Monthly Archive for May, 2006

Georgia to Appeal (Positive) Ruling on Gay Marriage

(Alternatively titled: ‘Georgia is Full of Dumbfuck Redneck Homophobes Who Have Nothing Better To Do than Meddle in Other People’s Lives’)

From The Chattanoogan:

Gov. Sonny Perdue announced today that the state of Georgia will appeal to the Georgia Supreme Court the ruling by Judge Constance Russell of the Fulton County Superior Court overturning Georgia’s law defining marriage as between one man and one woman. “I’ve spoken with the Attorney General and he has assured me that he will move forward with an immediate appeal to the Georgia Supreme Court,” said Gov. Perdue. “We will ask for an expedited review and I have confidence that the Supreme Court will handle this in a timely fashion.” If the Georgia Supreme Court fails to overturn the decision of the lower court or fails to act by August 7, 2006, Gov. Perdue said he will call for a special session of the General Assembly to convene on August 9, 2006. This will allow the state to meet the Secretary of State’s deadline of Aug. 14 for the general election ballot language certification. “I think the people of Georgia spoke overwhelmingly. They knew exactly what they were voting for and their voices deserve to be heard,” said Gov. Perdue.

What about the voices of the gay community? Huh. I thought we had, you know, gotten past all of that suppressing minorities thing about 40 years ago. Well, in theory anyway. Cause how does two women getting married affect you, Mr. Perdue? It doesn’t. Get over yourself.

My god says that homophobes burn in hell. Take that.

My Days at EARTH

So far, here’s what my typical days look like:

Wake up at 5:00am

Breakfast in the cafeteria at 5:30-6:00am

Catch 6:00am bus to the organic farm

Start work at 6:30am. End work around 2:00pm.

Work… any or all of the following:

  • Shovel pig shit

  • Feed sugarcane to the pigs

  • Harvest some veggies

  • Feed the chickens

  • Cut grass to feed to the water buffalo

  • Cut leafy plants to feed to the goats

  • Clean the goat stable

  • String up pole beans

  • Help students on their various projects (Wed and Sat)

  • Cut sugarcane and haul it to the pig shed

And fun at the farm…

  • Play with the baby goats

  • “Awww” at the baby pigs

  • Joke around with the workers

  • Talk to the students that I am meeting

It’s crazy humid here. I don’t know… 99%? All the time. I break a drenching sweat just walking from point A to point B in the middle of the day. It’s disgusting, but I guess since it happens to everyone it’s not so bad. The reason I’m updating my blog and posting pictures so much is that the computer lab (and the library) is the only place on campus that has air conditioning.

Heiner Castillo runs the farm. He is an absolute genius about organic agriculture. Thankfully he speaks great English, because I would be totally lost trying to discuss the intricacies of agriculture in Spanish.

Panfilo Tabora is the professor in charge of the teaching side of the organic farm. He too is a genius. And he speaks great English (he is originally from the Philippines). I’m in good hands here.

They are letting me participate in an Organic Horticulture class tomorrow. We’re going on a field trip. Also, on Wednesdays and Saturdays, the first year students come out to the farm to work and assist the fourth year students on their graduation projects. So I have been meeting a lot of really awesome people from throughout Latin America and the Caribbean.

I’m still in shock at how amazing Earth University is. Back home at UGA… I am graduating with a BSA degree in Horticulture in December. And I’ve only had one… ONE… class where I actually got my hands dirty and performed the real-world tasks that I will have to do when I graduate and get a job. And that class was Greenhouse Management II. Thank you, Dr. Armitage.

All of my other classes at UGA have been strictly in the classroom and lab. It still doesn’t make sense to me how we are majoring in Horticulture, and have classes dealing with vegetable and fruit crops, but we never actually grow anything. That just seems a little, well, fucked up. The only class I’ve had at UGA where we learned to grow vegetables was an Organic Agriculture class from the Ecology department. [Yes, I know there is more to Horticulture than just growing food crops, but that is my interest.]

There are lots of things I love about the Horticulture department at UGA, don’t get me wrong. And lots of amazingly smart, resourceful, and caring professors that have taught me much. But it would be a lot better if I spent more time outside getting dirty instead of inside staring at Powerpoint presentations. I think the UGA Horticulture department could definitely borrow some ideas from EARTH successfully, and this I will mention during my exit interview (if not sooner).

It just seems weird to me that here I am, majoring in Horticulture… you know the degree that’s all about growing stuff… and yet in most of the classes I’ve had we haven’t grown a damn thing. Only talked about it. That seems a bit retarded to me. I know that a large part of doing an internship is to learn and work in the “real world” but I still believe that doing these things should also be possible in the classroom. There are plenty of plants we could grow in the fall, and in the spring we could get a start on some summer crops. Why not? I have no idea…

I think the students here at EARTH learn more about growing stuff during their first year than I have learned in my 5 year degree from UGA. That’s a little disconcerting.

Then again, here I am, learning what I’m bitching about not learning. And lots of people at UGA helped me get here. As well as friends and family who’ve had my back for some time now. I’m having a blast and definitely need to send out some thanks.

Thank you:

My parents and family, for putting up with my shit all these years and still showing the love. My girlfriend, Giovanna, for being amazing in ten thousand different ways. And the following individuals at UGA: Vicki Collins in Global Programs. Dr. Doug Bailey, head of the Horticulture department. Dr. Mark Rieger, my advisor in Horticulture. Dr. Wayne Parrot, Crop and Soil Science. Dr. Barry Palevitz, Plant Biology. Dr. Jim Richardson, Ecology. Dr. Carl Jordan, Ecology. Paul Duncan, Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies. And last but not least, to Patrick Ferguson, a friend, fellow gardener, and musician who works in EITS and keeps all my internet issues straight. Special thanks also to Kathryn Keslosky and all the great folks at the Annie’s Homegrown organic food company for taking an interest in my work.

Cilantro

Took this picture of cilantro at EARTH’s organic farm today.

It’s for you.

EARTH : Organic Cilantro

Music Hates You

If you like good music at all:

Music Hates You

My friend Patrick is the drummer, but this is not a friend plug. MHY stand on their own, and I would recommend them whether or not I knew them. If you want to get your face ripped off by your stereo, buy their debut album Send More Paramedics. Even better, go see them live.

The album is technically not out yet so you will have to check their website (or Patrick’s) for updates.

Nintendo : 12 Years Later

I haven’t played video games in forever. Really, not since Super Mario World. I’ve always had a special place in my heart for the original Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) and nothing since then has impressed me. I guess when it’s the 80’s, and you grew up playing on an Intellivision, the upgrade to an NES was nothing short of spectacular (I still kept the Intellivision though, and it survived with a few games — Burgertime being the best — until the early 1990’s when my grandparents got a new house and it disappeared in the process).

As a kid it was always a big deal when my mom drove us up to Macon to the Toys-R-Us store. Back in the day, that was pretty much the only place to buy video games (the game stores in the mall didn’t exist yet). I remember they had walls of games for the NES, and later, the Gameboy, and even after that the Sega Genesis. I would look at the cases hanging there, beg and plead with my mother to shell out $40 for a game, grab a purchase ticket and head to the front register. A few minutes later I would have the shiny new cartridge packaging in my hands (I was the older brother, after all) as I bounced off the walls with anticipation.

The 30 minute ride home would consist of drooling over the case graphics while I waited to get home and try out my new treasure. Or if it was a Gameboy game, I would, undoubtedly, drive my mom crazy for half an hour as I sat in the backseat and convinced the Gameboy to produce an unending sequence of “Bleep!s” and “Blonk!s” and “Zap!s”.

As the years went by, game systems came and went at that Toys-R-Us. NEC Turbo Grafx 16. Panasonic 3DO. Sega Saturn. Neo-Geo. Atari Jaguar. Etc. And still, the NES remained, followed by the Super NES.

The other systems arguably had more power and better looking games. But I never got them (literally and figuratively) because they were too complicated, too expensive, and generally the games sucked. Eventually, sometime around 1994 I stopped playing video games altogether (well, sometimes my friends and I would play HappyWeed on my Mac in high school but that was a different story).

I knew friends who had Playstation and Nintendo 64 and GameCube and Dreamcast and even X-Box. But no matter how many times I tried to play these games, I just didn’t get it. They depended on too many arcane button presses and joystick movements just to get started (some controllers had 4 primary buttons, 4 secondary buttons, 1 trigger button, and two or three separate joysticks!). Sure, the graphics were great, but I always had a hell of a lot more fun playing RC Pro-Am versus Grand Theft Auto anyway. Call me old fashioned.

And then I read the news the other day. Oh boy.

Nintendo is coming out with a new game system called the Wii (pronounced ‘We’) that looks like it will change the face of gaming. The games aren’t the fanciest or flashiest or most advanced graphically. The controllers don’t have 12 buttons. In fact, they use gyroscopic motion sensors so the required movements are natural, like swinging a baseball bat. And this is a good thing. Check out the website.

The Wii is supposed to retail for around $200, significantly cheaper than the Playstation 3 ($600) or Xbox 360 ($300). If I can figure out how to hook it up to the screen on my 20″ iMac, I just might get one when I return to the States. It looks like it’s going to be that good.

The best part? It’s backwards-compatible with the NES, Super-NES, Nintendo 64, GameCube, Sega Genesis, and TurboGraphx 16!




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