Amusing facts about the Mountain View Public Library

The Odyssey is filed under non-fiction. When I asked the girl at the checkout desk about this, she said “That’s weird. That’s, like, science fiction, right?”

The Adventures of Baron Munchausen are filed under fiction, under their author — Baron Munchausen.

The car manuals for Honda Civics are all filed under car manuals, but some years are under “Honda” and others under “Civic.”

The catalogue lists identical books under separate entries, and often multiple copies of the same book are filed in different sections of the library.

Is there a librarian in the house? Anywhere?

(Although to be fair: Apart from the total lack of organization, it’s a remarkably pleasant library. Very good places to sit and read or work.)

Published in: on August 21, 2002 at 23:50  Comments (4)  
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Well, that should have been obvious…

Simple LiveJournal hack: Add self to own friends list. This allows easy monitoring of comment threads spawned by one’s own postings, without having to pipe it all to e-mail.

I probably should have figured that out earlier.

(Besides, isn’t a certain section of the old Purity Test subheaded “I’m my own best friend!”?)

Published in: on August 21, 2002 at 15:26  Comments (10)  
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Plans finalized…

Well, looks like my travel plans to Israel are finally set. Leaving the 23rd of September and returning the 5th of October, which means I make it to my cousin Maia’s wedding and miss about the first week of the school year. Ah, it’s expendable. And it’ll be very good to see family again.

*sigh* There’s some very odd things about this trip. First, that I haven’t been back in so many years that I’m a very different person from who I was the last time there; it’s like meeting my family again. And second, that there’s a strong feeling that every encounter there may be the last — either because I may never return, or because several of the people there may no longer be there when I do. So many people from the older generation are beginning to show their years… and the situation there is always unstable. The stress of the past two years’ war has not been good for anyone.

Oh well. I plan to eat some damned good food while I’m there, and maybe spend some time wandering through the marketplace, haggling over rugs or antique copperworks or whatever, and sit on the beach, watching the sun set over the Mediterranean. If you squint hard enough, you can still see Phoenecian ships go by on the horizon.

Published in: on August 21, 2002 at 15:11  Comments (3)  
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How times have changed!

“The interesting thing about America is that she asks nothing for herself
except what she has a right to ask for humanity itself.”
— Woodrow Wilson

There is an interesting thought in this. The American Empire, for most of
its life, was ultimately based on a notion of spreading certain ideals —
democracy, free markets, an open marketplace of ideals — to the places
under its control. Not to say, of course, that it didn’t employ coercive
means to achieve this, but there was always a stated (and often followed)
intent to use the power of empire to spread the benefits of this way of
life to the world.

Yet in recent years — I’m thinking of the past two years in particular —
there has been a change in attitude, a stronger sense that America is
interested in its own well-being, end of message and off, and that it is
willing to sacrifice that of its peripheries without even a slight thought
to achieve this aim.

And the question I ask myself is, Can an empire which has always
depended for its coherence on the propagation of certain ideals survive
becoming a simple organ of its own survival? At what cost will we have
to hold the peripheries if they see that our goal is ultimately to beat them
down, to force them to obey our every order without concern for their
own situation and status?

The increasing centralization of power and draining of the peripheries
was one of the key transitions that moved Rome from an empire to an
unstable collection of warring states. If we are agreed that the American
Empire, at its height, was beneficial to its members, and that this (their
own ultimate complicity, unwilling only for short times, willing more often
than not when they realized the profits of joining) is what made the
administration of so far-flung a collection of states possible, then what
is this likely to lead to now?

Published in: on August 6, 2002 at 17:28  Comments (2)  
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Breakfast and the synthesis of opposites

Breakfast today was Horizon organic milk with Froot Loops. There is something wrong in this picture.

On the other hand, perhaps not. It can be interpreted as the visible synthesis of the organic and the unnatural, a symbolic first step in the ever-closer relationship between man and machine, and so it is a deeply relevant cultural commentary.

On the third hand, that sounds very pretentious. Perhaps the organic milk is slowly turning me into a postmodernist critic.

On the fourth hand, where did I get so many hands? That’s the side effect of eating Froot Loops.

Published in: on August 6, 2002 at 16:44  Comments (2)  
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Finally!

From the New York Times:

WASHINGTON, Aug. 2 — A federal judge ruled today that the government had no right to conceal the names of more than 1,000 people detained following the Sept. 11 attacks and ordered that their names be released within 15 days.

The ruling was a significant setback to the Bush administration’s policy of secret detentions of immigrants in connection with the investigation into the terrorist attacks.

Story here.

This is why a country needs an independent judiciary.

Published in: on August 2, 2002 at 14:44  Comments Off on Finally!  
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Random event…

Driving down the street a few minutes ago, I saw someone driving by who looked almost exactly like sajin, when he’s dressed as Dale.

I am now rather disturbed.

Published in: on July 26, 2002 at 12:12  Comments (4)  

Excellent day

Wow… just got back from a session of the Amaranth LARP, and it was fantastic. Thanks especially to Lori, for an excellent death for the Father. He finally got the martyrdom he was hoping for. (Most I’ve ever enjoyed having a character killed…)

(And in other news, yes, I’m finally back in town… trip was quite good. Feel much more relaxed)

Published in: on July 6, 2002 at 02:28  Comments Off on Excellent day  

News Items of the Day

Looks like today has been a good day for slightly-under-the-radar news stories, so I figured I may as well do a roundup.

Interesting developments in the Middle East

Published in: on June 21, 2002 at 15:39  Comments Off on News Items of the Day  
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Return to the Net

Well, prompted by jrpseudonym‘s recent posting, I suppose I ought to return to the land of the livejournal postings as well. My reason for not having posted lately is a bit different; as several of you have probably heard, there’s been drama in my life of late, of a particularly difficult nature. And the following journal entry will have nothing at all to do with that. What can I say? I’m just not the type to post this sort of thing. And honestly, anyone who’s reading this has probably already heard way, way too much about this anyway.

(more…)

Published in: on June 19, 2002 at 21:55  Comments (4)  
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