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    Music Review: Year Zero

    April 30th, 2007 by geoff

    In brief:

    Year Zero is our generation’s version of Pink Floyd’s The Wall. It successfully does what American Idiot cries itself to sleep at night, wishing it could do.

    Posted in Music | No Comments »

    Maturity?

    April 26th, 2007 by geoff

    One of the signs that I was starting to listen to good music was when I was finally able to list a lot of music that was not about love.

    Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

    Trying to believe

    April 18th, 2007 by geoff

    And once again, after tragedy strikes the nation our wanna-be puppet masters rush in to try and grab a few more of our strings. Whether it’s Dr. Phil or Thompson blaming the event on video games before we even knew who the culprit was, or the gun control nuts wanting to blame the whole affair on a piece of metal instead of the person pulling the trigger.

    It’s sick.

    Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Comments »

    Living

    April 16th, 2007 by geoff

    I have two alarm clocks.

    My actual clock wakes me up.

    Hearing the coffee grinder gets me out of bed.

    Posted in Glory, Life | No Comments »

    Prayers

    April 14th, 2007 by geoff

    My manager is going to start chemotherapy for his cancer next week. He really is the last person in the world who should have cancer so young (28). He’s healthy, does sports, he eats right… But it shows that this kind of thing could happen to anymore.

    But still, God is good. I’m praying for him, and I’d like you to too, please. Eric and I are going to have extra work on our plates to help him out, so please pray for us to be up to the task too. ; )

    Posted in Work | 1 Comment »

    : D

    April 13th, 2007 by geoff

    Holidays are always best when there are babies and other small children around. It just seems so much more magical when you add in their wonder about what’s going on.

    Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

    Geoff’s 22nd Year Resolution

    April 11th, 2007 by geoff

    My resolution for being a more responsible person this year…

    #1 - I will only eat out for lunch if there’s a special occaison (Like someone else volunteering to pay. ; ) )

    This will save tons of money and calories. :P

    Posted in Life | 2 Comments »

    Square one

    April 9th, 2007 by geoff

    The best thing I’ve come across in trying to learn Japanese is something Alex showed me, a game called Slime Forest. Essentially it plays like an old-school SNES RPG. The difference is that when you try to attack something, a katakana symbol will appear over the enemy’s head, and in order to successfully attack you must type out the sound that that symbol makes.

    Deceptively simple, but pretty effective.

    Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

    PLANNING

    April 6th, 2007 by geoff

    My birthday is coming up, which gives me a good excuse to do things with my friends!

    But I don’t know what to do with this excuse. Maybe a dinner sort of thing, watch a movie? Go to Kimo’s? Applebees might be fun. Hmmm… A combination perhaps!

    Help me think of something Pat. :)

    Posted in Uncategorized | 7 Comments »

    No Escaping Philosophy

    April 5th, 2007 by geoff

    The most depressing story I’ve read in a while.

    I played with legos a lot as a kid. Me and my friends would construct entire worlds with cities, barren wastelands, fortresses, allies and enemies. It was fun. It was a world we could live the adventures of our imaginations in, a place that we felt we had a hand in creating. We could write the stories there. Makeshift lego wargames even served as my first introduction to tabletop roleplaying.

    These kids are having their imaginations neutered. You can tell straight off from their idea to create ‘Lego Town’. I have never met a kid who wanted to build a city with communally owned property when given a crate full of legos. They do look for the ‘cool pieces’, but those pieces weren’t doors or windows. They were plasma guns, swords, castle walls, ion shields, drawbridges. It’s unsaid, but the ‘teachers’ here obviously didn’t allow any pieces like that. How are children going to grow up to be model World Citizens if they play with guns and swords? Legos are about building, and how can you build a society on tools of death? The teachers are terrified of kids, they’re terrified of play.

    My nephews, Hans and Jaeger learned very early how to turn their hands into guns and sticks into swords.  That’s just what boys do! But Matt and Mystie took a different approach than taking a hard look at the assumptions and associations of power that the use of force implies and its application in a corrupt, oppressive capitalistic meritocracy (I think I just got sick saying that). They’re teaching their sons about the just use of force, defense and protection. They’re teaching Hans and Jaeger how to recognize and protect the good guys, to not attack the unarmed and defenseless. Hans watches out for bad guys and slays dragons with his sword. That’s education!

    Still, thats the implied, unsaid of the article. Any article about kids building things with legos that doesn’t have ANY reference to swords, guns, castles, pirates, police, kings, or ninja means something weird is going on. ; ) The point of the article is essentially about how once a small group of kids started playing with the legos, they didn’t want to share with anyone else who wanted to join in.

    Instead of teaching the kids about how they bought the legos for everyone, and why sharing is important, the teachers believed something far more sinister was going on. No, the children were showing their “assumptions about ownership and the social power it conveys — assumptions that mirrored those of a class-based, capitalist society — a society that we teachers believe to be unjust and oppressive.”

    Children don’t want to share! Such greed could only be from over exposure to capitalism!

    To summarize the rest of that imagination-neutering, navel gazing, rubbish: The teachers ban the legos and hold meetings with the children about the nature of ownership, rights, and power. They bring the legos back after groundwork is layed about how all buildings in the new lego town will be equal, none will be “Over-Average” (What kind of kid uses the word over-average? That HAS to be made up.), all buildings will be public, and lego people can only be saved by groups, not individuals.

    The kids never learned about how to share. They got a lesson about how everything, if not equal will be made equal.

    Posted in Uncategorized | 6 Comments »

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