis), just as "She was" is sometimes used idiomaticaly for "She said". But for some reason "She's transgender", despite being an identity issue, still grates ... like it's a statement of membership in a club (I've heard, "I'm SCA", or "I'm [name-of-school]", for example) instead of recognition of being in a category, if that makes any sense ... or that it's just the wrong part of speech, which is more grating to my ear even if it's a little less annoying overall than the other explanation.

I was quite tempted to tack on "[ed]" to the word when I posted it.
 
posted by [identity profile] merde.livejournal.com at 12:03pm on 2004-05-28
i do worry about the self-identification angle. as you say, it's almost like they're claiming membership in a club. it also seems to imply in some cases (although not with the 'transgender' issue, which is obviously an issue of identity) that the person has integrated their condition into their identity to an unhealthy degree. i knew a woman who'd been told by a psychologist that she was codependent -- and the way she talked about it, it was like that was some immutable thing over which she could never have any power. she said it the way someone else might say "i'm a quadriplegic." she seemed to have no awareness that this was something she could work through and conquer.

i mean, i'm very open about having depression. it's a huge issue in my day-to-day life, and chances are it will always be with me. but i don't incorporate it into my identity. it's more like a tapeworm. it's a parasite; it affects me, it's within me, but it's not part of me -- and i'll fight it with every fiber of my being until one of us dies.

as for the grammar angle, i can do nothing but bemoan the state of the American educational system. people can't spell, can't construct a coherent sentence, have no clue how to use apostrophes... and if the writing style of the average online teenager is any indication, in another 50 years proper spelling will have become as universally ignored as it was 500 years ago.
 
posted by [identity profile] cyan-blue.livejournal.com at 11:01am on 2004-05-28
I was really happy to hear about Gwen's mom seeking a legal name change for her.
cellio: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] cellio at 11:23am on 2004-05-28
I saw the Gwen story this morning and it touched me.

I love the kitten/soldier picture.

I wonder how much of the success in the spammer case is due to Earthlink, how much to New York, and how much to random goodness. I hope he's the first of thousands. And if he thinke there were no victims, he's either delusional or lying.
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 11:24am on 2004-05-28
[livejournal.com profile] force_of_will also wrote about this (http://www.livejournal.com/users/force_of_will/61908.html) today, and in addition to some thoughts on the potential for fascism, included links to additional coverage of the story:

http://www.livejournal.com/community/sos_usa/1447903.html
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2004_05_21.shtml#1085354422

which I'm just reading now.
 
posted by [identity profile] silmaril.livejournal.com at 11:52am on 2004-05-28
That soldier picture hurts my heart somewhere.

I... don't know.
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 12:10pm on 2004-05-28
*Hug* I experience multiple, conflicting reactions to it simultaneously when I glance at it, and a different set of reactions when I stop to ponder it. It's an odd response to a deceptively simple photo.

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