Enterprise and “Happy” Vulcans

I’m not sure if the stories on Enterprise are improving, or if the series is just growing on me, but I just watched “Singularity,” and I must say, it was quite enjoyable. Character interaction was thoughtful and engaging, stories are now developing with some believable evolution, and the plot, though not quite Shakespeare, works quite well for a Star Trek series.

One significant script problem: when Archer first asks T’Pol if she would read the preface he is to write for his father’s biography, she responds, “I’d be happy to.”

No, no, no, no, NO. Vulcans are beings of logic, not emotion, and no self-respecting Vulcan would ever say that she would be “happy” to do anything, even as a turn of phrase. While I enjoy Enterprise a lot, I think these writers really need to work on their continuity with the older series; the cold, logical, peaceful character of the Vulcans has been mangled beyond recognition in later incarnations of Star Trek. Tsk, tsk, What would Surak say?

Adobo for PETA

In honor of Yourish’s International Eat an Animal for PETA Day, I spent the afternoon cooking up a pot of chicken adobo.

While buying the chicken earlier this week, I quite forgot that we don’t have a decent butcher knife at home, and it was more difficult than I expected to dismember half a chicken with my bare hands, so I let it marinate in soy sauce and vinegar overnight so it would be much softer the next day. Very cathartic, tearing up all that flesh and skin and bone. Anyway, I used a bit too much vinegar and ginger and too little soy sauce, so that the boiling sauce stung the nostrils a bit, but a little brown sugar helped bring down the acidity. Quite good with rice and chutney.

Next project: find some bagoong.

The First Year

Thursday was an anniversary of sorts for me; it was one year ago, on March 13th, that I made the jump from Manila, with little more than the clothes on my back, two bags in my hands, and a prayer in my heart. Today, I have school and work and a room in picturesque Little Italy in Baltimore, with wonderful friends and blessings aplenty. It is more than I ever dared hope for since I first landed in DC National that cold, gray, rainy morning.

A good year, and the Lord has dealt with me abundantly. To Him I am grateful.

The Lord is gracious and righteous;

our God is full of compassion.

The Lord protects the simplehearted;

when I was in great need, he saved me.

Be at rest once more, O my soul, for the LORD has been good to you. (Psalm 116)

TechBalt, Pop2Blog, and Theremins

This is really belated, but TechBalt had a Sunspot story last month. Adam emailed me to say they’re about 200 people strong now, and are making progress towards purchasing houses on the first block they’ve picked. Will this transform Baltimore?

On the mobile side, thanks to a tip from Jesper, my moblog concerns may soon be addressed with pop2blog. Looks very much worth trying.

Oh, and in Sound class, we just learned about theremins. Now I know what I.R. Baboon was playing in that I Am Weasel episode.

A Lighter Whyblog

I redesigned WhyBlog, but it’s still beta. The programming’s okay, but I’m conceptually lost as to what kind of artistic direction I can take the thing in. First, I need to meet with my thesis advisor for input and advice, and then install a blog for the project.

A.O.W.C.U.T.G.D.F.P.

I’ve seen a bunch of ANSWER antiwar march fliers around school lately, and it makes me want to append to them: “Beware the A.O.W.C.U.T.G.D.F.P.!!!”

Update: Pity they let that domain expire. Anyway, AOWCUTGDFP was an acronym for “Authoritarian Opportunists Who Cozy Up To Genocidal Dictators For Peace,” referring to ANSWER’s backing from the communist Workers World Party, whose preference for non-democratic tyrants and despots tended to cast a pall over high-profile peace marches. You can still see AOWCUTGDFP as saved by the Web Archive.

De Quiros pulls a Godwin

I usually appreciate Conrado De Quiros’ columns, and I stand as a Christian against unjust war, pero sobra na po ito. With the deliberate comparison to Hitler, De Quiros is pulling a Godwin, which in newsgroup and message board culture usually indicates that a person is running out of more meaningful arguments for his stand. It’s worse than Krugman implicitly making a Marcos out of Bush. C’mon, Mr. De Quiros. There are far more reasonable arguments against the war than the straw man demonization of American political figures; we can do this without sounding like a Boondocks strip.

(Okay, “just-war” Christians, Republicans, Filipino pundits, Marcos loyalists, Boondocks fans… anyone left whose feathers I haven’t ruffled? Heh heh. “Left.”)