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Does Viagra Enhance Your iPod Too? February 27, 2008

Posted by wes285 in Other Blogs, Plain Strange.
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The Israeli air force is giving its fighter pilots Viagra to improve their performance. It’s supposed to give them a better handle on their cock….pits. I guess the Viagra will help them grip their sticks more effectively. You know, the joystick thing that controls the jet? Sorry, I couldn’t resist. Apparently, the same blue pill that makes the penises of old men work properly also helps people function better in high altitude, low-oxygen environments that fighter pilots are constantly working in.

Other uses for Viagra, according to the article:

— Viagra saved the life of Lewis Goodfellow, born prematurely last year and weighing only 1lb 8oz, when one of his lungs failed. It caused tiny blood vessels in the lung to widen, to give his body sufficient oxygen

— Argentinian research last year found that the drug may be useful in treating jet lag. Hamsters subjected to simulated jet lag recovered up to 50 per cent faster when given the drug, known generically as sildenafil

— In an American study in 2005 Viagra was given to pregnant women with high blood pressure. It helped to maintain healthy circulation and possibly contributed to easier, safer childbirth

— Viagra mixed with stimulants such as cocaine or Ecstasy has become increasingly popular in nightclubs. The combined drug — known as “sextasy” — is taken to fuel all-night dancing and sex marathons

Who would have thought a little blue pill made for erections could have so many other uses!

Completely unrelated, I’ve found someone who dislikes iPods more than me. I can tell already, I’m going to like reading this site.

One Big Holding Pattern February 25, 2008

Posted by wes285 in Observations, Work.
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I have a friend Tina. She’s a journalist at one of the big newsmagazines. She also keeps a blog. I love the way she writes. Tina and I have an interesting relationship. We were in the same magnet programs in middle and high school. I guess you could say we were friends throughout high school. I don’t know that we ever hung out outside of school, but we had many of the same classes and had many of the same friends. She was obsessed with the Backstreet Boys. I was obsessed with not appearing as if I were a nerd.

We both had xanga accounts and then livejournal accounts. Being the stalkers that we both are, we read up on each other’s lives. Then somehow during one of the first two years of college we started getting into intense online conversations about anything and everything. The Darfur genocide. The perkiness of Victoria Beckham’s fake boobs. Like I said, anything. We would bounce different ideas off of each other and we even started a short lived blog with the theme being our shared contempt at the Asians who didn’t think we were “Asian enough” because all of our friends didn’t also have yellow skin. Quite clearly those were heady times. Funny thing is, I’ve seen Tina in person maybe five times since college started. And yet she is one of the few people I actually talk to about things that matter. I mean, she might not even really exist. Maybe she’s just be my own private JT Leroy. Ha, but I digress…

A while back, Tina wrote a post about, well, I’m not sure exactly how to describe it. Idealism. Inspiration. Hope. Dreaming. Righteousness. Doing something that matters. It’s something along those lines. I’d link to it, but she’s paranoid and its password protected. So, basically you have to know her and she has to like you and then maybe you’ll get to read it. It couldn’t have been more than 600 words, but for some reason it really struck a chord with me and kind of inspired me onto a mini soul searching/baring analysis of my future.

I’ve been told by a few friends in law school that I would love it. I have a love of useless knowledge and apparently law school gives out a lot of it. I’ve also been told by some lawyers that I should run far away from it, or at the very least be 110% sure that I want to be a lawyer. And then still reconsider whether or not I want to be a lawyer. That was the rationale for taking a couple years off to work. As it happens, I ended up in a law firm. I have been working for less than a year, but already I know that I want to be a lawyer. It’s something I know I will be good at and something I doubt I will easily tire of. See, I have no problem with the mind numbing minutiae and details that are the job of a lawyer. I don’t know if I’d go so far to say that I enjoy it, but I thrive on details.

I lost my idealism a long time ago. I highly doubt I’ll go into public interest or criminal law. It just isn’t for me. Plus, I’ve become used to a certain standard of living that a lifetime in public interest probably won’t afford me. I guess we can thank my parents for that. Family law is out of the question because I refuse to be involved in divorce cases. Won’t do it. There’s something unsavory about it to me. So really, that leaves my options to the big corporate law firms, like the one I’m working at now.

I have no problem with this at all. It’s something that, as I said earlier, I know I can be good at. It also pays ridiculously well. The situation really isn’t as bleak and depressing as you might think after reading this post. I’m happy with where I’m headed and isn’t that the most important thing anyway?

A family friend who experienced the whole big law firm grind of billables, 80 hour work weeks and no weekends once told me that her worry for me was that I would be too good at playing the corporate game and get too caught up in the ladder climb. I wonder if that’s true. I wonder if I’ll give away part of my soul in the upward scramble. I’ve been in the thick of it since the 4th grade gifted and talented program to the magnet programs to the honors programs in college. I’ve been programmed to constantly be competing against others. But I think I’ve done a pretty good job with saying the fuck with those expectations and the competition, I’m just going to worry about me and not what those around me are doing. I’ve found that my life has worked at more than pretty well by sticking to that. Hopefully that translates into the working world.

My other issue is whether any of this will all matter in the end. My job will, in one way or another, be to facilitate the flow of large amounts of money from one rich person/entity to another. I already assist in that in my current job. But, doing this job kind of makes you wonder why the whole profession of corporate lawyer is even necessary. Then you realize how stupid some of the clients are and realize this job is so necessary just to keep the world going. Money makes the world go ’round, but the lawyers make sure the money actually gets to where it’s supposed to get. Sometimes in some very round about and unsavory ways. But I suppose we can call it a necessary evil.

The thing is, I know what it feels like to work on something that matters. The adrenaline rush. The energizing feeling of waking up in the morning even though you are still so exhausted from the previous day. The pure joy that comes from mission accomplished. I know what it feels like to work on something that matters. In the last eight or so months in this job, I’m not sure I’ve gotten that feeling once. Is this just because I know I’m just sitting in a holding pattern at the moment until law school comes or is this what its like from here on out. Hopefully its the former. I’ll find out soon enough.

You Bet Your Ass We Can February 11, 2008

Posted by wes285 in D.C., Politics, Sports.
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It turns out, I am actually registered to vote in D.C. Originally, I had only checked my registration status online. I figured, I should call into the Board of Elections and voice my displeasure at their complete incompetence. I would have, except the automated system that they use is an absolute clusterfuck. It runs you around in circles from recorded message to recorded message. Finally, I got a real person on the phone and as I proceeded to voice my complaint she told me that the database hadn’t been working for the past couple weeks and that I should try again. Wouldn’t it have been simpler to, I don’t know, put up some sort of message on the website saying that the database was broken? I mean, how many other people out there were in my position and didn’t bother to call in and were just resigned to being disenfranchised? At any rate, I checked online again and discovered I am indeed registered in the District of Columbia.

Driving on Connecticut Avenue through Cleveland Park and Van Ness this Saturday was basically like driving through Obamaland. It was great. Sign waves on every other block and Obama posters on every light pole. Gets me nostalgic for the times I spent on campaigns. Almost makes me want to go back and do it again. And then I remember the way too many miles I put on my car driving back and forth from Silver Spring to Baltimore and down to way down south Gorgeous Prince Georges County. Like I said, almost.

I’ve been pretty vocal in my support for Barack Obama on this blog. He’s the most used tag according to the tag cloud on the right. I”m sure you all have seen the video that Will.I.Am and Jesse Dylan put together with the help of many musicians, actors and actresses (if not go to www.dipdive.com). I admit, it slightly resembles a Gap commercial and to certain people can come off as a bit cheesy. But, can you imagine Hillary Clinton or John McCain having a video like this? No chance. Not since 9/11 have celebrities come together to create a song/video like this. Admittedly, the starpower for this video is not on the scale of the 9/11 “Tribute to Heroes” song. But that’s besides the point. This video is symbolic of Obama’s campaign in that it brings people together and inspires people. My roommate works in the news division of one of the major networks and works alongside many veterans in the industry, people you would recognize from TV. Many of them say that not since JFK has a candidate created such a buzz and gotten voters so excited about the candidate. These are people who were there in the thick of it and are now here in the thick of it. It isn’t just a fairy tale. It’s very real.

What irks me about this whole thing are the naysayers. I don’t mean the people who are simply supporting Hillary Clinton. In regards to the issues, Hillary and Barack are not that different. Certain small disagreements. But in general, on the issues as a whole, they are not that different. If you want to support Hillary go right ahead. It’s the people in my parent’s generation that looked at every election before this and shook their head at the apathy shown by people my age. But now, that we have come out in force (in some states the youth vote has as much as quadrupled pacing Obama to wins in a few states) in support of Barack Obama, these same people look at us and say that we’re caught up in the hype and we don’t know what we’re voting for. When you were our age, you voted for JFK because he inspired you. Now, we’re voting for Obama because he inspires us and a lot of people in your generation as well. But that hypocrisy isn’t my biggest gripe. What I take issue with most is that these people think we’re voting out of ignorance of the issues. I’m sorry, but many of my peers are far more educated than you about the issues. We are more plugged into the everyday goings on of the country if for no other reason than we are more technologically savvy in this 24 hour news cycle and that we have more free time on our hands.

Scold us for being young and thinking we are invincible. Look down at us for our rash and impulsive decision making. But do not, do not, call us ignorant. Finally there is a candidate who has been able to electrify not just the traditional voting base, but also the younger population. While that is not a good enough reason in and of itself to vote for someone, it is a quality that is seen so rarely from generation to generation. It is most certainly a quality that you would want a president to have.

I’m off to Colorado on Wednesday to get some skiing in. See you suckers when I get back. Breckenridge here I come.