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plainmornings

:: 2004 12 February :: 2.13pm

Fucking christ.
i come on here for 3 fucking minutes and i swear a bazillion pop ups flashed everywhere. The quicker i Xed them out, the faster they came.

This is ridiculous.

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JediBumblebee

:: 2004 11 February :: 11.03pm

"I've come to the conclusion that I'm not in a school anymore. I've just paid several thousand dollars to join a book club." -eric

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JediBumblebee

:: 2004 11 February :: 10.15pm
:: Mood: blah
:: Music: White Stripes- Hotel Yorba

I wonder how long it will take 'til we're alone...sittin on the front porch of that home...stomping our feet on the wooden boards, never gotta worry about lockin the door...
i'm sick....it sucks big time.

I missed class tonite, and by the looks of things, I'm not going to them tomorrow either.

I took a 5 hour nap from 3:30 to 8:30 so I doubt I will be able to get to sleep...maybe i'll get some homework done, but i've got "sickness apathy", where you just dont care about anything or even want to move because you're just...sick.

I cant wait until this semester is over....I want the summer!

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munkysaurus

:: 2004 10 February :: 6.13pm
:: Music: Nine Inch Nails - La Mer

Paper towel treasures...
La Mer

Et quand le jour arrive.
Je deviendrai le ciel.
Et je deviendrai la mer.

Et la mer viendra pour m'embrasser.
Moi vais chercher.
タ la maison.

Rien ne peut m'arr黎er maintenant.

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JediBumblebee

:: 2004 10 February :: 2.42pm

Wed. Feb. 11th WIDR Rock And Bowl 9:30pm
Bowl with your favorite WIDR DJs at the Holiday Lanes (near Holiday Inn on 11th St. off Stadium, 375-6100). Complete with food and drink specials, raffle prizes, and WIDR DJs spinning music! $5 for shoes, 2 games of bowling and a raffle ticket for... damn, are we crazy?!? ...a Prima Italian electric bike (sells for $1500), a snowboard and a DVD Player. Each additional game only $1.

Friday Feb. 13th, Sat Feb 14th, 7pm and 9:30pm WIDR at the Movies
At the Little Theatre on Oakland and Oliver, WIDR and the Kalamazoo Film Society present "Pieces of April," starring Katie Holmes, Patricia Clarkston and Oliver Platt. $5, or $3 for students -- all proceeds go to WIDR --thank you Kalamazoo Film Society!

Saturday Feb. 14th Night of Rock 9 pm
At Kraftbrau Brewery -- Demolition Doll Rods, Tough and Lovely, and Invisible Mansion.

Sunday Feb. 15th WIDR at the Movies 2:30pm and 5pm
At the Little Theatre on Oakland and Oliver, WIDR and the Kalamazoo Film Society present "Pieces of April." See above for details.

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JediBumblebee

:: 2004 9 February :: 8.39pm
:: Mood: drained
:: Music: Guided by Voices- Hot Freaks

Took me to the new church and baptized me with salt...I am a new man...
its been an f-in crazy weekend...
took most of it off of work, dyed my hair red again (it rocks), went to a party and schmoozed with girls I didnt really know (guys too, but schmoozing with girls is a shocking thing for me), drank too much liquor, woke up with three men and a hangover (not as bad as it sounds, I promise), worked the WIDR garage sale (with said hangover), rocked out the homework scene (still hungover), watched American Wedding, slept, woke up today with a headache AGAIN (a 48-hour hangover?), went to work for 7 hours, ran home quick and went to DJ and collect pledges for WIDR week (I made $115 during my show), came home, threw some laundry in the washer, and then I am here. Still with a serious headache (or a two-day hangover?) and beat to a pulp.

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JediBumblebee

:: 2004 5 February :: 9.55pm

ahh! i cut all of my hair off!


I decided...since i dont have anything/one keeping me from it, that i would. and i did.

i like it. not the cut, particularly, but the assertation of my independence.

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JediBumblebee

:: 2004 5 February :: 11.33am

man...i kicked all your asses...i'm not sure thats a good thing...


Your Ultimate Purity Score Is...
CategoryYour Score Average
Self-Lovin'38.3%
When I think about you - or anyone - I touch myself
65%
Shamelessness33.3%
Puts 'em on the glass
79.3%
Sex Drive 36.8%
I got needs, baby, you gotta unnastan'!
77.7%
Straightness3.6%
Knows the other body type like a map
44.8%
Gayness 66.1%
Had that experience at camp
83.5%
Fucking Sick63.7%
Dipped into depravity
89.9%
You are 41.69% pure
Average Score: 72.6%

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JediBumblebee

:: 2004 5 February :: 11.16am
:: Music: the sound of trains outside and my prof rambling on about having babies...

woohu DOES NOT WORK at my house, at all. I am very upset by this.

i was noticing today that a lot of my neighbors and people who ride my bus are particularly unattractive. I wonder if it's the area, or if i can just blame it on the weather.

I have 18 more days of this class. a very exciting thought. and two weeks until spring break (leaving on friday 27!). Three more semesters before I graduate. A week and one day until my study abroad deadline.

I am still debating about going, I have to finish up my application ASAP. I should just do it and not think. It ought to be worth it in the long run. but if i hold off for a semester, i dont really have a place to live for the first semester. but its only 4 months, i can handle it.

on an unrelated note, i got flowers yesterday :) i haven't gotten flowers in a long time, it was very nice and thoughtful...and unexpected.

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JediBumblebee

:: 2004 4 February :: 8.03pm

i do miss my izza-beth though...

and eric and estey dont talk to me much anymore...

so i guess i have a lack of friends, but i have one thats been taking up most of my spare time.

yeah, life is f-in weird.

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JediBumblebee

:: 2004 4 February :: 7.43pm

wow.

for some reason, woohu wont work when I am at home, so i am in class right now... its really been driving me nuts because I feel so out of touch with everyone and everything thats been going on.

I've been doing a lot of that "reminiscing" shit and its really been blowing my mind. so much has happened to me already this year, my life and my plans have changed so much in just a month.

school's been a bitch, and work too...I'll be pushing 40 hours again this week, especially if I stick around on saturday.... however, I'll probably stay around 35 because I'll need time to get ready for the party that I'm going to that evening...with people that I had never even met two months ago...

I really feel like i'm happy, successful, appreciated, and loved.


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crazygirl

:: 2004 2 February :: 7.02pm
:: Mood: amused

my life really isn't boring, it only feels like it. weird.

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sugarpeep

:: 2004 1 February :: 12.51pm
:: Mood: loved

我等候月亮在微風來通過一半被打開的門清掃牆壁花陰影移動的西部分庭: 我想像這是來的我的戀人

Woohu doesn't like chinese..

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Upchuck

:: 2004 31 January :: 9.20pm
:: Mood: blank
:: Music: "Better Man"- Pearl Jam

PLS 327 Pol Developing Countries Essay
Thinkers, Globalization, and Industrialization
Developing countries have faced many struggles in the post-war era. The income gap between rich and poor nations has increased while conditions continue to change for development. Several social thinkers have laid out plans by which they believe developing nations can succeed. However, the conditions for development have changed in the postwar era that has caused many nations to reject this thinking while setting out on a new track for success. These nations have dealt with an increase in foreign competition, globalization, a perceived cultural bias against development, and democratization.
During the Pre-war era, fewer countries were developed. Those who were, either were growing regional powers (Japan and the United States), or conflictual European powers. Nations did not have to contend with foreign markets invading their country by flooding it with imports of higher quality and greater quantity. States have turned to import substitution industrialization (ISI) to promote industrialization within their own economies. Import substitution industrialization works by creating large trade barriers in certain industries where a nation is almost exclusively reliant on imports, and then either subsidizing domestic manufacturers or allowing them to develop on their own. This is an attempt to diversify the economy of the developing state. The problem with this approach is that it takes time for industry to develop. This leads to an increase in the gap between rich and poor at the beginning. Later in development, this gap begins to shrink if ISI is successful. However, the demands of global trade have ended most attempts at ISI.
Globalization has played a key role in keeping the rich countries much richer than the poor countries in the postwar era. By globalizing trade, industrialized nations have been able to open up markets to their goods. The sheer force of goods and the cooperation of international economic organizations have worked to destroy ISI programs in many countries. International organizations such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, and the World Trade Organization (WTO), have made reduction of protectionist tactics a tenet of membership. Without membership in such organizations, developing countries would have severely limited foreign markets for their goods. So nations face a threat from the globalization of the economy by the already developed nations and the economic international organizations.
Developing countries are facing a cultural bias to development. Many influential thinkers such as Weber and Rostow have presented a case in which less developed nations lack a cultural quality that makes them inferior to the developed world. Weber argues that the reason Europe was the first to industrialize was the Protestant Ethic. This Ethic promotes Christians to be 電iligent and frugal. Weber theorizes, it would be difficult to industrialize because there would be no work ethic instilled in the people. This is how Weberians explain the economic growth of Asia in the late seventies and early eighties. They state that Asians possessed a similar work ethic to Protestants through the teaching of Confucianism. Rostow goes on to further demean developing nations 鍍raditional society. He states the countries are unlikely to not have 菟reconditions arise endogeously but from some external intrusion by (a) more advanced society. Under this thinking, developing countries are incapable of development because they do not possess an advanced sense of what it takes to become successful. This also provides justification of developed nations to either exploit nations who are developing, or to enter into a militarily controled mercantilistic relationship. The latter was seen in the invasion of Egypt by the British to open the Suez Canal. The Egyptians attempted to socialize the operations of the canal, the British did not see this as a positive move to their economy, so they solved the situation militarily. It seems that the West has a ethnocentric view at times when it comes to economic advancement.
Developing nations have also faced a burden by changes in their governmental structure. In the recent postwar era, there has been a trend around the world to democratization. Mitchell Seligson lays out the argument of others, 電emocratic political systems are less capable than their authoritarian counterparts of setting a clear economic agenda. However, in the international system, this theory has been disproved. No where is there a clearer example of this than in the Marxists nations of Eastern Europe and Central Asia. In Marx痴 Communist Manifesto, he presents the four stages of economic development. These are laid out as an eventuality that all capitalist states will socialize, and then communize. Marx paints a picture where the lower classes (proletariat) rise up against the upper classes (bourgeoisie). The only solution to Marx is one which the state represents the collective interests of the people, and not just a pawn of the economic elite. States who established a Marxist system immediately after the inception of the postwar era are now emerging from that authoritarian system, and are facing new challenges in democratization. Seemingly, democratization and capitalization go hand in hand because states are converting their economies as well.
States are also attempting to battle the income gap among their citizens by instituting social welfare programs. Certainly for men like Kutznets, the development of the social state should be unforeseen. If the income gap will eventual close following development, then it is better to let the situation run it痴 course and adopt a laissez faire attitude towards social welfare. Marx would argue that the only reason for the existence of the state is to provide social support to its citizens. He takes a stand on the fact that war is a characteristic of the bourgeoisie-controlled state. He states that the upper classes 澱ecome antagonistic with the bourgeoisie of foreign countries and that it is then compelled to 殿ppeal to the proletariat [and] drag it into the political arena. Meaning the interest of the upper classes have sent the state into war. Rostow actually states that nations should not concern themselves with the gap between rich and poor until the nation is developed. He justifies this by claiming that a welfare state will be a diversion to a developing economy. The welfare state is a relevant issue that will continue to exist until states can learn how to promote economic development without massive urbanization or unemployment.
So, developing nations will continue to endure problems in development. The resolution to a global problem of income inequality among states has not been solved. In many ways, the world today is worse off as a whole than it has ever been. Humanitarian needs are not being met around the globe, and nations continue to struggle. As for the thinkers, they must keep on thinking.

Simon Kutznets, 摘conomic Growth and Income Inequality, in The Political Economy of Inequality, ed. Frank Ackerman (New York: Long Island Press, 2000), 44
Max Weber, 典he Protestant Ethic, in From Modernization to Globalization, ed. J. Timmons Roberts and Amy Hite (Oxford: Blackwell, 2000), 73
W.W. Rostow, 典he Stages of Economic Growth: A Non-Communist Manifesto, in From Modernization to Globalization, ed. J. Timmons Roberts and Amy Hite (Oxford: Blackwell, 2000), 100
Rostow, 102
Mitchel Seligson, 典he Dual Gaps: An Overview of Theory and Research, in The Political Economy of Inequality, ed. Frank Ackerman (New York: Long Island Press, 2000), 7
Fredrich Engels and Karl Marx, 典he Communist Manifesto, in From Modernization to Globalization, ed. J. Timmons Roberts and Amy Hite (Oxford: Blackwell, 2000), 33
Kutznets, 47
Engels and Marx, 33
Rostow, 106

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jedibumblebee

:: 2004 29 January :: 5.18pm
:: Mood: crazy

I need to break out.

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