SUCK MY BIG, BLACK ASS CHARLIE BROWN!

You know what they say about brothers with big mail boxes? Big mailbox, big welfare check!

I’ll let this video speak for itself otherwise:

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Hey folks,

I believe that Bitesized Buddha is playing a show next week (the 10th of June) at the fowlwoodrobber. I bet there will be dancing and fun both before and after we play, and there may be another band playing. Hopefully my friends from NYC will be here and we will have a super time. I know they love to dance, so yay! There has been some talk of an early 90s dance party. I’m not sure if I can get enough cheasy early 90s dance music in time though. Dance dance dance!

Also the week after that:

Bitesized Buddha
@Rhinos 8pm
Friday the 16th

Wheeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

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Yes…I’m getting a job offer today from the DDN folks. I think I will be able to save up and possibly move to NYC within the company. It seems like pretty interesting work, but there is a huge learning curve. Basically I will be in charge of RAID arrays that can do 3GB/s each, that’s almost a DVD’s worth of data every second. IU is getting a bunch of these things, it’s a lot of disc. There will be over a petabyte of data when it’s all said and done. Pretty exciting.

So plus for getting a really awesome job. minus that it’s not in NYC.

This company has positions in Paris and Tokyo though, so I have a lot of long term moving options.

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The Greener Grass Syndrome

A while back, my high school hosted Law Day. Law Day is a day where seniors spend 3 hours rotating between various guest speakers whose occupations deal with the law in some way.

My favorite speaker was a professor at George Mason University by the name of Hawke. He specialized in the foundations of America especially the constitution and its underpinnings.

It was all very enthralling. He talked about the relationship between political culture and our rights—how when rights are eroded it is difficult to maintain them because it changes the political culture on which rights are protected.

All that is very interesting to me, but what struck me as most interesting about his presentation was a comment he made about the change communication has had on economics dispersion. He said that the huge difference between now and a century ago is not the fact that there are haves and have-nots—they have always been. It was rather the fact that now, because of media prevalence, the have-nots see exactly what the haves have. It is shoved in front of their face—marketed to them in such a way that what becomes important are not characteristics integral to the person, but instead the products presented for consumption.

It’s the greener grass syndrome.

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I bet he voted for Bush

And I also bet he has a giant collection of fag mags too:

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