That Summer feeling

June 6, 2010

Every summer, or really, every inter-semester break, I spent a few weeks at the beginning just relishing the lack of pressure, deadlines, and responsibility.  It’s nice, though of course it can get boring, but it means that I accomplish very little.  This time around it wasn’t as pronounced usual since I began my first ever internship working on lobbying and social activism with a non-profit.  As it deals with political issues it could be controversial so I won’t go into detail, but it’s exactly the sort of thing that fascinates me as a student of politics.

Having to do that has made me less lazy than I would otherwise be, but it also eats up time and energy, which has contributed to my neglect of this site for the past few weeks.  I’ve been wanting to work on it for a few days now, and I’m trying to reverse the tide.  I added an Extended Bio to the Personal page, which makes it look a bit fuller.  (Making the top-level pages look less barebones has been an ongoing project for me and it’s now more or less completed.)  I’ve also added some new material to the Humour page and further reorganized things there a bit.

I had an idea for a fairly ambitious project for the Humour page back before finals, and I’d like to work on it now.  I am, however, going to North Carolina to attend a wedding next week, so it might be some time before that project is completed (or started :P ).  It’s a parody/rewrite of Tolkien’s unfinished sequel to The Lord of the Rings with the working re-title The Purist Shadow.  If you’ve ever read the original you might be able to guess where this is going, but that’s all I’m going to say for now.

In the meantime, I hope everyone is enjoying summer (or winter if you’re in the Southern Hemisphere, in which case I envy you when the humidity level passes 60%).


Revisionist history

May 27, 2010

Check out this article from The New York Times.  It has nothing to do with Tolkien; I just need to vent for a bit.

A lot of people talking about the Texas School Board vote to change standards for history classes talks about conservatives and liberals campaigning for or against the changes.  Conservatives in this country are fond of complaining about liberal bias in education, and they claim they are merely correcting it.  If they can find an example of “liberals” warping historical fact to fit their political goals, then by all means correct it.  Unfortunately that is what’s happening right now, except its conservatives doing the warping.  I want to make clear before proceeding that this isn’t a criticism of conservatives but a criticism of historical revisionists, regardless of their ideologies.

Looking at some of the changes mentioned in the article:

questioning the Founding Fathers’ commitment to a purely secular government

As a political science student and a lover of history this offends me on many levels.  The First Amendment declares that there will be no official religion of the United States.  This is a pretty big element of secularism right there, but the idea has been expanded since then.  This isn’t a case of “activist judges” doing so years after the fact, the Founders themselves used the broader interpretation of the amendment to separate church and state (more on that later).  This reveals the hypocrisy of those who obsess over the Founders’ intentions and then jump ship when its something they don’t like.

believe the Founding Fathers were guided by Christian principles

Perhaps some of them were, but many of the Founders were deists, not Christians, and (almost) all were secularists.  Their main inspiration was the Enlightenment, particularly in France.  It’s worth noting that the Constitution does not mention God at all, and the Declaration of Independence refers only to “Nature’s God” (i.e., deism).  This rather flies in the face of the “the Founders wanted a Christian nation” position.

the votes in Congress on civil rights legislation, which Republicans supported.

This is technically correct, but it is almost certain to be misinterpreted.  This statement is similar to the ongoing “we’re the party of Lincoln” line from the Republicans.  The two main parties in the U.S. have had an almost 180-degree shift in ideological orientation.  The Democrats were, at the time of the Civil War and through the 1960s, mostly social conservative.  In the mid-20th-century, however, certain elements of the Democratic party endorsed such radical ideas as integrating the armed forces and public school systems.  This led the conservative Southern Democrats (Dixiecrats) to largely abandon the Democratic party and join the Republicans.  Despite what party labels they had, there were mostly liberals supporting Civil Rights and mostly conservatives opposing it.

He also won approval for an amendment stressing that Germans and Italians as well as Japanese were interned in the United States during World War II, to counter the idea that the internment of Japanese was motivated by racism.

This ignores the obvious counter that white Americans were simply racist against Italians and Germans as well.  Pretty much all immigrants were mistreated for most of American history.

cut Thomas Jefferson from a list of figures whose writings inspired revolutions in the late 18th century and 19th century, replacing him with St. Thomas Aquinas, John Calvin and William Blackstone.

For those who don’t know, Thomas Jefferson wrote the American Declaration of Independence, making him rather indisputably and inspiration for Revolutions.  He is, however, disliked by conservatives for coining the term “separation of church and state”, so they have removed him.  The notion of a Christian origin was already considered above, but it’s worth noting again that the founding documents of the U.S. do not mention Christianity, nor is the system of government that was established particularly Christian, nor were the Founders all Christian.

Finally, and this is a longstanding pet peeve of mine, consider the following tidbit from this column:

so that schoolchildren could see that the Civil War was about states’ rights, not about slaverU

This is a common historical myth, largely among people in the American South.  I can understand why people don’t want to think of their ancestors as fighting a war to defend the disgusting practice of slavery, but sadly, that’s why it was fought.  Anyone who knows of them can read the Declarations of Causes of Secession and see for themselves how big of a role slavery played in the minds of the Confederates themselves.  It would be overly simplistic to say that slavery was the only cause, and states’ rights played a role, but had the rest of the Union not been increasingly anti-slavery the South would not have seceded.

Again, please note that I don’t mean to criticize conservatives in general here, merely those who try to rewrite history to fit their political viewpoints, whatever those might be.  If the story was about Massachusetts trying to remove Ronald Reagan from history textbooks I would be just as offended.  I feel better after getting to rant for a while, though. :P


Done with finals!

May 24, 2010

Last week I had my three final exams, and over the weekend I’ve finished and submitted my final essays as well.  As usual it came down to a very busy crunch time at the end, but I will now have a rather drastic increase in free time.  On the other hand, I was able to make some updates in my free time early last week.  The Humour page has been somewhat restructured and expanded.  I also added a somewhat random essay about Imperial Stormtroopers from Star Wars.  It’s not exactly relevant to this site’s topic, but it’s come up on two separate Tolkien forums I frequent, so I figured I’d stick it in the Personal section.

I can’t say when anything new will be added here since I have a number of things to do in the next week or two.  I have some ongoing RL obligations, several books and movies that I’ve been waiting for a while to enjoy, and then a few online projects.  I’m going to be working on a Lore project for the LotR Plaza Library (which I’ll also link to from here).  I also have an idea for a somewhat lengthy parody to go in the Humour section, though how (if) that will play out remains to be seen.

In the meantime, enjoy your summers, even if you’re in the real world and don’t get the whole thing off. :)


A new domain name!

May 13, 2010

I don’t think I’ve been this active with the site in, well, ever. :P

I’ve been toying around with the idea of getting a real domain name for a long time.  I almost did before making this site, but was convinced to not spend money on one before having developed material for the site first.  That’s why I started using WordPress in the first place.  Recently I decided that I had written enough material to justify spending some money in hosting it, but I wasn’t sure what exactly to do.

While I am not entirely computer illiterate, I have only basic proficiency with HTML, and no ability at all with Javascript, PHP, or any other language used in web development.  That ruled out buying a domain name and writing pages from scratch.  I also didn’t want to spend money to get software that would write the website for me.  I looked around at some services such as Webs.com, but nothing really interested.

Then, just in the past week, I learned that for only $15 a year WordPress.com, the site I was already using, would register a domain name for me and host my blog on it.  That meant I didn’t have to pay monthly hosting fees (a problem with just about every other service out there) and I could also keep the easy WYSIWYG editor and not fumble around with formatting languages I didn’t know.  It was a surprisingly inexpensive win-win situation that would let me finally have a personal domain name.

As such, welcome to Eldorion.com!  The entire site moved here, but the old URL will still seamlessly redirect you here from any page of that site.  Not much has really changed, but I finally get to drop the ungainly “.wordpress” part of the URL.


Finals again

May 13, 2010

It’s that time of year! I have had a fairly quiet week as everything winds down to the last day of classes (today), but over the weekend my workload will pick up again. I have three finals and one paper plus some minor stuff to take care of. On the bright side, it will all be over in just over a week: 21 May. Then I will move back home for a nice long summer break. :D

Also, I recently downloaded WordPress for Android to my Motorola Droid (smartphone), and I’m posting this from the phone. We’ll see how it works out…


A slight structural change

May 10, 2010

I have added a static homepage to this site, meaning that when you go to the main page (http://eldorion.wordpress.com/) you will not see the latest blog posts, but rather an unchanging web page.  Clearly though the blog portion is not done, and it remains accessible from the main links bar at the top of each page.  To make room for this new link, the contact form is now only accessible through the About page.


Little things

May 10, 2010

I have made a number of minor additions to both the Humour and Personal pages over the past few days. I’ve added a few links to other people’s humour that I like and have expanded the Personal section to include two new pages (that was a short year, wasn’t it? ;) ).  I also took the time to expand on an old idea of mine and add a new Purism essay: Doublethink?.

I would really like to make some large-scale additions to the Tolkien-related pages, but I need to have both the time and the motivation.  For me, it’s being motivated to get started that is the largest hurdle.  Once I actually sit down and start working I can get things done fairly quickly, but I can wait days (or with this site, weeks and months, since it’s less urgent than school) before doing anything. Nonetheless, I hope everyone reading this enjoys what there is so far as well as what I add in the future.  I’ll keep tabs on all the updates right here on the blog.

In the real world, I am fast approaching the end of the semester.  It’s been both an exciting time – my first semester living away from home – and somewhat of a respite – fewer credits than last semester had and fewer extra-curricular activities than next semester will bring.  This week should be fairly quiet (which might mean that I continue my semi-active updates here), though the next week will be full of finals and essays.  After that I have a nice, long, three month summer break to look forward to, though.


Aaaaaand another new section!

May 7, 2010

In the spirit of growth (and filling the links bar in this WordPress template), I’ve added a Personal page to the site.  It’s an idea I’ve been toying with for a few weeks, and it’s essentially just a place for me to put any thoughts and/or essays that don’t relate to Tolkien in any way.  It’s not very large now, but I might add to it later.  At the rate I’ve been going with the site recently, check back in a year and it’ll have two new pages. :P


New section of the site

May 6, 2010

Check out the brand-new Tolkien Humour page and the not-so-brand-new entries on it.  It will (hopefully) be expanded in the not-so-distant future, to include more humour written by me as well as links to other people’s, but I hope you enjoy it as it is now. :)


Lore redux

April 3, 2010

Since the Purism pages are more or less complete, I have turned my attention to the relatively neglected Lore pages.  First, and most noticeably, I changed the title from “The Lore of Arda” to “Tolkien Lore“, and altered the URL slightly.  Second, I re-read and edited some of the existing essays, and gave the Canon note it’s own separate page.  I also expanded some posts I made on TORn into a new essay about the infamous Eagle question.

I’m going to be fairly busy for the rest of the weekend (and part of the coming week), so I can’t say when I’ll do anything more.  I will try to brainstorm new ideas for both sections of the site (but especially Lore) to upload soonish.


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