tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-299623072024-03-07T03:18:03.764-06:00Your name here"Ya ves que las putas idioteces son más guapas y más interesantes que las chingadas sensateces."xochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.comBlogger193125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-51989068445142157852010-12-13T10:37:00.006-06:002010-12-13T11:18:07.043-06:00The Social Network<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjcC3JW37wf1mCRbUIudJZZA_aCVQ0NZivrhr46XSWpkdagDspPkhPhZVZ2jQdL6VWxwptnXSIVSqNLomz8yzdvB7YwWfr-TdftudJWniB2C-gKInYQWx_Q6h3q0X4MtK3_Iwez/s1600/The-Social-Network.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 216px; height: 320px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjcC3JW37wf1mCRbUIudJZZA_aCVQ0NZivrhr46XSWpkdagDspPkhPhZVZ2jQdL6VWxwptnXSIVSqNLomz8yzdvB7YwWfr-TdftudJWniB2C-gKInYQWx_Q6h3q0X4MtK3_Iwez/s320/The-Social-Network.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5550212663603434882" /></a><br /><br />People found a lot of things wrong with the Social Network, Nathan Heller and Luke O'Brien over at Slat panned Sorkin for glossing over dteails and believing Harvard still is stuck in 70's era The Way we Were with the jews and Geeks as underdogs and overprivileged WASPS ruling the place.<br /><br />I'm not a Harvard grad. Hell, I've never stepped foot an an Ivy League campus. But I think the Slate writers are the ones stuck in lala land, not Sorkin. The way Heller depicted it, I expected some sort of Revenge of the Nerds. <br /><br />Harvard is not depicted as an old boys network, not really. The only one obsessed with final clubs in the movie is Zuckerberg, for whatever reason. Edwardo Saverin is also interested, and he get "punched" for one of them, but Dustin Moskovitz shows no interest in them. Zuckerberg is potrayed as embittered about not getting selected, and even tells Saverin that he was probably picked in a bid for diversity. However, as a non American I can tell you that you won't get picked for a club wearing shower sandals, I don't care if they're Adidas. Saverin on the other hand, seems to be a snappier dresser and a more sociable person in general. <br /><br />Of course, this is a movie, I'm aware that the real Zuckerberg probably doesn't have Asperger's. And he's been in a long term relationship since before he even moved out to Palo Alto (something the movie completely ignores). And you don't have to be a geek in order to NOT know that the best way to meet women is to go out and meet them, and talk to them, not at them. But the real Zuckerberg still wears those sandals, and the damn hoodie. Maybe he is at least a little bit of that Eisenberg potrayal.<br /><br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgXgYUl2q8pnKwIKvTvVVltAiYsW5yBV9sW9Qc0cH2nAchGbXP-_xiV5-lr9XHbIDsMJbiPfIWhUMZA_2Q3Q6LWNIYl6WcSAv-ngpMprgn713jFgD2nc6WnN_4sv2kpenfJYZVR/s1600/the_social_network_jesse_eisenberg_image.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 216px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgXgYUl2q8pnKwIKvTvVVltAiYsW5yBV9sW9Qc0cH2nAchGbXP-_xiV5-lr9XHbIDsMJbiPfIWhUMZA_2Q3Q6LWNIYl6WcSAv-ngpMprgn713jFgD2nc6WnN_4sv2kpenfJYZVR/s320/the_social_network_jesse_eisenberg_image.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5550213007891573970" /></a><br /><br />"Sorkin and Fincher's 2003 Harvard is a citadel of old money, regatta blazers, and (if I am not misreading the implication here) a Jewish underclass striving beneath the heel of a WASP-centric, socially draconian culture", according to Heller. <br /><br />The only people who fit that description are the Winkelvoss twins. But the movie acknowledges that they're not like everyone, and not everyone is like them. Larry Summers brushes them off. Their friend and partner is an Indian guy from Brooklyn or Queens. <br /><br /><b>Every creation myth needs a devil</b><br /><br />Towards the end of the film, a young lawyer tells this to Zuckerberg. True. But that doesn't make him any less ruthless. <br /><br />I know that Sorkin and Fincher have exaggerated Zuckerberg as a maladapted kid in Harvard. The guy is a Phillips Exter grad who was captain of the fencing team. Hmm, come to think about it, that kinda sounds like Max Fischer. But the point is, they think Facebook was born out of revenge. Who knows the truth? Revenge and lust are extremely powerful motivators. And Zuckerberg is a very driven person. He created software in high school. He had software <i>tutors</i> for christ's sake. <br /><br />All that said, the social network is a brilliant movie, an excellent piece of storytelling. The editing is tight. The music, courtesy of Trent Reznor, is quite good. The acting is also impressive. <br /><br />Eisenberg plays Zuckerberg as a tragic hero, anti hero, and misunderstood evil genius all at the same time. Most people don't know much past the sandals and hoodie shtick, but he shows the human side of someon whose is so sad and angry, and at the same time driven (I already said that, no?) and energetic.<br /><br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgpN86W023xImmMiRkKBwnd0ZYTn9djnH1PlxGqXNlfaXGD-egZJ7I8228M7Pgm93sUNCE6uuHgTsU0MOSeb5wgMSyMweIMoANZUJdeuemLwP_qsLr8VUQD7yQMfiWUqB2qfl6E/s1600/Jesse-Eisenberg-The-Social-Network.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 215px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgpN86W023xImmMiRkKBwnd0ZYTn9djnH1PlxGqXNlfaXGD-egZJ7I8228M7Pgm93sUNCE6uuHgTsU0MOSeb5wgMSyMweIMoANZUJdeuemLwP_qsLr8VUQD7yQMfiWUqB2qfl6E/s320/Jesse-Eisenberg-The-Social-Network.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5550213378211312546" /></a><br /><br />Andrew Garfield as Edwardo Saverin comes of as sweet and smart, but ultimately making some foolish decisions that got him pushed out. He seems ti still care about his friend during the deposition, but also knowing that it's past the point of no return. For a guy who looks straight out of Gossip Girl, Garfield is great, IMHO. <br /><br />Even Napster's Sean Parker gets a good turn by Justin Timberlake. He's opportunistic, sure, but it's not moua-ha-ha nefarious, and you can see that he has learned from experience and helps Zuckerberg retain control (knowing that he played a key part in Zuckerberg having 3 out of 5 seats on the board, that's how I read it).<br /><br />The Winkelvoss, Winkelvii? (vintage sorkin) are shown as more than two dimentional characters, arguing and feeling conflicted about the need to be "Harvard gentlemen" and the need to kick Zuckerberg's ass for his perceived larceny. <br /><br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjQcDkaSWDifdq4iYi7sJLlTxFjZRmuHFIFJg6ybmOeXPysoaRkgH9SlQubSwwMqteb-YLtIDCfI7pCox7OsmOZ64Mc5qwyZsoxynz-2R4yCdSVWw4AUemCd2HLCwFfC6rp5KKG/s1600/girls.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 186px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjQcDkaSWDifdq4iYi7sJLlTxFjZRmuHFIFJg6ybmOeXPysoaRkgH9SlQubSwwMqteb-YLtIDCfI7pCox7OsmOZ64Mc5qwyZsoxynz-2R4yCdSVWw4AUemCd2HLCwFfC6rp5KKG/s320/girls.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5550216204336968226" /></a><br /><br />The only part I DID roll my eyes at was the final club party in the beginning, with all the Girls Gone Wild Ivy Leage Edition. I don't know how realistic it was (girls lined up outside waiting to be let in?), but my general reaction to female chauvinist pigs is, really? You're among the smartest women in America and that's what you do? Take your top off? 'Cause you're so empowered? Even if they weren't Harvard co-eds, they had to be from the area, so you're talking about Boston University, Tufts, Amherst, UMass, MIT, etc. I have no idea if final clubs are such dens of iniquity, but college in general does have that type of party, so probably. <br /><br />So, in the end, did they get the facts right? Did they get the sprit of the whole endeavor? When you have trust, friendship, relationships, betrayal, alienation, entrepreneurship, and all those ships, who cares?? It's a brilliant film. Go see itxochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-31605708551597153092010-03-09T18:16:00.001-06:002010-03-09T18:17:19.728-06:00Yo siempre busco comedia, o una defensa del cine mainstream(<i>No está bien editado, pero a estas alturas es mejor publicar aaalgo que quedarme en el intento</i>)<br /><br />Cuando mi hermano y yo vamos al cine o a rentar DVDs a Saharis, siempre buscamos comedias. Sabemos que no se ha estrenado algo, pero persistimos con la esperanza de que un día nos vamos a encontrar una colección de humor negro o de <i>feelgoods </i>indie que no chorrea aspartame.<br /><br />Es como cuando todavía compraba CDs y automáticamente me iba a las Rs para ver que tenían de Radiohead, como si de la noche a la mañana iban a sacar disco nuevo sin que nosotros los geeks supiéramos meses antes. <br /><br />Examinamos los estantes, a ver si salta por ahí alguna stoner comedy. Yo le quiero dar una oportunidad a algo con Steve Zahn a pesar de que su coestrella es Jennifer Aniston, mientras mi carnal me ve con cara de "ur so gay". Él quiere escoger Watchmen, de la cual no he escuchado nada más que "blue peen". Me dice que tal vez es tan mala que me reiré, así que habríamos logrado nuestro objetivo. <br /><br />A veces envidio a la gente que no ha visto Fight Club, o This is Spinal Tap, o Adaptation, o Annie Hall. Porque todavía tienen continentes por descubrir. <br /><br />Obviamente no he visto todas las películas en esta vida, y se que todavía hay comedias. Pero por cada Adventureland o Zombieland had cuatro All About Steve, Along Came Polly y Serious Moonlight. Aún con Judd Apatow y Greg Mottola y compañía, la comedia es ahora terreno de bromas de pedos o situaciones tan pendejas y deprimentes como Carrie y Sex & the City, que la neta prefiero ver algo como Precious que se regodea en su miseria. <br /><br />Sí, soy light. Me gusta ver movies como forma de entretenimiento. Y aunque me encantó Doubt y Sin Nombre, hay momentos (muchos) que sólo busco catarsis. Verán, yo no veo novelas y no me gusta el horror, en algún lado me tengo que desestresar. <br /><br />Por eso a veces entiendo a la gente que ve coctelitos de wákala como Transformers 2 o Charlie's Angels. Quieren divertirse. Y la neta, toda esta esquizofrenia de que si algo es indie es bueno y si es palomero tiene que ser malo, ya me dio flojera. Indiana Jones (las originales) es buena. The Dark Knight y Batman Begins son increíbles. It's All about Love, de Thomas Vinterberg, es bastante mala. <br /><br />A la mera hora, queremos que nos cuenten una historia. Y si el cuento es malo, no importa cuanto maquillaje azúl o nuevas tecnologías embarren en la pantalla, la película nunca podrá ser más que mediocre. (Sorry, Avatar). <br /><br />Ayer leí que Kathryn Bigelow ganó porque su película es buena y no porque su movie es super macho, y que si Nora Ephron o Nancy Meyers quieren ganar un hombrecillo dorado deben dejar de dirigir It's complicated. Bueno sí, pero porqué denigramos a la comedia? Porqué Salvando al Soldado Ryan o El Paciente Inglés son intrínsicamente mejores que Mejor Imposible? Nos dicen más sobre la condición humana? Neta? Cuando me acuerdo de una película, me acuerdo si era buena o mala antes de pensar en qué género era. Este afán de categorizar nos ha dejado más pobres de películas.xochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-77203960617511212442009-12-31T13:01:00.003-06:002009-12-31T13:05:40.702-06:00Byeeee con el 2009.<br /><br />Más que nada, byeeee con todas estas listas.<br /><br />¿Creen que nadie sabe que hubo una contingencia por la influenza puerca? Perdón, la influenza AH1N1.<br /><br />¿Qué nadie se enteró que murió Beltrán Leyva? ¿Que la gubernatura de NL la ganó la versión guera y con menos carisma de Peña Nieto, el Golden Boy Medina? ¿Que hubo chingos de violencia y muertes por la dizque guerra con el narco?<br /><br />Honestamente, este año estuvo de la chingada y no necesitamos que nos lo recuerden. No nos aporta nada nuevo.<br /><br />Yo quiero ver una BUENA lista. De las 10 películas más chidas que no vi este año. De 10 personas que lucharon por los derechos humanos y no se les ha reconocido. De las 10 cosas que nos pegaron silenciosamente en el 2009 y no pelamos porque estabamos viendo las estupideces de Dulce Sarahí o el circo de Juanito o el tiroteo en Garza Sada. De lo que nos tenemos que cuidar o tenemos que aprovechar el año que viene. <br /><br />Más que nada, quiero contenido original, producto de investigación. Basta con el más de lo mismo. Fue un pinche año feo para los medios a nivel global. Que el 2010 no siga así, depende de nosotros. <br /><br />P.D.:Si quieren una lista chida, pasen por pajiba.com y busquen las 20 mejores películas de la década. Tienen otras sandeces divertidas, pero pues esa es la más típica. Deusexmalcontent.com también publicó los 20 mejores "singles" del año, incluyendo varios géneros desde el rap de JayZ y MosDef, los alaridos emo de 30 Seconds to Mars, hasta los sintetizadores hipster de Phoenix.xochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-91273469302767097592009-02-04T17:22:00.003-06:002009-02-04T17:30:50.607-06:00On failed statesThis isn't really new, but it's still relevant I think. Stephen Haber published "Latin America's Quiet Revolution" on the WSJ on January 31. You can read the whole piece <a href="http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123336272714535407.html">here</a>. Several things struck me.<br /><br /><blockquote>"A report by the U.S. Joint Forces Command released earlier this month calls Mexico a potential failing state, likening it to Pakistan. This assessment is particularly striking in light of the $400 million per year that the United States provides in military and security assistance to Mexico. It also adds urgency to the U.S. government's plans to complete a 700-mile-long border fence and dramatically expand the number of Border Patrol agents, to over 20,000 by the end of 2009 from 11,000 in 2004 -- both of which have opened a rift between Washington and Mexico City."<br />(...)<br />"Most of Latin America is, however, undergoing a period of unprecedented political and economic transformation. In Chile, Brazil, Peru, Uruguay, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Panama, the Dominican Republic and, yes, Mexico -- which is most decidedly not a failing state -- there has been a quiet but substantial movement toward the creation of societies that are characterized by increased economic opportunity, social mobility and political democracy. This is not to say that Brazilians have achieved the same standard of living as the Dutch, or that the rule of law operates in Mexico as it does in Canada. It is to say, however, that these countries have undertaken a series of economic and political reforms that make them vastly different places than they were two decades ago."</blockquote><br /><br /><br />Although I agree with a lot of this, the Pentagon study said Mexico is at risk of becoming a failed state, not that it already was one. It stated Mexico bears consideration for rapid and sudden collapse.<br /> <br />And although we do have a "normal life" according to Haber's standards (education, garbage service, weekend getaways) in large parts of the country, there are cities that are quickly becoming ghost towns according to some reports. Tijuana, Monclova, etc. We have banking reforms that enable us to buy homes, but who wants to buy a home right now?<br /><br />And then: <br /><blockquote>"After falling for a decade, Mexico's homicide rate increased in 2008, because the Calderón government courageously decided to take on the drug traffickers. If it keeps rising, it may soon be as high as that of...Louisiana."</blockquote><br /> <br />Ok, yes, the official crime rates are low. Secretary of the Interior Juan Camilo Mouriño used to say that the government was winning and that's why the narcos were panicking and going berserk. Well, Mouriño's dead. Accident or not, who knows? Anyway, half the crime goes unreported, and we may have less murders than Louisiana but we certainly have more violent crime (and murders).<br /> <br />Narcos aren't going to go away as long as that huge and lucrative market, the US, demands drugs. And demand they do. Imagine, if you will, that the government outlawed toothpaste. There would be contraband paste maybe, sure, but you can substitute baking soda. What substitutes drugs? Drug demand is pretty much inelastic, would you pull out of that market? When does it stop being worth "the hassle"? Especially since many people employed in the drug trade have no other marketable skills.xochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-88962851669796307102009-01-27T18:03:00.002-06:002009-01-27T18:30:57.286-06:00Desempleo, xenofobia y personal calificadoHello again! Is there anybody in there?<br /><br />I had seriously considered shutting this down, as evidenced by my nil posts for almost three months straight. Everyone and their grandmother was writing up the elections, lack of enthusiasm, I wanted to write about food like everybody else, take your pick.<br /><br />But anyway, I keep sending out long and ranting emails to selected friends (lucky them, haha) about shit I run across. About Carlos Slim and the NYTimes, or Chuck Grassley suggesting Microsoft fire them furriners first.<br /><br />So I decided to post one of them, as suggested by Ben. My comments are in Spanish although the quotes are in English, sorry to say, and I'm not inclined to change it right now. Sorry, it is what it is. <br /><br />So without further ado, the first post of 2009!<br /><br /><b>Desempleo, xenofobia y personal calificado</b><br /><br />En todos lados se cuecen habas, jaja.<br /> <br />Ahora que Microsoft correrá a 5 mil empleados (de los 95 mil que tienen y como dice Palmira, pues es una nada para ellos), el senador republicano Chuck Grassley vio la oportunidad de pedir que se corran a los extranjeros primero.<br /> <br /><blockquote>"I am concerned that Microsoft will be retaining foreign guest workers rather than similarly qualified American employees when it implements its layoff plan." </blockquote><br /> <br />El H. señor Grassley no solamente mandó la carta al CEO Steve Ballmer, nooo, él la puso en su propio website. Más de sus perlas de sabiduría:<br /> <br /><blockquote>"My point is that during a layoff, companies should not be retaining H-1B or other work visa program employees over qualified American workers (...) Our immigration policy is not intended to harm the American workforce. ... Microsoft has a moral obligation to protect these American workers by putting them first during these difficult economic times."</blockquote><br /> <br />Un blog del Seattle times sacó an abogado experto estas cosas, Cletus Weber, que informó que es discriminación! (por lo tanto ilegal) correr a los trabajadores con visa H-1B primero: <br /><br /><blockquote>"I believe arbitrarily laying off lawfully employed foreign workers first would subject these companies to potential legal liability under federal anti-discrimination laws. <br /><br />"Perhaps Senator Grassley forgot that Google and innumerable other large and small American companies that were founded by foreign workers have created tens of thousands of jobs for U.S. citizens. It is laudable for Senator Grassley to champion the cause of the American worker, but his calling for blatantly discriminatory layoffs is anti-competitive scapegoating, and in many ways removes some of the innovation that created large numbers of American jobs in the first place."</blockquote><br /><br /> Tal vez vieron la nota del 20 acerca de la falta de personal calificado en NL (Denuncia Caintra falta de técnicos o algo así). <br /> <br />Aunque el desempleo está muy alto tanto aquí como allá, hay empresas tecnológicas que se mueeeeren por encontrar personal. Pero personal técnico bien, no licenciasnos, jajaja. <br /> <br />El misísimo Bill Gates ha declarado ante el Congreso sobre la necesidad de expandir el programa H-1B para que puedan contratar a extranjeros porque simplemente no hay suficientes estadounidenses con la educación y experiencia laboral que ellos necesitan para crear maravillas como el Windows Vista. Ya en serio, sí es un problema real, CrapVista nonwithstanding.<br /> <br />No pueden los gobiernos crear algún programa para capacitar a los desempleados en esto que necesitan las empresas? No es ese el trabajo de las universidades? Porqué diablos estudie comunicación y finanzas en vez de ingeniería, jaja. Apuesto que en Alemania no tienen esos problemas.xochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-51259081749291810712008-11-13T16:22:00.002-06:002008-11-13T16:25:18.395-06:00Rage Against the Machine<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjzrtKcd2fYH7NYmiCPyMxPr82wQIuYsox-gz3htfBUkjOG3VnAK9wa31Ifw4sJYiJn8_ZzmrMZWi671a7N2q16fj5wszIKndjPNZnWBnseBGgJFIeaP9Sg9L8eYf-psxq3GNlA/s1600-h/jon_stewart-thumb.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 220px; height: 185px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjzrtKcd2fYH7NYmiCPyMxPr82wQIuYsox-gz3htfBUkjOG3VnAK9wa31Ifw4sJYiJn8_ZzmrMZWi671a7N2q16fj5wszIKndjPNZnWBnseBGgJFIeaP9Sg9L8eYf-psxq3GNlA/s320/jon_stewart-thumb.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5268271742688476002" /></a><br /><br /><br />Interesting article about The Daily Show in a Democratic administration.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.pajiba.com/daily-show-the.htm">Comedy in the Era of Obama</a> @ Pajiba.<br /><br /><br />I'm not worried that the Daily Show will run out of material just because Obama's won. Hell, the government, corporations and the mass media...there is not going to be a lack of stupid powerful people to mock any time soon. But will Stewart remain as relevant? <br /><br />Now that we don't feel so much like the underground insurgency that needs to tread carefully around the jesus freaks, will we be less engaged maybe? It's a slippery slope....xochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-26357692250084794122008-11-04T23:59:00.004-06:002008-11-05T00:28:09.377-06:00I was all set to live blog election night... when something terrible and closer to home happened...<br /><br /><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/05/world/americas/05mexico.html?ref=world">Mexico’s Interior Minister Killed in Jet Crash </a> AP by way of NYT<br /><a href="http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/notas/552692.html"><br />Confirma Presidencia muerte de Mouriño<br /></a><br /><br />Juan Camilo Mouriño, Méxican Secretario de Gobernación (Minister of the Interior) was killed in a jet crash today. He was travelling from San Luis Potosí to Mexico City on a Learjet, when his plan crashed 12.6 kilometers from the airport (Aeropuerto Internacional de la Ciudad de Mexico). It all points to narcotráfico.<br /><br />Mouriño was a young, good looking heir apparent, had been in office less than a year, transferred from the Oficina de la Presidencia (a relatively new department). <br /><br />Per the NYT: "He headed the government’s security apparatus and was the President’s point man in the increasingly bloody drug war."<br /><br />He hadn't been doing so well, especially with the energy reform. Ties to Pemex and family businesses hadn't helped. <br /><br />My paranoid conspiracy theory mind points to a narco / inside job. Mouriño was a close friend of Calderón, but there must be somebody high up who takes it upon himself to do the dirty jobs. To offer the mob Mouriño in exchange for, what?<br />This is a big emotional hit, but the Secretary wasn't being as effective as initially hoped.<br /><br />The problem is now who will take his place? Cesar Nava? Josefina Vazquez Mota? Is the country still governable? Yes, this might help the PAN get elected next year since they can be martyrs (they can also lose because they're not competent), but jesus christ was I stunned and yanked back into reality when I heard this news. There is more than one Mexico. But we all live in the same space. ANd sometimes those worlds don't just brush against each other, they crash into each other.xochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-85179493315802978542008-10-23T15:54:00.003-05:002008-10-23T16:01:50.288-05:00Why We Fight.And why we will win.<br /><br /><object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/_9OhVMHIuO4&color1=0xb1b1b1&color2=0xcfcfcf&hl=en&fs=1"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/_9OhVMHIuO4&color1=0xb1b1b1&color2=0xcfcfcf&hl=en&fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object><br /><br />There will be a post forthcoming, I'm not dead yet. <br /><br />Democrats must not slack off, 'cause elections can be lost in a minute. Rusty keeps reminding me that campaigns that don't work their bases can lose votes on election day. Obama's campaign has been quite disciplined in their grassroots work, and the astounding amounts raised in the last couple of months attest to that. I'm confident they can pull it off because of practical reasons. But it's speeches like this one that speak to our souls and make us believe. I'm not from the States, but I'm a proud ally at moments like these. <br /><br />Advertising baloney? Well, cynisism is our easy answer, it takes guts to believe. That's my frame of mind today. Despite our horrible drug war, and the floundering global economy, we must remember, we're in this for the long run.xochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-73495224182119477312008-10-07T12:04:00.002-05:002008-10-07T12:35:23.596-05:00Did you all have a good day yesterday? I hope the worldwide stock plunge didn't scare you. It was Europe's turn to host the party. We had a pretty eventful day, althoug thankfully there were no catfights between biz and the front page (that was friday, thankyouverymuch).<br /><br />Yesterday was like the maxed out chick getting her credit cards snipped in half by the saleslady because, "I'm sorry ma'am but your card was rejected". <i>Les cayó el veinte?</i> There is no credit in the markets, and the top hat ran out of rabbits.<br /><br />Sorry, I'm being unintelligible I know. Frankly, I have no idea if the credit lines approved by the Fed will be enough fow now. Helicopter drops can only go so far, and right now it seems all markets (except China) are spooked. The Sao Paulo and the Moscow stock markets had to shut down, twice, because their respective indexes were down 15 percent. <br /><br />Our market expert said this morning that the Dow would go up today although it would behave like it had a hangover. As of 20 min ago, the DJIA is down 1.88%, S&P 2.06% and the Nasdaq has lost 2.31%. The U.S. sneezes, the rest of the world gets a cold.<br /><br />What <i>really</i> left me cold yesterday was a warning from John Burbank of Passport Capital, that GE might go bankrupt. General Electric. (I'll pull a Biden and repeat, General. Electric.) Which just raised about $15b in stock, plus got another $3b from Buffet. The firm is having difficulty rolling over its paper, and has 22 times as many assets as it has tangible equity. Shit.<br /><br /><br />So, Roubini was right. So was Taleb. <br /><br />===><a href="http://www.portfolio.com/views/blogs/market-movers/2008/10/07/roubini-was-right">Felix Salmon's Market Movers @ Portfolio: Roubini was right</a><br /><br />Pay off your credit cards NOW. But don't panic, 'cause right now what can hurt us the most I think, is fear itself. At least for now.xochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-76861581171987268852008-09-10T22:39:00.005-05:002008-09-12T21:53:02.241-05:00La Ley de Herodes, o te chingas o te jodesOk, I haven't posted in a couple days even though many things have been going on.<br />Right now I have a lot going on work wise. There is a lot going on in Monterrey and in Mexico that deserves attention. Corruption charges against Madero's government, our dismal fiscal system which is makng us lose our (nonexistent) edge among other countries, the kidnappers being part of the anti-kidnapping unit, etc. <br /><br />Also, I don't know if anyone is actually reading right now. Democrats and Republicans are slinging it out, but are the independent and swing voters listening? Will celebrity endorsements convince them? Swing voters aren't really swing voters, they're just unwilling to admit they have made up their minds, for whatever reason. <br /><br />This race has gone on long enough for people to have a general idea of what each candidate wants to do, how he will do it and if he's capable of acheiving those goals. McCain has shown that he is willing to sell his soul to the devil (aka Karl Rove) and the christian right in order to get elected. He is willing to lie, cheat and Palin his way to the White House. <br /><br />Obama has shown himself unwilling to fight dirty so far. That's not always a good thing, though I'm aware that the Republicans have defined him (he allowed that to happen) and now it's a case of dammned if you do, dammned if you don't. <br /><br />If the American public is willing to believe the republicans' lies, well, I give up. I know there are many people out there that don't swallow this shit, not even for a minute. And many people are indifferent (I don't see how they can be, but they are). <br /><br />But if there are enough people in the United States of America that vote for McCain-Palin whether on faith or because of corporate interests or just out of habit, I think the U.S. will have reached a tipping point, and things can only go downhill from there. To get back up, will take a dozen years and enormoous effort. <br /><br />There are just so many things that are almost unbelievable, like people praying for McCain to die so the righteous Palin can take his place. <br /><br />Sounds kooky? Chez Pazienza posted this on his blog today ==> <a href="http://www.talk2action.org/story/2008/9/3/11483/3470/Front_Page/Theocrats_to_Pray_for_McCain_s_Death" target="_blank">Theocrats to Pray for McCain's Death</a>xochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-84436874752647214192008-09-09T02:36:00.003-05:002008-09-09T02:42:52.275-05:00Cuidando el Voto==><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/08/education/08students.html" target="_blank">Voter Registration by Students Raises Cloud of Consequences - NYTimes. com</a><br /><blockquote><br />The practice of students registering to vote at their college address has set off a fracas in Virginia, after a local registrar incorrectly suggested dire consequences for students who register at college.</blockquote><br /><br />Huh. This could very well be a crucial issue down the line, since Obama has the college students' vote (as far as we know). <br /><br />The Democrats aren't crying foul, not yet. A spokesperson for the Obama camp in Virginia said it appears to be a good-faith effort to convey state guidelines, not a politically motivated effort to stop voting by students. <br /><br />But I'm thinking that behind the scenes they're scrambling to fix this. Or the should be.xochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-73678595125751492322008-09-05T03:18:00.001-05:002008-09-12T21:54:05.989-05:00you know, thank god for jon stewart. I love me some john stewart.<br /><br />I knew I wanted to watch the daily show today for his take on palin's speech. Yet I was dreading watching palin and her snark again. I usually love snark, but not on her. Not when they're soiling one of the few good things to come out of U.S. politics in recent times. Obama's not perfect and there will probably be a time when he disappoints as president, but he's just so un-republican, so un-stupid, he's just uplifting. Because he's articulate. Because he's smart, because he has risen above the mudslinging, for the most part.<br /><br />Anyway, Stewart did not disappoint, as always. I laughed and cried along with him. Colbert, not so good today. Huckabee was on, and he surprised me with how not stupid he came off. I wasn't expecting that.<br /><br /><br />A Democratic win is not only necessary and possible, but also likely. The info and informal polls I've been able to get to show people in states like Indiana, Michigan and Arizona voting Democrat. Middle aged women are not impressed with Palin, thank God. Men, ehhh, they think she's hot. But so far she's impressed some (ok, a lot) of the Republicans, who were voting McCain anyway. Oh, and traitorous little Rusty. <br /><br />****I've been reading Chez Pazienza's blog often again . Absolutely brill. I missed a post in the evening and ended up commenting on a newer one, kind of saying the same thing he said on the previous post, only not as sharp or creative. Anyway, read it.*****xochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-52559876293323592662008-09-04T21:24:00.001-05:002008-09-04T21:34:14.038-05:00Not so long ago, everyone was going on about how the U.S. was (is) on the wrong track, and the rest of the world no longer looks up to them, and how they've been surpassed by Europe and China. Tourists are viewed as Ugly Americans. Fareed Zakaria published The Post-American world and said it was a good thing, other people clutched at their heads and bemoaned the state of the union, etc.<br /><br />I think a big part of that has to do with the way Republicans subverted Americana. Middle America used to mean simple, hardworking folks. You know, the whole Norman Rockwell thing, small towns, etc. They didn't resent city slickers. They didn't begrudge them their "success". The past eight or twelve years, Karl Rove and his friends have poisoned many American's ideas about themselves. <br /><br />Imagine, if you will, an old black and white movie. A 1930's type atmosphere, a little girl with a dirty and tear streaked face shrieking, "I may not have much, like y'all rich and fancy folks! I didn't go to fancy schools and I don't eat arugula, but I sure do know what decent is! And you ain't decent! You're bastards, the whole lot of you!"That's how I picture it, somehow.<br /><br />It may not be true, but perception is reality. If you constantly tell people that they live in fly over states, that the other side thinks they're morons, they start to believe it. And the Democrats certainly haven't helped. <br /><br />Mr. Bristol Palin's Baby's Daddy said he's a "fucking redneck". Provincial and proud of it. But it didn't use to mean bitter. <br /><br />It's not just Rove and Rush Limbaugh who did this, mind you. It has to do with the fact that the so-called American Dream is not so easy to acheive these days. Many people are disillusioned that hard work by itself won't get you many places. <br /><br />I've written before about this phenomenom in Mexico. The lower, middle and higher classes resent each other and it manifested itself in the 2006 elections with pro-AMLos and anti-AMLOs. Because in Mexico, even more than in the U.S., it's not what you know, it's who you know. It's extremely hard to jump the gap from poor to middle class. Lots of people emigrate (legally or illegaly) to the States or elsewhere, and 'strike it rich' through hard work and persistence. They don't lack the smarts or the ambition. But bureaucracy, cronyism and a lack of community spirit are mighty barriers down here, sometimes insurmountable. <br /><br />I think this is happening in the States. It may be happenind in other places too, I don't know. Yes, I know entrepreneurship is alive and healthy, and there are more millionaires than ever. But the gap between haves and the have nots is growing, and it's harder to overcome it, below a certain level. <br /><br />My marketer friends and I are fond of saying that you can badmouth the upper classes in a Mexican political election and win, but it doesn't work that well North of the Rio Bravo, since Americans all believe they can strike it rich someday. But maybe that is no longer true, at least in some circles. <br /><br />I mean, what the fuck happened that "elite" is now a dirty word? Cosmopolitan is an insult? Obama is a fancy city boy who doesn't understand hard work? His mother sometimes went on food stamps! He was raised by his grandmother! The Obama's has massive student loans! Why can't people enjoy their success if they worked hard for it? <br /><br />Palin's speech is the Republican party up to it's old antics, praising small mindedness. Proud of their ignorance. If this kind of thinking wins, frankly, the rest of us just might give up the U.S.xochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-80794871695856461432008-09-04T10:14:00.003-05:002008-09-04T10:28:34.477-05:00Palin PowerFuck. Be afraid. <br />Palin gave a very good speech last night, and it's time we stopped underestimating her. <br /><br />Sure, it was mocking, condescending and misleading. I didn't hear what she plans to do about health care, the economy or the environment. It was totally fucking shameless. But it's right back to the culture wars with this, and this kind of bullshit can have broad appeal in swing states and with rural and blue collar voters. <br /><br />Let's take a step back and think. It's unlikely the christian right will vote for the Democrats, so they need to focus on some 15 keys states. They need to keep those from McCain-Palin. <br /><br />I think they won't be fooled, but the next two months are going to be tough. Palin <i>will</i> go after Obama's strengths and potray them as morally undesirable. They <i>will</i> play this as a narrative, and everyone loves a story. Here's an example:<br /><br />“I had the privilege of living most of my life in a small town,” Palin said. <br /><br />“Before I became governor of the great state of Alaska, I was mayor of my hometown. And since our opponents in this presidential election seem to look down on that experience, let me explain to them what the job involves. I guess, I guess a small-town mayor is sort of like a community organizer, except that you have actual responsibilities.”<br /><br />Jesus Christ, burn!!! Did Obama mock McCain that way, or her? Did Biden? No, but this is obviously Karl Rove's game now. 'Cause that speech sounds a lot like George W. Bush.<br /><br />"I’m not a member of the permanent political establishment. And I’ve learned quickly, these last few days, that if you’re not a member in good standing of the Washington elite, then some in the media consider a candidate unqualified for that reason alone,” she said. “But … here’s a little news flash for those reporters and commentators: I’m not going to Washington to seek their good opinion — I’m going to Washington to serve the people of this country.”<br /><br />That was Goober's platform. <br /><br />I think it would be a mistake to cross off Palin as another untraveled, science doubting moron who thinks "Jesus Christ our Lord" has a personal interest in Republican political issues. She is that of course, but that doesn't mean she can't convince enough people to vote her. <br /><br />Months ago there were some conspiracy theories afloat on the blogosphere that McCain was going to drop out during the GOP convention. Amid all the chaos and confusion a fresh face would emerge, someone public could identify with, someone they didn't know about and therefore would give the benefit of the doubt on their faults and pecadilloes. Eight weeks later, bam! the Democrats don't know what hit them. <br /><br />Guess what? This is it. <br /><br />Faux News rejoiced in Palins vitriol. Their headline today is ==> <a href="http://elections.foxnews.com/2008/09/03/palin-to-scold-washington-elite-defend-vp-credentials/">Newcomer Palin fights critics, mocks Obama</a>. <br /><br /><blockquote>Sarah Palin thrashed Barack Obama Wednesday as an empty suit whose campaign themes of “hope” and “change” are better fit to describe her Republican running mate, John McCain, a man she said has spent a career in service to his country. </blockquote><br /><br />Does this seem like absolute bullshit? Maybe to you or me, but some people eat this shit up with a spoon. And they love it. <br /><br />I don't remember if it was tha National Review or the NRC website, but there was this comment about how brilliant he lipstick joke was.<br /><br />“What’s the difference between a hockey mom and a pit bull? Lipstick,” said Palin, pointing to her mouth. Um, right. <br /><br />Fighting the campaign on the Republican's turf, on their terms, is a losing battle. Let's not make this about culture wars and keep it about the issues. Let National Enquirer write report on The Baby Daddy and Jamie Lynn's gift to Bristol Palin.<br /><br />I would love, love, love it if soeone cornered Palin about abortion rights and she would say she's not totally against it, since that would let down her christian right base. But that needs to be handled with the utmost care, lest it explodes in Biden's (or whoever would run that) face.xochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-88965309684627879232008-09-03T11:04:00.008-05:002008-09-03T11:34:24.162-05:00And the hits just keep on coming...<a href="http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jIMJWupyWNmvU3UX2aGhICmZrQ_wD92UUPU80">Levi Johnston to join Palin family at convention</a><br /><br />Other blogs have also picked this up,<br />==> <a href="http://www.deusexmalcontent.com/">http://www.deusexmalcontent.com/</a> ,<br />== >@huffpo <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/09/03/levi-johnstons-mom-on-bri_n_123458.html">Levi Johnston's Mom on Bristol Palin pregnancy: This is just a bonus </a><br />==> <a href="http://althouse.blogspot.com/2008/09/levi-johnston-kid-who-knocked-up.html">@ althouse </a><br /><br /><br />yesyesyes this is exactly what Rove wants, for us to focus on the cultural aspect of it, to ignore the issues (apparently when Palin was mayor she left Wasilla $20 million dollars in debt). And that way Democrats will seem a whiny elitist bunch out of touch with reality etc etc etc. I will post on the issues in a while. It's just too much fun! As we say in spanish, "se ponen de pechito"<br /><br /><br />Update: Now I see what Rove is after.... He's going after the cougar vote! and the Jamie lynn Spears vote!<br /><br />New York Magazine admits what the rest of us won't:<br />==> <a href="http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2008/09/were_sorry_but_palin_babydaddy.html?imw=Y">We're Sorry, but Palin Baby Daddy Levi is Sex on Skates</a><br /><br />Ya'know, What Would Karl Rove Do is not fun anymore. It used to be a favorite game with Rusty and me. But now it's like a) no fuckin' way he planned this or b) what if he did, 'cause he's just smarter than us?xochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-6112253578350738512008-09-03T11:02:00.001-05:002008-09-03T11:04:04.257-05:00McC's vetting process<object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/1RN5xbWtNSU&hl=en&fs=1"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/1RN5xbWtNSU&hl=en&fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object>xochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-9125980934630155652008-09-02T15:45:00.005-05:002008-09-02T16:10:48.024-05:00The Empire strikes backThe WSJ graciously allowed Nancy Pfotenhauer, national spokesperson for the McC campaign, to write up a glowing review of Palin, filled with little white lies that never hurt anybody. Possible even worse than their profile on Cindy McCain back in april (see my review <a href="http://sodafilms.blogspot.com/2008/04/karl-rove-is-perverse-genius.html">here</a>) this is just priceless. Below, the first few paragraphs. My comments are in light blue.<br /><br /><blockquote>In Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, Sen. John McCain has found a fellow maverick to be his running mate -- one who can help bring the right kind of reform to Washington. Ms. Palin, like Mr. McCain, has a strong record of battling the status quo, restoring accountability and effectiveness to government, and working to secure energy independence, root out corruption and curb wasteful spending. <span style="color:#00cccc;"><strong>(I'm not even touching this one since it's only the inital salvo, a summary, if you will, of the following crock.)<br /></strong></span><br />As the chief executive of the nation's largest state,<strong> <span style="color:#00cccc;">(Largest in area, fifth smallest populationwise.)</span></strong> Ms. Palin oversees some of the country's largest energy reserves<strong><span style="color:#00cccc;">.(Alaska does have the some of the largest reserves in US but the largest is in North Dakota and part of Montana. So?)</span></strong> She came into office at a critical time in Alaska politics, facing a system plagued by corruption. Her response was to immediately begin cleaning it up. (<span style="color:#00cccc;"><strong>the governor is currently under an ethics investigation by the Alaska state legislature ==> <a href="http://www.adn.com/monegan/story/492964.html">Palin Staff Pushed to have trooper fired</a>)</strong></span> The results of her leadership today speak for themselves: Ms. Palin's approval ratings top 80% -- more than 60% higher than that of the Democratic Congress. <span style="color:#00cccc;"><strong>(Correction, her approval ratings have fallen to 65%. Congress inherited its rating from the last 6 years)<br /></strong></span><br />Ms. Palin has a tangible, impressive record of achievement and executive experience.<strong><span style="color:#00cccc;"> (¿? </span><span style="color:#00cccc;">Palin's experience is couple of years as governor and six years as mayor of her hometown, with a population of 6, 500.)</span></strong> She is head of the Alaska National Guard <strong><span style="color:#00cccc;">(and tell us, Nancy, which crisis exactly did she use her chief executive skills?)</span></strong> and the chairman of two multistate agencies that make energy decisions that affect all Americans.<br /><strong><span style="color:#00cccc;">(Ted Anthony over at </span><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/08/31/alaska-national-guard-gen_n_122860.html"><span style="color:#00cccc;">huffpo </span></a><span style="color:#00cccc;">notes: </span><blockquote><p><span style="color:#00cccc;">Maj. Gen. Craig Campbell, adjutant general of the Alaska National Guard, considers Palin “extremely responsive and smart” and says she is in charge when it comes to in-state services, such as emergencies and natural disasters where the National Guard is the first responder.</span></p><p></strong><strong><span style="color:#00cccc;">But, in an interview with The Associated Press on Sunday, he said he and Palin play no role in national defense activities, even when they involve the Alaska National Guard. The entire operation is under federal control, and the governor is not briefed on situations.)</span></strong> </p></blockquote><p><br />While Barack Obama spent almost all of the past two years running for president, Ms. Palin has been running a state. <span style="color:#00cccc;"><strong>(Sorry to repeat this. A conservative, red states, fifth smallest in population. Plagued with corruption. Where it seemed she was different, but Troopergate and the flipflopping on the bridge suggest more of the same. )</strong></span></p><p>It's telling that Sen. Obama chose to give a negative, partisan speech at the Democratic National Convention in Denver. Whenever Obama dares criticize, he is painted as being negative. <strong><span style="color:#00cccc;">(Doesn't this strike you as racist? He's jiving, and they'll dismiss him are puerile or pollyana-like. But he points out the bad stuff, and suddenly he's the angry black man, and nooooo, we don't want that.)</span></strong> He envisions a Democratic monolith in Washington that will solve all of our problems.<span style="color:#00cccc;"><strong>(Huh? If anything, he's the community organizer guy, the one who tells everyone to work towards a common goal instead of just expecting a handout. )</p></blockquote></strong></span><br /><br />Look, it goes on and on, and the full text can be found here: <a href="http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122031229774188795.html">Ignore the Chauvinists, Palin has real experience</a> Although judging from the comments, a lot of which say pretty much what I'm commenting on, readers aren't impressed. WSJ readers. Huh.xochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-14658074292087998102008-09-02T09:06:00.005-05:002008-09-02T10:43:15.351-05:00Sarah Palin is not a bad parent...because her teenage daughter is pregnant. Say what you will. Does that mean the thousands of teenagers with unplanned pregnancies have bad parents? You can be a great parent, but you are not with your child 24/7. Sometimes you just have to hope for the best. People make mistakes, you know.<br /><br />That's not to say there aren't other reasons she may be accused of bad parenting. Using her children and their circumstances for political gain. Allowing, probably pushing her daughter to marry at 17. There are a host of reasons, although if Sarah Palin was a man we wouldn't be half as harsh, admittedly. <br /><br />Accepting the VP nomination already knowing her daughter was pregnant is suspicious. She knew all the scrutiny her child would have to endure. I don't think she knew. If she did know, and it's all done in the name of electoral votes, ugh. Or because it's God's will and they are strong enough to stand it and teach everyone else a lesson and accept Jesus Christ as their personal savior, again, ugh. <br /><br />It's all fishy, and my inner conspiracy theorist doesn't think the younger Palin is five months pregnant. And that nine hour flight just doesn't seem legit. Something's afoot. <br /><br />Many unwed teenagers get pregnant every year. It's actually not the end of the world. Life is what happens to you when you're busy making other plans. Sure, I say this from a very comfortable perspective, a 25 year old Mexican middle class viewpoint where families pitch in not just with money but with their love and their time. And it didn't happen to me. But the things is, life, happiness and success come in many forms. <br /><br />I once knew a woman who had married very young, and had children almost right away. She told me that almost no one will ever confess to regretting that kind of choice since it would mean you regret your kids, and our society places a high value on offspring and advancing the family name. <br /><br />However, she said, she could tell me as a single person in her twenties, that given then chance she wouldn't do it again since she missed out on a lot of things. I thought, wow, here's someone who's brutally honest. But does did it make her any happier? Was this regret actually a refusal or inhability to adapt? <br /><br />This post, as usual, started being about one thing and meandered over to a whole other territory. My apologies, dear reader.<br /><br />I am pro choice, because I believe it is a woman's right to choose. While I deplore the act of abortion itself, I know it isn't a decision anyone comes to easily. I have not walked in their shoes. I did not raise them, nor am I raising their child. I would rather they had received sexual education, I would rather they would try to find other solutions. But I cannot deny them their right to choose. As they shouldn't deny me my choices.<br /><br />One of my main arguments against people who want to keep abortion illegal is that they're not solving anything with denying women access to healthcare. The rich get their abortions in San Antonio or Houston, the middle class goes to clandestine (professional looking though, but no guarantees) clinics in the city, and the poor resort to herbs, dubious pills and coat hangers. A lot of anti choice people I know are all about not murdering an unborn child, but they're not very interested in discussing what happens once the kid is born. <br /><br />But maybe we should restate the problem in order to find a solution. Somehow teenage pregnancy rates remain on the rise, if we trust statistics. I'm not so sure it's not just a case of selective attention, or the fact that we have better data now. In ancient history, about fifty years ago, young people were expected to keep it in their pants. Yet teenage pregnancy still happened. It was all hush hush then, so maybe social stigma <i>did</i> work to keep the rates down, but not completely. <br /><br />If we worked on getting everyone on contraception, we could work on getting us to respect our bodies and ourselves and getting rid of our hang ups about sex, and other higher and nobler purposes. But it's kinda hard to do that when all this procreation and all the emotional upheaval in entails keeps distorting the issue.xochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-66044225102500405512008-09-01T17:09:00.003-05:002008-09-01T17:42:07.384-05:00either you do or you don't<blockquote>"Bristol Palin made the decision on her own to keep the baby, McCain aides said."</blockquote><br /><br />From the Reuters article. Of course this wasn't even a question, once the news leaked at least. Nobody believes for even a second that there was no coercion or at least pressure. <br /><br />But I find it annoying that the pro-lifers (anti-choice is more apt) are stressing the fact that she <i>chose</i> to keep it. Now back the fuck up. You are trying to <i>take away</i> women's right to choose. Why are you congratulating yourselves on choosing then? <br /><br />I know that they are implying the choice between keeping it and giving it up for adoption. Puh-leeze. It was the younger Palin's choice. Right. <br /><br />Pro-choice, is precisely that. It's not gung-ho abortion, it's advocating for a woman's right to choose. And part of that means keeping abortion safe and legal. In Mexico's case, making abortion legal for starters. Except in Mexico City, where it already is. (More on that later)<br /><br />It's the same thing with governor Palin's fifth child, who has Down Syndrome. And she heroically choose to keep it. If she's so pro-life, it wasn't a choice gdamnit! She doesn't accept having a choice! Also, both republicans and democrats are using this as political fodder. Is she a saint for doing it, was it wrong, etc. And I don't see the McCain camp stopping them. As in, back off, this is my child. <br /><br />The Palins' "ask the media to respect our daughter and Levi’s privacy as has always been the tradition of children of candidates." But I haven't seen this about Trig Palin, only with this new development. <br /><br />Cara Kulwicki, who writes at <a href="http://feministe.us/blog">feministe</a> and also has a <a href="http://thecurvature.com">blog</a>, had an interesting post last week about this,<br /><br /><blockquote>It’s almost as though they think that Palin became pregnant and gave birth to a child with Down Syndrome simply to please them. And the thing is that if they really believe their rhetoric, the answer was obvious, so obvious in fact that Palin didn’t really have a “choice” to make. Only now, because it’s convenient, they want to acknowledge that the decision of whether or not to abort after getting news that your child will be born with a disability is a difficult one, simply so that they can point and say “but look at her, she searched her soul and then did the right thing — so should all women!” They don’t want women to have a choice, but then want to praise this particular woman for the choice that she did make.</blockquote><br /><br />full text here ==><a href="http://thecurvature.com/2008/08/30/its-not-a-choice-its-a-child-except-when-its-beneficial-to-say-its-a-choice/">It's not a choice, it's a child - except when it's beneficial to say it's a choice</a><br /><br />Once again, you're either in or out. Not both ways. If there shouldn't be choice, don't congratulate yourself for "choosing right". This willingness to use a very private matter and render it public and political is disgusting and I'm expecting the shit <i>will</i> hit the fan if they continue like this. I hope.xochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-78032194408028000832008-09-01T11:54:00.005-05:002008-09-01T13:44:03.233-05:00Shameless gossip==><a href="http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/us_elections/article4647965.ece">Sarah Palin hit by Internet rumors over fifth child</a><br /><br />Already climbing up the ranks on digg. It seems Palin's fifth pregnancy was suspiciously announced in her seventh month and she hardly ever showed. They're saying it was really her daughter's kid. <br /><br />True? False? Um, how do I know? Maybe she was keeping it quiet because of the Down Syndrome thing.<br /><br />The Republican camp seems to be reacting today, by announcing that Palin's 17 year old daughter is pregnant and will marry "her baby's daddy". Reminds me of when Michael Douglas annouced he was a sex addict (and he was covering up something else supposedly, although I never found out what it was).<br /><br />Poor kid. Now they (we) are going to set her up as an example of her mother's parenting skills, how she's unfit for VP, the American taxpayers' abstinence-only education tax dollars at work, the list goes on. <br /><br /><br />When I was reading the NY Times story, I found it very odd that Palin boarded a nine hour flight to Alaska when she already had contractions. She already knew her child had Down's Syndrome, and she was going into labor a month early. And she's 44. Miscarriage city? Is that what was really going on?<br /><br />I've had a post drafted all weekend about the whole nomination, but have been arguing all weekend with Rusty and Ben and everyone about the effect. Rusty thinks Rove is a genius and this will only benefit McCain. They're bidding for the forgotten Hillary supporters, etc.<br /><br />I think this is only brilliant n the surface and not even the U.S. voters would fall for such obvious pandering. Hillary's holdouts, impressed with a staunch prolifer? Who sued the federal government for placing the polar bear on the endangered species list? <br /><br />Let's say Clintonites are a stupid bunch and they will go for Palin because she's a woman. That they're rabid manhaters and totally bitter. Ok, let's suspend disbelief for a moment and go ahead and buy this. So they'll vote for a happily married 44 year old with five children? Who is VP under McCain? Naaahh. I don't think so.<br /><br />Look, you can't have your cake and eat it too. Either the Christian right embraces this move or the Clinton fans. Not both. Possibly neither one.<br /><br />Right now, conservative christian right folks are relieved about this pick, if the MSM is to be believed. Yet the loony right blogs are eating up this story about Palin having faked her pregnancy.<br /><br />This is very muddled right now, but I stand by my original reaction. The VP pick was only brilliant on the surface. Even without this prurient gossip, it opens up McCain for a host of criticism. It makes him seem too old. Yes, everyone else says he's too old, but this pick means he agrees with them. Biden complements Obama. But he doesn't fill in gaps in a way that spotlights Obama's failings. <br /><br />Oh, and wtf with Cindy McCain saying that Palin has foreign policy experience because Alaska is close to Russia? Someone shut her up. And the republicans criticized Clinton when she flashed her ex-First Lady credentials and tried to pass it off as experience!<br /><br />According to an AP article, Mrs. McCain asked Palin how she was feeling about her son being deployed to Iraq, etc. <br /><br />“And she looked me square in the eye and she said, ’You know something? I’m a mother. I can do it.’ ”<br /><br />Ugh. Someone get me a barf bucket.xochhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03244099926405846270noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-73911699257364944822008-08-30T23:22:00.003-05:002008-08-31T00:01:39.294-05:00Chinese DemocracyBlack and White Cat is a blog that writes about China from an insider's perspective. (btw, found this via Forbes ===><a href="http://www.forbes.com/business/2008/08/29/china-media-olympics-biz-media-cx_pm_0829notes.html">Reporting From The '1984' Beijing Olympics</a> by Paul Maidment)<br /><br />Charles McGrath wrote a story for the New York Times that the Beijing Evening News translated. Um, ruthlessly edited. *cough* censored *cough*. B&W cat translated it back to english, so we can examine how the chinese news service eliminated anything even slightly negative and edited all the nuances out. It reads like propaganda now, IMHO. <br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_Ap0R0YHBHHs/SLofUc_ai7I/AAAAAAAAAM8/paphx4rBZ-4/s1600-h/Dibujo.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_Ap0R0YHBHHs/SLofUc_ai7I/AAAAAAAAAM8/paphx4rBZ-4/s400/Dibujo.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5240535552639011762" border="0" /></a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.blackandwhitecat.org/2008/08/28/how-the-new-york-times-should-have-covered-the-olympics/"> ===>Full text at Black and White Cat</a><br /><br />The Chinese aren't alone in this. Everyone does it, I know, Last Friday I was editing an article while a reporter was present (not her article) and I could see her wincing wile I wrote over things, deleted others, switched paragraph order. Ya know, edited. This was an agency text so I couldn't call the reported and ask him/her to clarify something. What were you trying to say when you wrote unexpectedly modestly plummet? <br /><br />Aaand it's a translation. Another area I dabble in, and wracking my brains out for the exact turn of phrase that sounds more professional without losing the essence, thinking, am I pouring my opinions into this? Am I interpreting too much?<br /><br />Even so, it's just a reminder that freedom of the press is not a fact in China. And in many places too. <br /><br />Did you know, the Singapore government claims that it does too respect freedom of the press. But it has a hand, and it discourages community participation. It wants a press that supports capitalism and free trade, but not citizen involvement or participation. <br /><br />A lot of censorship is self censorship. We cover flashy items, we eschew analysis in favor of a catchy headline, and ignore community issues.<br /><br />But back to the point, Madiment pointed out that editing like this explains a bit why the Chinese, according to a Pew survey in June, believe that the world thinks better of them than the rest of the world really does. (see ==><a href="http://www.forbes.com/opinions/2008/08/08/olympics-opening-ceremony-oped-cx_pm_0808notes.html">A Spectacular Misunderstanding, also by Maidment</a>)<br /><br />And when they're confronted with that reality, that your country isn't beloved byt he world and not everyone thinks you're A OK, that's when shock and ugliness ensues. Accusations that the rest of the world willfully misunderstands them, characterizes them in black and white. <br /><br />Well, I'm Mexican, I'm used the the U.S. press and their broad strokes. Yes, I've crossed them off as xenophobic, ignorant, out for a quick headline, etc. Yet they do tell the truth sometimes. And truth stings.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-21842223814641318832008-08-28T10:08:00.005-05:002008-08-31T00:02:24.241-05:00<a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_Ap0R0YHBHHs/SLbAdT9tjNI/AAAAAAAAAMs/3AvVt0At490/s1600-h/obama2.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5239586826300001490" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; CURSOR: hand; TEXT-ALIGN: center" alt="" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_Ap0R0YHBHHs/SLbAdT9tjNI/AAAAAAAAAMs/3AvVt0At490/s400/obama2.jpg" border="0" /></a><br />Ok, so he's the annointed one now. We are on track, set to go. Don't choke. Please, U.S., don't fuck this up.<br /><br />I keep thinking, <i>shiiit, they're gonna get all resentful that he's like the prom king and too cold and pragmatic and they're gonna shun him! They need to keep in mind that of the options they have, he's the best man for the job. They need a pragmatist, not a beer buddy!</i><br /><br />Although that kind of reaction is more likely to happen in Mexico, not in the US where the American dream is alive and well and that's why people don't pick on and resent the rich or the elite so much, since they live in hope that they too, will be one of them, some day.<br /><br /><br /><p><a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_Ap0R0YHBHHs/SLbA4f4s4wI/AAAAAAAAAM0/pP3mU64rcd8/s1600-h/obama.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5239587293356679938" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; CURSOR: hand; TEXT-ALIGN: center" alt="" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_Ap0R0YHBHHs/SLbA4f4s4wI/AAAAAAAAAM0/pP3mU64rcd8/s400/obama.jpg" border="0" /></a><br /><br />Still, I'm not totally sure it can't happen. Anything can happen. Karl Rove got George W. Bush elected. Twice.<br /><br />The so called American people had an earnest, dorky pol in Al Gore, and they chose Goober. Never mind Florida, 'cause the margin had to be really slim in the first place for that to have happened. So now they have this smart guy from a very different background, and people are in love with him. And I'm hoping the love affair will last. </p><p>He's not really a prom king ya know, not with a middle name like Hussein and a free spirited mother that sometimes went on food stamps. Don't be fooled, he may be charming but he didn't lead a charmed life. Sure, things are "easier" for Obama than for other politicos, but he still had to fight to get there.<br /><br /><span style="font-size:78%;">Does this sound like incoherent ranting? I'm sorry, I just need my morning coffee, and I'm using this poor blog to vent, since most of the subjects du jour can't be published right now. They are <i>embargoed</i>, so to speak. But I'll find a way around it.<br /></span></p>Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-14839977558255430602008-08-27T18:00:00.003-05:002008-08-31T00:02:47.119-05:00When the important things get buried under urgent stuff==><a href="http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/6d033ee8-7497-11dd-bc91-0000779fd18c.html">US set to adopt IFRS rules</a><br /><br />This is a small item, no big headlines. It's a bit of legislation about accounting practices, quite boring. But the repercussions, I believe, are important. <br /><br /><blockquote>US companies are set to switch to international accounting rules in a move that will, for the first time, see all the world's most important listed groups reporting according to the same set of standards.<br /><br />The US Securities and Exchange Commission yesterday proposed a "roadmap" to manage the migration of US companies from its rules to the international ones. The plans are open to comment for 60 days.<br /><br />More than 100 countries use, or are adopting, International Financial Reporting Standards, including all 27 European Union members as well as China, Japan, Canada and India. US GAAP, the accounting lingua franca until the sudden rise of IFRS, is the last significant standard to be switched.<br /><br />Under the SEC's plans, US groups are likely to adopt IFRS in 2014 providing certain conditions are met, a decision that will be taken in 2011. Some companies may be allowed to adopt IFRS sooner.</blockquote><br />What does this mean? Financial statements are a labyrinth where accountants, tax attorneys and the like can hide their bosses' pecadilloes and misdemeanors. The situation is even worse when you're comparing companies accross countries, since everyone has their own accounting standards.<br /><br />Case in point: the WSJ recently called out Cemex for it's debt management. According to the Journal, Cemex might be in trouble not because of the Venezuelan expropriation, but because they are heavily leveraged and demand is declining. <br /><br />==><a href="http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121928337870859005.html">Cemex's Cement Shoes</a><br /><blockquote>But investors should be more worried by the Mexican company's large, complex and, some fear, overly engineered debt. This exposes shareholders to risks associated with things like movements in the Japanese yen and changes in Cemex's own share price.</blockquote><br />The article also points out that the company's 17.6 billion dollar debt- mostly acquired when they purchased Rinker- doesn't include about 4 billion that are considered capital assets in México, but instead are liabilities under US GAAP (Generally Accepted Accounting Principles).<br /><br />This is all very boring to most of you, I know. Only very geeky people get excited about accounting rules. The bottom line is, having everyone (or more companies at least) follow the same rules when counting their chickens means less room for interpretation and subterfuge. Less room for bubbles and meltdowns, less Enrons. And while this may not be stop all presses kind of item, in the long run, I think it's an important move in the right direction.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-34526253416653943282008-08-25T11:48:00.002-05:002008-08-25T12:05:57.980-05:00What's going to happen when Obama wins the election? Ok, ok, <i>if</i> he wins the election. <br /><br />This isn't about his capacity to govern etc, I'm just wondering about the media aspect of it all. I mean, will they phase out his Twitter updates? The presidency is not a West Wing episode. It's not all glamour, and some national security issues can't really be discussed over Web 2.0, can they?<br /><br />Maybe his fans know that, and I'm subestimating them. Although they shouldn't be called fans in that case. And therein lies a problem.<br /><br />First of all, there's the candidate / elected official transition. Vicente Fox was a good candidate but not such a good president. And people expected miracles and didn't lift a finger, etc... But now this is a very mediatic (is that a word?) candidate, one who's in touch, so to speak, with his constituents or whatever, through the web. And I'm wondering if all this closeness will continue once in office.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29962307.post-41015775233266499422008-08-21T10:38:00.003-05:002008-08-21T10:57:37.985-05:00So yeah, um, we removed the dirty pic. It wasn't pervy or anything, but apparently anyone and everyone who googled <em>chingada, chingar, chingan</em> and other derivatives of the word, arrived here. And I didn't even tag it, so what the hell? But, as R. just pointed out, removing the pic might not deter those would be searchers since I am still including the word in this post. We'll see. <br /><br />So, on a totally unrelated topic, I'm an MBA now. Here's to late nights, to finding out I am a good student only if I like the subject, and to finding out that even if I don't like the subject I can still scrape by (albeit not as happily). Here's to my parents, and my teachers, and my advisor. To saying goodbye to Excel spreadsheets. And adios, McKinsey case studies! Good riddance.<br /><br />Here's to beer, and singing the Pet Shop Boys really loud on a Tuesday night. Here's to my teammate Wendy who's in friggin' <i>China</i> and still manages to be saner and more on the ball and more communicative than other teamsters residing in good ol' Monterrey. I promise I'll visit you one of these days!<br /><br />So, I'm not switching jobs. I like my current one just fine, thank you very much. I like to write. I'm not very keen on working for investment bankers. Or being one, for that matter. <br /><br />I also like the fact that I am getting an inmense amount of time back. What will I do with it? I dunno, sleep maybe? Gardening, running, biking, drinking, cooking, reading, watching movies, writing (or attempt to) screenplays, the list is endless. Some things I never stopped doing, but they were scaled down some. Sleeping, for example.<br /><br />Anyhooo, I am just glad to be done with the whole thing. Even at work, I'm no longer writing about venture capital funds, and we're back to agribusiness. Slaughterhouses. Yeah, so. I actually like the subject, although I predict I won't be eating beef the next couple weeks. Or months.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com1