2010年6月17日木曜日

Wednesday Web Work

We saw two videos today, about after school arms clubs. What types of loopholes are there in Japan, and what type of activities would be beneficial to society?
Three came to me: the population problem and how foreigners are treated in Japan,
the nuclear reactor problem in Japan, and the food problem.
How can we make a difference? is it possible to tie up with Amnesty or some other group like that?
Another thing: the people in the video were not making any argument, but just pointing out the flaws. In our classes, we don't do that, we just compete to make a better argument and then discuss the relative merits and demerits. .
(another reason why i like agriculture: YOU have to DO it)
We then learned how to set up a website. I hope to make something interesting.
And finally the topic i was avoiding all along, the fact that it was our last class.
This class was one where i never felt any apprehension when going to class, and this thanks to rab and everybody in CB, Yay!hope to have fun during the barbecue!

Tuesday- what would you take to a desert island?

OK, so Rab asked us what we would take to a desert island (12 items)
Personally, i wanted to get rid of relying on Oil and machinery but i failed to get my point across.
I think that there isn't any need for Man to hunt animals, especially where food is supposed to grow abundantly on plants. is it something hardwired into men that we instinctively want to create a situation where everything is to our advantage? ( in this case, conservation of energy by burning fuels)
I read the Swiss Family Robinson when i was small and wanted to grow up to be like them. However, the family had a whole ship at their disposal. As if that wasn't good enough, the ship was loaded with stuff required for inhabiting a new island.
I feel that a diary set is enough for entertainment, by the way. Its one of the activities that is unique to humanity, the ability to record events in such a way that many people can learn of it.

Monday PWT

The PWT is so boring....
i mean they could have asked more interesting questions. The questions are so predictable...
Nothing much to note here, except that i chose to answer the second question.
i hear rumors that just being present for the PWT is enough to guarantee a pass mark.

2010年6月14日月曜日

Friday's Class

We had our last class in the computer rooms on Friday.
We saw many videos used by people to get their message across, and saw a lot of them using humour as a weapon. In contrast to the grimmer Earthlings, i think that more people can watch these videos. However, the humour also kind of numbs the senses to the gravity of the situation. I think that both serious and humorous videos have to be seen..... in the end, (like in yuuji's blog) it depends on what the person watching the video wants to do.
I read tomoaki's rant against the people who want his medical certificate. What's the bottom line ?
was tomoaki sick or not? If he wasn't sick, then the system has succeeded in finding him out, hasn't it? I thnk that such generalisation is self-defeating to say the least.

2010年6月10日木曜日

Wednesday: debate

I was wrong about my thinking that i was successful at debating.... Rab totally destroyed all of us.
The way he managed to outfox us reminded me of a slippery eel. i would really like see rab debating rab if you know what i mean.
Do debates ultimately have any real social value? I think this brings up ghosts of Nisbett.

i used to stay in a dormitory in high school, and we often had debates about what to do about our policies ( it was a self-governing dorm) . When i was dorm president, i was what you might call conservative reformer. I kept jougeikankei in place , but i emphasised the responsiblity of the seniors more than my predecessors. The system worked well because everybody trusted me as the dorm pres. the next term, the new dorm pres ( my classmate) was a radical. He involved the students in a debate about jougeikankei . after lengthy debates, i lost and jougeikankei was abolished, at least experimentally. Instead of the authority of seniors, we depended on everyone's good will for the dorm to function. I had pointed out that the pressure on everyone to perform their duties would dramatically decrease, while my friend said that it was better to rely on everybody's conscience to provide the pressure. Naturally, everybody wants to be the master of their own fate, so i failed to convince.
Ultimately, however, we admitted to certain failures in the new system, but this was after we graduated from the high school.

The bottomline is that i am a bad debater, and i want to improve, so i want rab to teach us about debates and convincing arguments.

Tuesday political compass

Today we explored the political inclinations of Hemingway, and the effect it had on his writing.
Rab told us about the Political Compass, and i visited the site. By the way, i was close to gandhi in my political views. Rab made some mistakes when placing the personalities on the compass in class, and it might be a good idea to check it out yourself!
We then had a debate about the best interpretation of Hemingway's book. I always get hot and flustered in such situations, but i think i managed to hold my ground.......

Monday- Hemingway's nature

On Monday, we did work on Hemingway. The discussion somehow wound up on the topic of Hemingway's view of nature, and then moved onto the ethics of eating animals and the rights of animals in general. I felt that we can't defend our reasons for eating meat, and it just comes down to a matter of taste. Advances in science mean that we do not need to depend on eating animals for our nutritional needs, and this reduces the argument to our values.
Rab recommended the video ' earthlings' , and i saw the first fifteen minutes on freedocumentaries
and i understand what rab meant when he said that we would be thankful for the poor picture quality. It was extremely depressing. But it is our duty to know.
By the way, there is a farmer in america called Joel Salatin who raises animals on his farms and kills them in a glass abbatoir( literally). He emphasises the consumer's duty to know where his food comes from and allows people to personally process their own chicken. So what? you might say but i think it will lead t0 lower consumption of meat.
Salatin's farm is interesting, you might want to google him.

2010年6月7日月曜日

In saturday's Japan Times, i read an article about hookworms and the role they might play in protecting us from allergies.http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2010/may/23/parasitic-hookworm-jasper-lawrence-tim-adams
It sounds incredible, but i don't know if its true or not..... can anyone help point out the fallacies in this argument? This intriguing article claims that we need parasitic worms to help with our bodily functions. I have a gut feeling that this is true ( no pun intended). After suffering from an inflammatory attack myself which doctors failed to properly diagnose, i am very interested in these alternatives.

The Early Bird....

I just finished writing an essay for another of my courses ( environmental ethics and religion). We use a software called turnitin which prevents plagiarism. While the teacher has access to the information regarding the level of plagiarism (uncited works), the students do not have access to the authenticity check and therefore have no information regarding the amount of information requiring citations. What should we do to right this unbalance? Tada... we use SentenceWorks!
however, i didn't have any citation problems so i think i have to go to the library to find some sources......
On Friday, Rab reviewed our essays and we had time to gather our thoughts and take our essays to the next level. I totally forgot to use the Portfolio which allows us to construct the essay more logically....thankfully, Miki send me hers and i remembered the portfolio.

On Friday, i saw a program about a Chinese village, and then a documentary featuring the propaganda of the North Korean regime. In the documentary about the village, the main focus is on water availability. It detailed the difference between two houses, which, though only ten metres apart, have very different water in their wells. One house, having sweet water, was very prosperous, while the other, which had very bitter( high salt concentrations) water, had many health complications and were barely able to eke out a living. Seeing how water affects people is something that Japanese do not normally see. It also reminds me of the unfairness of the world- people with access to good resources almost always end up misusing them, and then say,' We have no aim in life'.

2010年6月3日木曜日

Epilogue: The End of Psychology or The Clash of Mentalities

The last chapter raises the nature versus nurture argument , and ends up swinging it into the nurture side of the argument. So, i think that there will neither be a clash of mentalities or the end of Psychology, but rather, a mix of eastern and western cultures, the kind that exist in the artificial environments of cities. Because, cities around the world are essentially the same. It is impossible for Man made concrete jungles to have special characteristics so extreme that they would require different cultures for optimum living conditions. I mean, if you want food, for example, you take out your wallet and find a shop. Period. No need for specialized hunting techniques, no need for different rituals to prepare the food. And no variety, no skills are required. Its a good survival strategy in the short run, but not so in the longer run.

2010年6月2日水曜日

debito arudou

Tuesday, June 1, 2010 THE JAPAN TIMES

JUST BE CAUSE

Futenma is undermining Japanese democracy


Times are tough for the Hatoyama Cabinet. It's had to backtrack on several campaign promises. Its approval ratings have plummeted to around 20 percent. And that old bone of contention — what to do about American military bases on Japanese soil — has resurfaced again.

The Okinawa Futenma base relocation issue is complicated, and Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama has devoted too much time to a battle he simply cannot win. If the American troops stay as is, Okinawan protests will continue and rifts within the Cabinet will grow. If the troops are moved within Japan, excessive media attention will follow and generate more anti-Hatoyama and anti-American sentiment. If the troops leave Japan entirely, people will grumble about losing American money.

So let's ask the essential question: Why are U.S. bases still in Japan?

One reason is inertia. America invaded Okinawa in 1945, and the bases essentially remain as spoils of war. Even after Okinawa's return to Japan in 1972, one-sixth of Okinawa is technically still occupied, hosting 75 percent of America's military presence in Japan. We also have the knock-on effects of Okinawan dependency on the bases (I consider it a form of "economic alcoholism"), and generations of American entrenchment lending legitimacy to the status quo.

Another reason is Cold War ideology. We hear arguments about an unsinkable aircraft carrier (as if Okinawa is someplace kept shipshape for American use), a bulwark against a pugilistic North Korea or a rising China (as if the DPRK has the means or China has the interest to invade, especially given other U.S. installations in, say, South Korea or Guam). But under Cold War logic including "deterrence" and "mutually assured destruction," the wolf is always at the door; woe betide anyone who lets their guard down and jeopardizes regional security.

Then there's the American military's impressive job of preying on that insecurity. According to scholar Chalmers Johnson, as of 2005 there were 737 American military bases outside the U.S. (an actual increase since the Cold War ended) and 2.5 million U.S. military personnel serving worldwide. What happened to the "peace dividend" promised two decades ago after the fall of the Berlin Wall? Part of it sunk into places like Okinawa.

But one more reason demonstrates an underlying arrogance within the American government: "keeping the genie in the bottle" — the argument that Japan also needs to be deterred, from remilitarizing. The U.S. military's attitude seems to be that they are here as a favor to us.

Some favor. As history shows, once the Americans set up a base abroad, they don't leave. They generally have to lose a war (as in Vietnam), have no choice (as in the eruption of Pinatubo in the Philippines), or be booted out by a dictator (as in Uzbekistan). Arguments about regional balances of power are wool over the eyes. Never mind issues of national sovereignty — the demands of American empire require that military power be stationed abroad. Lump it, locals.

But in this case there's a new complication: The Futenma issue is weakening Japan's government.

Hatoyama has missed several deadlines for a resolution (while the American military has stalled negotiations for years without reprisal), enabling detractors to portray him as indecisive. He's had to visit Okinawa multiple times to listen to locals and explain. Meanwhile, the opposition Liberal Democratic Party claims Hatoyama is reneging on a promise (which is spoon-bitingly hypocritical, given the five decades the LDP completely ignored Okinawa, and the fact that Hatoyama has basically accepted an accord concluded by the LDP themselves in 2006). And now, with Mizuho Fukushima's resignation from the Cabinet, the coalition government is in jeopardy.

Futenma is taking valuable time away from other policies that concern Japan, such as corruption and unaccountability, growing domestic economic inequality, crippling public debts, and our future in the world as an aging society.

As the momentum ebbs from his administration, Hatoyama is in a no-win situation. But remember who put him there. If America really is the world's leading promoter of democracy, it should consider how it is undermining Japan's political development. After nearly 60 years of corrupt one-party rule, Japan finally has a fledgling two-party system. Yet that is withering on the vine thanks to American geopolitical manipulation.

We keep hearing how Japan's noncooperation will weaken precious U.S.-Japan ties. But those ties have long been a leash — one the U.S., aware of how susceptible risk-averse Japan is to "separation anxiety," yanks at whim. The "threatened bilateral relationship" claim is disingenuous — the U.S. is more concerned with bolstering its military-industrial complex than with Asia's regional stability.

In sum, it's less a matter of Japan wanting the U.S. bases to stay, more a matter of the U.S. bases not wanting to leave. Japan is a sovereign country, so the Japanese government has the final say. If that means U.S. forces relocating or even leaving completely, the U.S. should respectfully do so without complaint, not demand Japan find someplace else for them to go. That is not Japan's job.

Yet our politicians have worked hard for decades to represent the U.S. government's interests to the Japanese public. Why? Because they always have.

The time has come to stop being prisoners of history. World War II and the Cold War are long over.

That's why this columnist says: Never mind Futenma. All U.S. bases should be withdrawn from Japanese soil, period. Anachronisms, the bases have not only created conflicts of interest and interfered with Japan's sovereignty, they are now incapacitating our government. Japan should slip the collar of U.S. encampments and consider a future under a less dependent, more equal relationship with the U.S.

is this plagiarism? im not sure but this is an article by arudou... i know that most people don't follow links so i copypasted.

Tuesday

today was a sort of free class.... i researched about Hemingway. I like his Iceberg theory, but i feel that he would have to exercise considerable restraint, stating only what he feels is necessary.
However, i feel that this method is very successful because it appeals to the reader' ego: it allows the reader to form his own interpretation of the story. no wonder he won the Nobel Prize!

i also asked rab for help with my application for a scholarship. He readily agreed...... i wish i had met Rab before i entered ICU, when i was writing my application for the PeaceBell scholarship....how much life would have been better. What made my blood really boil is that one of my friends, i think he is a sadistic person, i told him of my bad fortune with the Peacebell and he says that he happens to have a peacebell scholarship, though he doesn't have any financial problems......f$#k f@$K f#$k
so i really really really need to get this loan. to at least get some peace of mind, and not be darkly muttering to myself whenever my 'friend' is around.
thats the problem with money, its all too easy to get caught up with it. I really admire my parents because they don't allow money to define their lives. They support my wish to be involved in agriculture. Sometimes i wish that my father had stopped me and said, nonsense, you can't go to Japan, we can't afford it,i'll educate you instead...... hah... no use lamenting about things past.


this is what happens when rab doesn't conduct classes... skeletons tumble out of the closet to fill the void.( wry laugh .... creases should form around your mouth)







5/31 politics

We learned what each of us was doing for their essays. But before that, we had a discussion about participation in politics. We learned that politicians cater to the needs of the majority of voters, not to the majority of citizens. rab drew an important difference between voter and citizen.
So, if i were a politician, whose votes would i prey on? well, i think i would prey on the elderly in Japan, appealing to their conservative values and subsidizing health-care for elderly citizens....
but i think i would hate myself if i did that........
oh, i almost forgot! we were told the results of our self-assessment on the PWT tests.
turns out we were way out of touch with the teacher who graded the paper before us! sorry to rab..
I just wondered about the tests... is it better to favour better typers or better hand-writers?
i mean, i am more comfortable using pen and paper than i am using computers... and the PWT confers an advantage to me because i can write more than my friends in the given amount of time.
In high school, where everything was done with pen and paper, i suffered a serious disadvantage because 1. i can' t recall Kanji well enough to write them, making my answers full of kana 2. i couldn't write fast enough; never managed to answer all the questions ( my grades weere good because i wrote terse answers, and had a high accuracy rate- i wrote the correct answers)
though the teachers allowed me to use a dictionary, they didn't allow me extra time.
In ICU too, i face abit of a disadvantage because i am not able to type fast, so when it comes to typing, i am at a disadvantage.
Is it democratic to confer advantage to the good (hand )writer or the good typist, or does it simply not matter?