primroseburrows (
primroseburrows) wrote2007-01-12 04:33 am
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Entry tags:
lots of random things
I can't FIND my cell phone, and I dunno about clever, but otherwise, yeah:
You Are From Mercury |
![]() You are talkative, clever, and knowledgeable - and it shows. You probably never leave home without your cell phone! You're witty, expressive, and aware of everything going on around you. You love learning, playing, and taking in all of what life has to offer. Be careful not to talk your friends' ears off, and temper your need to know everything. |
Best. Answer. Ever. OMG:
Your Daddy Is Pedro Martinez |
![]() What You Call Him: Pa Why You Love Him: He gives good spankings |
Hehehehyep:
You Are a Liberal for Life |
![]() You've got a bleeding heart - and you're proud of it. For you, liberal means being compassionate, pro-government, and anti-business. You believe in equality for every person, and you consider yourself universally empathetic. Helping others is not just political for you ... it's very personal too. |
Toldya New England is
Your Slanguage Profile |
Canadian Slang: 75% |
New England Slang: 75% |
Aussie Slang: 50% |
Victorian Slang: 50% |
British Slang: 25% |
Prison Slang: 25% |
Southern Slang: 25% |
Yay!
You Passed the US Citizenship Test |
![]() Congratulations - you got 8 out of 10 correct! |
Also, Howard Dean for Prime Minister.
Except we need him here, right where he is, so forget about it.
I can't really figure out why he was chosen, though. I mean, why an American? I guess it was because of his success a. with his grassroots internet campaigning (no, he didn't win, but he changed the face of political campaigning forever, and for the good, IMO, because it got the average you-and-me citizen to participate AND set him in a perfect spot to become DNC chairman), and/or b. as chairman of the Democratic National Committee, because obviously he did something right if the Democrats now control Congress. Yes, a lot of it was because the Republicans did almost everything wrong, but still. Howard's a great organizer, and that's what he did.
The fact that he was governor of a border state might have something to do with it, because he talks about that in his speech.
The video of Dr. Dean's speech is here. I'm such a Howard Dean fangirl that it isn't even funny. I don't always agree with everything, but his heart is always in the right place. Go him.
Yes, I am a dork. I thought we established that.
In other news, Little Mosque on the Prairie is very cute. It's done well, too, so I'll get to see more than just the eight episodes, hopefully.
Also wtf, Dubya?. Go. Away. Now.
Jesus on a Segway, even Republicans are opposing this horrible, terrible plan. "When mistakes have been made, the responsibility rests with me." Damn straight it does. If you really believe this, though, why are you saying "OMG, if we left, the middle east would fall apart"? Um, if that's true, YOU caused it by attacking Iraq in the first place, you utter, utter hypocrite. And now you're sending more kids off to a war that isn't ours. Channel Nixon much, Junior? I wish someone would channel Woodward and Bernstein and get you kicked out on your arse.
And there we go, with "Al Qaeda is still active in Iraq". Same old propaganda, and he's saying it to reinforce the whole (entirely fictional) Saddam-Sept.11 connection.Maybe Al Qaeda is active in Iraq, but I bet it wasn't nearly as active, if at all, before the U.S. decided to take down Saddam (there are plenty other dictators as bad or worse, but they weren't sitting on a bunch of oil). And, um. He's dropping Joe Lieberman's name as an example of bipartisanship? This would be funny if it weren't so incredibly pathetic.
"They have watched their comrades give their lives to insure our liberty." No they haven't, they've watched their comrades give their lives for a horrible mistake made by an idiot."
And oh. Tony Blair is backing Bush, but at least he's not sending more troops in.
I hadn't planned on ranting, honest. Dubya has that affect on me. :/
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I wonder how many people are going to believe the same old propaganda re: al qaeda in Irak. you know that despite the polls that show how dubya's popularity is going down the tubes, there WILL be people who still believe that type of crap. that's what's really sad.
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I think that for the most part? People don't care. They're living their lives. I think that might be one of the saddest things about the US population.
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*gags*
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(Also, I can't actually access the article but the title leads me to believe we are notfollowing Bush with more troops, which is only a good thing.)
Also, I failed the
American historycitizenship test woefully, only 6 out of 10 correct, haha! Though I always thought failing was less than 50%...And I couldn't get the Slanguage quiz to work! I was really interested too!
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And hmm, the quiz link works fine for me. Try c/p instead of linking? http://www.blogthings.com/whatslanguagedoyouspeakquiz/
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It wasn't the link, but it seemed to time out halfway through and the page didn't finish loading! Very frustrating :(
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I dunno about the validity of the US thing, it probably isn't true, but I wouldn't be surprised if it were. We sort of like to stick our nose in other people's (and peoples') business.
And hmm, I'm going to have to do more reading on the political system of Australia. Y'all have proportional representation, which is a concept I'm trying to figure out. We supposedly have first-past-the-post, but then there's the Electoral College when it comes to the President, so apparently it doesn't count there, and OMG, I am the biggest geek ever.
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Actually I am a dork too and was up until 2AM the night I made the original comment reading about Australia's election process and government system. I knew the sort of basics, but I feel much more informed now. Wiki is the source of all (popular) knowledge!
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It seems like this has already happened over and over, that his administration has been revealed to be criminally underhanded. It's just for some reason it doesn't matter.
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As for Dubya... well, since I don't want the Fibbies jumping on me, I'll just say that I am reconsidering moving to work in the US. Too skeery!
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*takes your temperature*no subject
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I've never been to Texas, but from what I've heard, the cultural attitude is pretty far removed from your average Canadian province. California? Maybe. Or you could come to RI, 'cause we're cool and everything. :)
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It's been a few years since I wrote my licensure exam in NS, but I didn't find it too tricky. I think it is alot more general than the NCLEX, looking at critical thinking rather than looking for the so-called 'right' answer: one study guide I have said the NCLEX exam has nothing to do with testing one's nursing knowledge, but with finding the 'right' answer for the question asked.
I'll get you any info I can on the NS exam :)
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Also, I was able to ace the labour and delivery section without even studying. I've done a lot of studying in other areas besides nursing about the subject, so I like to think it was because I'm ohso intelligent and not because the questions weren't hard enough. The hard part for me was checking the 'right' answer when it was against everything I believe in as a doula (when do you do the first ultrasound? Me: Only when medically necessary, duh. Real Answer: blablahblah weeks. Me: *checks Real Answer, 'cause mine's not even there). [/soapbox]
Do you have to be a resident of NS or Canada to write for a provincial board? Because I'd love to be able to write it if I could. It wouldn't help me get a better job here (Me: Uh, yes, I'm not only licenced in Rhode Island and, er, Nova Scotia. Interviewer: ...and this is helpful how?)
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Nope! There are probably some different fees you have to deal with, but there isn't a resident restriction: alot of nurses at my hospital are from other provinces, and while some take 'reciprocal' consideration (ie: the license from province 'a' can be basis enough for issuing a license in NS) other folks have had to write the exam.
If you google 'College of Registered Nurses of Nova Scotia' (CRNNS) you should be able to find the info there :)
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*kicks something in frustration*
I do think that people don't respond to corruption as much as we did in the 70's. Back then, the corruption that was going on was well hidden til Nixon got caught. Now it's so out in the open that when attention is brought to it - everyone seems to ignore it. I noticed this right away when Bush came into office. I remember reading the paper and thinking to myself - why aren't people more outraged? And that was well before 9/11. I'll stop ranting in your LJ now. sigh.
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:P
I found this website you'd like. And other things. Alas.
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My future son-in-law is looking for you.
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I will be around tomorrow night unless there is nuclear war.
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I have to drive to the Great State of New Hampshuh, ayuh, then I'll be home.
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Thanks :-)
I also need to do some shopping, for winter stuff and such.
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And did you just
loathelove how Dubyuh led off -- second sentence of the speech -- with 9/11? Just the same old shit. Oh, how I hate that man.no subject
*has Vietnam flashback*
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Also, hello, who ever suggested that Middle Eastern nations -- Iraq or anybody else -- wanted democracy in the first place? We see how well that's going for Israel, and that's a nation that's about 1/3 populated by expatriate Germans and Americans! And one of the basic premises of Islam is Sharia; Islamic law is unavoidably religious in character, and therefore has fundamental biases that conflict with democratic ideology. If anyone in the American government made even the slightest effort to understand Islamic beliefs and culture OR Middle Eastern history, we wouldn't be in this mess in the first place. /rant
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If the American government made an effort to understand beliefs that aren't American, let alone a culture that's completely foreign to us, I might pass out from the shock. And that's the problem, too. We're a melting pot, and I'm not convinced that melting is the way to go. US culture is a muddy soup; everyone's expected to shed their culture and become part of the big one-pot nation, and if they don't, well, that's not our problem and we don't want to have to deal with it.
We don't celebrate diversity as a nation, we try to force different cultures into the American Model. We've been doing it since the beginning, and naturally we assume everyone wants to be like us. And, we think, why not? We're the Best Nation on Earth, after all. Um. I wonder if anyone's ever really thought about why they assume this. And how we can assume this without ever even bothering to look at other cultures/countries and say, hey, maybe they don't want to be just like us. Maybe their way of life is what's best for them, even if it isn't Democracy and Freedom Fries. Bleh. [/also rant]