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DubWolf

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  1. DubWolf

    review
    Without further adue, here I go.
     
     
    Having to complete two novels, Midnight’s Children and The Satanic Verses written by the author of Salman Rushdie, one has come to a sure conclusion
    Yes! Totally ! There is without a doubt that what I am about to tell you is the absolute, undeniable truth about his books .
     
    that his works are in purpose of a certain goal he is trying to achieve in his world,
    You don't f***ing say?? I can't stop .
    and of those who read or critique his novels. According to Salman Rushdie’s use of symbols, and allegoric style of writing in just two of Salman Rushdie’s masterpieces, it is very certain
    Yes, no kidding! Very certain!!
    that Salman Rushdie wishes to acknowledge his reading audience of the realities of life that all people experience, whether or not they appear to be erratic or predictable, and how one may decide to adapt to such truths introduced by Salman Rushdie. Among some realities depicted in Salman Rushdie‘s literature include but are not limited to the truth of successful love, destruction that is followed quickly by creation, the representation of one entity as many more entities, and the inevitability of events or attributes of a person‘s life as they continue to exist on this tiny blue world.
    Kamala Harris, is that you? Wait, "tiny blue world"? Is that supposed to sound depressing? No room for your paper to sound like a debbie downer; just make it objective and let the reader decide!
    Symbols, as they are clearly defined, do more than just represent something beyond it’s own existence, but they are not present just to make the literature look more svelte and stagy. Instead, literary artists such as Salman Rushdie, wish to include these devices to bring up a certain point.
    Again, you don't say? Get on with it!
    Among the symbols included in his works includes the perforated sheet in Midnight’s Children, which Doctor Aadam Aziz must use to view one of his patients, which later on becomes his future love life,
    The sheet?? Oh, nevermind. Is it a piece of paper or like, a bed sheet?
    Naseem Ghani. Doctor Aadam Aziz first uses this perforated sheet because Naseem’s grandfather explains to him that “[her] daughter is a decent girl…She does not flaunt her body under the noses of strange men” (Rushdie, Midnight’s Children, Page 19). Of course this is a reminder that the Islamic religion in the novel and the world that women are veiled and their appearances are kept hidden, so this definitely explains why the grandfather wishes her to be viewed only by a perforation.
    Wait, what was the purpose of Rushdie's books again?
    Aside from that, Doctor Aadam Aziz begins to fall in love with her, but only in fragments, as he is unable to see her completely for as long as they are not married. Unfortunately this creates some dilemmas with their relationship as the relationship itself starts to grow, or supposedly grow. The hole or perforation which Doctor Aadam Aziz peeks through is another figure; the absence of substance or something necessary to complete the puzzle. Because of this fissure of the two persons by this thin filmed schism, they never truly enjoy a complete relationship and aren’t what they hoped to be in the long run. Fragmentation is very prominent among the novel, such as the metaphorical fragmentation of one of the characters in the Midnight’s Children and has other interesting appearances as the novel is told. The novel of Midnight’s Children, first explaining it’s title before proceeding, tells a story of Saleem Sinai, who is born at the stroke of India’s independence from Great Britain at the date of August 15, 1947, and is paralleled in the story with his native country of India itself, henceforth he is one of the midnight children born at or near that time. Whatever condition he appears to be in, determines if the nation will be prosperous or in turmoil. Further into the novel, Saleem Sinai himself explains how his body is slowly falling and “crumbling into six hundred and thirty million particles of anonymous, and necessarily oblivious, dust” (Rushdie, Midnight‘s Children, Page 36). When the novel had first been published in the year of 1981, the population of India at the time was about over six hundred and thirty million people behind it’s border lines. The coincidental situation suggests with his disintegration that his destruction will break into enough dust and debris for every person in the country of India to spiritually hold upon to, almost like the Eucharist in communion at church.
    Is it??? Tell me more.. oh wait, you don't.
     
    Unfortunately for Saleem and the other thousand midnight children, they must live with the fact that their lives are fully connected with India, no matter what they do. That brings up another truth about one’s life; a person is always born with certain attributes, that may not be changeable ever in life, regardless of the choices that person makes everyday of his life. This is plain inevitability, just like a person born with the human immunodeficiency virus must live with that haunting fact, or a person walking down a street in a downtown area being hit by a car, or shot by a nearby criminal, and so forth, they have no control of anything surrounding them but themselves. Although really, even if there are so many factors in one’s everyday experiences, there are still many innumerable manners in which one could shepherd their choices, and make the best out of everything. In the Satanic Verses, Gibreel Farishta and Saladin’s chance of surviving an airplane crash by falling from the sky are one to a million impossible, since flapping one’s hands and singing while rapidly descending towards the hardened Earth’s crust wouldn’t slow the fall at all,
    Well, that would be pretty cool though, and not impossible as it is a fictional book.
    and wouldn’t fall “like scraps of paper in a breeze” (Rushdie, The Satanic Verses, Page 10). Much like being born with an inherited cardiovascular virus which runs in the family. In spite of the indubitableness that this genetic disorder could terminate one’s time alive on the planet at any given second of any hour, fashioning the best congenial decisions could augment greatly to the net health of a person’s well-being.
    Lol I'm so lost. Or do I suck as a reader?
    This may not always be the case however, since with great numbers comes the chance for many great exceptions to come. Which leads to the next main idea. If the idea that the sole person of Saleem Sinai, and the many other “midnight children” are symbols and representatives of the condition of the mother country, should that not mean that there’s a theory that whenever a minor individual incident or event occurs, should it not also occur wide scale?
    I guess. Go on...
    Or maybe differently interpreted, could a single agglomeration of individuals be represented of many other hundreds and thousands of ideas and people? Thinking about India, being the home to many religions like Islam and Buddhism, many languages and cultures as well. As of now it has a population of at least one billion, being the second most populous country in the world, and very diverse in its peoples. Not just India, but other larger countries too, much like the United States, which had been first created by immigrants all across the world.
    Who cares? This is India we are talking about.
     
    One country, but many meanings and ideas, and belief systems. The importance of that is that it creates a sense of, importance to a single individual.
    I guess. What is this all leading up to though?
     
    Despite the fact that they are just one person on the Earth out of the seven billion inhabitants, it may not seem encouraging or significant, but even one person can make a monumental influence on others, much like civil rights speakers like Martin Luther King Junior, in his “I Have a Dream” speech, or the creation of new technologies and innovations that have helped ameliorate and enhance the standards of livings in the recent centuries of our world’s civilizations.
    No sh**. Tell me something I don't know. Otherwise his book goes against what you are suggesting; that his book is any different from what others are already saying.
     
    That also therefore means, it can take one man or woman to cause great destruction or despair on other people. Adolf Hitler during the later early twentieth century,
    Lol we are talking about Hitler now, apparently.
    around the start of the 1940s lets just say, had managed to acquire power, and put thousands of his men to believe his own ideology, and commit terrible genocide on the Jewish peoples, and those others he believed were too inferior or “evil” to deserve to live. So overall, one person can spread or represent his ideologies to others, the speed at which it occurs depends on his or her popularity among the peoples, hopefully nothing with a bad cause. One voice can represent a Destruction however, doesn’t always mean it has to be a bad thing.
    Thanks. That's a relief.
    In the novel of The Satanic Verses, one of the main characters, “Shiva”, directly alludes to the Hindu God of Destruction (sanatanasociety). Saleem Sinai, who is Shiva’s nemesis, is symbolized as the Hindu God of Creation, Brahma (eng.fju.edu). The two Gods in Hinduism, along with Vishnu the God of Maintenance, work together to bring a cycle of creation and destruction, with maintenance being that transition between the two (rudraksha-ratna), much like morning dies into noon, and noon dies into night.
     
    To the main point, destruction is not always a deed of malevolence, but rather, it could be an act of making way for newer things; an act of renewal.
    So putting it together, are you suggesting....
    In the book of Genesis, our God had brought a great flood onto the Earth, washing away all the old terrible planet but Noah, relatives, and many pairs of animals on an arc for forty days and forty nights. Most people will agree that our God is not evil, he simply wished to renew the world from all the troubles and crime that was occurring at the time, and it ended with clear skies and a rainbow, a symbol of promise of good. The past eventually just seems to grow on and burden the newer generations, and for that reason it is the best choice to have the old ruins torn down and demolished for the purpose of preventing it to exasperate the new prosperous, youthful present, much like an old refrigerator is removed from the kitchen to make space for a newer and cooler refrigerator that will cool food for years to come.
    Hahahah, a refrigerator!!! What a beautiful metaphor.
    If the old is not removed from the picture, then there is a problem with space. If one were to have the real world rid of all death, though that is impossible, then this planet would be jam packed with people who have set foot on Earth long before today‘s inhabitants, like Christopher Columbus and John Lennon;
    Hahahahah, John effing Lennon! And don't forget Isaac Newton or Freddie Mercury while youre at it. Also I don't think that's a realistic problem...
    one would have had to found a way to the moon or one would be uncomfortably stuck face to face with one another,
    Lol ... what. Ok? So the world would be like India but... to the 100th power?
    living one’s lives insufficiently with no possible way of pursuing happiness because of an overpopulation issue. This of course, would never be the case since death is inevitable,
    Again no sh** lol.
    but well, it can be delayed. There are however, certain cases whence one must confront the reality of life that even the unlikeliest of events may just be a foot step away from happening, whether or not they appear to contain good or bad juju.
    Bad juju, lol! Another weird thing to say in a research paper.
    Anything could happen if it is not already physically impossible. Re mentioning the incident occurring in the first chapter of The Satanic Verses; one New Year’s Day, a cruising airplane flying across the rocky and watery Earth, “twenty-nine thousand and two feet” (Rushdie, The Satanic Verses, Page 3) up in the frigid deleterious air, all of a sudden discharges a violent explosion, instantly eliminating all of the unfortunate passengers onboard their flight. All except for two fortuitous riders of this voyage in the sky survived; Gibreel Farishta and Mr Saladin Chamcha. Despite the fact that surviving the fiery outburst of the airliner was already a hard task to accomplish by one’s luck, they still had to experience that immense fall from their lofty height of, thousands of feet. Without carrying anything special equipment or clothing other than the clothes they were already wearing, their odds of surviving such a drop of doom are, well virtually below anything desirable. However, the novel is fiction, no surprise there by the way, so anything that the author wishes to include in his works, Salman Rushdie being the writer in this case, can be as fiction as common fairy tales would be, or as real as a book based on a true story, also no surprise there. Instead of the two travelers landing hard on the solid earthy ground, or plopping sharply into the unforgiving water, Mr Saladin Chamcha began to blindly holler to Gibreel Farishta to “Start flying now…and Sing” (Rushdie, Satanic Verses, Page 8).
    "He can fly, he can fly, he can fly!!"
    Two problems exist with his command he yells at Gibreel Farishta; men, or women not in this case, are unable to fly,
    Really? I didn't know that.
    literally, and not with their own means of levitation. Second of all, singing provides no means of physical propulsion which may slow down a sky diving session.
    You have opened my eyes.... I will not attempt to sing unnecessarily in the event I am falling to my death. That would reduce my energy and chances of surviving a fall of thousands of feet.
    In the novel, it appears that this hopeless method of deceleration actually enables the two wanderers to “float down to the Channel like scraps of paper in a breeze” (Rushdie, Satanic Verses, Page 10). Being fiction, this occurrence could may as well happen however the author wishes to scribe it, but it does have a different meaning symbolically. In general, “flight is freedom“ (Foster, How to Read Literature, Page 127); the idea of plowing through clouds and the free air, is a soothing comment and desire all people wish to perform though impossible. In the context of the novel, it purely means that as long as a person is halcyon and focused on the situation, they should be able to accomplish whatever is necessary for them to complete. There are many other instances which require great focus to achieve a task which may be as simple as an insignificant game of tic tack toe, or a life or death situation. Had one not paid attention in that herb studies class, the devil snare plant would have strangled any poor soul unfortunate enough to fall upon it’s treacherous roots and strings of vegetation,
    Wait, are we talking about Harry Potter now???
    or had a lack of concentration become great enough, it would have caused one to loose a large gamble in Las Vegas, leading one to enter a stage of depression, which in the end, provokes one o commit suicide. Going back to flight, who said that flight only means freedom in Salman Rushdie’s context?
    I didn't.
    While it does mean liberty, in addition means that Gibreel Farashti and Saleem Sinai are angelic. Angels, not truly being a physical human being, “are not subject to death or any form of extinction” (christiananswers) and do possess the ability to fly as they wish wherever. Gibreel Farashti and Saleem Sinai, are not exactly angels, but are similar to them in a way; they didn’t die, and they “flew” for a long period of time. Both Saleem Sinai and Gibreel Farashti’s acts of singing and flying are angelic acts, so their drop from the heavenly heights is just a manner of saying that they have been sent to Earth as messengers, as the word angel derives from the Greek word “aggelos” meaning messenger (christiananswers). So there’s a lot of things that people don’t realize about their lives; some experiences in one’s lives are just inevitable, some things in one’s life will be found highly improbable or unlikely by others, or maybe one just fails to notice that taking their time and being focused is a much more better choice than quickly trying to react fidgety and unsure. Many of these symbols shown in the novels are telling their own theme or story while the story itself is running along. One must not be easily fooled to think that only the most possible will happen, for even miracles and sudden catastrophes may occur without warning or notice. One might even find out in about eleven months from now that what they ignored and deemed as outrageously false is actually a true event that will occur and most likely provoke one to believe that their ignorance lead to downright demise, had they not attempted to take some form of action, as if they were just in wonderland.
     
    Soooo this ties to the beginning of the essay how? It says:
    Salman Rushdie wishes to acknowledge his reading audience of the realities of life that all people experience, whether or not they appear to be erratic or predictable, and how one may decide to adapt to such truths introduced by Salman Rushdie. Among some realities depicted in Salman Rushdie‘s literature include but are not limited to the truth of successful love, destruction that is followed quickly by creation, the representation of one entity as many more entities, and the inevitability of events or attributes of a person‘s life as they continue to exist on this tiny blue world.
    Even if this was the case, I feel like this paper doesn't really fully recognize Rushdie's style of writing completely, or rather, is blind to it, as it sticks to just symbols, doesn't go too far in depth with each idea that the writer me is suggesting it is trying to convey (in my opinion), and doesn't really connect.
    The random use of specific artists or books is decent comic relief.
  2. DubWolf

    movie, spoilers
    Putting this in a blog since status updates are much easier to be missed and forgotten (and hard to find).
     
    Finally saw Toy Story 4. 4 years after, so not too bad. I jokingly protested watching it since I considered the 3rd to be the "final movie" of the Toy Story arc (I procrastinate watching movies), but sincerely the 3rd did "satisfy" me from watching another sequel. Yet.
    If the first three movies are like a well-written letter, the 4th is a very well-written "PS".
    -I liked how we got an answer about Bo Peep and her whereabouts. She basically became an action figure.
    -Forky's obsession with trash never got old thankfully and I liked how he was able to evolve from a simple desire to a loyal toy like Woody (albeit pretty quickly, though he also didn't have very much fleshed out to begin with, so... law of primacy).
    -That unicorn is out for blood, as are the plushies.
    -Very sweet story arc regarding Gabby Gabby. She was obviously nefarious in the beginning, but I felt for her seeking belonging from a kid. It was half-funny, half-sad (well for me, 3/4 sad) to have Harmony just shrug her off and leave her... all that buildup.... and still nothing. How I feel for her rejection.... almost abritrary, it didn't have to be this way! Only question was... what if Woody said no? It's likely she would've tried to force the voicebox out anyways (she had the power to do so), but we're lead to believe her actions are sincere and stem from self-perseverance. Still glad she found someone to love her in the end and clearly she's mostly good-natured (besides the whole attempting to rip out someone's body part! Though yeah, Woody still would've been alive although it's like losing part of your identity).
    -I entered the movie with a spoiler, so the ending wasn't too surprising to see Woody stay with Bo Peep, but it wasn't super-impactful either. It was on the wall; somehow Bonnie was no longer playing with him*. He could go back to Bonnie who will just leave him in the closet.... or he could go with Bo Peep. He didn't budge with his argument with her earlier on; his loyalty to his kid was unquestionable.... but it was time for him to move on knowing he would be happier being off-child and with Bo Peep who may not ever see him again, and maybe that wouldn't feel as satisfying for her or the viewers.
     
    *This does reek of "somehow Palpatine returned", I know! Wasn't he her favorite in Toy Story 3? Oh well. Buzz was Andy's favorite after a while too and maybe Bonnie will miss him later.
    I hear a 5th is coming out... uhh... none of the movies ever disappointed. I hope they can do the same with this one too.
  3. DubWolf
    I mean to say I'm not and have never been employed as an engineer but that's besides the point. I've had a lot of reflections on my personal matters and shortcomings and I feel like it would be beneficial for people to see what I've thought of. Bear in mind because I have no such professional experience, this is a limitation on my thoughts.
    I'll skip a few basic obvious ones.
    1. Know your job. Do you know exactly what your job is going to be or do you only have a vague idea of what it entails? An astronomer does more than just sit by a telescope all night, for example. If you're not entirely sure or even if you think you're sure just because you've looked at it on the surface, I encourage you to at some point, look at "day of a ____" video. I'm sure they exist for all kinds of careers. I never really explored engineering that much for example and only assumed it would be as painful as it would be in college. Bad assumption.
    And especially consider an internship somewhere. This is where I am disappointed with employers. People should be given a chance to see firsthand what their duties will be like. Why limit this invaluable opportunity to just a tiny select few who are probably good enough to get hired anyways? Doesn't always have to be paid, and maybe I admit there ought to be more free, volunteering options for certain careers... I don't know.
    2. Plan ahead of your degree. Echoing back to the first point, do you know what you're going to do with your degree exactly? Do you know where you're going to work? Do you have connections so that you'll have an easy time finding a job, especially with those more "liberal art" majors?
    Many degree paths are pretty broad, including engineering (I was in aerospace engineering) but you need to know what specific task you think you'll be doing yourself. You may only be involved with one field altogether within that umbrella of engineering and it's something I felt people kept asking in college. "What are you going to do with your degree?". I could only answer "work as an engineer." If you can't answer past "become a _____", maybe you should do more research or consider if you really know what you're getting yourself into.
    3. Question yourself. Echoing back to the previous point. Is this really what you want to do? Do you feel like you are planning ahead of graduation? Consider everything on the table. Don't doubt yourself too much.
    4. Know people. Tiring to hear but it's true and invaluable. For starters, get to know your professor outside of class if you feel like you can at least get along with them. Have good questions to ask? Certainly they may also know of opportunities for you to get involved, or they could give you a letter of recommendation once they get to know you better. Get your name out there. Go to a job fair and ask good questions.
    5. Apply to MANY jobs/internships/COOP. This is something we're always encouraged to do that was also parroted to me, but few actually explaiend why. You're competing with a lot of people for one position, most of the time. There will almost always be someone better than you out there. If you apply to enough jobs however, YOU will be that "person more qualified than everybody else".
    Even if you're at the very bottom of your class but have salvagable things, odds are all those other more qualified people will find a job elsewhere and that one job opening will have employers fill you in.
    And I mean MANY jobs. Depending on how good you are, it can mean a dozen applications, or it can mean a hundred.
    6. Your degree is just a heading on the top of your resume. And the employer will read it in 2 seconds. Big realization after the fact. Everything else you did while in college is the body. Slay as many dragons as you can and brag about it in your resume. No matter how good a school you went to, it is just one little thing (unless of course, your GPA was near perfect which is often very important too). I went to a great school.
    Bottom line, no matter the unemployment rate for your degree, you aren't 100% guaranteed any job almost anywhere***. My unemployment rate in my field is supposedly 0.3%. I don't exactly know if that means "employed anywhere" or employed as an engineer. I imagine its the former.
    Personally, could I have been hired eventually? Probably, but I didn't take this advice of my own years ago and it's mostly too late now, and that's fine because I'm going down a different path where I DO take it, and I know I enjoy doing this and CAN answer these questions. The only problem is severe lack of opportunity for the inexperienced.
     
    If anybody has anything counter to this, I'm open to hear. Again, disclaimer: I don't have professional experience. Just blue-collar experience.
    Lastly you might be asking if I'm even possible. Two reasons:
    Lost interest in this field, half didn't want to do it. It's hard. I have no doubt I'm skilled in other aspects but it asked too much of certain skills I just lacked. Lack of willpower means I couldn't better myself as much. Chicken and the egg.  
    ***With exceptions. Usually blue-collar jobs who need a lot of manpower (like the airlines) will want to hear from as many people as possible to get people flying their planes.
  4. DubWolf
    He who views this thread will acknowledge that Sunset Shimmer is best pony by posting here  .
    He who ignores thinks they're the worst, if they've read up to this part  .
    @Splashee  

     
     
  5. DubWolf
    My latest toy in my flight sim. Been wanting to get it for sometime, finally just made the quick, instinct choice to buy it  . Wanted something single-engine that still packed a punch...


    It's a nice lookin plane with pretty good speed, especially for a single-piston. Tweaked the cockpit gauges a bit to my liking. Doesn't feel like a big GA plane.

     
  6. DubWolf
    When bored, learn to fly a new airplane.

     
    This here's the panel of a Piper Seneca, PA34-200T to be specific. Probably one of the fanciest planes I've got in the sim (it's payware and I bought it at a sweet discount under $10 some time ago). All it takes is a good reading through the flight manual and a good understanding of all the physics involved in flying. Only annoying part about this guy is the creators didn't make a 2D panel (virtual cockpits are hard because I have to move the camera around to click stuff and it's not so easy when many buttons are at an angle), and an addon wasn't too great as it is off.

    Plenty to still learn...
     
  7. DubWolf
    Quick run from Llano to Kerrville, Texas. A 40 minute trip with the Piper Arrow, practicing the localizer approach into Kerrville with the vacuum pump out (it's much harder without an attitude indicator. It's the blue/brown gauge that's lopsided, and above the compass-looking gauge). Mild success... was going left and right of track, but managed to stay relatively center. I "simulate" instrument conditions by pulling the outside screen view down so that I only rely on the instruments. Instrument training requires you to do so (with a safety pilot in the other seat if simulating, of course!).

     
  8. DubWolf
    With a lot of time to spare from quarantine (ok, actually the only difference is I can't actually train with an instructor right now or go fly. I can still work and all and almost always am home anyways), got a bit bored doing the same ole routine, so I decided to go find a decent model of a Piper Seminole online for my flight sim, read through the POH (basically the manual), as well as read through need-to-knows about multi-engine aircraft from the text.
    I know.. I've technically flown multiengine stuff in the sim already, but I've always flown them as if they just had one powerplant (flying a twin is no different than a single until you lose an engine!). So... spent several flights going up, killing an engine, then attempting to restart, either doing so successfully or continuing flight with a single engine. However comfortable I may be in the real thing... I'll have to wait and see.
    Here's the Piper Seminole going over ... somewhere West of LA towards Santa Barbara.

    I had already practiced a few maneuvers with it (you cannot stall this thing! At least in the simulator I could not), so one of the ultimate tests was flying IFR with it (flight rules which allow and may require flying through clouds or low visibility). Rather than cloud the view I'll just tilt the outside view down to simulate zero-vis conditions.

    (different flight. View is a Piper Cherokee above)

    ILS minimums. A bit fast, a bit high, it was my first time. Doing this with one engine will be the next challenge..
  9. DubWolf
    Lately I've been flying the Piper Cherokee on the sim, as I've also been training on it in real life to meet the complex aircraft requirements for the commercial pilot license. Luckily was able to find a good free model online.
    Did a couple of instrument approaches at College Station, then Hunting...ton... or was it Huntingville? Lastly going towards Galveston to see some of the beautiful, exotic beaches (ah hah hah).
    Enroute. 


    Final approach... weather is currently pretty hazy/foggy in Galveston, so the weather downloaded gives me just that. 

     
  10. DubWolf
    Thought about going back from Bozeman to Minneapolis..... decided to cruise around the area in a Baron 58. Even for default scenery, it's not a bad view.

    There's a whole 'nother world to fly than just the big airports in the simulator.
  11. DubWolf
    Haven't touched this blog in years. Certainly some people may take a little bit of interest in what I try to do 24/7!
    Pretty limited as far as what I can do due to my new job putting me out pretty late at night to want to do anything longer than an hour or two. Here's me flying a CRJ9 from Detroit over to Pittsburgh ('bout a 200 mile flight). Third flight on this type as of recently. It was wayyy overpowered as the throttle scalar was set to 30% extra, so the previous two runs on this guy weren't pleasant (not exciting to climb only having to use... not a lot of power).


  12. DubWolf
    The internet is a medium which allows one to GREATLY express oneself in so many ways. To put people at a disadvantage or unable these forms of communication, our freedom of expression is being hindered, THUS, doing away with net neutrality should be considered unconstitutional. It would basically be like starting a poll tax; while some can afford to pay it to vote, many cannot, hence this freedom is being limited to only the privileged.
    If America REALLY wants to call itself a country of "freedom" (which by the way, I think does not deserve that title anymore....), THIS, is one way it can earn itself that title.... one way...
    And NO, Verizon, you have it all wrong; removing net neutrality would essentially put your fking respect paramount over all others who can't afford to run sites on the internet, and that right there, would be unconstitutional.
    https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2015/10/net-neutrality-violates-the-first-amendment-according-to-one-isp/
    This is just one more of those examples today where big money is trying to unleash its hounds on people which are the consumers, the leashes being regulation. All regulations exist today to protect consumers from careless, profit-hungry organizations. Capitalism can be a great system when we keep the producer of products and services in check, but when we let them play by their own rules, we become hostage to them, and that's what's happening...
  13. DubWolf
    I wrote this for my senior year English AP class. Spoiler alert, it is really horrible .
     
    @Wind Chaser
     
    As requested by fellow class mates. I didn't bother indenting paragraphs since that would take me more time. Score: 89/43 = 66
     
    Having to complete two novels, Midnight’s Children and The Satanic Verses written by the author of Salman Rushdie, one has come to a sure conclusion that his works are in purpose of a certain goal he is trying to achieve in his world, and of those who read or critique his novels. According to Salman Rushdie’s use of symbols, and allegoric style of writing in just two of Salman Rushdie’s masterpieces, it is very certain that Salman Rushdie wishes to acknowledge his reading audience of the realities of life that all people experience, whether or not they appear to be erratic or predictable, and how one may decide to adapt to such truths introduced by Salman Rushdie. Among some realities depicted in Salman Rushdie‘s literature include but are not limited to the truth of successful love, destruction that is followed quickly by creation, the representation of one entity as many more entities, and the inevitability of events or attributes of a person‘s life as they continue to exist on this tiny blue world. Symbols, as they are clearly defined, do more than just represent something beyond it’s own existence, but they are not present just to make the literature look more svelte and stagy. Instead, literary artists such as Salman Rushdie, wish to include these devices to bring up a certain point. Among the symbols included in his works includes the perforated sheet in Midnight’s Children, which Doctor Aadam Aziz must use to view one of his patients, which later on becomes his future love life, Naseem Ghani. Doctor Aadam Aziz first uses this perforated sheet because Naseem’s grandfather explains to him that “[her] daughter is a decent girl…She does not flaunt her body under the noses of strange men” (Rushdie, Midnight’s Children, Page 19). Of course this is a reminder that the Islamic religion in the novel and the world that women are veiled and their appearances are kept hidden, so this definitely explains why the grandfather wishes her to be viewed only by a perforation. Aside from that, Doctor Aadam Aziz begins to fall in love with her, but only in fragments, as he is unable to see her completely for as long as they are not married. Unfortunately this creates some dilemmas with their relationship as the relationship itself starts to grow, or supposedly grow. The hole or perforation which Doctor Aadam Aziz peeks through is another figure; the absence of substance or something necessary to complete the puzzle. Because of this fissure of the two persons by this thin filmed schism, they never truly enjoy a complete relationship and aren’t what they hoped to be in the long run. Fragmentation is very prominent among the novel, such as the metaphorical fragmentation of one of the characters in the Midnight’s Children and has other interesting appearances as the novel is told. The novel of Midnight’s Children, first explaining it’s title before proceeding, tells a story of Saleem Sinai, who is born at the stroke of India’s independence from Great Britain at the date of August 15, 1947, and is paralleled in the story with his native country of India itself, henceforth he is one of the midnight children born at or near that time. Whatever condition he appears to be in, determines if the nation will be prosperous or in turmoil. Further into the novel, Saleem Sinai himself explains how his body is slowly falling and “crumbling into six hundred and thirty million particles of anonymous, and necessarily oblivious, dust” (Rushdie, Midnight‘s Children, Page 36). When the novel had first been published in the year of 1981, the population of India at the time was about over six hundred and thirty million people behind it’s border lines. The coincidental situation suggests with his disintegration that his destruction will break into enough dust and debris for every person in the country of India to spiritually hold upon to, almost like the Eucharist in communion at church. Unfortunately for Saleem and the other thousand midnight children, they must live with the fact that their lives are fully connected with India, no matter what they do. That brings up another truth about one’s life; a person is always born with certain attributes, that may not be changeable ever in life, regardless of the choices that person makes everyday of his life. This is plain inevitability, just like a person born with the human immunodeficiency virus must live with that haunting fact, or a person walking down a street in a downtown area being hit by a car, or shot by a nearby criminal, and so forth, they have no control of anything surrounding them but themselves. Although really, even if there are so many factors in one’s everyday experiences, there are still many innumerable manners in which one could shepherd their choices, and make the best out of everything. In the Satanic Verses, Gibreel Farishta and Saladin’s chance of surviving an airplane crash by falling from the sky are one to a million impossible, since flapping one’s hands and singing while rapidly descending towards the hardened Earth’s crust wouldn’t slow the fall at all, and wouldn’t fall “like scraps of paper in a breeze” (Rushdie, The Satanic Verses, Page 10). Much like being born with an inherited cardiovascular virus which runs in the family. In spite of the indubitableness that this genetic disorder could terminate one’s time alive on the planet at any given second of any hour, fashioning the best congenial decisions could augment greatly to the net health of a person’s well-being. This may not always be the case however, since with great numbers comes the chance for many great exceptions to come. Which leads to the next main idea. If the idea that the sole person of Saleem Sinai, and the many other “midnight children” are symbols and representatives of the condition of the mother country, should that not mean that there’s a theory that whenever a minor individual incident or event occurs, should it not also occur wide scale? Or maybe differently interpreted, could a single agglomeration of individuals be represented of many other hundreds and thousands of ideas and people? Thinking about India, being the home to many religions like Islam and Buddhism, many languages and cultures as well. As of now it has a population of at least one billion, being the second most populous country in the world, and very diverse in its peoples. Not just India, but other larger countries too, much like the United States, which had been first created by immigrants all across the world. One country, but many meanings and ideas, and belief systems. The importance of that is that it creates a sense of, importance to a single individual. Despite the fact that they are just one person on the Earth out of the seven billion inhabitants, it may not seem encouraging or significant, but even one person can make a monumental influence on others, much like civil rights speakers like Martin Luther King Junior, in his “I Have a Dream” speech, or the creation of new technologies and innovations that have helped ameliorate and enhance the standards of livings in the recent centuries of our world’s civilizations. That also therefore means, it can take one man or woman to cause great destruction or despair on other people. Adolf Hitler during the later early twentieth century, around the start of the 1940s lets just say, had managed to acquire power, and put thousands of his men to believe his own ideology, and commit terrible genocide on the Jewish peoples, and those others he believed were too inferior or “evil” to deserve to live. So overall, one person can spread or represent his ideologies to others, the speed at which it occurs depends on his or her popularity among the peoples, hopefully nothing with a bad cause. One voice can represent a Destruction however, doesn’t always mean it has to be a bad thing. In the novel of The Satanic Verses, one of the main characters, “Shiva”, directly alludes to the Hindu God of Destruction (sanatanasociety). Saleem Sinai, who is Shiva’s nemesis, is symbolized as the Hindu God of Creation, Brahma (eng.fju.edu
    ). The two Gods in Hinduism, along with Vishnu the God of Maintenance, work together to bring a cycle of creation and destruction, with maintenance being that transition between the two (rudraksha-ratna), much like morning dies into noon, and noon dies into night. To the main point, destruction is not always a deed of malevolence, but rather, it could be an act of making way for newer things; an act of renewal. In the book of Genesis, our God had brought a great flood onto the Earth, washing away all the old terrible planet but Noah, relatives, and many pairs of animals on an arc for forty days and forty nights. Most people will agree that our God is not evil, he simply wished to renew the world from all the troubles and crime that was occurring at the time, and it ended with clear skies and a rainbow, a symbol of promise of good. The past eventually just seems to grow on and burden the newer generations, and for that reason it is the best choice to have the old ruins torn down and demolished for the purpose of preventing it to exasperate the new prosperous, youthful present, much like an old refrigerator is removed from the kitchen to make space for a newer and cooler refrigerator that will cool food for years to come. If the old is not removed from the picture, then there is a problem with space. If one were to have the real world rid of all death, though that is impossible, then this planet would be jam packed with people who have set foot on Earth long before today‘s inhabitants, like Christopher Columbus and John Lennon; one would have had to found a way to the moon or one would be uncomfortably stuck face to face with one another, living one’s lives insufficiently with no possible way of pursuing happiness because of an overpopulation issue. This of course, would never be the case since death is inevitable, but well, it can be delayed. There are however, certain cases whence one must confront the reality of life that even the unlikeliest of events may just be a foot step away from happening, whether or not they appear to contain good or bad juju. Anything could happen if it is not already physically impossible. Re mentioning the incident occurring in the first chapter of The Satanic Verses; one New Year’s Day, a cruising airplane flying across the rocky and watery Earth, “twenty-nine thousand and two feet” (Rushdie, The Satanic Verses, Page 3) up in the frigid deleterious air, all of a sudden discharges a violent explosion, instantly eliminating all of the unfortunate passengers onboard their flight. All except for two fortuitous riders of this voyage in the sky survived; Gibreel Farishta and Mr Saladin Chamcha. Despite the fact that surviving the fiery outburst of the airliner was already a hard task to accomplish by one’s luck, they still had to experience that immense fall from their lofty height of, thousands of feet. Without carrying anything special equipment or clothing other than the clothes they were already wearing, their odds of surviving such a drop of doom are, well virtually below anything desirable. However, the novel is fiction, no surprise there by the way, so anything that the author wishes to include in his works, Salman Rushdie being the writer in this case, can be as fiction as common fairy tales would be, or as real as a book based on a true story, also no surprise there. Instead of the two travelers landing hard on the solid earthy ground, or plopping sharply into the unforgiving water, Mr Saladin Chamcha began to blindly holler to Gibreel Farishta to “Start flying now…and Sing” (Rushdie, Satanic Verses, Page 8). Two problems exist with his command he yells at Gibreel Farishta; men, or women not in this case, are unable to fly, literally, and not with their own means of levitation. Second of all, singing provides no means of physical propulsion which may slow down a sky diving session. In the novel, it appears that this hopeless method of deceleration actually enables the two wanderers to “float down to the Channel like scraps of paper in a breeze” (Rushdie, Satanic Verses, Page 10). Being fiction, this occurrence could may as well happen however the author wishes to scribe it, but it does have a different meaning symbolically. In general, “flight is freedom“ (Foster, How to Read Literature, Page 127); the idea of plowing through clouds and the free air, is a soothing comment and desire all people wish to perform though impossible. In the context of the novel, it purely means that as long as a person is halcyon and focused on the situation, they should be able to accomplish whatever is necessary for them to complete. There are many other instances which require great focus to achieve a task which may be as simple as an insignificant game of tic tack toe, or a life or death situation. Had one not paid attention in that herb studies class, the devil snare plant would have strangled any poor soul unfortunate enough to fall upon it’s treacherous roots and strings of vegetation, or had a lack of concentration become great enough, it would have caused one to loose a large gamble in Las Vegas, leading one to enter a stage of depression, which in the end, provokes one to commit suicide. Going back to flight, who said that flight only means freedom in Salman Rushdie’s context? While it does mean liberty, in addition means that Gibreel Farashti and Saleem Sinai are angelic. Angels, not truly being a physical human being, “are not subject to death or any form of extinction” (christiananswers) and do possess the ability to fly as they wish wherever. Gibreel Farashti and Saleem Sinai, are not exactly angels, but are similar to them in a way; they didn’t die, and they “flew” for a long period of time. Both Saleem Sinai and Gibreel Farashti’s acts of singing and flying are angelic acts, so their drop from the heavenly heights is just a manner of saying that they have been sent to Earth as messengers, as the word angel derives from the Greek word “aggelos” meaning messenger (christiananswers). So there’s a lot of things that people don’t realize about their lives; some experiences in one’s lives are just inevitable, some things in one’s life will be found highly improbable or unlikely by others, or maybe one just fails to notice that taking their time and being focused is a much more better choice than quickly trying to react fidgety and unsure. Many of these symbols shown in the novels are telling their own theme or story while the story itself is running along. One must not be easily fooled to think that only the most possible will happen, for even miracles and sudden catastrophes may occur without warning or notice. One might even find out in about eleven months from now that what they ignored and deemed as outrageously false is actually a true event that will occur and most likely provoke one to believe that their ignorance lead to downright demise, had they not attempted to take some form of action, as if they were just in wonderland.
  14. DubWolf
    As I was away in Mexico for two weeks, I sort of missed getting the chance to flight sim. After all, I only had a week after I was done with finals before I left. Not having much to do at that moment, I decided to start planning a series of flights around the world. As much as one like myself would love to do the real thing like KK Slider, this was the closest I could get at the moment, but flight simming is a pretty fun hobby of mine anyways.
     
    This flight from my hometown in Austin, Texas to Chicago was the first leg of my trip. It was the first time I piloted an embraer 170, a smaller plane for regional airlines, and though my touchdown at O'Hare was smooth, I managed to "bump" and went airborne again. The second time I touched down was much more harsh. It was pretty stormy, so that's partly to blame.
     
    Next stop is to Sao Paulo, Brazil. I'll probably have to pause and save the flights for later since I am not the only one using this computer, so.
     
    Just kidding, going to Buenos Aires, first.
     

  15. DubWolf
    Lel, if you're reading this, take a cookie:
     
     
     
     
    With all the time available throughout the day (and my brothers away at school), I took the liberty of this time to flight sim on longer than usual routes. The latest flight being Frankfurt to Hong Kong, which took about 11-12 hours (leaving at 4pm, arriving at 10 am), and...two landing attempts (I'm not used to the 747). Here are some pics!
     
     
     
     
    Here's the route taken (this is pretty close to accurate). The thick blue path is the actual route taken, whereas the thinner path is the actual route flown by the airline in real life (DLH796).
     
     
     
  16. DubWolf
    For @Sterling Crimson
     
    Singapore Changi to Soekarno-Hatta (Jakarta)
     
    A truck labeled "special cargo" arrived from an unknown source to the tarmac where a Pacifica Airlines 734 was parked, although there was trouble loading the smuggled goods onto the plane due to high security, but they managed to "work it out" by falsely reasoning it out.
     
    Chronological order of images:
     
    1 2 3
    4 5 6
    7 8 9
     
    Pics 1-2: Taxiiing from Singapore Changi.
    Pic 3: Climbing to cruise altitude.
    Pic 4: Climbing. Singapore in the background.
    Pic 5: Descending.
    Pic 6: Descending. Airport in sight.
    Pic 7-8: Taxiing to gate.
    Pic 9: Parked at gate.
     

  17. DubWolf
    WELCOME, to my blog :comeatus:. I don't know where to put this introduction, but I had the idea just a few minutes ago of starting a blog for all my flight sim trips since I always took pictures of a lot of my flights, but I never did anything with them except keep them stored in my computer, so why not do something cool with them and start a blog for anyone who's interested? Even if nobody but myself is interested, I'd like to keep the entries of my flights stored somewhere better than just jammed in my computer.
     
    ANYWAYS, a friend of mine, a very retro friend (@Retro*Derpy) of mine suggested I transport "children who haven't seen their parents in ages" to a backland city in Russia (Murmansk), using the 787. Of course, I ended up using the 777 since I had trouble with the 787's panel (missing some features). This 777-200 to be the case:
     
     
     
     
    The flight took...oh son of a gun, the flight took course over several days since I was busy and couldn't do it all in one day (4 hour+ flights aren't manageable since the computer is shared), but I estimate it took about 9 hours from take-off to landing.
     
    I'm a little lazy with the blog at the moment, and I'm sure I could be a little more organized, but here are screenshots from my descend and landing to Murmansk.
     
    View the screenshots from top left going right, then going down (so view them in this order):
     
    1 2 3
    4 5 6
    7 8
     
     
     
    And all the children rejoiced to see their parents !
    Some were probably disappointed xD .
  18. DubWolf
    Here's the last flight I've flown; my second transeastern (across the Eastern hemisphere) flight performed. I thankfully didn't have to fast-forward much (except the beginning since the simulator crashes if I'm on or near the Frankfurt airport for too long). Voila! Still have Manila, possibly Auckland, New Zealand, San Francisco, then back home to Austin.
     
    Sure wish I could do this for realz tho.
     

  19. DubWolf
    Berp.
     
    The autothrottle was giving me trouble at first (the autopilot in general was giving me trouble), but I got settled in.
     
    I arrived with 2 minutes of fuel left, and mistook the runway, hence a sideways landing in one of the pics.
     
    Off to Johannesburg, next.
     

  20. DubWolf
    Hello again. This is the second leg of my flight sim world trip. This trip took about 12 hours (I had to chop it into 3 days by saving flights for later), and the dam thing crashed thrice when leaving ORD, most likely since I was flying over Midway, and the sim likes to crash when I fly over major airports :okiedokielokie:. As much as I would have liked to see virtual South America on the way to Buenos Aires,....it was kind of dark, up until an hour flying past the Andes. Bummah. Next leg is to Sao Paulo, not too far from here.
     

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