Archive for October, 2009

29
Oct

Bigotry: nurture vs nature

   Posted by: Szivák Sándor    in Caoilainn, pets, puppy

All right, so the title is a bit misleading, but just bear with me a minute. I get home from a morning of errands, take the puppy out, visit Becky at her work and come back home. Its a beautiful day outside, one rarely seen in Charleston, so in an effort to savor this rare delight, I proceed to open doors and windows. Now our property is maintained by some landscaping company (they do a pretty good job at it, as well); in the grand tradition of landscaping companies (at least those in the Charleston area), ours is staffed predominantly by a Spanish speaking crew.

So, this is where we stand: energy pup, lawn care (mowers, weed-wackers, and a whole mess of noise), and open windows. The quadrupedal inhabitants of my residence remain unphased by the abundance of stimuli, perhaps having grown accustomed to the noise that comes with living in a condo, surrounded by constantly partying college kids. Unphased, that is until one of the aforementioned Spanish speaking lawn care reps begins speaking.

Recap: noise is fine, weather is fine, lack of noise from lawn-care equipment deactivating is fine, Spanish… not so much. The crew stops to chat for a minute and Caoilainnn goes ape-shit! She does not know what these people look like or what they are doing; they did not bother her or appear to pose any sort of threat up until they started talking, at which point, it appears they must be stopped at all costs. The pup growls a lot, I’ll give her that, but the barking, growling, hair standing up, the show of force in its entirety was pretty intense. She certainly meant business. We often improv a dialog for her: “What the eff is going on here!? Who are these people? Can’t you see they are a threat?!”

The reason for the post is that this isn’t the first time she has displayed these tendencies. She certainly did not learn them from us, and she doesn’t ‘hang out’ with other dogs who might have taught her this hatred/intolerance (even at the dog park, she doesn’t socialize with other dogs), which would somewhat rule out ‘nurture.’ On the flip side, and this might support the ‘nature’ angle, she was born in BFE North Carolina. This is by no means a scientific study, merely a series of observations, but I find it interesting non-the-less.

24
Oct

Quote of the Day, part ii

   Posted by: Szivák Sándor    in movie, Quote of the day

“There are over five hundred and fifty million firearms in worldwide circulation. Thats one firearm per every twelve people on the planet. The only question is: ‘How do we arm the other eleven?’”

- Yuri Orlov, Lord of War

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24
Oct

Quote of the day

   Posted by: Szivák Sándor    in movie, Quote of the day

"While private gunrunners continue to thrive, the world's biggest arms suppliers are the U.S., U.K., Russia, France and China.

They are also the five permanent members of the U.N. security council."

- Lord of War, closing

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21
Oct

Quote of the day

   Posted by: Szivák Sándor    in Quote of the day, TV

"Are you questioning my bad-ass-ness?! Have you SEEN my guns?"

-Puck, GLEE!

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7
Oct

my real quick Deapool kick

   Posted by: Szivák Sándor    in misc.

not sure where this one is from

I do believe that is a Leon, the Professional poster in the background

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7
Oct

Pup Pix

   Posted by: Szivák Sándor    in Caoilainn, pets, puppy

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7
Oct

Quote of the day

   Posted by: Szivák Sándor    in Quote of the day, TV

“We’re planning on slapping them down like the hand of God.”

-Artie Abrams, Glee

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6
Oct

Points of interest

   Posted by: Szivák Sándor    in misc., social

Saying "real quick" after an hour long task does not make it any quicker, nor does it make the task APPEAR any quicker.

"We" is plural; as in "me AND you." Using this word when not including yourself is incorrect, improper and missleading. Even though it is intended to evoke team spirit, unity and solidarity, it fails in all of the above intentions when the person talking does not contribute. It feels more respectful and less condescending if you just say "you."

Saying "thank you for your patience" when the person has, had and will have no patience is condescending. It does not convince either party that anyone is or was patient.

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4
Oct

Quote of the day

   Posted by: Szivák Sándor    in Quote of the day

[character attempting to get a library card]

Librarian: "You do understand that this card is only valid until you die?"

Character: "Dis iz good; dis is exactly how long I want it."

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2
Oct

Quote of the day

   Posted by: Szivák Sándor    in Quote of the day

"Your anger is a touch much, and I don't care for your hatred, but your passion is inspiring."

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