Sunday, February 26, 2006

Ooh, it's hot!



I was the managing editor for the Fire issue of LooseLeaf, and we finally have it up on the web! We had quite a few submissions, so to date it is the largest issue of the ezine.

LooseLeaf is a collection of prose and poetry written and edited by Print Futures students, and was created by some students in the program a few years ago. Each year, as one editorial team graduates, they pass the reins onto a fresh crop of second-year students. My cohorts and I are the third team to take on LooseLeaf, and you can definitely see how it is beginning to evolve.

On another note, I expect that I will be very lapse with regards to updating my blog for the next two months. As mentioned in a previous entry, this blog was created for a school assignment, and since the grades are in, and homework is piling up in my other classes, well, that's how it goes sometimes. I will make every effort to maintain my blog on a regular basis once I graduate in April. I promise.

Till then, I remain sporadically yours.

Monday, February 20, 2006

Where eagles teach their young to soar

The cliffs that overlook Wreck Beach are a popular spot for eagles to teach their young to fly. There is concern among many beach-goers that the construction of two more high-rise towers that will overlook the beach will send the eagles away.

I have been quite remiss in my updates this past week and a half, and I really must apologize for that. I should also apologize for my last entry, which is brief and confusing. I think I now have enough emotional distance between last Friday to go into the events of the day, and the events leading up to it.

Some time ago, the University of British Columbia (UBC) announced its plans to build four student-housing highrises that would overlook Wreck Beach. The outcry was loud, but UBC managed to build one tower before being ordered by the GVRD to subject the rest of the development to a public consultation process and prove that to not build the towers as planned would present an extreme hardship to UBC.

This began two years ago, and in the time since, UBC has had a couple of public information sessions. Their last set of plans has eliminated one of the towers, but that still means three towers visible from the Beach known and loved for its natural backdrop, where no buildings are visible. Or were visible, before UBC decided that there was no place else on campus that they could possibly build student housing on.

Last year, my classmate Heidi and I wrote a report about the importance of green spaces on the physical and mental health of people. This report went to the GVRD, and it seems that they took my report to heart, because now they are going to conduct their own study on this topic. They are also going to do something about the bylaws surrounding Pacific Spirit Park, of which Wreck Beach is a small part, so that they don't have to face another 2-year battle between developers and nature lovers.

But UBC managed to prove their hardship case, and too many of the GVRD directors voted in favour of allowing UBC to proceed as planned. A few directors were completely against the whole thing, saying that UBC had strong-armed and bullied it's way to their claim of hardship: UBC threatened that if they could not go ahead as planned, then the whole project would be cancelled and no new student housing would be rebuilt. "Hog-wash," said one of the directors who was in the minority against UBC's proposal. I think she was being polite.

To learn more about Wreck Beach, visit the Wreck Beach Preservation Society's (WBPS) home page. It's a pretty basic site, but easy to navigate. It is updated fairly regularly, but not as regularly as it could be. The home page has more information about the Society's battle against UBC's towers.

But I can't just guide you to the WBPS for one half of the story without providing you with a link to UBC's side of the story. The Marine Drive Residences, as the towers are called, are sure to provide lots of distracting views to students occupying the upper levels of the towers. UBC's housing website is pretty generic.

And the GVRD, the poor guys stuck in the middle, most of whom voted in favour of UBC and ignored the fact that Wreck Beach has greater value to more people than that of those who will be affected by the new student residences. You can learn a lot of really interesting things on their website, but it contains some flaws with regards to the process of speaking to the Board of Directors. The site itself isn't the easiest to navigate around... sometimes I know what I'm looking for but can't find it unless I search within the site. Here's a link to the document that was influenced by the report Heidi and I wrote.

Friday, February 17, 2006

Today, my heart is broken

A panorama of Wreck Beach

My heart broke today. It wasn't broken by a man or a family member. It wasn't broken by a friend, or even an enemy. Rather, it was broken by a governing body known as the GVRD Board of Directors, who I believed would protect the interests of me and you and all other indivuals in their constituencies before the interests of large corporations who serve the needs of a relatively (select) few.


A solitary crane at Wreck Beach

Sunday, February 05, 2006

South Park and Scientology

Last week, South Park, one of my favourite TV shows, decided to poke fun at Scientology ("Trapped in the Closet"). The beliefs of this religion, as presented in the show, seemed so outlandish that I had to Google Scientology. What the heck are thetans, and are we really controlled by them? What, exactly, is an E-meter? What's this business about an intergalactic war in an overpopluated universe millions of years ago, and all the thetans being sucked up into huge vacuums, brainwashed, and stuck on earth thinking they're human? And will Tom Cruise ever come out of the closet?

The first result Google turned up was the Church of Scientology Official Site. The site is nicely laid out, with a lot of white space, and is very easy to navigate. You can learn about Scientology and what Scientologists believe, and find out that thetan is more or less another word for soul, and that it is the most important of the three parts of man - the other two being mind and body, of course. You can also learn about the late L. Ron Hubbard, the creator of Scientology. The man really must warrant the absolute devotion of his followers that Matt and Trey, creators of South Park, made fun of, since his biography just goes on and on... The man sure did write a lot of fiction in his time.

I recommend checking out the Newsroom on the site. Here you can find out about something called Silent Birth, which dictates that a women shouldn't make a peep while giving birth. "This is because any words spoken are recorded in the reactive mind and can have an aberrative effect on the mother and the child." Now, I have never given birth, but it seems to me that if some man should tell me to be quiet while I'm in the midst of labour pains, it's going to have the reverse effect. I didn't find out anything about ancient space wars or theton-sucking brainwashing facilities on the Church of Scientology's official website.

"Operation Clambake: Undressing the Church of Scientology since 1996" was the second result Google turned up. It is also reported by other anti-scientologists to be "the number one anti-Scientologist resource on the web." This is a horribly designed website. The home page doesn't tell really tell me what's going on on the website, and the nav bar only reveals a small part of the site. However, by clicking on the different links on the home page, you'll find some really interesting information about the religion. Such as the stuff about an intergalactic war that took place 75 million years ago. Courtesy of ex-scientologist Roland Rashleigh-Berry, here is the "Xenu Leaflet":


Once upon a time (75 million years ago to be more precise) there was an alien galactic ruler named Xenu. Xenu was in charge of all the planets in this part of the galaxy including our own planet Earth, except in those days it was called Teegeeack.


Now Xenu had a problem. All of the 76 planets he controlled were overpopulated. Each planet had on average 178 billion people. He wanted to get rid of all the overpopulation so he had a plan.

Xenu took over complete control with the help of renegades to defeat the good people and the Loyal Officers. Then with the help of psychiatrists he called in billions of people for income tax inspections where they were instead given injections of alcohol and glycol mixed to paralyse them. Then they were put into space planes that looked exactly like DC8s (except they had rocket motors instead of propellers).

These DC8 space planes then flew to planet Earth where the paralysed people were stacked around the bases of volcanoes in their hundreds of billions. When they had finished stacking them around then H-bombs were lowered into the volcanoes. Xenu then detonated all the H-bombs at the same time and everyone was killed.

The story doesn't end there though. Since everyone has a soul (called a "thetan" in this story) then you have to trick souls into not coming back again. So while the hundreds of billions of souls were being blown around by the nuclear winds he had special electronic traps that caught all the souls in electronic beams (the electronic beams were sticky like fly-paper).


After he had captured all these souls he had them packed into boxes and taken to a few huge cinemas. There all the souls had to spend days watching special 3D motion pictures that told them what life should be like and many confusing things. In this film they were shown false pictures and told they were God, The Devil and Christ. In the story this process is called "implanting".

When the films ended and the souls left the cinema these souls started to stick together because since they had all seen the same film they thought they were the same people. They clustered in groups of a few thousand. Now because there were only a few living bodies left they stayed as clusters and inhabited these bodies.

As for Xenu, the Loyal Officers finally overthrew him and they locked him away in a mountain on one of the planets. He is kept in by a force-field powered by an eternal battery and Xenu is still alive today.


Normally, when South Park makes fun of some thing, body, or organization, they have to resort to good old fiction to get the best laughs. Not so with Scientology. All the show's producers had to do, it seems, was portray the truth.

A slightly better designed website than Operation Clambake, Scientology Lies takes a good critical look at what's wrong with the religion. A scroll through all of the reported lies is a little scary. Not as scary as the website Scientology Kills, though. This is only one of many sites dedicated to the memory of those who's deaths have been linked to involvement with the Church of Scientology. This particlular site is well designed, with a gothic elegance, and is easy to navigate.

Wikipedia is a good place to get a wholistic picture of Scientology. Not the most aesthetically pleasing website, Wikipedia can always be relied upon to provide reliable information on all sides of an issue - the good, the bad, and the controversial. And it's an easy site to navigate through.

As for Tom Cruise? He did come out of the closet at the end of the episode.

Me, I think I'm gonna start up my own philosophy: Humanimism. We are all human, and part of the world around us.



Stan, making his first public appearance as the reincarnation of L. Ron Hubbard.

Wednesday, February 01, 2006

Insomniac poet

I enjoy writing poetry. I think I lack the spark of a true poet, or perhaps it's the inclination or the dedicaton that I lack. Could even be some combination of all three. Anyway, here's my favourite love poem that I wrote, about falling in love. In case you wonder, no, I didn't write it with anyone in mind.




Catch Me

Catch me should I fall,
hold me strong,
shh -
in silence.
Press your lips to my

temple;
intimate
cradle of bliss.
To sweetly
surrender...
But no!

I won't fall, I will
leap!
Merely -
whisper words of
encourg'ment.
Catch me.




My friend Amanda has dedicated her blog, Firefly Wordplay, to poetry. She has some of her own poems posted there, other people's poems, and links to other poets' websites and literary websites. I recommend checking it out if you would like to enjoy some really good poetry, or laugh at some really horrendous poetry. Let me add that Amanda's falls into the former category.

Did I mention I have insomnia? I've had it for nearly a full week. It really takes it's tole on a body, not being able to fall asleep until 3am every night but still having to get up at a decent hour and function the next day. Sometimes, insomnia can set the mood for poetic inspiration, but not when the insomnia lasts for extended periods of time.

With that said, my next several entries will focus on taking a good look at some websites. I had to create this blog for an assignment in a class called "Writing for the Web" in the Print Futures program at Douglas College. Therefore, I must fulfill certain requirments, such as analyzing websites.

Well, it's nearly 3am. Time to get myself ready for bed - for the second time tonight.