Wednesday, April 30, 2008

I hate stupid people making life more annoying for the rest of us!

Ok, so a few weeks ago I was watching one of the big 24 hour news conglomerates when a story about a lawsuit against myspace came on. Evidently yet another teenager met yet another predator through myspace and yet another set of parents are pissed that myspace let their daughter use myspace to communicate with the predator. There have been suits against myspace before, but it's not like myspace is doing nothing. They have all sorts of filters and won't let people underage sign up for a profile. They fall short of taking steps to legally verifying a persons age, but even if that were the case then the teenage crowd who populates myspace would find a way to get profiles and say they are 18, only to wind up falling victim to more predators and causing myspace to get sued yet again!

HELLO! MYSPACE ISN'T THE FUCKING PROBLEM YOU STUPID FUCKING PEOPLE! THE PARENT'S ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR KNOWING WHERE THEIR KIDS ARE ONLINE, AND IF THE KIDS GET IN TROUBLE THEN THE PARENTS SHOULD ASK THEMSELVES HOW THEY, AND NOT MYSPACE COULD LET THIS HAPPEN TO THEIR KID!

So I continue watching TV after commenting about the stupidity of all of it, only to forget the story even existed after about 5 minutes......

.....until about 5 minutes ago.

I log into myspace and there's a safety warning that reads:



Hey folks a friendly reminder about Safety!

MySpace is a public space. Don't post anything you wouldn't want the world to know (e.g. your phone number, address, instant messenger screen name, or specific whereabouts). Don't post any nudity, violent, or offensive material, or copyrighted images. If you violate these terms, your account will be deleted.

People aren't always who they say they are. Exercise caution when communicating with strangers and avoid meeting people in person whom you do not fully know. If you must meet someone, do it in a public place and bring a friend or a trusted adult.

Harassment, hate speech, and inappropriate content should be reported. If you feel someone's behavior is inappropriate, react. Talk with a trusted adult, or report it to MySpace or the authorities.


This is followed by a checkbox that makes you tell them that you've read it before they let you into your profile. After the checkbox, it continues and says:

We have recently updated your account so that you have to approve all comments before they are posted to your profile. Do you wish to keep this setting?:


It makes you tell them if you want your comments to be in your control or automatically posted. Now i've always had mine under my control, but I don't like them automatically changing this for me just because of some stupid fucking teenagers not following the first cardinal rule of social networking.....DON'T MEET PEOPLE IN PERSON THAT YOU MEET ONLINE UNLESS YOU'RE WITH A LOT OF PEOPLE IN PUBLIC AND OTHER PEOPLE KNOW WHERE YOU ARE AND WHAT YOU'RE DOING.....IF AT ALL!!!!!

So I continue on into my profile, and I go to leave a comment on a friends profile. Above the comment box, there's a Warning! It reads:

Warning - Please be aware that MySpace is accessed by thousands of users every day; since you do not know every user on the MySpace site, exercise caution when posting personally identifiable information.


Ok, I've had about enough of this shit. I'm 27 years old, and I shouldn't have to put up with this shit just because of a few fucknut predators and a few stupid ass teenagers who fall victim due to their own fucking ignorance!

To all the teens out there, don't be fucking stupid. Don't meet people in person that you meet online without taking precautions because there are people out there who mean to do you harm. This goes for anyone, not just teens. And for all the parents out there who are looking for someone to blame because your kid was a dumbass, then BLAME THE FUCKING PREDATORS AND NOT SOME PEOPLE JUST TRYING TO PROVIDE A SOCIAL OUTLET FOR PEOPLE! And if you're wondering who to blame for you not knowing what your kid was up to online.....

HERE'S A MIRROR! HAVE A LOOK!

Saturday, April 26, 2008

18 years ago today.

Rest in peace mom.

If I were voting in the primary..........

If I were to vote in the primary (which I'm not), my original deciding factor was going to be the candidates stances on Stem Cell research. My mother died 18 years ago today, she had ALS. I was 9. Stem Cell Research holds the promise of finding a treatment if not a cure for diseases like this one, and therefore I feel that we have a moral obligation to explore this. However, thanks to the Bush administration being completely ignorant, we've gone backwards rather than forwards. The one thing that made me like John Kerry above all of the other things I agreed with him on was his stance on Stem Cells. He would've pushed us back in the right direction. But with him that's now a pipe dream, and we're still moving backwards. So now, if I were voting in the Indiana Primary, I would pick the candidate based on their stance on Stem Cell Research.

However, I'm back at square 1. Both of them are for this type of research, which means that yet again, I'm unable to decide on a candidate. As I posted yesterday, I'm just going to sit the primary out and vote in the national. Either way, I feel like the democratic party will get a good candidate who will do good for our country.

It's just sad.....

Ok, evidently there's a problem with the Honey Bee population, and for a reason that I've not been able to uncover in two minutes of research (I'm lazy) they are evidently dying. I've got the TV on CNN this morning, and every commercial break it cuts to this commercial.



Maybe I love animals a little too much, but this just makes me sadder and sadder every time it airs! Here's a link to the web site with more info about how you and Haagen-Dazs can help.

http://helpthehoneybees.com/

Friday, April 25, 2008

That's it! I'm not voting.....

.....in the Indiana primary! As far as I'm concerned, all I want is a Democrat in the office. Both Clinton and Obama are great candidates, and each have things I really like about them. Obama's stance on poverty and foreign policy and Clinton's stance on universal health care are just a few of the things. So the way I figure it, either way one of them is running against McCain. I'll just sit this primary out and let the process pick which one will be my candidate, because either way I'm voting for the Democratic candidate! I'll cast my vote in November! The candidates will just have to win the primary without my vote!

Trying to understand Columbine, 9 years later.

This year, on April 20th, marked the 9th anniversary of the Columbine H.S. shootings. I was a senior at Minford H.S. in southern Ohio at the time it happened. I remember watching it on the news, and being fascinated by it as much of the country was that day. I, like many, was eager to learn a lot about the tragedy, and would read article after article about the events that took place. I even based a song called "Lifeless Life" around similar events (though by my current songwriting standards that song is total crap....but back to the point). In my own way, it was an effort for me to understand what had happened.

9 years later, I still don't.

This year, I was fortunate enough to be at the Columbine High School Memorial on the 9th anniversary of the shootings. I was eager to be there as this had been such a big deal to me when it happened. True, I didn't know anyone that was lost, nor did I know anyone who knew anyone, so I was very far removed in that respoect. But this tragedy affected everyone in it's own way.

Being the guy who was very much picked on in middle school after making the transition from private christian schools to plain-old-public school in 6th grade, I was a bit of an outsider. I got in a lot of fights, only one of which I started, and everyone made fun of me. To make matters worse, I didn't know how to roll with the punches. My sheltered upbringing to that point had kept me from being able to deal with that social situation, and I was being thrust right into the lions den. By 7th grade, it started subsiding, and by 8th grade I had some solid friends, but I went through total and complete hell in 6th grade.

On that level, I could identify with how the people who did the killings must've felt. After all, I'd been there in a way. Sure, I never had glass bottles thrown at my head, and I didn't go to a school with more than a thousand students in my own class, but I still dealt with the same issues for a time.

But I got over it. That's where we differ.

After reading about the tragedy as much as I did, I thought that I had an understanding of what had transpired. There was an understanding in the media that this was a small town in Colorado where there's nothing to do, and therefore all that people had to do was form alliances and lash out at those weaker than them. First thing I want to point out about that perception is that, after being there this past weekend, you can see the Denver Skyline in the distance as you approach the school! This was no mere small town in Colorado, but rather a small suburb inside of The Greater Denver Area's southern freeway system! Furthermore, Denver has some kick ass mass transit, and even if you live in the mountains 30 minutes from Denver, you can still catch a bus and get into town! This town was well within reach of the entire Denver area via the many bike trails, mass transit systems (they have busses and above-ground rails too), and of course cars! This town has the Rockies within clear close view to the west, and all the great things that the largest city in the state can provide at it's fingertips. So I don't buy into the story that there was nothing to do in this small isolated town! I actually went to school in a small isolated town, and this is far from it! Look up Minford Ohio if you get a chance on Google Maps, and you'll see how small and isolated it actually is! Compare that to the proximity of Littleton to Denver, and you'll see that this was no small isolated town. These kids had plenty available to them, things which I did not. If I missed my bus home, I was walking for 6 miles because there was no mass transit system there!

Here's a map showing the 13.7 mile distance from the High School to downtown Denver!

View Larger Map

Here's a map showing just how distant from civilization my high school is!

View Larger Map

Furthermore, the thing that baffles me the most is that these kids were seniors in high school! This happened in April, just about a month or so from Graduation! What, you can put up with taking shit for 4 years, but you can't ride it out for one more month?! I mean, I can understand if the social situation made it unbearable for them. I can understand if they decided that life was just not worth it and decided to check out early (though I don't condone that). What I don't understand is the "I'm taking all of you down with me" mentality! This is what made all of this so much more senseless to me! They couldn't ride it out for a month longer?! After all, they'd never have to see any of those people ever again, and they'd have been able to live their lives and possibly be happy in less than 45 days! That has always bothered me! Aside from the senseless killing, the fact that they did this so close to the end of their days in High School just blows my mind. I can't wrap my head around it!

In making attempts to understand this tragedy in light of this new information I realized from being there, I understand it even less. The only thing I can think is that these kids had some serious mental health issues that were only made worse by the school's social climate. After all, the social climate alone is not enough to have pushed these kids over the edge and made them do what they did. I went through it, and I didn't bomb and shoot up Minford (though in the year before Columbine my former bandmate Josh Murphy made jokes about doing exactly what these kids did, including suicide at the end of the events....kinda eerie). My point is that the only justification I have for these kids thinking this was the right thing to do was that they were insane. The funny thing is that this has been my justification all along!

The memorial is very moving. I wasn't moved to tears, but I was moved. After losing several people in my life, it's hard to move me to tears unless something affects me on that level. Others around me were moved to tears. There were plaques on the walls with quotes from survivors, from important people like Bill Clinton, from school officials, all giving insight to the events from a vantage point of having been through it and come out on the other side. In the middle were memorial stones that you could walk around and read, each one written by the family of the victims about the victim, each one talking about how great of a person they were and how much they will be loved and missed. On the one for the teacher who was killed, there was a kids drawing taped to it with a message that read "we miss you grandpa". The mood was quiet, people were talking amongst themselves in a very low-toned and respectful fashion. There was a feeling in the air of love, acceptance, and comfort. There was a woman showing her family where she hid during the events of the day, there were people who would park themselves in front of one particular memorial stone and just stare (suggesting they knew the person who was lost), there was a quiet calm amongst the whole scene. I'm very glad that I was able to see the memorial this year, and I'm very glad that I've not had to experience anything quite like Littleton Colorado did 9 years ago. This tragedy affected some more than others, but it truely affected everyone.

There was not even an acknowledgement of the two killers anywhere on the memorial, a sign that the community wanted purely to honor the memories of the slain, not the suicidal slayers.

Columbine High School appears to be in the same place it was during the tragedy. There was nothing posted on the school's web site about a memorial service, or even a link to the memorial site's information. When we apprached the school, we noticed the only thing acknowledging the events of 9 years earlier was a message written on the school's sign out in front. I can't remember it's exact words, but the message was clear. It's a time of rememberance. It appears that the school doesn't want to dwell on it's historic past, but doesn't want to completely ignore the events either. This is understandable, as they have current students and faculty to be concerned with. The memorial itself is located in the park behind the school. As you look at the school from the memorial, you can see the windows that students were pulled from by police and SWAT. Seeing it on TV is one thing, but seeing the actual windows in person is a whole different experience. Looking around on that very sunny cloud-less day, it's hard to imagine that such atrocities could happen there. Of course, it's hard to imagine it happening anywhere.

To those who were killed that day, I hope you have found peace. To those who were personally affected by the tragedy, I hope you are finding peace. To those who, like me, were affected from a distance, I hope you find an understanding that this was a unique series of events, but that people should cherish the moments they have with one another because you never know what the future holds.

Below are photo's I took on April 20th at the Columbine Memorial.

Columbine H.S. Memorial, taken 4/20/08 on the 9th anniversary of the shootings


Columbine H.S. Memorial, taken 4/20/08 on the 9th anniversary of the shootings


View of Columbine H.S. from the Memorial, taken 4/20/08 on the 9th anniversary of the shootings


Columbine H.S. Memorial, taken 4/20/08 on the 9th anniversary of the shootings


Columbine H.S. Memorial, taken 4/20/08 on the 9th anniversary of the shootings


Columbine H.S. Memorial, taken 4/20/08 on the 9th anniversary of the shootings