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Jan. 22nd, 2006

8 bit HP

Do me a favor and just click it.


TheRecordBreakingDomain.com



No need to worry about getting any viruses or anything. It's just for my benefit.

Oct. 20th, 2005

8 bit HP

(no subject)

I've been able to avoid any major LJ "drama" in the year that I've had this. But just to prevent that eventuality from happening, I'm making this friends only. If you're already on my friends list, you're good to go, but any one else wanting to be added should comment.
8 bit HP

(no subject)

Y'know what? I hate people. Sure there are plenty of 'em that I like, but there are so many more that I dont. I wish I could be done with High School and get into a college where the ratio of douchebags to decent people was better.

That is all.

Oct. 17th, 2005

8 bit HP

(no subject)

chef jpeg
You are the the Swedish Chef.
You are a talented individual, nobody understands
you. Perhaps it's because you talk funny.

FAVORITE EXPRESSION:
"Brk! Brk! Brk!"
HOBBIES:
Kokin' der yummee-yummers

FAVORITE MOVIE:
"Wild Strawberries...and Creme"

LAST BOOK READ:
"Der Swedish Chef Kokin' Bokin'"

QUOTE:
"Vergoofin der flicke stoobin mit der brk-brk
yubetcha!"


What Muppet are you?
brought to you by Quizilla

Oct. 12th, 2005

8 bit HP

We already have a better record that the football team.

For the first time in 6 years Marquette has won a High School Bowl match. We beat Ironwood 160 to 115. The episode airs the 29th at 8:00 pm on channel 13. I dont know when our next match is, but we play ontanogin.
8 bit HP

mmmm, cows

Read more... )

Oct. 10th, 2005

8 bit HP

Stupid Colombus day.

So I'm feeling much better than I was last time I updated this thing. (Thanks for the vitamin tip, Tyson. I think it's helping.)

We learned the drill for Nessun Dorma today. It's really pretty easy, now if we could make the song not suck, I'll be really happy. Nessun Dorma is one of those things that's not going to impress anyone by how well the drill is marched, but by how well we play it. It's a very not marching band like piece.

This week is going to be pretty boring except for Wendesday, which is going to be Pandemonium. I have PSATs in the morning, and immediately after that I have the first High School Bowl competiton. If I take too long on the test, I wont be able to go compete, so I better test fairly quickly.

5th hour (potentially) is the dress rehersal for the big sing. Which I think is the most stupid (stupidest?) concert we do all year, but I suppose it has to be done. That evening is the actual concert. Thank God we dont have to actually go for the whole thing, just for our medly. Then I'm getting the hell out of there.

My only other thing this week is that I have to be at school at 7:30 on Friday morning, which is normally no big deal, except that Friday is a teacher in-service. I have to be at school on my day off! Damn.

High School Bowl is shaping up to be quite good. Most people know that the only MSHS team worse than the Football team is traditionally the HSB team. We aim to fix that this year. At practice today the team that we plan on sending (Mia, Ben, Matthew Holliday and myself) won by some rediculous margin. The score was something like 300+ to 120 or something. The first game was a blowout as well, but not by as much.


Also, I hate Colombus day and my heatsink still has not arrived.

I suppose that's it for now.

Oct. 8th, 2005

8 bit HP

Teehee.

This is Mia updating Matt's journal because he's become quite lapse in doing so.
Contrary to the last entry, Matt is not as grumpy gussed as he was before.
We're all sugared up from Donker's candy and going out to the Verling (where I have never been before) avec sa Mere et son cousins.
I love him very much.

Bwahaha. :)

Oct. 7th, 2005

8 bit HP

Everybody raise a glass to the master of the house.

To quote a certain Hobbit:

"I'm beginning to feel like not enough butter scraped over too much bread."


I don't know what it is exactally but I'm feeling more tired than ususal every morning. I'm forgetting do to homework assignments, or when I remember to do them I realise I've forgotten where I wrote down the page assignment. Between marching band, regular schoolwork, Boy scouts, Les Mis auditions and Regional Honors choir auditions I'm just feeling wiped out. I also need to remember to practice my horn this weekend. Ugh.

I'm somewhat worried about the show tonight. I've only practiced it twice, everyone else 3 times. I suppose I'll get a feel for it after school today. I'm more worried about the playing than the marching. I keep running out of air right where the mellophones have the melody and I cant keep up.


whatever. Time for school

Oct. 2nd, 2005

Izzard

I have but one thing to say.

Ben Folds in concert! October 28! Kalamazoo!

*giggles like he's got something to hide*


(I wonder if he'll sing "Kalamazoo")

Sep. 6th, 2005

Izzard

(no subject)

the Cutting Edge
(66% dark, 42% spontaneous, 21% vulgar)
your humor style:
CLEAN | SPONTANEOUS | DARK




Your humor's mostly innocent and off-the-cuff, but somehow there's something slightly menacing about you. Part of your humor is making people a little uncomfortable, even if the things you say aren't themselves confrontational. You probably have a very dry delivery, or are seriously over-the-top.

Your type is the most likely to appreciate a good insult and/or broken bone and/or very very fat person dancing.


PEOPLE LIKE YOU: David Letterman - John Belushi





The 3-Variable Funny Test!

- it rules -



If you're interested, try my latest:
The Terrorism Test




My test tracked 3 variables How you compared to other people your age and gender:
free online datingfree online dating
You scored higher than 86% on darkness
free online datingfree online dating
You scored higher than 40% on spontaneity
free online datingfree online dating
You scored higher than 12% on vulgarity
Link: The 3 Variable Funny Test written by jason_bateman on Ok Cupid

Sep. 5th, 2005

8 bit HP

I swear I didn't rig it so I got this for an answer





Take the What High School
Stereotype Are You?
quiz.

Sep. 4th, 2005

Izzard

The little monkey stole my ice cream and everybody laughed at me.

So Livejournal, we meet again.

I know I haven't updated in a long time (well, I suppose I have. But those updates were pointless little blurbs or quizes.)

I'm at Ben's along with Bruce and Ross right now. Four day weekends are prime times for these video game filled events. Bruce and Ross are DDR-ing it up, Ben's watching and I'm on my new lappy stealing Ben's wireless.

Now Bruce has opted for lounding on the futon to rest himself (he fell off of his dance pad during a particularly rousing match.) Ben is EXTREME.

School so far is not too terrible. Physical Geography is an absolute joke, but Swadley seems really nice. I like her. She just got stuck teaching a shitty class. I'm sure the class would be useful for someone who plans on becoming a geologist...or something. But for those of us who don't plan on going into the the physical sciences, it's kind of useless.

Algebra II with Seeke appears as if it's going to be pretty good (for a math class, that is.) Seeke seems nice enough and pretty capable as a teacher. Of course I may just like the class because Mia's in it. We'll see.

Redmen chorale makes me sick. But the first week of class always does. I know how to sing the national anthem. I've been singing it for years. This probably sounds a bit elitest of me, but I think that there are too many people in Redmen chorale that are not at the level that they should be to be in the highest vocal ensemble in the school. I love Mrs. Brodersen, but She's too nice. I'd rather that I was in not in Redmen chorale myself and it was a better ensemble, than be in it and have it be of lesser quality. Not that it's really bad now, or anything. I just think that it could be a much better group if everyone in it was really devoted to it. But it's not my choir to direct, and whatever Mrs. Brodersen decides, I'll go along with

World lit with Pelto looks like it's going to be great. Ben, Bruce, Anne and Myself all sit by each other (as do Nelson and some other FMMS kids.) Pelto wants to do a unit where we do small group study on a novel of our choosing. I want to do 1984 or Brave new world, personally. Hitchhiker's guide to the Galaxy would also be fun.

The Stairwell is rather naked this year. It's unusual, to say the least. There are no underclassmen at all. If recruitment stays like this, the stairwell as we know it will cease to exist in 2 years. *gasp*

Wind Symphony is great. There's not much more I can say about it than that. It's just like previous years...but better.

Chemistry (Chem-is-try) doesnt seem like it's going to be very hard at all. The people in the class seem kind of....'eh for the most part. I think I'll stick by Zack, Danielle and Kari.

I suppose that's it for now. Maybe I'll play some Halo or something.

Aug. 22nd, 2005

8 bit HP

(no subject)

Take the quiz: "What sex dessert are you? *PICS*"

strawberries
your classy...you like it nice...but simple...you know just what you want, where you want it...IN YOUR CHAMPAGNE!

Aug. 17th, 2005

Izzard

These are the days of miracle and wonder and don't cry baby, don't cry.

Physicial Geo::Solinski <-Sem. 1|Sem. 2-> Economics::Stevenson

Algebra II::Hendrickson

Redmen Chorale::Broderson

World Literature::Pelto

Wind Symphony::Ludwig

Chemistry::Clement

Aug. 9th, 2005

8 bit HP

(no subject)

I know, I know. Again with the articles. But this one is not a satire, this is a bona fide article about something that I think is absolutely rediculous. The whole concept of "Zero Tolerance" If you'd like to see why it irritates me so, read on. If not, just keep scrolling down your friends page and read the next survey you come across.

I dont know who to give credit for this to, but It comes from www.overcriminalized.com

Criminalizing Kids II
Misdemeanor Mistakes and Felony Forgetfulness

It was a cool, clear October day in Washington, D.C., when the closing bell rang and twelve-year-old Ansche Hedgepeth ran out the door of Alice Deal Junior High School. She stopped at a fast-food restaurant for an order of hot French fries and then headed for home. Ansche took the escalator down into the Tenleytown/American University Metrorail station to catch her train. In the station, she ate a single French fry. Moments later, the junior high student was in handcuffs and headed for jail.

Ansche had no idea that the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA) had picked that Monday to kick-off a week of “zero tolerance” enforcement of “quality of life offenses.” They had ordered undercover officers to automatically punish even minor infractions.

D.C. Code § 35-251(b) makes it a violation to “consume food or drink” in a Metrorail facility. For a first offense, adults could be fined from $10 to $50. Only for a second offense can an adult be arrested. Minors, however, cannot be fined. Officers can either warn them, or arrest them, but the zero tolerance policy made arrest the only option.

An undercover officer saw Ansche eat the one fry and quickly placed her under arrest. The twelve-year-old girl was searched and her jacket, backpack, and shoelaces were confiscated. Her hands were cuffed behind her back and she was put into a paddy wagon and driven to the Juvenile Processing Center. Three hours after the arrest, Ansche was finally released into the custody of her mother.

In a decision reluctantly upholding Ansche’s arrest, the judge noted that she was totally compliant, never resisting, only crying throughout the process. She had never eaten in a Metrorail station before, nor had she ever been warned not to eat there. The judge mocked the harsh, zero tolerance enforcement of the “serious offense of eating a French fry on a subway platform.”

The district judge lamented the “humiliating and demeaning impact of the arrest” and suggested that the WMATA “re-think any other ‘foolish’ operating procedures before subjecting – or continuing to subject – unwary users of mass transportation to the indignity and horror suffered by [Ansche].” The Supreme Court, in a decision finding no constitutional problem with a similar incident, cited news reports of Ansche’s treatment as an example of a “comparably foolish, warrantless misdemeanor arrest” (Atwater v. City of Lago Vista).

In the face of public criticism, the WMATA rescinded their “zero tolerance” policy that required arresting minor children for minor infractions. Many overzealous zero tolerance policies remain, however, and most continue to target children. An American Bar Association (ABA) report cited some horrific examples:

  • A 12-year-old with hyperactivity disorder told students ahead of him in the lunch line to leave some potatoes, or “I’m going to get you.” The principal called the police and the Louisiana boy was arrested for making a terrorist threat. He spent two weeks in jail awaiting a hearing.
  • In Arlington, Virginia, two 10-year-old boys put soapy water in their teacher’s drink. The teacher insisted that the young boys be charged with felonies, although their case was later dismissed.
  • An 11-year-old girl was arrested after asking her teacher for permission to use a smooth-edged steak knife that she had brought from home to cut a piece of chicken that she was eating for lunch.
  • A disabled 14-year-old was charged as an adult with strong-armed robbery and jailed for six weeks. The boy, who had no criminal record, was accused of taking $2 from a classmate. After 60 Minutes II showed an interest in the case, all charges were dropped.

Where did this rush to lock up kids come from? The ABA traced the origin of the modern “zero tolerance” for children movement to the fear of school shootings that developed during the 1990s. The Clinton Administration trumpeted legislation that required “‘zero tolerance’ for guns in schools,” but even this well-intentioned move has become a symbol of overcriminalizing kids.

Eight-year-old Hamadi Alston found an L-shaped piece of paper in a school book. While playing “cops and robbers” with his friends during recess, Hamadi used the paper as a pretend gun, exclaiming “Pow, pow!” At the conclusion of recess, Hamadi was taken to the school office and interrogated to tears. Hamadi was arrested by the Irvington, New Jersey, Police Department for “threatening to kill other students” with his paper pistol. He spent almost five hours in police custody and was required to make two court appearances before charges were finally dropped.

Numerous students have been punished, some suspended or even expelled, for bringing toy guns (plastic, rather than paper) to school. Nine-year-old Austin Crittenden was suspended for “possession of a weapon – firearm replica,” when he brought a tiny plastic G.I. Joe handgun to his elementary school. The third grader’s principal “had to tape the gun to a piece of paper to keep from losing it,” Austin’s grandmother reported.

In Georgia, a five-year-old kindergarten student was suspended on the second day of school for violating White Bluff Elementary’s zero tolerance policy on “violent toys.” Principal Jane Ford-Brocato claimed that the kindergartener’s quarter-sized plastic gun would have “a negative impact” that justified zero tolerance. Defending the suspension, she said “we need to apply consequences as appropriate, with the understanding we want to guide the children into making good choices.” After a local television station called the school, however, the youngster’s suspension was immediately lifted.

Similar cases have sparked debate over zero tolerance policies across the country. In Spokane, Washington, an eight-year-old was suspended for having two tiny plastic G.I. Joe guns at school. At Oak Mountain Middle School in Alabama, two boys were suspended for playing with toy guns that one had brought in for a school-sanctioned project.

Much worse than suspensions or expulsions, some students have faced criminal charges for toy guns. One nine-year-old student was arrested for aggravated assault and disrupting a school function for playing with his toy gun as he left school at the end of the day. A ten-year-old student in Alabaster, Alabama, was likewise arrested for supposedly threatening behavior with a toy gun. Reasonable people might disagree about whether a student should be suspended for possessing a squirt gun on school property. But when students are arrested for such alleged crimes, the expansion of the boundaries of criminal law undermines the very concept of justice.

In January, Adam Liston made a mistake. The 18-year-old Davis High School senior dropped off a few friends at school on his way to the gun range with a new shotgun in his gun rack. Apparently someone reported seeing the gun, and the next day at school the vice principal asked to search Adam’s Ford F-250 truck. Adam readily agreed.

Six police cars arrived and officers swarmed Adam’s truck. As they searched, he realized he had made a major error. He forgot to take the shotgun, unloaded and still in its original box, out of his truck after target shooting the day before. Adam broke down in tears as officers pulled the gun from his truck and placed him under arrest. He was handcuffed and taken to the Yolo County Jail.

Adam was charged with two felony violations of California Penal Code § 626.9, possessing a firearm within 1,000 feet of a school. He was released on $25,000 bail, and on February 19, the school board voted 3-1 to expel Adam from Davis High.

The Sacramento Bee pointed out that Adam “had been a model citizen since the first grade.” He “had never been a discipline problem in school and … never had a run-in with the law.” Adam maintained good grades and already had college plans. His mother was president of the PTA.

One of Adam’s former teachers called him a “very thoughtful, very respectful, very charming and fine young man.” When his mother resigned her PTA position in response to her son’s “banishment,” several other parents resigned with her to protest Adam’s treatment. The Davis High School Student Council delivered a letter from Davis students to the Davis superintendent, stating the obvious: “Adam Liston is not a threat to this school district.”

A collection of letters to the editor of the Sacramento newspaper expressed the community’s outrage. The authorities acted without “common sense,” several writers opined. Adam’s act was “unintentional” and “an honest mistake.” This kind of zero tolerance enforcement perpetuates a “paranoid atmosphere” and is “morally bankrupt” and “a real travesty of justice.”

Another letter writer rhetorically asks, “Where is the criminal intent in this case?” Apparently, most Americans inherently understand the foundational concept of criminal law: a wrongful act (actus reus) is a crime only if done with wrongful intent (mens rea). Causing a traffic accident is entirely different from intentionally ramming someone with your car. Forgetting to remove an unloaded shotgun from your truck before driving to school is not the same as carrying a concealed loaded pistol to class.

Somehow, a number of school administrators, police, prosecutors, and lawmakers have cast aside this critical distinction in favor of mechanistic “zero tolerance.” While relieving decision makers from the burden of making decisions, zero tolerance undermines the very notion of justice, particularly when aimed at youth. School kids “care most about fairness,” said one attorney quoted in the ABA report. “When they see two students whose ‘offenses’ are vastly different being treated exactly the same, that sense of fairness is obliterated and replaced with fear and alienation.”

Civil society flourishes where people can rely on law to approximate justice as best it can. Law, at its best, provides protection and predictability, essential qualities for progress and ordered liberty. When the objective of law strays from justice, both concepts are tarnished. Law, no longer the protector, becomes the oppressor. Justice is twisted into a rationalization or dismissed as a phantasm.

The recent expansion of criminal law, manifest in part by zero tolerance policies, mocks the legacy of Anglo-American jurisprudence. As Roscoe Pound, a preeminent legal scholar of the early 20th Century, explained, “criminal law is based upon a theory of punishing the vicious will. It postulates a free agent confronted with a choice between doing right and doing wrong and choosing freely to do wrong.” When we punish innocents for their mistakes, we turn lady justice into a child swinging for a piñata, blindly waiving her razor-sharp sword amongst the crowd.


Aug. 6th, 2005

Izzard

(no subject)


Religous Sect Calls for an End to War )

Aug. 2nd, 2005

8 bit HP

(no subject)


Christian Fundamentalist Group Suspected of Terrorist Bombings )

Aug. 1st, 2005

8 bit HP

(no subject)

I was tagged by Mia
I tag:
Ross
Tyson
Joe
Jenna
Luke

10 years ago: Andy was being born (well, 10 years minus 30 days)
5 years ago: I was getting pumped up for Science Olympiad
1 year ago: I had just discovered D&D
Yesterday: Hung out with Mia and went to Art on the Rocks

5 snacks I enjoy: Hummus, toast with jam and cream cheese, chips, chex mix, baked things
5 things I’d do with $100 million:
1. Buy my mom the new car she wants
2. Go on a massive trip to various parts of the globe
3. Invest/save
4. be generally generous with my money and buy things with little actual value
5. Donate to some charaties

5 bands that I know the lyrics of most of their songs:
- Ben Folds [five]
- MC chris
- REM
- Jens Lekman
- Damien Rice

5 locations I’d like to run away to:
- Germany
- Finland
- Chicago
- Russia
- Buffalo, New York

5 bad habits I have:
- Being generally profane
- not cleaning up afer myself
- eating nightime snacks
- not studying/doing homework
- sitting around too much

5 things I like doing:
- Playing horn
- Gaming in general
- Singing
- Reading
- Writing

5 things I would never wear:
- A man thong
- Anything spectacularly flamboyant
- Anything with sequins
- UnderArmor
- short shorts

5 TV shows I like:
- Mythbusters
- The Daily Show
- Family Guy
- Scrubs
- South Park

5 movies I like:
- Hero
- Pulp Fiction
- Batman Begins
- Kill Bill
- Dr. Strangelove or: How I learned to stop worrying and love the bomb

5 famous (I'm changing it to alive or dead becuase It's cooler.) people I’d like to meet:
- Gyorgy Zhukov
- Che Guevara
- Eric Whitacre
- Shigeru Miyamoto
- Nobuo Uematsu

5 biggest joys at the moment:
- Thunderstorms
- Mia
- Cheap used books
- Money
- my impending lappy

5 favorite toys:
- Digital camera
- Pocket knives
- X box
- iPod (if it ever works again)
- D&D stuff

Jul. 29th, 2005

8 bit HP

fer shits and giggles.

Your IQ Is 125

Your Logical Intelligence is Exceptional
Your Verbal Intelligence is Genius
Your Mathematical Intelligence is Exceptional
Your General Knowledge is Exceptional

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