Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Apparently I'm the 1%...

I'm going to come across a bit elitist with this statement, but whatever, its my opinion. Hooray free speech!
I look at the "Occupy Edmonton" protest as a farce, and nothing more than a hipster "jumping off" protest for other causes. I see the VALIDITY in the idea, as it applies to the States. The sociopolitical/economic system is fundamentally different. I fail to see the direct correlation here in Canada. I'm not saying that there is no income disparity. I'm saying that the situation is not nearly as dire. I do not see people getting screwed out of homes by large corporations. I do not see massive unemployment. Everything's not all roses, however, the situation is 100% different. I don't absolve "the corporate boogeymen" (ooooooooooooh *ghost noises*) of profit chasing at the expense of their customers.

I think that the following (at least the majority of it) rings pretty true, although it does sound a bit embellished to fit the counterpoint to all this "We're the victim"/entitlement crap going around:



Being a Graduate Student that has had to sacrifice and make hard decisions about money, I have learned that leveraging the money you have properly can be more powerful than having a bunch of money - this allowed me to purchase a house at 23 while being a grad student.
Apparently that makes me part of the "problem" rather than a responsible taxpaying citizen.
*sigh*
How long until I can just ignore these idiot hipster retards and make several large evil corporations richer by playing their MMORPG?!?!? (Yay SWTOR!)

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Yay! Its Election Time!

Wow.

Long time no post.

Well, to be honest, I've been pretty busy. Since my last post I've managed to publish a paper (yay!), and submit a bunch of grant applications. A couple smaller ones, but one 150k commercialization/development grant. If that one goes through, I'll be able to finish my research (and degree) without having to search for other funding, while getting paid for the first time in over eight months. A lot is riding on that grant, so we'll see what happens. Other than that, Portal 2 = Absolutely Awesome.

In any case, we have another Election coming up here in Canada. Hooray.

Yeah, I'm not too enthusiastic about it, because in reality, there may be slight shifts in power, but I cannot see a wholesale ideological change taking place. As per usual, you have the mudslinging and attack adds, misleading spinning of stories, and of course, the random commentary by significantly slanted random people on social media.

I understand people have opinions - they are entitled to them. However, I just can't but help to laugh/shake my head about people who push their specific ideology or political viewpoint without considering how it impacts others.

For example, the oilsands. Yes. That taboo topic again. I am not going to argue that the oilsands are a "good" thing, because quite realistically, anytime you have heavy industry, regardless of what industry (yes, even the sacred cow of solar panel production*) you have environmental damage.

[*The production of solar panels requires a variety of harmful chemicals, dangerous goods, and significant power requirements to produce. Having worked in a parallel field that uses many of the same technologies/materials, I'm wondering how many environmentalists would be happy to know what specifically goes into making those solar panels. It takes upwards of 2-3 years of operation to have a "net positive" power output (ie, replace the power that was used to produce them). I'd like to know how many "greeners" will admit to that... but I digress.. ]

Anyways, what cannot be argued, even amongst the people who are vehemently opposed to them (*cough* Greenpeace Eco-terrorists *cough*) is the significant economic impact they have on Alberta, and on Canada as a whole. I have multiple family members that are involved directly in the oilfield or in the supply, trades, or worker training (welding, etc). There is a major demand for skilled labor because of the oilfield, to the point that technical colleges are completely full and workers are coming from out of province to work here.

On a national level, the oilfield/commodity sector of our economy helped prevent our recession from being as bad as the one in the US. Additionally, the oilfield is most likely the only reason Alberta is the only "have" province in the "wonderful" equalization payment program that exists nationally. Billions of dollars produced through the oilfield's economic impact are redistributed to the rest of Canada to "equalize" the relative economies of the provinces. Yet, the Alberta oilfield is the "great Satan", while (in the wake of the BP oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico) Newfoundland's offshore oil drilling is quietly ignored.

Anyways, the point I'm getting at is that its easy to be against something that doesn't directly (or indirectly) benefit you, regardless of the human cost. Many people want to shut down the oilfields. I'm not sure how many people have considered the entire effect on Canada - both the positive and the negative.


My hope for this election is that people vote with their heads, not with their emotions. Its really easy to get caught up in the "Ignatieff is an American", "I don't like Harper's Lego Hair", or "Layton is a Commie" bullshit. If you're planning to vote simply based on the TV adds being spewed at us constantly on Canadian TV, Stay Home.

I'm serious. People who simply vote on "X said Y, and hates Z" attack adds should have their right to vote taken away. You're not helping the country, and you're definitely not helping yourself. There is nothing funnier than someone complaining bitterly about the government *THEY* voted for.

Get informed. Get off the couch, talk to people, do some research. If you're too lazy to get involved, the CBC has a fairly good website that asks some general questions about the important issues of the day:

http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/canadavotes2011/votecompass/

At the very least, this should make you think about the real issues that are going to be affecting our country, and where the parties stand (more or less). There has been some media outlets (Toronto Sun) calling the validity of this test into question, saying you'll be forced Liberal by default. Regardless, if this gets a potential voter thinking about the issues, rather than focusing on "he said/she said", its worthwhile.

If you plan to vote, and can't bring yourself to do some background work to figure out who to vote for, do the rest of us a favor and don't bother voting. People who vote blindly just harm the rest of us.

Monday, January 24, 2011

What a PhD means in the "Big Picture"

Yeah, I haven't really posted in a while. One part too busy, one part Christmas. So, yeah, this post is going to be a bit of a hodge-podge. Oh well.

As I have worked on my PhD, I have had a bit of an issue trying to explain clearly what exactly the impact of my research is. I always try and equate it to every day life, or some sort of consumer product. Having to equate it to a consumer product ultimately annoys me. Unfortunately, this is the most realistic way of the general public trying to understand what the end product of a PhD is - A shinier cell phone... lol.

I can go on unending rants about how the media uses "Mythbuster-esuqe ""Science"" " is used to "prove" things like global warming, the end of the world in 2012, and so on, but ultimately that's not productive. People are too deeply rooted in the opinion of what is being presented to them in the popular media and television is absolute fact for anyone to argue an alternate opinion. This is where the label of "conspiracy theorist" is used at-nauseum (granted, sometimes is warranted).

Anyways, I'm off on a tangent.

What I want to do with this post is to explain exactly what a PhD is for society, using an excellent example from The Illustrated Guide to a Ph.D. ( http://matt.might.net/articles/phd-school-in-pictures/ ).

So first, lets consider the below circle as containing the entirety of human knowledge. Everything:
  

By the time someone finishes elementary school, they know (roughly) this much of total human knowledge:
Now, when someone finishes high school, they learn a little bit more general knowledge:
Now, with a bachelor's degree, you gain more general knowledge, but also gain a specialty, which gives you more knowledge in a specific area, as shown below:
A Master's Degree deepens that specialty further:
When you start a PhD, you first learn the work of others in your specialty, and reading that work/those papers takes you to the edge of human knowledge:
Eventually, you find a specific area of your field to focus a thesis on:
For a few years, you work hard on that focused area of work, pushing the boundary of human knowledge:
Eventually, one day, a discovery or experiment causes that boundary to give way:
That small dent in the "frontier of human knowledge"? That's a Ph.D.:
So, the world looks different specifically in that field now:
 Now that the world has been changed by that discovery, its important to reflect on the overall impact, or to look at the bigger picture:

So, in the words of the original author, its very important for people to "Keep Pushing".

Anyways, this is the most accurate representation of what a PhD is for society that I've ever seen.