Destruction in Gaza
I won't pretend to know all the circumstances regarding this carnage. I have read some articles online detailing why Israel is doing what it's doing. I don't know who's right and who's wrong, because I don't think things like this are ever as clear cut as it seems. War is not a tangible concept to me, nor do I think it is to most people in America who live in relatively peaceful and comfortable lifestyles.
The following are pictures from a website I found on the internet, showing what's going on in Gaza. To be honest, I still have yet to fully process what's going on in the pictures. One commenter said it best when he wrote: "This is getting dealt with by the "fiction" section of my brain; I have no real life context in which I can understand this." It is a shame that our tax dollars are helping to fund this.
The following pictures were taken from this site. Consider yourself warned, because the pictures are very graphic.

Burned baby torn in half

No living thing is safe in Gaza

Gazan buried alive in his home

What would you do?

Entire streets reduced to rubble


Firemen pause to hose the blood off the streets


Children climb through the rubble

Bullet holes

An entire street bombed out


Pulling survivors from bombed out buildings


Buried alive

A women steps through the front door of what used to be her house

Entire apartment blocks bombed out

Mother and child in rubble

Had enough yet? Like I said earlier, I'm not sure which side is right and which is wrong in this situation. Absolutes don't exist here. But this NYC Pro-Israel crowd seems to believe this is the absolute right thing to do, and they are celebrating:
Music
Everyone in the world has their own idea of what "good music" is. Some attribute good music to a certain time period or a particular genre. I've noticed that taste in music varies widely and no two people have the same exact taste in music, which is not suprising of course. What bothers me though is that many people have very limited taste in music and only stay in their comfort zone. I guess what each person like is his or her own prerogative, but I think it's a shame if a person doesn't expand their taste and learn to appreciate all different types of music.
I don't mean to say that I'm this worldly music guy who loves everything, but I do think over time I've developed an appreciation for many different genres of music. I don't think my taste in music is obscure either, since I really only like the popular stuff for every genre of music I listen to. Some stuff I got into really late, but the key was to be open minded about it. I also don't mean to imply that I listen to everything. Country doesn't do it for me (except for Rascal Flatts, but are they really country?) and I still can't wrap my head around jazz despite many attempts. And sometimes I might like some artists in a genre, but it doesn't mean I like all artists in that genre.
I think I might be alone on this when I say that I don't really pay attention to lyrics though. It's not like I don't hear it, but lyrics have never struck a chord in me. As far as vocals go, I just go by how it sounds. How it sounds is more important to me than what the lyrics actually mean. A little shallow, I know.
I think I can characterize my taste pretty easily. A song that makes you feel some type of emotion, whether upbeat, happy, angry or sad, is a good song. A song that makes you want to sing or dance is a good song. This last part is important. If a song starts playing and I feel compelled to sing aloud, it must be a good song (like this song and this song).
Anyway, right now I'm stuck on some trance/house/freestyle binge . . .
Collage - I'll Be Loving You
Rockell - In A Dream
Lil Suzy - Take Me In Your Arms
Canine Rant

This picture was taken with my phone, so excuse the poor quality. The big one on the bottom is my dog, Bobo. He just turned 2 in October. After 2 years, there are still some things about him that drive me crazy. For one, he is a moody piece of shit sometimes. There would be months on end where he'd be fine with doing his thing outdoors, but out of the blue he'd decide to pee in the same spot indoors for weeks on end. He stopped doing that about 2 months ago, and I hope this time it's permanent.
I'm not sure what's up with him now, but the new thing with him seems to be disdain for the food I give him. He hates eating his food, and sometimes he will only eat it if we force him to eat it. What kind of dog has to be told to eat his food? I have to stand over him and watch him sometimes to make sure he finishes.
He's also the LAZIEST freaking dog in the world when he's indoors. He can literally sit on the couch for the entire day, doing nothing. There have been times where I would come home and expect to be greeted by the guy, only to open the door and see him just chilling on the couch. He's on and off with that though. Some days he'll run up to you and wag his tail like he hasn't seen you in a week, other days he sits on the couch looking like he's stoned out of his mind or something.
The thing is though, once you shake the leash as a sign that you're going to bring him out, he goes NUTS. He loves going out, and he loves to pee on EVERYTHING. He especially has a thing with cracks on the ground. He loves peeing on the sidewalk crevices. Yea . . . beats me. The thing that bothers me the most is that he always barks at other dogs. He's not aggressive with other dogs because when I bring him to the dog park, he doesn't do that. But god-forbid if he sees another dog on leash and I don't let him go say what's up, he'll start barking non-stop. It gets pretty embarrassing sometimes, because he goes CRAZY.
And speaking of crazy, I've stopped giving him chew treats like bones and pig ears. Whenever I would give him one, he automatically turns on protective mode and just hovers over his treasure. If I even start approaching it, he gets in between, and if I reach for it he will start growling. The look in his eyes turns pretty menacing.
I want to correct all these bad traits but it just seems impossible at this point. Maybe one day when I have the funds I'll bring him away to a training school and hope they take care of all these problems.
By the way, the dog on top is my brother's dog, Kirby. I don't even want to get started on that guy.
*edit
So that retard Bobo today dug through a garbage can and found a huge chicken bone. I saw him chewing on it and god he was giving the most hardcore "Don't touch my fucking bone" look I've ever seen. He ended up ingesting the whole thing. Now I'm worried about internal bleeding . . . Bobo why are you so stupid!
Hope Is Not A Strategy
I read an excellent article written by Cliff Draughn, a wealth manager in Georgia, regarding the current economic situation and his outlook on the future. It's a very long article, so read it only if you have the time. In the course of the article, he says "hope is not a strategy" regarding the future of the stock market. That line really stuck with me, and not just in the context he used it in.

I'm not ready to give up on the idea of hope just yet, but hope should only be reserved for situations where there is nothing that can be done, or when a situation is beyond your control. Hope to me signifies the inability to act. So by these standards, it's fairly safe to say to someone "I hope you do well" or "I hope you feel better soon" because you're not responsible for another individuals outcome.
But it is senseless to hope for something positive regarding one's own future. I'm beginning to equate hope with desperation, because only the desperate live on hope. If you're busy hoping for a great job or hoping to do well on a test or an interview, then that means you're not doing enough to make your way to that great job, to ace that test or do well on that interview.
To rely on hope is to rely on luck, but in the real world, you make your own luck. Relying on hope is an admission that you are a victim to chance. I've been guilty of this too, but these days I'm trying to be more conscious of my thoughts. Whenever catch myself hoping for something, I have to remind myself that I shouldn't be hoping for it. I should be doing things to make it happen. This may sound like common sense for some, but statements like "I hope I do well" are not benign statements at all and you hear things like that being said all the time. If you ever catch yourself hoping for something, ask yourself what you could be doing to achieve what you're hoping for instead of just hoping. Hope is not a strategy.
Stimulating Our Way To Rock Bottom
I share the same sentiments as Ron Paul regarding our government's role in this economic crisis.
Stimulating Our Way to Rock Bottom
by Ron PaulWith attention turning to the next big economic stimulus package, questions are still swirling about our economic troubles. How did we get here? How do we get out? As usual, Washington has all the wrong answers. According to many politicians, we got here by not spending enough, not consuming enough, and not regulating enough. Now government, like some mythical white knight, is going to ride in to save the day by blanketing the economy with dollars, hiring an army of new bureaucrats, creating make-work jobs, and sending everyone some form of a bailout check. The debate seems to focus on whether this will cost enough to save the economy, or if this is just a "down payment" with much more government spending to come. Talk like that would be comical, if the results weren't going to be so tragic.
The results will be worsening economic woes until we learn our lesson. But instead Congress is behaving like drug addicts who must hit rock bottom before they are ready to face reality. They are playing foolish games with the economy now because they are thinking only of political expedience. This talk of job creation is a perfect example.
Contrary to the belief of many, the goal of the economy is not job creation. Jobs can be a sign of a healthy economy, as a high energy level can be a sign of a healthy body. But just as unhealthy substances can artificially give the addict that burst of energy that has nothing to do with health, artificially created jobs just exacerbate our problems. The goal of a healthy economy is productivity. Jobs are a positive outcome of that. A "job" could be to dig a hole one day, and fill it back up the next, or perhaps the equivalent at a desk. This does no one any good. But the value in that paycheck ultimately has to come from taxing someone productive. Some think this round-robin type of economic model is supposed to get us somewhere.
Politicians and bureaucrats have already done their fair share to ensure that jobs in the private sector are prohibitively complicated and expensive to create. They are now shocked that the economy is shedding jobs, and want to simply create hundreds of thousands of jobs to make up for the job losses, through another so-called economic stimulus package. The private sector must be permitted to do that, but instead they are massively burdened with taxes and webs of red tape and regulation. Washington's bandaids will only prolong this agony. The Austrian school of economics teaches that only a free market economy, unencumbered by onerous government controls, creates long-term prosperity. Politicians, however, tend to be notoriously short-sighted.
I am left with these questions - who is going to be left standing, to tax in the private sector, to pay for all these public sector make-work jobs? Is Washington really to be considered some sort of savior for creating unproductive jobs in place of the productive jobs they eliminated?
We are at an economic dead-end and those in power are in denial. The truth is our economic problems are due to loose monetary policy, central economic planning, and the parasitic expenses of government. Unless we assess these problems honestly, we unfortunately have a long way to go until, like the junkie, we hit rock bottom.













































