Friday, March 30, 2007

Demam and homework

I left work early cos of demam today...last night I was coughing and by this morning I knew I was running a low-grade fever...so all the standard over-the-counter treatments...take Panadol, take dextromethorphan. I know it's supposed to be some kind of opiate that suppresses cough without the psychotropic effects or something, but it makes me feel really sluggish.

You know, I had this argument with an MD (Malaysian expat in the US) as to whether paracetamol (usually known as Panadol) and acetaminophen (usually known as Tylenol) are the same thing anot...he kept saying they weren't...and guess what...geez.

On top of this I learned from my boyfriend today that we're supposed to leave for North Carolina (plus 2 of his housemates, to visit another former housemate) tomorrow (well technically today, it's past midnight), not Saturday, which means that I have to run home and pack ASAP after class. And travelling while sick - ugh.

On the plus side I managed to finish an assignment which is going to comprise 25% of my grade for Path 750 in one evening without getting distracted by novels, TV, or the internet (other than using it to look up papers, obviously). I guess fever does do some good things after all...I'm not as hyper as usual.

One of these days I'll post the PDF of the first assignment. Still very pleased with having gotten full marks on it, especially after being so worried that I didn't address the question properly.


On another note, I logged on to Friendster for the first time in ages and went to look at a random old classmate's profile. This is her kind of blogging:

haaaa...- finally...! today is the day. where things are back to normal. my laptop is ok alreadyyy!!!!! i can make full use of it now.. after 6 months, not being able to use it to the fullest. banyak benda seems missing! huhuhu-- but still i had to wait for like 2 1/2 hrs to get it done.. pheww..! worth it. thanx nia nia ooo coz u teman me all the way... muahs muahs muahs* but still, i have to install few stuffs. so, i'll continue later... ;p
I feel like such a freak...I really had very few friends in school. It's like being in a different universe almost.

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Science and Christianity seminar last weekend

Posted in my Facebook notes.

The church I attend in Madison (I don't like to say "my church" ever, because as a pastor's kid I'm a bit allergic to church-specific allegiance) is a bit of an odd case because it's an Evangelical Free Church, but unlike the typical evangelicals in the US, they're pretty neutral politically and even open to what Americans usually consider left-wing issues. Last year there was a sermon on "The Future" and my reaction to the title was Oh groan they're going to talk about Revelation, but instead the pastor invited a UW professor to talk about climate change =D

Anyway, last weekend there was a seminar on science and Christianity which I attended. I ran into a few people I didn't expect, including a kid called Rob in my molecular biology techniques class. Descriptions of the speakers are here here.

The five speakers included three current and one emeritus UW professors, one of whom was Rick Lindroth, the entomology prof who did the "Al Gore" talk mentioned above =D

The other two UW professors are Jeff Hardin, in Zoology, and Stuart Knechtle, a professor of transplantation. Hardin is in developmental biology, which is really cool. Dev bio is also one of the areas that's very much dealing with the "where did life come from" question.

The retired prof, Wayne Becker, is a biochemist. He did a cute little gimmick of literally wearing different hats as he described positions along the creation/evolution continuum: Young Earth Creationists (Henry Morris), Old Earth Creationists (Hugh Ross), Theistic Evolutionists (Francis Collins - the Human Genome Project guy, and me), and Naturalistic Evolutionists (Richard Effing Dawkins).

I was saying something to someone today about Francis Collins and I said Michael Collins by mistake...wait...not the astronaut dude. =D

The one non-UW faculty member is John Walton, a professor of Old Testament at Wheaton, who talked about reading the OT in the light of ancient Middle Eastern thought...comparative literature I guess. I ended up buying one of his books on the subject, message me if you're interested in reading it.

In sum, it was definitely worth getting up early on Saturday (after staying up till 3am reading Terry Pratchett's "Thud" =PPP I needed to catch up on Sam Vimes.)

Ultimately my position as a Christian and a scientist is based on faith. I'm trusting that a) God exists and b) made a world which is systematic and c) gave us rational minds, I'm not going to go into by what mechanism here and d) loves us enough not to mess with our minds too much. If those four assumptions are correct, nothing the Bible says should contradict the findings of reason and observation, and vice versa. There ya go.

To close, a note from St. Augustine:

"Since, then, in those situations where such things are appropriate, some perish to make way for others that are born in their room, and the less succumb to the greater, and the things that are overcome are transformed into the quality of those that have the mastery, this is the appointed order of things transitory. Of this order the beauty does not strike us, because by our mortal frailty we are so involved in a part of it, that we cannot perceive the whole, in which these fragments that offend us are harmonized with the most accurate fitness and beauty." (City of God*, Book XII, Chapter 3.)

I think Augustine would have been a TE =)

ARGH I HAVE HOMEWORK AGAIN. At some point I'll get around to posting the theory I came up with for my last Path 750 assignment. I got fifty out of fifty marks for writing about Devil Facial Tumour Disease (I guess "tumour" ought to be spelt with a u, since it is an Australian animal) and I'm very pleased with it. At the rate I'm going with this second one, it may be somewhat less pleasing.


*Unfortunately Augustine's books are no longer on Gutenberg.org. They're now in the CCEL, which you can access for free but have to register.

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Saturday, March 24, 2007

The Asian Mystique

What I did for the last two nights instead of my homework =P This was for Vox.


Book review: Sheridan Prasso’s The Asian Mystique
ISBN: 1586483943 (paperback edition)

Usually when someone says of a manuscript that it sounds like it was researched in bars, it’s an insult. With this book, it’s the truth.

I first heard of the book when visiting a Singaporean classmate from college. She pointed it out to me while we were wandering around Kinokuniya, and I scribbled down the title to see if it was cheaper online. Since I’m a Malaysian English-speaking banana with a vested interest in intercultural issues and women’s rights, it piqued my interest. Although admittedly my concern with Western perceptions of Asia previously extended mostly to getting annoyed at people who would ask “Do you have computers in Malaysia?”

The premises of the book, to “uncover the origins of Western fantasies and fallacies” and “encourage a clearer understanding of an Asia unclouded by Mystique” sounded promising, but the outcome is a let-down. From the author’s own narrative, she seems to have gone through her travels with her thesis fully formed, selecting subjects who would prop it up.

As mentioned before, Prasso spends a lot of the book hanging out in bars with prostitutes. She also hangs out with feminist writers, air stewardesses, the famous retired geisha Mineko Iwasaki (who stopped befriending Arthur Golden after he twisted her story in “Memoirs of a Geisha”), and Japanese housewives. Why Japanese housewives, if the book’s about Western perceptions and interactions with East Asia? I suppose the point is to show that Japanese women aren’t all that exotic after all, but unless you like reading about a bunch of aunties taking care of their kids and chit-chatting with their friends, you can skip the better part of the sixth chapter. (However, it’s useful to learn that a good Japanese excuse for getting rid of salesmen is “I’m sorry, I must ask my husband.”)

On the non-Hello Kitty side, sex tourism certainly is one of the more disturbing aspects of globalism. However, the two chapters spent on prostitution aren’t good enough to justify the space they take up in a 13-chapter book. Again, Prasso seems to be selectively deaf here – if you’re in a red-light district, you’ll find dirty old men. She fails to make a coherent argument that their mindset is representative of the Western mindset toward Asian women, or any coherent argument at all. Her research the Philippines is pretty much just a narrative of a bar crawl.

This book would have been better for examining the lives of Asian/white couples and the effect that culture and perceptions have on their various trajectories. However, Prasso only looks at one long-term relationship in depth – Yukie and Chris, Japanese and American, and it terminated badly. Even from the biased narrative, it sounds like it was more the woman’s fault for not considering the consequences of asking a spouse to give up everything and move to a country where he literally couldn’t do anything. (Gasp! Can I write that on a feminist website?)

One dot’s not enough to make a picture. Among my relatives and acquaintances, there are a number of long-term (long-term = old enough that I call them aunty and uncle) interracial couples. I know two ladies, sisters from Penang, who both married white men and settled overseas. One couple had very different personalities, didn’t communicate, and were openly bitter. They are now divorced. The other two are pretty straight-laced but easygoing, outreaching people, and are together after more than two and a half decades. As one of the young Japanese women in the first chapter says, “Junin toiro!” Ten people, ten colours, and yet this author seems determined to paint all Asian-inclined white men with the same brush.

The one welcome break from this comes in “The Communities and Fetishes of the Net” where a couple of pages are allocated to a website attempting to refute stereotypes about fetishism and racism toward Asian girl/white guy relationships (asianwhite.com, which no longer exists). Excerpt: “Some men have an attraction to Asian QUALITIES. Less healthy men have a fetish for Asian women as OBJECTS.” Prasso doesn’t seem to have anything to say about the site, presumably because she can’t come up with anything nasty to say.

One of the failures of this book is neglecting to look at interactions among students. Uni students are young and horny, and by definition at least smart and educated enough to get into a university. International students are likely to be interested in other people’s cultures, or at least willing to experience them briefly. Put all these factors together, and ka-ching! Mixed couples. I’ve lost count of the number of “yellow fever” couples I’ve seen walking around campus here. Students are important to look at for an author to consider trends, because as the cliché goes, we’re the leaders of the future.

Instead of spending time to observe everyday life around a few American campuses as she does with the Japanese housewives, Prasso mainly takes sound bites and essay excerpts from a handful of students who seem to have been selected for having spoken out on the subject before. The few students (few compared to the number of whores in later chapters) featured are mostly Asian-Americans, who, from a foreigner’s perspective, are American for all practical purposes. They’re even more banana than me.

[Disclosure: I’m inclined to believe that middle-to-upper class Asian-Americans tend to be somewhat neurotic and self-conscious, because of exogenous pressure from the model minority stereotype and endogenous pressure from well-educated, skilled immigrant parents. This is especially noticeable in the statement from one young lady that a diagnostic of “yellow fever” is “You see a guy walking down the street, hand-in-hand with another Asian girl, and he still checks you out as you walk by him.” This fails to take into account normal male behaviour: GUYS WILL LOOK AT PRETTY GIRLS, PERIOD. Insert dick joke here.]

Yes, there are a lot of jackasses here who think everyone outside the U.S. of A. is living in a third world slum with no electricity. Yes, they still think “Vietnam War” when they think of Vietnamese. Yes, there are idiots who will catcall “Sayonara!” and “Arigato!” at Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese, Filipina, Indonesian, or even Japanese – hey, even a broken clock is right twice a day - girls. Yes, there are creepy hamsup otakus who think Asian girls are kawaii like anime characters. But I think the influence of these ignoramuses on international relationships is marginal. As stated above, the movers and the shakers and the ones who are shaking their bon bons together are more likely to be those who are educated, professionals who know better.

Prasso’s annoyingly elitist tone saturates the book, from her description of a sniffling Filipina prostitute to her explicitly disdainful tone toward a Chinese school administrator, who wants to marry her long-term boyfriend and have babies. I thought the point of women’s rights (and any other “rights” movements) was to let individuals do what they want to do, not what some wanker with a diploma wants them to do. Even the interview with the famous Madame Iwasaki seems exploitative, as the author can’t seem to stop congratulating herself on how much the ex-geisha likes her. By the end of this book, I was prepared to bellow “YES!” at her admission that “As a Caucasian woman, I cannot eschew membership in a group that…has been guilty of racist “sour-grapeism.””

One unintentionally funny sentence is where she rags Singapore Airlines and Cathay Pacific for pandering to foreigners: “no flight on Singapore Airlines or Cathay is ever domestic.” Perfectly correct – I don’t know about Hong Kong, but Singapore is a nation that you can bicycle across in a matter of hours. (My athletic sister at NUS did that one night with a bunch of her crazy friends.)

At the end of scientific papers, the authors sometimes declare that they “have no competing interests”. This isn’t a paper, but I have to declare that I do have a competing interest: I’m dating a white guy. I have an interest in refuting Prasso’s typifying of Asian women who date Western men as green-card-chasing gold-diggers, and of all Western men who like Asian women as chauvinistic, domineering, closet paedophiles (I kid you not). He freely admits a preference for the physical features of east Asian girls, but we’re in a university town full of Korean, Chinese, and Taiwanese students, the vast majority of whom are better-looking than me. He wants a girl who won’t be afraid to argue with him, not the stereotypical Oriental who’ll look demure while he inserts foot in mouth. My favourite angmoh and I are together because we’re antisocial science geeks who get along like a house on fire. Or in his words, “Intelligence is sexy.”

Not so much my ebony hair, tea-coloured skin, or petite figure, but the invisible part – brains. Damn syiok.

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Raptor!

No, not the Jurassic Park kind...although that's where I first learned the word from. That book can scare the crap out of a ten-year-old kid.

Recently my sis FlowerMoonFish who's interning at theSun was assigned to cover Raptor Watch. It's spring migration now, so they're all going back to their breeding grounds in China or Russia or whatever from their winter holiday in M'sia.

Anyway, I was at Blackhawk Church's Science & Christianity seminary today (I'd like to say "more about that later", but more than likely I'll be too lazy to do a proper write-up). Rick Lindroth, who's a UW-Madison professor of entomology, was talking about environmentalism from a Christian perspective (a.k.a. creation care). He noted that one reason we're pretty apathetic about what happens to nature is that we're unfamiliar with it - walk down the street and you'll probably recognize most of the corporate logos you see, but very few trees. (Hinthint, the one that looks like the Canadian flag in autumn is a maple. =)

[Is it just me, or does he look like a less horsey version of John Kerry?]

Also, I've been rereading Joey Slinger's Down and Dirty Birding, which I picked up last year at the Singapore National Library booksale. It's a humorous and accessible guide for the beginning birder, insightful but not heavy, and mentions characteristics of birds you're likely to see in North America. As it's written by a Canadian, the particulars of birds mentioned in the book are pretty unhelpful for Malaysians (except for worldwide invasives like the pigeon...groan).

Also, IT'S EFFING SPRING! You'd have to be blind and deaf to not notice all the birds showing up (blind birders listen for songs and calls).

The cool thing happened later. I'd gone to lab after the seminar around 5pm to check on some cells. As I was unlocking my bike at the side of the building, a crow-sized bird bombed out of the crabapple tree next to the bicycle rack, swooped across the lawn, and ended up in a big tree (yes, I don't know what kind of tree it is) with a chipmunk in its talons. At least, it had something in its talons and a still-twitching chipmunk tail was hanging out.

After it moved to a higher branch to get slightly further away from my kaypoh staring, it began to eat. You could hear the crunchy noises.

It was mostly light brownish-grey, with brown stripes across the tail, and the top of its head was darker. A bit like this fellow. I went home and looked it up on eNature and I think it was either a Cooper's or a Sharp-Shinned Hawk (both the Animal Diversity web pages and Slinger say they're easily confused).

ADW on their feeding habits:

When hunting, Cooper's hawks usually perch in a hidden location and watch for prey. They wait until their prey is unaware of their presence, then quickly swoop down and seize it. Bobwhites, starlings, blackbirds, chipmunks, and squirrels are common prey for Cooper's hawks.
Sharp-shinned hawks are opportunistic hunters. They often hunt from a perch and dart out from hiding to catch prey. Their long, sharp talons help them to grab onto prey and their short bursts of high-speed flight help them to catch their prey.
There ya go.

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Thursday, March 22, 2007

Things I've learned in lab this week

Things I've learned in lab recently, in no particular order:

  • Powdered gloves + black pants = more laundry
  • Cells don't like being tossed into a liquid N2 tank all of a sudden.
  • Chicken embryos look like little chickens, but with enormous heads. They're kinda like Grays.
  • If you run a very old centrifuge faster than it likes, the drive belt will melt =(
  • Hot glassware doesn't look hot. [Yes, I stole that, but it's a classic.]

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Saturday, March 17, 2007

Blackhawk typo

This is to the last person who commented on my blog and anyone else who goes to Blackhawk Church...there was a typo in their flyer...if anyone's interested in the Science Fiction and Fantasy group, the email address starts with "sfandf", not "fandf"!

Apparently the contact form on Blackhawk's site works okay, but then their emails end up in my spam folder. Sorry guys.

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Thursday, March 15, 2007

On the frontier

Another narrative snippet.


"Really? What lines do you have available?" asked Kai Wern. Dominic, too, drifted a step closer to the vendor.

"Anything you need. Hundreds of cell types in pure culture, and anything else on feeders. Fluor-tagged proteins, homozygous knockouts, inducible knockouts, primary cultures from wild-type systems, SCID systems, whatever. Pure inbred genotypes, clean, no retrovirus. My supplier can even give you customized, MHC-matched lymphatic and bone marrow sets if you allow a couple of weeks. You two are Surveyors, right? For environmental testing I've got fully functional mini-organs in vitro that'll last for months or freeze down perfectly.

Her eyes narrowed. "Did you say primary cultures?"

To her left, Dominic was eyeing the vendor's wrist. Then he interposed himself between Wern and the vendor, spat violently into the man's face, and punted off down the microgravity corridor with such lack of drama that everyone was left wondering if they had actually seen it.

The shocked and dripping vendor found himself staring at the point of an antique butterfly knife. "If you're not off this station in twenty-four hours," Kai Wern hissed, "you'll be going to Earth in a freezer on my ship. With a stick up your arse." She rotated the knife closed with a loud snap and pushed off. The three youngsters followed after, glancing back at the vendor who seemed to have gone catatonic, one hand on his saliva-smeared chin.

"Jie, what just happened?" panted Kai Teck when they caught up.

Kai Wern slowed down. It was mildly hazardous for the three teenagers to try to keep up that speed, as they weren't used to how fast one could go in micro-g. "That man was wearing a Transpatial badge."

"Di'n't see it."

"Not on his shirt, he had it on a bracelet," Whiska offered.

Kai Wern nodded. "In Transpatial territory, slavery is legal. In fact, it's universal."

"So?" Her brother looked baffled.

Kin Onn was quicker. "Sheeeet."

"I really need those human tissue cultures before the Dawn Treader ships out again, if we do get out of here, but I am not getting them from him or anybody else who buys from Transpatials. Imagine being born and living out your life literally in a box. Imagine having some horrible disease that makes your stomach hurt and your skin fall off, but never being allowed medicine. Imagine never learning a single word, or colour, or the taste of food. Imagine having men tie you to a table and pull out your organs without anaesthesia. That's where he's getting his pure cell lines from."


Argh I have SO MUCH homework but I've been reading a paper about transgenic autoimmune mice (which was part of the homework) and reading a Steven Saylor novel and watching Rome all over the past week...this was BEGGING to get out of my head and into text.

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Old art: Doodles

While talking to Amy on phone, some time in spring 2005

Seen in Hauert's Pet and Garden (which no longer exists) in downtown Appleton, 2002

During my uncle's sermon, TRAC 2006

Technically not a doodle, since my classmate asked me to do it for him, but it's based on a doodle I drew the first time I heard this piece of his played. The "t=" labels are a reference to his being a music-physics double-degree student. You haven't heard music until you've heard "The Incy-Wincy [Itsy-Bitsy if you're American] Spider" on a tuba.

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Old art: Imaginary Lovers

This is based on a storyline between Jeremy's character Tashya and Zedeck's character...argh, forgot his name. Frankly I think Dek made him up because he had a crush on Tashya himself...for quite a while there were several Phases guys who had a thing for this imaginary girl. One time one of the newbies asked me for Tash's ICQ number and my response was something like "Er...you'd better ask Jeremy."

Actually, I think Tash DID have an ICQ number...

Words on the border are from Bruce Cockburn's "Look How Far" and "The Embers of Eden".

[Click for larger versions]

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Monday, March 12, 2007

SPM anxiety

Soo...It's exam results season again. I'm sure all of us who went to school in former British colonies remember that.

SPM results are coming out/have come out today. I'm hoping the kids I was teaching bio to last year did okay. It was at a little kampung school where I was volunteering out of sheer boredom during the months I was at home unemployed.

It was my first teaching experience, and my Malay was pretty rotten after five years of disuse, and I'd forgotten all the methods of "spotting" (prognosticating) SPM questions that my classmates had come up with, and I'd forgotten what kind of answers examiners wanted. Malaysian public education is a damned bloody stupid mind game, really.

I had my father's dictum in mind, though (he taught Form Six chemistry for several years): "If a few students fail, it's the students' fault. If the whole class fails, it's the teacher's fault."

One of the more depressing things about the school was that they'd hung bunting saying things like "5P and 3P [the top classes in Form 5 and Form 3], You Are Our Hope". This is what I really don't like about streaming: kids in the lower classes are automatically assumed to be not worth the bother.

Fussy parents can always make the argument that their precious babies will be bored if they're in a class with dumbos, but that's the case anyway. If your kid is that freaking smart they should be smart enough to ignore the bad teachers and teach/entertain themselves. Like me =D Also on a more serious note, I think learning humility and appreciating other people for non-quantifiable talents is part of an education in being a decent human being.

I'd like to apply to be a TA next semester...I want to learn to teach. Tutoring one or a few is something I enjoy, but talking in front of a whole class is a different story, as I learned. Lesson planning, encouraging participation, holding people's attention...

My little Mousie did very well in her A-levels. The family's proud of her.

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Thursday, March 08, 2007

Augustine on Evolution

I've quoted St. Augustine on ecology before. Here's what he might have to say about the current evolution-vs.-creationism flap. I'll let the great man speak for himself. *grin* This is a link to the entire book in plaintext if you want it.

[From Book XII]

Chapter 4.--Of the Nature of Irrational and Lifeless Creatures, Which in Their Own Kind and Order Do Not Mar the Beauty of the Universe.

But it is ridiculous to condemn the faults of beasts and trees, and other such mortal and mutable things as are void of intelligence, sensation, or life, even though these faults should destroy their corruptible nature; for these creatures received, at their Creator's will, an existence fitting them, by passing away and giving place to others, to secure that lowest form of beauty, the beauty of seasons, which in its own place is a requisite part of this world. For things earthly were neither to be made equal to things heavenly, nor were they, though inferior, to be quite omitted from the universe. Since, then, in those situations where such things are appropriate, some perish to make way for others that are born in their room, and the less succumb to the greater, and the things that are overcome are transformed into the quality of those that have the mastery, this is the appointed order of things transitory. Of this order the beauty does not strike us, because by our mortal frailty we are so involved in a part of it, that we cannot perceive the whole, in which these fragments that offend us are harmonized with the most accurate fitness and beauty.
Haha, he said "fitness" =D

... But they forget that this very light which is so pleasant to them, disagrees with and hurts weak eyes; and in that heat which is disagreeable to them, some animals find the most suitable conditions of a healthy life.
He must have been thinking of Strain 121.

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Wednesday, March 07, 2007

Sartorial Rights

I don't normally pay much attention to clothes, but this is a human rights issue: Malaysian women everywhere should stand up for DJ Linda Onn's right to not wear an argly dress just because some idiots at Star TV want her to be more patriotic.

Even with a dearth of fashion sense (I'm a purple-T-shirt-and-grease-stained-jeans kind of girl) I can see that a beige-coloured sheer kebaya covered in stupid lace butterflies is not something one would wear while interviewing Hollywood stars at the Academy Awards...ew.

If you're too lazy to click on the link, here's the summary: Linda had worked with Jovian Mandagie, an Indonesian designer, for two weeks to come up with a "black and white modern baju kebaya" to wear while hosting Star TV's red carpet event at the Oscars. Some dumbass called Nini Yusof thought that her wearing a foreigner's rags was inappropriate and commissioned a local designer called Ridzuan Radziwill to come up with this:

Linda Onn was presented with the kebaya on landing in LA. They didn't offer her any other designs to choose from, and as stated above, it's a dem argly dress. Linda's more specific complaints were that it "did not fit her properly and was revealing" and it was "an unflattering “skin colour” ". But ultimately, Linda said that it was a matter of standing on her principles.

It's a matter of principle that surrounds the whole "Belilah Barangan Buatan Malaysia": why should we go for crap just because it's locally produced?


Just to make it clear that I'm not contradicting myself, I don't want to return home out of some blind patriotism like that exhibited by the Star TV executives. I want to go home because there are still lots of good things about our country (ironically, most of which aren't publicized by the government or corporations, such as Manglish and 24-hour mamak stalls), and I want to FIX the crap.


Generally speaking, I think the self-appointed arbiters of culture have very poor ideas of what women should wear. Who's the misogynistic nitwit who decided that primary school kids should wear dark navy pinafores, but then at the age when girls' reproductive systems start up, with all the attendant leakage and mortification, the uniform colour should switch to light turquoise, for girls only?

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Friday, March 02, 2007

Spam spam spam

What I learned today: Spam and mushrooms are a bad combination =P It's good with potatoes, but I didn't have any.

Also, Chinese brands of luncheonmeat like Ma Ling still taste better. This person made a pretty exhaustive list of Spam-like products that they've tried.

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