"There is no reciprocity. Men love women, women love children, children love hamsters." - Alice Thomas Ellis
Addendum: I also see this as "There is no reciprocity. Men love women. Women love children. Children love hamsters. Hamsters don't love anyone". - Anna Haycraft
***
Someone: u know, *** can be quite stupid at times
makes me wonder how she got into [top UK college] and [top US college]
but perhaps she's just generally brilliant but with blinders on when it comes to anything to do with women
Someone else: that's called flattery.. flattery!!
girls love flattery!!
Me: yeah women respond well to it
women dont appreciate honesty hurr hurr
Someone else: although she's so small, she's still a girl
d:
i mean woman
Me: small cannot be woman ah
Someone else: lol.. cannot
she's still a little girl
Me: ...
is *** still a little girl
Someone else: hahah.. kind of..
it's a little different
girlfriend, even though small, is still woman
friend, if small, is a girl!!
kawaii!!!
Me: ..............
Someone else: aren't both of them kawaii???
ahahhahahahaha!
Me: now I feel like slapping you
Someone else: hohoho
what?
you should watch more anime or read more manga
Me: yah then I end up like you
or ***. or ***
Someone else: yeah, why not?? d:
Me: *** is like a manga character
always excited
Someone else: yeah.. exactly...
but that's okay.. haha
manga characters are fun, flowery, have crazy lives
Me: depends on the manga
sometimes they go crazy and kill their crushes
Someone else: what manga do you read!!
@@
Me: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_Days_(game)
Someone: btw, my friend told me the correct answer to your pro-kidney sales thing is this:
when it is legalised, i will offer to buy BOTH your kidneys for 10K
and if you refuse, i shall report you to the authorities for opposition to capitalism
=p
Me: ........
that's like saying if someone supports being paid for doing work you should make them work 24/7
and if the personrefuses, he's a communist
...
Someone: actually there's a way to scuttle the organ trading hub plan of khaw boon wan
all it takes... is for other countries to declare that any citizen found selling or buying organs in singapore... would be considered criminals for breaking their own countries' organ trading bans
(remember, singapore started this extraterritorial nonsense thing first, by insisting that singaporeans who consumed marijuana in australia were still criminally liable when they returned to the fatherland)
Me: other countries aren't as retarded as us
Someone: indeed
but this will preemptively scuttle the sg organ trading plan
it's clear that we don't have enough singaporeans to fuel an organ market, either on the buyers or sellers side
and in case you're forgetting, other countries do insist on extraterritorial prosecution of their own citizens for certain crimes, such as child sex/paedophilia
Me: why don't we have enough singaporeans
there is no harm involved here, unlike in child sex/paedophilia
Someone: well, the countries that still ban organ trading (i.e everyone in the world aside from singapore and iran) obviously see it as a harm
so they will dispute your point
Me: they ban drugs
but they don't insist on extraterritorial prosecution of their own citizens for drug consumption
Someone: singapore does
Me: but other countries don't
they're not as retarded as us
Someone: look.
extraterritorial prosecution is practised by the following countries: australia, austria, belgium, china, canada, denmark, finland, france, germany, iceland, italy, japan, morocco, new zeland, norway, portugal, spain, sweden, taiwan, UK and US
for the folliowing "crimes": sex tourism, human smuggling...
they could probably argue that singapore's organ trading is a legitimised attempt at organ smuggling, and prosecute their citizens from this viewpoint
Me: sex tourism, if properly practiced, harms no one. and I've only ever heard of prosecution for underaged sex
human smuggling is obviously a crime to another person
I think they've better things to do
which is why they don't prosecute foreign consumption of drugs
apparently neither have we since the first case
Someone: human smuggling is not a crime to the person getting smuggled
to them, it was a simple economic transaction: you loan me money, i work for you in foreign country
where's the harm?
=P
properly practised, human smuggling harms no one
Me: eh I thought you meant human trafficking
well the only reason it harms people is that it is illegal, and the attempt to get around immigration restrictions necessitates people suffocating in trucks
and the only reason we have human smuggling is because of illiberal immigration laws
so if we legalise organ trading we won't have problems like with human smuggling
Someone: what we need is a hitchhiker's guide to the galaxy solution
breed a special subspecies of human beings who WANT their organs to be donated
MFTTW: on principle i am against [paid organ donations] too
ideologically so
i don't believe that one should attach monetary values to human life
30k per kidney, 50k per liver etc. then 1 human is wroth how much, 500k etc.
of course don't ask me to explain how that would be practical, but still.
Me: http://www.slate.com/blogs/blogs/humannature/archive/2008/07/23/age-wealth-and-medicare.aspx
that is what happens when you don't attach monetary value to human life
you waste money
and since money is not infinite, other people die
this is not attaching monetary value to human life
but to a medical commodity
MFTTW: in principle again i also think medicare is best spent on younger people what
it works the same way in organ donations also -- people who are younger and more likely to survive have higher priority on transplant waiting lists
if all lives are equal in value (which in principle again, they should be)
then why favor one rich guy who can afford a kidney over a poor guy who canont
i think in this instance the medical commodity is virtually equal to a human life.
besides i really don't see the point of having a 50k surgery to live 5 years beyond 90
Me: if all lives are equal in value why favor younger people over older people
anyway when you legalise organ sales you don't ban organ donations
doesn't mean poor people won't get transplants
so emergency healthcare should be made free
because they are equivalent to human life
MFTTW: it's not a unilateral unifying principle...given the same age and fitness level, poor vs rich is irrelevant
but given a disparity in fitness level...people do need to learn to die gracefully
you put too much stock in human goodness to assume that if organ sales become legal, donations will still exist to suffice the demand for people who can't afford it. whereas i don't.
from a human perspective, if i were to die, if i can get money for my organs i'll donate, if not, i don't... either way i'm dead, so it matters not to me, so if i can get money for my family that's good, if not, why bother donating.
Me: well rich people can afford better healthcare than poor people
is that unfair?
that's if you think people donate organs because they bo pian
but people have more motives to donate than that
they donate out of altruism
MFTTW: for emergency healthcare, it is illegal to with hold if you cannot pay.
Me: that's in the US
but that results in poor people going in to emergency places only when they're really sick
and as a result premiums go up for everyone else
and the poor people get worse care than they would have had otherwise
MFTTW: how many singaporeans donate out of altuism. look at the reaction to the organs act
Me: http://ideas.repec.org/p/hhs/gunwpe/0180.html
there seems to be a crowding out effect when you pay people, but when you let people donate the payment to charity the crowding out totally disappears
MFTTW: 7 bucks
i don't mind donating 7 bucks to charity
ask me if i want to donate 50k to charity
Me: 7 bucks is for blood
organs are a different matter
and you can choose not to be paid
MFTTW: agree
organs are different
monetary value matters
i bet i can find you papers where given $5 and given $500 see how many people donate to charity
i think we differ on the point that you believe in altruism and i do not.
Me: so why do people donate organs now
MFTTW: yes poor people do get worse care than rich people, in balance
in sg? hallo? HOTA?
they don't have achoice
Me: I mean worldwide
HOTA is not the only way of donating
HOTA is opt out
the way you implement organ donation is important
you can outlaw paid donations when dead
paid donation only when you're alive
to compensate you for the pain and the expense etc
MFTTW: worldwide i don't know the %
!
ok you mean alive
i thought you meant dead
there is a limit to how many organs you can sell when alive anyway
and people balance b/w getting paid and staying alive
so i'm willing to concede the allowability of paid donations for living people
firstly i don't have a problem with HOTA
but i thought we were arguing the implentation of distributing organs
not the harvesting/availability
Me: if you legalise sales you get more organs
there will be separate markets for donations and sales
MFTTW: as long as sales are restricted to living people
and you are not taking away from the existing supply
Me: so the question now is if existing supply will be reduced
probably it will be, a little
but the net change in supply will be positive
right now people can only donate to their immediate relatives
or some shit like that right
MFTTW: i agree, existing supply through dead people is reduced very slightly
Me: why would this change with legalised sales
gah
not many people will donate even with legalised sales lor
MFTTW: haha wait till you get the black sheep of the family who refuse to donate to family and rather donate to someone else who will pay them
they should actually legalise livingdonation to strangers
ins't that allowed with bone marrow
not sure what the law in sg is wrt that
pretty sure for major organs it's family only
cos of the whole stupid pierre png fiasco
Me: then the person will get psychoed
but think about it. if the person will donate only for money, would the person donate in the first place if sales were banned? I doubt it
different factors motivating the donor
pierre png was boyfriend what
why cannot
MFTTW: i dunno. maybe can get psychoed to donate, if the option of getting paid was never on the table in the first place.
boyfriend cannot lah
relatives only
they had to get special consent
Me: cos going to marry or what shit is it
ok reason to shotgun wedding ahah
aiyah if the person doesnt want to donate to relative
but donates for money later
he will be screwed upside down
this is called social mechanisms
MFTTW: haha
people in desperate situations do stupid things lah
Me: and if the person is psychoed to donate... is that really donation?
no lor. it's being forced
which is a greater evil than paid organ sales
MFTTW: social coercion is not my problem lor. you cant legislate that either.
"were you guilted into donation by nagging mother/father/grandparents tick yes or no"
unless they hold aknife to your throat
LDPVTP: yue fei was one of my heroes in primary sch
Me: you're damn sad
LDPVTP: that was in primary sch
Me: what pri sch were you in
LDPVTP: tao nan
Me: no wonder
Someone: my fren was in cjc and in the first 3 mths, ppl wore their sec sch uniforms
a dense teacher went up to an scgs girl and said, "why are u only wearing your pinafore? slut"
Someone else: armour IS shit
all the armour officers i know are assholes
at least the regular ones
assholes or numbnuts
Me: once armour always suffer
Someone else: haha true
Someone: under IVLE Student Events:
SWINGERS PARTY
clicked on it:
wingers Party
Organizer : NUS Jazz Band, member of CFA
Description : Welcome Tea + Workshop
NABEI CHEEBYE
i want to email them to hurl abuse at them
Saturday, July 26, 2008
Facebook | I WAS FROM NANYANG AND I'M PROUD OF IT
"Description: You were from Nanyang (kindergarten, primary, girls' high, whichever) and you are proud of your heritage!" (No, I am not joining this group)
2 interesting threads:
1) I was from Nanyang and my Mandarin is still bad (ie the failure of Communist education)
"Yep.. incredibly bad!! i can see chinese people trying to stifle smiles sometimes when i speak mandarin and i've been told that in addition to a singaporean accent, i also have an aussie accent in my chinese..:-)"
"I have a C for my HCL prelims, after six years in a SAP school!"
"I had to do chinese and english as first language in primary 5 and 6 (when the scheme first started)... but was "saved" when my parents decided to move us to Australia in the middle of Primary 6!!! haha"
"Haha. Yeah. I only got a B3 for my O level chinese. It probably got worse when I went to ACS(I). Haha."
"Tell me about it. D7 at first language level, B3 at second language. Believe it or not, my mandarin got better when I was in the US. Felt compelled to defend my ethnic group. Haha.."
"Apparently so. Not saying my grade at PSLE, but UNGRADED at N level (including oral), then failing twice at O level (oral ungraded) before finally getting a C6...and my oral is still ungraded.
Downright terrible!"
"i'm a banana and proud of it. i haven't responded to my chinese name since '86. woo woo."
"My entire Sec 3/4 class can't speak Mandarin! I think it got to the point where it was simply much faster to write in Chinese than to speak Mandarin if we had to communicate in Chinese. Oh well."
"I got an A for chinese PSLE, a C6 for O levels and a D7 for my A's... Kinda regret not being more proficient in the language as I have trouble watching Taiwanese variety shows or reading Manga... :("
2) Who went to nanyang primary school and still has nightmares?=) (See?! I'm not the only counter-revolutionary)
"- the regulation haircut
- The compulsory eye exercises
-The scary teachers
-the all white uniform- whose sick idea was that
-When we had to change out of our PE uniform and back into the school uniform... Etc"
"No talking while walking!
Put your fingers on your lips"
"I cant belive i forgot about that! were you also there for that teacher... cant remember her name.. who used to punish kids by making them do the chair... We used to joke that one day she would actually give us the chair.."
"LET'S JUST SAY,
I JUST GRADUATED IN 05 & THINGS HAVE CHANGED (:"
"The white uniform is a good idea! at least for the guys XD"
"the haircut!!!! above the collar. and in my day, you couldn't tie unless you did dance/gym. so short hair + flat chest = I LOOKED LIKE A GUY! except for the skirt part.
and calligraphy class! with the blue paper that you practised with water on. in a coolio plastic briefcase haha
and that one principal, who was kind of petite and balding... and the vice principal with her afro.
and the gym thing i had to do for pe! that was in chinese. so i didn't understand a word the instructor woman said >< what with the forward rolls and backward rolls and awkward twists"
"Haha remind me to post some fotos of me up on facebook from when i went to NYPS. i looked like a boy/prison escapee/refugee. HOT...let me tell you. i think i missed out on the calligraphy tho... thank god=)"
"haha how about abacus class? i used to just mentally do the sum and pretend to flick here and there (though there's a high chance my memory's failing and this was done in another primary school)"
"oh no talking while walking. that's classic."
"oh my god. the. pain.
i spent most of the day in the classroom sitting out the front pulling my ears because i:
1. didn't do my homework
2. didn't bring my textbooks
3. forgot my schoolbadge
4. was late and got locked out of the back gate which made me later
5. got lost and became late. see #4.
6. did i mention not doing my homework?
7. couldn't speak a word of chinese
8. talked while i walked"
"Description: You were from Nanyang (kindergarten, primary, girls' high, whichever) and you are proud of your heritage!" (No, I am not joining this group)
2 interesting threads:
1) I was from Nanyang and my Mandarin is still bad (ie the failure of Communist education)
"Yep.. incredibly bad!! i can see chinese people trying to stifle smiles sometimes when i speak mandarin and i've been told that in addition to a singaporean accent, i also have an aussie accent in my chinese..:-)"
"I have a C for my HCL prelims, after six years in a SAP school!"
"I had to do chinese and english as first language in primary 5 and 6 (when the scheme first started)... but was "saved" when my parents decided to move us to Australia in the middle of Primary 6!!! haha"
"Haha. Yeah. I only got a B3 for my O level chinese. It probably got worse when I went to ACS(I). Haha."
"Tell me about it. D7 at first language level, B3 at second language. Believe it or not, my mandarin got better when I was in the US. Felt compelled to defend my ethnic group. Haha.."
"Apparently so. Not saying my grade at PSLE, but UNGRADED at N level (including oral), then failing twice at O level (oral ungraded) before finally getting a C6...and my oral is still ungraded.
Downright terrible!"
"i'm a banana and proud of it. i haven't responded to my chinese name since '86. woo woo."
"My entire Sec 3/4 class can't speak Mandarin! I think it got to the point where it was simply much faster to write in Chinese than to speak Mandarin if we had to communicate in Chinese. Oh well."
"I got an A for chinese PSLE, a C6 for O levels and a D7 for my A's... Kinda regret not being more proficient in the language as I have trouble watching Taiwanese variety shows or reading Manga... :("
2) Who went to nanyang primary school and still has nightmares?=) (See?! I'm not the only counter-revolutionary)
"- the regulation haircut
- The compulsory eye exercises
-The scary teachers
-the all white uniform- whose sick idea was that
-When we had to change out of our PE uniform and back into the school uniform... Etc"
"No talking while walking!
Put your fingers on your lips"
"I cant belive i forgot about that! were you also there for that teacher... cant remember her name.. who used to punish kids by making them do the chair... We used to joke that one day she would actually give us the chair.."
"LET'S JUST SAY,
I JUST GRADUATED IN 05 & THINGS HAVE CHANGED (:"
"The white uniform is a good idea! at least for the guys XD"
"the haircut!!!! above the collar. and in my day, you couldn't tie unless you did dance/gym. so short hair + flat chest = I LOOKED LIKE A GUY! except for the skirt part.
and calligraphy class! with the blue paper that you practised with water on. in a coolio plastic briefcase haha
and that one principal, who was kind of petite and balding... and the vice principal with her afro.
and the gym thing i had to do for pe! that was in chinese. so i didn't understand a word the instructor woman said >< what with the forward rolls and backward rolls and awkward twists"
"Haha remind me to post some fotos of me up on facebook from when i went to NYPS. i looked like a boy/prison escapee/refugee. HOT...let me tell you. i think i missed out on the calligraphy tho... thank god=)"
"haha how about abacus class? i used to just mentally do the sum and pretend to flick here and there (though there's a high chance my memory's failing and this was done in another primary school)"
"oh no talking while walking. that's classic."
"oh my god. the. pain.
i spent most of the day in the classroom sitting out the front pulling my ears because i:
1. didn't do my homework
2. didn't bring my textbooks
3. forgot my schoolbadge
4. was late and got locked out of the back gate which made me later
5. got lost and became late. see #4.
6. did i mention not doing my homework?
7. couldn't speak a word of chinese
8. talked while i walked"
Friday, July 25, 2008
Japan trip
Day 5 - 10th June - Ginkakuji, Kyoto (Part 2)
The next stop was Ginkakuji (the Silver Pavillion).
Map
Information panel
World Heritage plaque
Entrance
Hedge-lined walkway to ticket booth
Garden
Raked stones
Shrine
Torii
What I was supposed to see
What I actually saw
It seemed like half of Japan was under renovation during my visit
Mounds of small stones
Pond
Raked sand
Inner Shrine
Carved sliding panels. I wonder if these are original
Side
Garden
The Ginkakuji gardens were excellent
Path
Pond
Bridge
The pavilion
Moss display in garden
"Very Important Moss (like VIP)"
Damn Japs
"Moss the Interrupter" (???)
"The Inhabitants of Ginkakuji"
Waterfall
Moss garden
Buildings and pond
Shrine
The God is not in today
Path and staircase
View of compound
Other tourists
Me
More of the lovely gardens
Day 5 - 10th June - Ginkakuji, Kyoto (Part 2)
The next stop was Ginkakuji (the Silver Pavillion).
Map
Information panel
World Heritage plaque
Entrance
Hedge-lined walkway to ticket booth
Garden
Raked stones
Shrine
Torii
What I was supposed to see
What I actually saw
It seemed like half of Japan was under renovation during my visit
Mounds of small stones
Pond
Raked sand
Inner Shrine
Carved sliding panels. I wonder if these are original
Side
Garden
The Ginkakuji gardens were excellent
Path
Pond
Bridge
The pavilion
Moss display in garden
"Very Important Moss (like VIP)"
Damn Japs
"Moss the Interrupter" (???)
"The Inhabitants of Ginkakuji"
Waterfall
Moss garden
Buildings and pond
Shrine
The God is not in today
Path and staircase
View of compound
Other tourists
Me
More of the lovely gardens
Labels:
japs,
travelogue - Japan 2008
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