Got a little sick this week, I think it was from spending too many late nights drinking coffee and catching up on some reading. Then again maybe its just because of the rain and living in a city with close proximity to a large number of people, and riding the metro.
I think that being here in DC for the past couple months have given me some more perspective on career goals, hopefully it’ll pay off down the road when I finish Re-working some of my statements for applications. Got a little distracted by some webworking stuff, I’m using a Mozilla Firefox browser, so far I’m much more impressed with it since MSIE kept crashing the other day. I was able to resolve some HTML issues on one of my pages using this new browser as well. I also was playing around with converting my old La Follette papers to pdf form, I have to admit that they look really cool in digital format.
More on this internment book. I have to admit that the author’s ramblings have gotten my attention, kind of like the way reality TV can grab my attention. The interest remains in my confusion to how anyone could actually act this way, do these things, actually believe what she is saying, or typing in her blog. Somebody who has some pretty ignorant, or misguided views of the world, and enjoys broadcasting it to a larger audience as a twisted form of self advertisement. Have to remind myself that shes really just trying to sell books.
Irony, the legal battles fought for reparations following the internment, played a role in the overall status of APIs in America. The countless individuals who fought to set the record straight over all these years helped contribute to opening the door for generations of future immigrants to come to America.
All in all I don’t think she just “gets it”, meaning she likes to state the obvious a lot when it comes to some points. In response to people calling her a sellout and self hater, she posts an article she wrote a while back on the Michigan Law school affirmative action ruling. The tone of it points out that APIs lose out overall in affirmative action, as if most APIs didn’t know that already. For me I think this is a well established fact, and is more than obvious. what she fails to address though, is that people who support affirmative action have a general understanding that diversity on academic campuses is more than just a numbers game, each group edging to get more of their people into school. I would be just as alarmed if the school I went to was overwhelmingly Asian-American as if it was overwhelmingly white.
The name of the game is NOT to screw everyone else over for the benefit of your own. This is America, last time I checked. There is a difference between the ideal of free market capitalism that our founding fathers stood for, and corporate capitalism. Free market capitalism does lead to democracy, being that in a true free market, you can’t make yourself wealthy without enriching those around you. In a free market, you are pitted against others to produce quality goods and services at a reasonable price. If you act too selfishly, you’ll lose customers, and won’t make a profit. A free market capitalist makes a positive contribution to society. In a sense, the reason why capitalism is good is because the externalities of a free market system are on the whole, more good than bad. Corporatism on the other hand is something different, facism?
Some of our greatest presidents say this as well. I think it was Thomas Jefferson said that America would never be taken over by a foreign power, but rather by wealthy individuals (or corporations) exerting their own interests over the government. Teddy Roosevelt said that he feared bankers most of all. Eisenhower warned us about the dangers of a military industrial complex.
And then theres that old bootstraps arguement which makes no sense when you think about it. Individualism, I think is a good thing, but we can’t deny reality that at some point in our sucessful little lives we all got some help in one way or another.