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25.12.06

Longest Suicide Note in History?

This factual, clearly written cost analysis of Vista's new content protection laws ("laws" isn't quite strong enough) concludes that hardware made to be Vista compliant will necessarily be much more expensive, slower, and far less reliable. Oh, and by the way, so obscured that no open-source OS will ever again see a new driver.

All to make absolutely sure you never see an unauthorized frame of HD or Blu-ray "premium content".

Glad the priorities are straight. Read it and weep.

http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/pubs/vista_cost.txt



P.S. Oh yes, if you use an Intel Mac or even a 386-based Sun or Linux box, you'll still have to use this deliberately crippled hardware.

Commentary on this on Slashdot and other places:

http://www.theinquirer.net/default.aspx?article=36570
http://it.slashdot.org/it/06/12/25/2034238.shtml

19.12.06

Why Socialists Must Side with Islamic Fundamentalism

– The Typical yet Illuminating Case of Jimmy “Class-Uprising” Carter

Jimmy Carter seems like a gentle man. Gentle as a wheeze. But the response to his recent “Palestine Peace Not Apartheid” book hasn’t been. It’s been anything but gentle. It’s been outrage.

Some now say he’s anti-semitic. Which is unwarranted, and worse – irrelevant. The issues contested concern Israel – and Islamic fundamentalism. Not Judaism. Not the Jewish – or Masonic or Templar or Protestant – conspiracy. Not any more. Since the creation of Israel, it’s what goes on in the Middle-East getting voted most likely to enflame Armageddon.

Carter is wrong, of course. That’s clear the moment we concede Israel’s entitled to defend herself. Right? However defined, apartheid is offensive – and thereby can’t conceivably be practiced in self-defence.

Concrete example: the Israeli security fence. Some call it the apartheid wall. But, of course, they’re absurd calling it that. Since anything apartheid is offensive. Like, the Berlin Wall was an apartheid wall. Insofar it unjustly imprisoned a population, it was highly offensive. The Great Wall of China, diametrically contrary, was no apartheid wall. Insofar it excluded violent invading, it was defensive. Not offensive. Not so long as we believe China was entitled to defend herself.

If China was entitled to defend herself then the Great Wall of China wasn’t offensive. It was great. It was terrific. Take a total basket to get offended by self-defence. Regardless Israeli or Chinese.

The Israeli security fence is like the Great Wall of China – and nothing like the Berlin Wall. It has proven tremendous for defence. Stopping suicide bombing, anyhow. Not so great stopping rockets. Then again, neither would be the Great Wall of China. But never mind that Islam can’t stop shooting at Israel. Point is, the Israeli security fence proved effective in defence. It was particularly designed for defending. At great expense. With high hopes.

So it’s silly – or clumsy – calling the Israeli security fence an apartheid wall. Equally silly as claiming Israel an apartheid state.

Carter says he defines apartheid as the “forced separation of two peoples in the same territory with one of the groups dominating or controlling the other.” Well, there’s no doubt shooting at people often involves dominance issues. But where’s the offence in building a fence instead of shooting back right away? Where’s the offence in trying to force separation? Who goes into a war zone, gets offended there’s no casual mingling with the enemy, and charges apartheid? Only a total basket.

That’s what the outrage is about. That’s why some say he’s anti-semitic. Not because Carter’s wrong – after all, who isn’t? Nope. That’s not why. It’s because he comes across like a basket case. And he couldn’t possibly be such a total basket. No way. He was president of the United States.

Ayup. Newsflash. There may be another basket in the Oval Office right now. Maybe. It’s conceivable.

Different baskets. But both a bit weak. A tad bewildered. Prone to mishandling. And ideologically, sharing that charming, off-the-ranch, gung-ho naïveté.

It’s ideological naïveté that baskets Carter. Particularly, in his case, Marxism. Closet Marxism, since he doesn’t flaunt it. Doesn’t even admit it, perhaps. Yet, nonetheless flamboyant in his charging Israeli apartheid.

It would certainly explain why Carter sounds so lost in his basket. As a closet Marxist, he’d believe all conflict rooted in class struggling over the means of production. Struggling by the exploiting class – rich, power elites, etc. – to exclude the exploited from means of production; and struggling by the exploited classes – poor so thoroughly victimized that any getting ahead demands radical militant action – to liberate and redistribute the means of production from exploiters

As far as Carter would be concerned, were he a closet Marxist, believing anything different could only mean wishful thinking. Believing anything else could only be an opiate. An ideology. Not real. While that which causes conflict in history must be real. Tangible. Material. Namely: the disparity between rich and poor. Between exploiters and exploited. For any Marxist, whether closeted or not, conflict in human history must be expressive of class struggling over means of production. And class struggling must originate from material causes – from material exploitation. Any believing otherwise – i.e., that struggling may be rooted in ideology rather than materiality – is pipe dreaming.

Matter of fact, Marxists are mostly wrong. By far most conflict in history is ideological – not economic. Rich and poor of one ideology struggle alike together – against those of conflicting ideologies. Precisely how Islamic fundamentalist culture – in the sphere of which subsist the wealthiest states on the planet – converges against infidels. Armageddon is far more likely to spark from even minor ideological misunderstanding – i.e., Muhammad cartoons – than from struggling for control of monopoly oil pricing. Ideology precedes economics as sunlight precedes vegetation – and as vegetation precedes cultivation. Ideology binds us together – and tears us apart – prior the possibility of economics. There is no possibility of society, even – far less so economics – absent ideological fabric binding us together. Marxists are mostly wrong, in fact. But that’s not the point.

Aside from Marxists being wrong. The point is they can’t even conceive being wrong. For them, everything – struggling included – must originate in material causes. There’s no believing otherwise, for them. Conflict must be materially rooted.

It’s been called (not only) scientific materialism: that conflict arises only by material causes – and that nothing, including conflict, arises for ideological reasons. Marxists can’t conceive otherwise.

That’s the point. Scientific materialism is an ideology. And that scientific materialist ideology can’t conceivably be wrong to those adhering it, that it can’t be refuted, means that scientific materialism isn’t scientific. It’s as if someone were to declare all crows black – and then deny the evidence on being presented a white crow. “I just told you all crows are black – so, since the bird you’re showing me is white, it’s no crow.” Fine. Be like that. But let’s get real. That’s totally not being scientific. That’s being dogmatic.

Marxists are materialist by ideological dogma. They dismiss ideology from all accounting of human history. And, far as they’re concerned, that’s no self-refuting contradiction. Nope. That’s being scientific.

But never mind how they contradict themselves. Nevermind that historical impact – i.e., of Marxism, for instance – is animated primarily by ideology. The point is they can’t admit, or even conceive, that they’re being dogmatic. Not scientific. Particularly and precisely not scientific.

And that’s the whole point. If Marxist, Carter is a dogmatic materialist. If Marxist then he can’t conceive conflict as other than class struggling over means of production. So silly. If Marxist, that would make Carter a basket-case – a dupe – when it comes to the Middle East.

We’re familiar with some Marxist silliness. For instance, those obsessed with struggling over means of production can’t comprehend the meaning of productivity. Like even a voluntary employment relationship. To any dogmatic materialist of Marxist variety, it isn’t voluntary. It isn’t collaborative. Rather, since the employer profits from the employee’s labour, the employer necessarily belongs to an economic class inimical to that of the employee. The employer is exploiting the employee. And the longer such exploitation continues, the worse it will get. Inevitably, whether sooner or later, the employee will have no recourse but to rise up and put an end to it. A violent end – since the exploiting leech isn’t gon’na let go economic blood-sucking otherwise.

We’re familiar with this aspect of Marxist dogmatic materialism. We’ve seen what went on behind iron curtains the past hundred years. The terminal, totalitarian wreck of the marketplace. We know about it – even if we don’t fully understand how inevitable it is.

Absolutely inevitable. There’s no voluntary collaborating behind iron curtains. There’s no voluntary agreeing – such as private employment – permitted. Since, according to Marxist dogmatic materialism, such would constitute endorsing exploitation. Thus, collaborative labour must be managed and enforced by authority – more often than not at gunpoint. At gunpoint in order to ensure exploitation – i.e., voluntary collaboration such as in standard private employment – is extirpated. But what gets extirpated, of course, is everything voluntary. Including voluntary work. Eventually, no work remains voluntary. All work is at gunpoint. If not at gunpoint – well, they pretend to pay us, we pretend to work.

We’re familiar with this aspect – that productivity has no meaning for dogmatic materialists obsessing the means of production. There’s other aspects, though – some with which we aren’t familiar. Particularly, there’s another aspect worth familiarizing – to help appreciate where closet Marxists like Carter are coming from. And why they come across like such baskets when it comes to the Middle East and Islamic fundamentalism.

It is this. Marxist dogmatic materialists can’t conceive conflict as genuine unless rooted in economic class struggling. There’s no conceiving genuine conflict rooted in ideological dispute, religious intolerance, cultures clashing. No way. No conceivable way. Not genuine conflict. Merely noise and confusion under the influence of ideological, religious or cultural opiates. Alternately, should conflict prove unavoidably genuine, then it must be rooted in real economic class struggling. No conceivable way for genuine conflict to root and emerge from opiates like ideology, religion or culture.

It comes down to this. If Carter is a Marxist then he can’t conceive there being genuine conflict resulting from clashes of culture and cultural principles. Hence, Islamic shootings at Israelis constitute mere noise and confusion under the influence of ideological, religious or cultural opiates. So Israelis must stop shooting back, for crying out loud. They must stop the confusion. Get serious about mingling with and talking to the Muslims. C’mon, tear down that offensive apartheid wall already. You know there’s no real conflict. There’s no defensive justification for that wall. Stop provoking! There’s no conflict. It’s just some noise, smoke and confusion. Get together, mingle, have something to eat, straighten out and get down to economic brass tacks. No? The conflict is real? Those bodies are actually dead? Not dug up for propaganda? You’re not just provoking? Kidding around? Too much opium? No? Dang. Ok. Alright. But look. If the conflict is for real, if the shooting is genuine, then no way does real conflict and genuine shooting emerge from opiates like ideology, religion or culture. No way. If the shooting’s for real, then it must result from real class struggling. If so, fine. Stop shooting back and get serious about mingling with and talking to Muslims. Stop over-reacting! You’re not going to stop them shooting with a wall. There’s no defensive justification for walls. Tear down all apartheid walls! Talk! Mingle! Find out the real, the material causes. Find out how you’ve exploited them – and get to rectifying your exploitation. If you didn’t mean to exploit Islam then stop shooting back, tear down the apartheid wall, get out of those military uniforms and wave your white flags! Talk. Mingle, damn you, just mingle. Tell them you didn’t mean to and you’ll pay whatever it takes to make it up! Stop over-reacting! Just mingle with Islam, already.

That’s where it’s at with Marxist dogma. Either Israeli defence is in provocation – false and intended to perpetuate the sham of ideological conflict. Or the conflict is materially real and Israeli defence, albeit genuine, is in utterly confused over-reaction – hopeless when it comes to addressing and resolving material root causes. Either way, Israeli defence is dismissed. Either way, Israel is deemed to be engaging in forced separation for no good reason. And hey – that’s apartheid, damn it. Forced separation for whatever no-good reason. So, either way, Marxists can’t help getting offended by Israel. It’s not that Marxists agree with Islamic fundamentalists that Israel should hurry up and die already. They just don’t get why Israel persists either over-reacting or provoking – as if entitled to self-defence. As if Israeli self-defence could conceivably be reasonable or justified.

That’s why Carter is offended. That’s why he charges apartheid. He ain’t any kind of bad semitist. He’s just Marxist. And if he got out of the closet about his Marxism more often, people would get it. He wouldn’t require cluster-huddling with rabbis to prove what a good semitist he is.

12.12.06

Christmas Raises for Politicians

*sigh* Our elected officials at Queen's Park have decided to give themselves a 31% pay raise. Of course, it was for a truly altruistic reason. They want to attract better people into politics, and I suppose that with the provincial election a few short months away, it seems reasonable. NOT!

This is just greed and ego, probably mostly ego. It's about being paid comparable to their colleagues in Ottawa, just like Toronto city council gave themselves a raise to be paid comparable to their colleagues in the 905. They don't need the money, but their egos couldn't take the fact that someone else doing about the same job as them was making more money, as if somehow money was the only important determination of their worth.

Even in the corporate world, the reality is setting in that even upper management must earn their keep. Bonuses are tied to measureable goals, not because someone else at another corporation makes more money. But what exactly have the politicians at Queen's Park and Nathan Philips Square done to earn their salary increases?

The most noteworthy thing that they've done at Queen's Park is the strengthening of the current law again mortgage fraud, but even then, the government had to be shamed into it with a private member's bill that was better, and as far as the Liberals are letting on, we are still in a deficit situation because of the "fiscal imbalance".

As for the guys and gals at city hall, well, hmmm, they bought a garbage dump, sole sourced a contract for TTC vehicles, sold our light posts to Hydro, and generally showed no real leadership in attempting to solve this city's problems.

How does any of that equate to these insane raises? Oh, and the argument that more money will attract better people into politics? The ones who have the leadership necessary to make government better could probably get much higher paying jobs in the private sector, don't have to deal with the glaring spotlight of public life, and realize that their worth is not measured by how much money they make, but by what they've accomplished.

Let's face it, John Tory didn't get into politics because Rogers wasn't paying him enough.

5.12.06

Why is This Man Smirking?

The Daily Telegraph has an interesting story from "senior officials" in the Pakistani government that NATO give up their struggle with the "Taliban" and go home, allowing a coalition government to take control, one probably without Karzai.
Western ministers have been stunned. "Kasuri is basically asking Nato to surrender and to negotiate with the Taliban," said one Western official who met the minister recently.

The "Taliban" are Pakistan's men. Musharaf, the so-called president of Pakistan, a dictator and no democrat, has great ambitions and taking control of the border regions of Afghanistan would fulfill an old Pakistani dream. One almost as fecund as controlling Kashmir.
The driving forces that created the catastrophe of 9/11 originated in Pakistan. The madrassas provided the philosophical and religious viewpoint that encouraged martyrdom and jihad and the government of Pakistan has not only tolerated them, but has encouraged this extremism.
In typical fashion, when looking for the enemies that could be blamed for the WTC disaster the United States ignored the country from which most of the immediate perpetrators originated (Saudi Arabia) and where the guidance originated, and attacked the weakest and least involved of the counties, Afghanistan.
Why, in his interview with the CBC was Musharef smirking? First because he holds all journalists in contempt. Second because he knows he's put one over on us.

3.12.06

writing dyslexia

Interesting thing happened last night.

I went to the celebration party for the National Novel Writing Month Toronto group. There were about 60 people there, most of whom had done this, including me. The goal was 50k in a month! So lots of quantity. I didn't go the quantity route, though I learned to speed up some. About 10 people read short excerpts, including me.

I read the first segment of the novel. Out loud. And something was different. Dyslexia was missing. When I read aloud (or speak), I always switch the words around, not rewriting, but rather accidental switches, even spoonerisms. You may have noticed this in me or others. It happened a lot last week at a friend's play reading evening. I switched so much of the written dialogue around without being able to stop it. Not good for a play reading, though the gist was always correct.

This didn't happen reading my excerpt last night. There was this decidedly warm comfort seeing my words on the printed page. They were in the right order, whatever that means. I read them, out loud, without any switches, as if in writing I'd made them work right.

I don't know what that means-how does the disability work? But... now I suspect whatever it is has been built in to my writing style. Like a red green colour blind person doing beautiful paintings without ever using any reds. So when he (most red green colour blind people are actually men) looks at the painting later, there'd be a relaxing lack of colour confusion in the work.

It was like that for me. The words were in the right order, and it felt so nice. I wish everyone wrote like that! I'm writing stuff I can't spoonerize.

I wonder what that says!

Peter responds:

That's.. .. significant. Significant to a functional theory of cognition. And you might be right. You might have used all and only linguistic ingredients functional for you.

Hmmmm. Maybe not about cognition - maybe only about cue discrimination. Still, significant, and some would say cue discrimination is an aspect of cognition...

Carolyn responds:
Yes.

I experienced, so this is totally subjective, something more. I felt my brain searching for ways to spoonerize. I felt it. Became really aware while reading the excerpt. Aware of the autosearching happening and failing.

I felt the duslexic processing fail. Not that dyslexic processing didn't try to intercede, but that it tried and failed. It wasn't a conscious effort, trying or failing. But I was aware of it happening, unlike when it succeeds in happening. When it succeeds, sometimes I get an uncomfortable feeling, without knowing why. Very fascinating experience.

I suspect there's a solution to the dyslexia here somehow, not a cure, but perhaps a coping strategy. Not the 'only read what I wrote from scratch' kind of solution. That's very limiting. Rather something like practicing with my own writing to build the awareness muscle. Practice without the dyslexic results triggering, learn what that feels like, and then exercise with other material. Learn to avoid the dyslexic process, or even perhaps take control of it. Like removing one's native accent.

I'm rather excited.

So is that cue + cognition, a learned bad behaviour, ... ?

Timed Writing

Based on the Wikipedia entry for NaNoWriMo:

Edit a novel: Those who wish to spend time editing and polishing the stories composed during NaNoWriMo may choose to follow it up in March with NaNoEdMo, or National Novel Editing Month.

Life-cycle novel management: NaNoPubYe is a similar group that seeks to have a novel published in a year, starting with NaNoWriMo in November and continuing through the editing and publishing process through the remaining 11 months. NaNoWriYe runs for a full year with winners writing between 50,000 and 3,000,000 words.

Finish that novel: NaNoFiMo, National Novel Finishing Month, will take place in December.

Write your novel in July: JulNoWriMo has its third year of participants in 2007. There are two communities for writing a novel in January, a Livejournal community and a forum-based website which are loosely affiliated but not the same.

Other timed writing communities:

  • Book in a Week
  • Mad Challenge alternating between a novel in a month and other challenges.
  • A non-novel writing spin-off is NaBloPoMo, National Blog Posting Month, which also occurs annually in November.
  • Script Frenzy is a scriptwriting spinoff, for June of 2007.
  • Naplwrimo (National Playwriting Month) encourages its members to finish an existing script or complete a new one in the month of November.
  • NaNoMangO occurs twice a year, once in November and once in July, and challenges artists to draw thirty pages of a comic in a month.
  • NaNoArtMo in January encourages participants to complete ten different art projects in a month.