Saturday’s Outing

March 8th, 2010

(If anyone asks why it took me 2 days to write this, I’m claiming that it’s taken me that long to recover from the trip.)

Last Saturday was my first weekend in Bangalore; no one else was coming to the lab (and I’m not … supposed to touch the equipments without a chaperon); so I decided to take a short tour around the city. There were some organized tours advertised on the Internet, but this being my first week (and my not being too familiar with the city’s public transportation system), I decided to venture out alone.

After a quick Google search, I had my primary objective: Vidhana Soudha. Well, long story short, I didn’t do much touring of the place (the gates looked so forbidding; I wasn’t sure if tourists were welcome in that place), and this picture was all I could take away:

But I did take a walk around the parks, both near the city center


and near the Raman Research Institute

which was nice. And I also sampled the local drinks, including one moosambi juice (bars weren’t open in the morning, unfortunately).

If I had to pick one striking difference in India so far (what some other people have been calling “culture shock”, although I wouldn’t call it that—let’s call it … a vague nostalgia, for me at least) is the different … character of road signs. I’ve been warned about lanes well before I came to India, but I wasn’t told about these:



Oh. And here’s one traffic rule I found out while walking around:

P.S. I got around this time on bus—both to the city center and back—despite the fact that I couldn’t find good information on the bus system online (or on the supposed route map at some bus stops). It turns out when you have a GPS (that instantly lets you know when the bus has taken a “wrong turn”), taking a random bus going in the approximately right direction works out fairly well. Also, it helped that I was willing to walk a fair distance (and the day pass was fairly cheap; only 32 rupees).

P.S. Oh, and haggling is very much … in fashion here. I was able to haggle a map of Bangalore down from 150 rupees to 100 rupees, and a hat from 100 rupees to 80 rupees by simply saying that original price was “too much”. Of course, the map was rather imprecise (and not as useful as my GPS) and the hat was cheaply made, but well, I bought them as souvenirs, not practical purpose (which was why any price was too much).

Author: bkpark Categories: travel Tags: , ,

Visit to Foreigners Registration Office

March 5th, 2010

I finally made the visit to FRO/FRRO (I’m not sure what FRRO would stand for) to register. I’ve done something similar in Russia so at least I’m familiar with the concept—for certain types of visas, they want to make sure that I entered the country in the manner I said I would, for the purpose that I said it was for. Despite numerous warnings about how painful this experience would be, it turned out to be a relatively smooth process, if lengthy, and I am happy about that. One thing that stood out is a sign that was hanging in the Foreigners’ Registration Office (I didn’t take a picture out of respect (and fear that I might get kicked out; at least in U.S. government offices are so … paranoid about cameras in the office), but I have the sign’s wording in verbatim):

ATTENTION

ALL THE VISITORS WHO ARE VISITING
FOREIGNERS REGISTRATION OFFICE, BANGALORE
CITY, FOR THEIR OFFICIAL WORK ARE HERE BY
INFORMED THAT IN CASE OF ANY DEMAND FOR
MONEY FOR OFFICIAL WORK OR UNNECESSARY
DELAY BY THE OFFICIALS MAY PLEASE CONTACT
ASST.COMMISSIONER OF POLICE (FOREIGNERS
SECTION) OR DEPUTY COMMISSIONER OF POLICE
(F.R.O) BANGALORE CITY.

I guess they are trying to crack down on corruptions of the kind prevalent in developing countries, such as Mexico and South Korea (I have no direct experience with either, only anecdotes involving police officers and busy government offices).

I can’t say I’ve seen any … overt acts of corruption in my visit to FRO or elsewhere in India. There was some guy who was ushered in front of me at FRO with the, shall we say, bouncer recognizing him as “74″ (I had number 72 and there was another guy behind me who did really have 74), but aside from that, everything seemed relatively well-run, although busy and somewhat lacking in directions (it didn’t help that around the time my number came up, it was lunch time so many people were away at lunch).

So far, my short experience in India points to this place as being a region in transition: lanes are mostly ignored, but there are signs that admonish drivers to “Maintain lane discipline”. Roads are dusty in many places, but then, there are these trendy cafes that do serve expensive (compared to local food prices, for example) drinks. Perhaps in good time, India will come to be a place not too different from U.S. or Europe—I just wonder how the world economy would change with 1 billion more people in a well-developed market economy (for comparison, U.S. has only 300 million people).

Author: bkpark Categories: politics Tags: , , ,

Yet another CalMail phishing attempt

February 20th, 2010

Still fairly obvious, but it looks like phishers are getting better. Below is the email with full-headers (headers revealing my secret email server setup redacted):

Return-path: xxxx...@berkeley.edu
Envelope-to: xxx...@xxxxxx.xxx
Delivery-date: Sat, 20 Feb 2010 21:19:26 -0800
Received: from xxxxxxxx.berkeley.edu ([128.32.xxx.xxx])
        by xxxxx.xxxxxxxxxxxx.xxx with esmtps (TLS1.0:RSA_AES_256_CBC_SHA1:32)
        (Exim 4.69)
        (envelope-from <xxxx...@berkeley.edu>)
        id 1Nj4E2-0003HR-Mg
        for xxx...@xxxxxx.xxx; Sat, 20 Feb 2010 21:19:26 -0800
Received: from xxxxxxx by xxxxxxxx.Berkeley.EDU with local (Exim 4.69)
        (envelope-from <xxxx...@berkeley.edu>)
        id 1Nj4E2-0004s1-Bl
        for xxx...@xxxxxx.xxx; Sat, 20 Feb 2010 21:19:26 -0800
Received: from cm03fe.ist.berkeley.edu ([169.229.218.144])
        by xxxxxxxxx.Berkeley.EDU with esmtp (Exim 4.69)
        (envelope-from <webm...@berkeley.edu>)
        id 1Nj4E2-0004rv-9i
        for xxx...@xxxxxxxxxxxx.xxx; Sat, 20 Feb 2010 21:19:26 -0800
Received: from cm09be.ist.berkeley.edu ([169.229.218.182])
        by cm03fe.ist.berkeley.edu with esmtps (TLSv1:AES256-SHA:256)
        (Exim 4.69)
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        id 1Nj4E1-0005NQ-Cn
        for xxx...@xxxxxxxxxxxx.xxx; Sat, 20 Feb 2010 21:19:25 -0800
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Received: from cm01fe.ist.berkeley.edu (cm01fe.IST.Berkeley.EDU [169.229.218.142])
        by cm09ms.ist.berkeley.edu (Cyrus v2.3.13-CalMail-v2.3) with LMTPA;
        Sat, 20 Feb 2010 21:19:25 -0800
X-Sieve: CMU Sieve 2.3
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Reply-to: supp...@live.com
To: undisclosed-recipients: ;
Subject: Alert: Update your CalMail  account
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--

Dear CalMail User,

Your email account needs to be upgraded with our new F-Secure® HTK4S
anti-virus/anti-spam 2010 version.
Fill the columns below and click reply to send back or your account will be
suspended temporary from our services.

CalNet ID:
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Berkeley.edu Web-Administration
Greg Silva

https://calmail.berkeley.edu/

----©2010, University Of California.

Note the fairly convincing From: address. A lot of the suspicious routing information will be hidden by most email clients, however, the Reply-to: header (which would route the email to supp...@live.com and which the phishing relies on) should be set to visible by most email clients, which means, yet again, people who pay attention to details shouldn’t be taken in by this rather amateurish phishing attempt.

Not to mention one should never send passphrases over email—even if you know the recipient; email is transmitted in clear text between servers and is inherently insecure.

Author: bkpark Categories: security Tags: , ,

GOP “census” is here

February 4th, 2010

More like a survey, but, well. I guess they are taking a little artistic license here, but there is nothing really that deceptive, as you can see in this form (personal information redacted, as usual):

I think I will … choose to get counted, just to make my opinion known, but I don’t feel like donating to GOP. I’ll donate to select GOP candidates that I feel like donating to, when the time is right and situation permits.

Author: bkpark Categories: politics Tags: , ,

The failing “Don’t ask; Don’t tell” arguments

February 4th, 2010

Mr. Owens tries to make an argument for keeping the “Don’t ask; Don’t tell” policy, but unfortunately, his theoretical arguments are refuted by both modern and ancient real-life examples.

The congressional findings supporting the 1993 law (section 654 of title 10, United States Code) reflect the common-sense observation that military organizations exist to win wars….

This they do by means of an ethos that stresses discipline, morale, good order and unit cohesion. Anything that threatens the nonsexual bonding that lies at the heart of unit cohesion adversely affects morale, disciple and good order, generating friction and undermining this ethos. Congress at the time and many today, including members of the military and members of Congress from both parties, believe that service by open homosexuals poses such a threat.

The one problem is that our military has been already dealing with such a threat: women. Unless Mr. Owens is also arguing that we should not allow women into military—or that if we do, they should be kept in a separate regiment or, if they are allowed into troops with men, then they should only have non-combat duties, like staying in kitchen—his argument that somehow openly gay men pose new threat to this non-sexual bonding isn’t convincing. Presence of women, in however small numbers, already ruined that, for whatever it’s worth. For the consistency’s sake, Mr. Owens needs to oppose presence of openly female women in the military, as well as openly gay men (or lesbian women, as long as women are in the army). Is he willing to do that?

Accordingly, the military stresses such martial virtues as courage, both physical and moral, a sense of honor and duty, discipline, a professional code of conduct, and loyalty. It places a premium on such factors as unit cohesion and morale. The glue of the military ethos is what the Greeks called philia—friendship, comradeship or brotherly love. Philia, the bond among disparate individuals who have nothing in common but facing death and misery together, is the source of the unit cohesion that most research has shown to be critical to battlefield success.

I am surprised that Mr. Owens, being so versed with Greek, is unaware of the sacred band of Thebes, a.k.a. the fierce Greek regiment of gay lovers. Mr. Owens is quick to condemn eros,

Philia depends on fairness and the absence of favoritism. Favoritism and double standards are deadly to philia and its associated phenomena—cohesion, morale and discipline—are absolutely critical to the success of a military organization.

The presence of open homosexuals in the close confines of ships or military units opens the possibility that eros—which unlike philia is sexual, and therefore individual and exclusive—will be unleashed into the environment. Eros manifests itself as sexual competition, protectiveness and favoritism, all of which undermine the nonsexual bonding essential to unit cohesion, good order, discipline and morale.

And perhaps he is right. After all, it makes so much theoretical sense. But, even if he is right about eros, in particular, the heterosexual jealous kind of love between a man and a woman, the fact is whatever historical evidence we have regarding presence of gay love in a troop and the troop’s performance is not consistent with the conclusion Mr. Owens draws from eros’ supposed property. Perhaps Mr. Owens is, after all, wrong about eros, or gay love is nothing like eros as we understand it. Either way, it makes poor argument against eliminating the “Don’t ask; Don’t tell” policy.

If anything, Mr. Owens makes a great argument for repealing this policy:

To maximize the chances of battlefield success, military organizations must overcome the paralyzing effects of fear on the individual soldier and what the famous Prussian war theorist Carl von Clausewitz called “friction” and the “fog of uncertainty.”

And removing DA;DT policy will do exactly what Mr. Owens wants: it will remove the fog of uncertainty. Today, straight men in the army have to constantly wonder if his colleague is gay or not—after all, if he had been gay, he wouldn’t have told anyone, if he valued his service in the army at all. With DA;DT repealed and gay men left with no reason to hide their sexual orientation, straight men can be positive that their colleagues are probably not gay—or, for those that are, he knows who they are. Repealing DA;DT will allow the military to prepare their forces more effectively—for missions where eros, even homosexual eros, can really interfere (perhaps in ones involving long-term isolation from the main group), they can now form a troop consisting only of heterosexual men, a task currently impossible with a degree of certainty.

So, with all the good reasons gone, is Mr. Owens left with “many foolish reasons to exclude homosexuals from serving in the armed services”? Does he have nothing other than “simple antihomosexual bigotry” to justify his continued support of DA;DT? I would like to know.

Finished reading: Reason for God

February 4th, 2010

As I’ve said before, I began reading “Reason for God”, as a part of NCB winter break book club thing.

Well, I’m finally done with the book (as of last week), and I can make … general comments about the book—which is great because that’s all I have the time for at the moment.

So the book is broken into two parts. In the first part, Rev. Keller breaks down secularist arguments by arguing, (1) moral relativism (which is essentially the basis of secularism) is internally inconsistent: relativism doesn’t provide enough ground for the tenets of relativism itself, (2) doubt applies to everything; both to the Christian faith and non-believing atheism.

In the second part, Keller tries to provide the argument for Christianity—why it might be true (given the arguments given in first part, we concede that it’s not possible to prove a belief beyond all doubt—or perhaps even reasonable doubt), and why one might want it to be true.

To be blunt, I find the first part far more convincing than the second part. As I read Rev. Keller’s argument for Christianity, as a natural skeptic (but you all know that I put my skepticism to rest on certain aspects), I keep finding myself in the Devil’s advocate’s position, arguing counter-points and alternate plausible explanations that does not involve God or Jesus Christ (like a good lawyer or mathematician, I don’t have to believe in arguments that I advance; if I couldn’t do that, I would have to give up pretending to be a sophist). In contrast, I found myself mostly agreeing with Rev. Keller in the first half; it’s far much easier to agree that skeptical points of views he offered in the first half are reasonable than to agree that the options Rev. Keller is left with in the second half are indeed the only choices left for a reasonable person.

But through both the first and the second part, here’s one argument Rev. Keller makes for Christianity (that I’ve also seen Pastor Allan make, I think last week) that I do find compelling. Christian Bible, especially New Testament, is a true account, at least to the best knowledge of authors and as well as it has been transmitted to us (as verified by agreements between a number of papyri and archeological evidences), and here’s the reason why: the accounts in the gospels are so embarrassing (e.g. Peter denying Jesus three times) and so counter-productive (e.g. women, who didn’t count for much at the time, being the first witnesses of Jesus’ resurrection) that one wouldn’t make up things like that as propaganda. In fact, the only reason one would even tell such a story is because it is true and one feels obliged to tell the truth.

I found the very last chapter a little … too mysterious for me, but other than that, the book provides plenty of food for thought. In the end, there’s no guarantee that it will convince a non-believer—or even a seeker—or that it will not derail a supposed Christian, but one would be better off for having read this book than not.

Should I, or should I not vote?

January 20th, 2010

Another message from my beloved union (private address redacted):

From: UAW 2865 Berkeley <berk...@uaw2865.org>
To: xxxx...@xxxxx.xxx
Subject: Healthcare Negotiations Beginning; Vote on Initial Demands Feb.
        3rd or 4th
Date: Wed, 20 Jan 2010 18:45:37 +0000 (UTC)

January 20, 2010

Dear UAW 2865 members,

UAW 2865 is preparing to open our current contract with University of
California in order to negotiate improvements to the Graduate Student
Health Insurance Program. We consider UC’s agreement to enter
negotiations on GSHIP as a victory in our years-long struggle to improve
the quality of healthcare that academic student employees receive. In
recent years this struggle has included UC providing vision and dental
coverage as part of all GSHIP plans and the establishment of a UAW-UC
committee which has explored how best to make healthcare
improvements.

All members are encouraged to attend a meeting with bargaining
committee members and to vote on our initial healthcare bargaining
demands on February 3rd or 4th. Campus-specific dates, times, and
locations will be sent out next week.

We are opening healthcare now so we can negotiate changes that would
take effect in August for the 2010-2011 academic year. This would not be
possible under the already scheduled negotiations, because our current
contract expires September 30, 2010 and no changes take effect until the
entire contract is settled and ratified. We still plan to begin our full
set of negotiations in the spring, and there will be a separate process
where members will have a chance to vote on those initial demands as well.

If you have any questions or would like to get involved, please contact us
(info below).

In solidarity,

Bargaining Committee, UAW Local 2865

--------------------------------------------------------------------------
UAW 2865 Berkeley
2070 Allston Way, Suite 205
Berkeley, CA 94704
phone: (510) 849-1628  /  fax: (510) 549-2514
berk...@uaw2865.org  /  www.uaw2865.org

mail-list.com    1302 Waugh Dr. #438    Houston, Texas    77019    USA

This message was launched into cyberspace to xxxx...@xxxxx.xxx

So far, I haven’t participated in any union votes, mainly because I didn’t want to be part of (and hence, at least at my personal level, legitimize) the farcical imitation of democracy, but maybe I should vote.

Why? Well, let’s just say … I’m heartened by the ballot heard around around the world yesterday. If Massachusetts voters can vote for a small-government Republican, perhaps UAW 2865 members can finally say enough is enough—or at least, one day we will get to the bottom of what dirty tactics my beloved union uses to get 99% approvals on its measures.

Author: bkpark Categories: politics, ucb Tags: , ,

I am so conservative that when I buy a new shoe

January 17th, 2010

… it must be identical to the old shoe:

I don’t like change. Change is what destroys societies, and changing my shoe is what destroys my feet.

Change be damned!

Author: bkpark Categories: politics Tags: , ,

Conservatism as a sail, not anchor

January 17th, 2010

Devilstower at Daily Kos misrepresents conservatism

Liberalism grew as a response to the changes in society brought on by the industrial revolution and the rise of industrial corporations. Workers were no longer apprentices working directly with the people whose position they expected to hold some day. Instead they were separated from the owners of these new industries by many levels, and often their work gave them no experience useful for moving up in this structure. Liberalism formed around efforts to mend this new rift in society by using government as an instrument of egalitarianism.

Conservatism holds the opposite end of the field. From its foundations in 18th century Europe through the violent sex fantasies of Ayn Rand, the position of conservatism has been the same: stop liberalism. Rather than attempt to smooth out the inequities of society, conservatism seeks to maintain these chasms, and where possible to open them wider. The whole basis of conservatism is that this structure — a wealthy elite holding the reins — is the natural, desirable state.

I accept his explanation of liberalism, although I dispute some of the facts—working class of Industrial Revolution were by no means comparable to skilled artisans of earlier times; they were more like subsistence farmers; Industrial Revolution may have made some fabulously rich, but it did not make anyone poorer than they would have been otherwise, save by comparison to those who are now fabulously rich—I just wish he could have the same sense of fairness for conservatism. I will save you the rant about necessity of representing opposition in its strongest possible form as a prelude to any civilized discourse. However, I do need to clarify the term: given the context, I assume by “conservatism”, Devilstower means American conservatism, as there is a significant difference between, say, European conservatism and American conservatism. I know nothing of European conservatism, especially one that sought to protect the monarchy and aristocracy, and I don’t care to defend them. I do wish to defend American conservatism against the liberal misrepresentation.

Nothing that stands only in opposition to another lasts. John Birch Society is a good example: it had little to define itself save by its anti-communism (and these days, anti-globalism, anti-etc.). I would not be a conservative if I thought conservatism could only be defined as opposition to liberalism—what a miserable existence it would be, where the defeat of my opponent also means destruction of my self-identity!

Conservatism does stand by itself, independently from liberalism or any other political philosophy, and in terms of specific principles, not such generalities as “oppose change” (although that is the semantic meaning of the English word “conservatism”, as a political term, it is inadequate). In as few words as possible, conservatism is the classical liberalism, and little else—after all, we are conservatives; “Don’t fix it if it ain’t broken” is our motto.

In particular, the single most important principle in conservatism is individual rights: we hold that individuals have rights that are natural, in the sense that it is not granted by a government (artificially) and that a just government is obliged not to infringe upon them. “Life, liberty, and property” are these very basic, fundamental rights which a government is empowered only to protect, never to infringe. Other rights (such as freedom of speech and right to arm oneself) we consider essential in U.S. can be derived from these fundamental ones—in fact, libertarians go farther in the other direction and derive everything, including life and liberty, from property rights, but I’ll save you the details.

Holding these individual rights more important than any social institution, conservatives reject causes such as egalitarianism or social welfare as justification for infringement of these individual rights, especially that of property rights, although life and liberty are implicated as well, as you might have experienced if you tried withholding your property from the IRS.

So, if I consider the anchor, “propelling neither society nor the economy”, whose “whole reason for being is to slow change of all sorts and keep the current situation in place for as long as possible for those who benefit most from the current system”, as an inadequate metaphor for conservatism, what else could conservatism be?

I propose the sail. It is true conservatism doesn’t seek to “propel” anything on its own—we conservatives do not tend to agitate; we are a pretty happy lot when we are left on our own—however, at the same time, we embrace the natural laws of society as a sail embraces the wind. And the wind takes us where it might. Although we might tack against the wind at times, as you can with a sail, we don’t pretend that the wind, which is the natural laws of society, is not there. In opposition to conservatism, the metaphor I nominate for liberalism is the row. Take what you will from the metaphor, but I would like to point out that somebody has to be working the row, and they are not always willing participants.

Aside from our staunch defense of individual rights, we are primarily concerned with the natural laws of society I referred to before. No one knows all these laws—the same way no one knows all the natural laws of this physical world—but some things seem to happen again and again. Some of these laws are encapsulated in maxims such as “power corrupts” (hence our distrust of governments, single largest concentration of power), “there ain’t no such thing as free lunch” (hence our distrust of … utility of taxes and other government actions in the face of actual scarcity of resources), and so on. Even the liberals agree to many of these maxims. Our difference is that we conservatives keep these laws in mind, while liberals ignore them—or at least do their best to overcome them.

But what is not one of these natural laws is this: “those in power tends to stay in power.” A case in point: every empire eventually falls, if not by external threats, then by internal disintegration. Although conservatism is sometimes misunderstood as defense of the rich and the powerful, that is not the case: in the U.S. today, those who hold the most influence in the academia (university professors) and in the culture (Hollywood) are overwhelmingly liberal, not conservative. It is not even strictly defense of the corporations. Because corporations more often works by voluntary contracts than coercion (whereas with the government the opposite is true), conservatives hold more favorable view of corporations than government, but corporations themselves stand on the side of liberalism as often as they do on the side of conservatism. Just look at the current health care reform debate and how all the corporate players are for the admittedly liberal reform, even as conservatives vehemently oppose the bill.

I personally believe in conservatism because I am an individualist—I do not want to have anyone beholden to me, nor do I wish to be beholden to anyone else. Do some use conservatism simply to hold onto their power? Probably. But then, even though some use liberalism for their own selfish purposes, as in “something for nothing” welfare state, for the welfare recipients, or the monopolists whose monopoly depends on an enlarged government and its power, it would be dishonest for me to claim that that’s all that liberalism amounts to. Just as it is dishonest to claim that conservatism exists only “to maintain these chasms, and where possible to open them wider”.

Wasting my union dues on changes I don’t believe in

January 5th, 2010

I just got this email from my beloved union (private email redacted):

From: UAW 2865 Berkeley <berk...@uaw2865.org>
To: xxxx...@xxxxx.xxx
Subject: UAW Job Opportunity
Date: Wed,  6 Jan 2010 00:07:12 +0000 (UTC)

January 5, 2010

UAW is now hiring for social media jobs related to getting the word out about
its various campaigns. If you have experience with social media and think
you have what it takes to make UAW campaigns “go viral,” please send a CV
or resume along with a cover letter that highlights your experience in these
areas to uaw2...@uaw2865.org; attn: Christine Petit. Please also include
your availability for work (part-time or full-time; if part-time
approximately how many hours per week).

Applicants who get their materials in by 5pm on Thursday, January 7 will
have top priority; but because UAW has many ongoing campaigns, we will
consider applications received after that date as well.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------
UAW 2865 Berkeley
2070 Allston Way, Suite 205
Berkeley, CA 94705
phone: (510) 849-1628  /  fax: (510) 549-2514
berk...@uaw2865.org  /  www.uaw2865.org

mail-list.com    1302 Waugh Dr. #438    Houston, Texas    77019    USA

This message was launched into cyberspace to xxxx...@xxxxx.xxx

Er, what? Getting the word out about “its various campaigns”? If I know the kind of policies UAW 2865 has supported in the past, I am sure these are the policies I donate money to candidates (usually $100 at a time, when I can afford to) to oppose.

Is this what my dear union wastes my union dues on? Weren’t they supposed to be taking $10 a month from my salary so that they can fight for us at our workplace, not advance radical left-wing agenda? Or am I just expecting too much from the corrupt union leadership?

P.S. No, getting out of the union won’t really fix this problem. Their idea of “fair share” for non-union member is something like $9 per month instead of $10 per month. Either way, it’s more than the amount I pay for any utility besides rent (my cell phone service being the only one, for which I pay $100 a year).