I find the whole complaint about Hippies not wanting to go to war thus not worth listening to almost insulting to these people.
The people who mostly fought that war were the poor and those unable to get out of the draft. The middle class was being dragged in later but the folks who fought many had no way of getting out of the draft by schooling or their folks. The fact people didn't want to go to a war we later found out was built on a lie to fight in another countries civil war makes a lot of sense. Same way thousands and thousands of folks marched in the US against Iraq though that gets washed over.
And I think that complaint comes from folks whose family was not effected by Vietnam in some close way. There is a trunk of letters my mom has kept from her many friends who went to that war because of the draft. Many of them didn't come back or didn't come back quiet right. Reading those letters you realize how damaging that war was to the US both on an individual level and how that damaged our psyche for years to come.
Vietnam was a war of choice. A war we let get started by handing Vietnam to the French after WWII. Whose leader actually came to the US first asking for help to build a democratic society but who was ignored by those in power do to his "communist" connections because they were the only organized resistance against the French in the 1920's. To discredit the anti-war movement of the late 1960's early 1970's as just people not wanting to go to war is ludicrous and ignores the reality of the time and the underlying factors of that war.
Will, it is exhausting to read you go on about "kids these days" circa 1969 as though the entire counterculture movement of the time including the anti-war, environmentalism, and civil rights groups can be successfully reduced to 'lol hippies'.
man.
the boomers of the hippie movement were the blurst
they agitated for power to be redirected when they didn't have it. screamed and shouted and marched and demanded.
but then when they achieved power, they gave us reaganomics
pulled that ladder right up
but never stopped bloviating about their social conscience and about how they "really made a difference" back in their youth
Hippies weren't the only group in that generation. The conservatives weren't going to let them enact groundbreaking change and they were the ones who gave us Reaganonics, not the hippies.
+2
Options
MrMisterJesus dying on the cross in pain? Morally better than us. One has to go "all in".Registered Userregular
i grew up out west - outside santa fe, NM, and the self-congratulatory culture of the white post-hippies there was just odious to me. the big thing is throwing around money in a particular way and showing off your lifestyle.
I would put this in with there being assholes everywhere. And I knew plenty hanging around when I was growing up in the red diaper culture. But I think it's relevant that the very thing you're talking about--throwing around money and showing off the lifestyle--is one of the very things that the hippies were so powerfully critiquing. That some of them failed to absorb the message does not in the end, I think, undermine it.
MrMister on
0
Options
DemonStaceyTTODewback's DaughterIn love with the TaySwayRegistered Userregular
i personally view courtesy and politeness to be democratic and subversive to a hierarchical status system. it's a system in which all people are treated with respect regardless of their economic or social class. i find it empowering that a CEO is viewed as a heel and a cad if he's rude to a caddy or waiter. i like that it's seen as rude when some rich boomer comes rolling into a nice restaurant in his polo because he's too successful and special to follow the rules and he is then made to feel out of place.
Getting away from courtesy and going back to the suit conversation...
I may have mentioned a few times that I take a dim view of dress codes in offices because my experience with them is that they're used as cudgels against junior employees.
They're never enforced against the CEO - after all, who is going to enforce them? But the lower on the food chain you go, the more they are enforced.
In the same way it is equalizing for the CEO to be polite to a waiter, it is insulting to be told that you have to wear slacks and a button down by an executive who rolls into work in a baseball cap and jeans.
i completely agree with this!
i guess i have never worked a job where this was done
if I become a software developer can I show my tattoos
can I get my lip pierced
can I wear jeans and a t shirt
depends very much on where you work, a couple guys I work with have a bunch of tattoos (neck even!) although one of them is like a team lead now so he dresses up a bit but used to just wear like shorts and t-shirts. The last company I worked at was much bigger and I can only remember one person with a tattoo which was just a super boring Euler's Identity on his arm.
>:[
Just focus on more.... hip... I guess languages and stuff and you're more likely to fall in with the business you're looking for is how I've seen it. From places I've worked and interviewed at you could definitely see a different culture depending on what they were doing. Places doing web stuff and big into OSS and ruby and scala (gross) tended to have a much more liberal atmosphere. Like, I was in a big stuffy office with people in suits when I was interviewing with Aon Hewitt and AAA (half of my interview with AAA was going into a cubicle and taken a written test, it was the worst) for doing some weird old database stuff but I remember interviewing with a guy at some other small company I was interviewing with some dude that had a broken chain or something tattooed on his wrist who was like, "so let's talk about MVC".
*nods thoughtfully*
tell me all of your most liberal languages so I can learn them
0
Options
Donkey KongPutting Nintendo out of business with AI nipsRegistered Userregular
You will be flying out...
no no no no
... March 23rd ...
NO NO NO NO
... returning April 10th ...
NO GOD NO OH GOD NO NO
Thousands of hot, local singles are waiting to play at bubbulon.com.
+12
Options
LudiousI just wanted a sandwich A temporally dislocated QuiznosRegistered Userregular
@skippydumptruck If you really think you like CS and you will for real stick with this online degree program, then I say go for it. The biggest risk with online degrees is not that no one will take your credentials seriously at the end, it's that the dropout rates are crazy high. So stick with it and you are mostly set!
If you get a degree from a real university, through their online system, you're not really obligated to put "online" on your resume next to the name of the University are you?
Does this program result in a degree? Is the online degree equivalent to what a normal CS major on campus would receive? Is it going to say "earned online" or anything different on the diploma?
Hey Skippy, what sort of help does the online course offer? There are a lot of things in comp sci that I needed people to sit down and explain to me and I dunno if people online could replicate that.
I requested info from the school yesterday, I believe part of the stuff they will send will be examples of classes so I can see how they work
one of my other friends who was a CS major but has just worked apple retail, like, throughout college and up through now, idk why, well, i guess like me he was not super motivated about changing it
but he had a CS degree from Columbia which is something and was reasonably good at code
but the apple store did pay him pretty damn well for a retail job and whatnot so that's good
but i'm glad, he just got into a 6 month corporate program at cupertino
something about proprietary software they're using at retail stores
so that's cool
poo
0
Options
DemonStaceyTTODewback's DaughterIn love with the TaySwayRegistered Userregular
if I become a software developer can I show my tattoos
can I get my lip pierced
can I wear jeans and a t shirt
depends very much on where you work, a couple guys I work with have a bunch of tattoos (neck even!) although one of them is like a team lead now so he dresses up a bit but used to just wear like shorts and t-shirts. The last company I worked at was much bigger and I can only remember one person with a tattoo which was just a super boring Euler's Identity on his arm.
>:[
Just focus on more.... hip... I guess languages and stuff and you're more likely to fall in with the business you're looking for is how I've seen it. From places I've worked and interviewed at you could definitely see a different culture depending on what they were doing. Places doing web stuff and big into OSS and ruby and scala (gross) tended to have a much more liberal atmosphere. Like, I was in a big stuffy office with people in suits when I was interviewing with Aon Hewitt and AAA (half of my interview with AAA was going into a cubicle and taken a written test, it was the worst) for doing some weird old database stuff but I remember interviewing with a guy at some other small company I was interviewing with some dude that had a broken chain or something tattooed on his wrist who was like, "so let's talk about MVC".
*nods thoughtfully*
tell me all of your most liberal languages so I can learn them
It changes a lot but right now Scala is probably the up and comer, it's sort of like java but trying too hard to be cute. Java is big, ruby is really big, objective C is big if you're interested in mobile development.
skippy did you look into any of those other program things too that i sent u
my friend is having quite positive experience afterwards
makin codes
yeah so
pros of one of those code boot camps: way faster transition, lots of in-person working with people, networking
cons: opportunity costs from leaving my job make it more expensive than doing the longer program and keeping my job, no credential at the end
Posts
The people who mostly fought that war were the poor and those unable to get out of the draft. The middle class was being dragged in later but the folks who fought many had no way of getting out of the draft by schooling or their folks. The fact people didn't want to go to a war we later found out was built on a lie to fight in another countries civil war makes a lot of sense. Same way thousands and thousands of folks marched in the US against Iraq though that gets washed over.
And I think that complaint comes from folks whose family was not effected by Vietnam in some close way. There is a trunk of letters my mom has kept from her many friends who went to that war because of the draft. Many of them didn't come back or didn't come back quiet right. Reading those letters you realize how damaging that war was to the US both on an individual level and how that damaged our psyche for years to come.
Vietnam was a war of choice. A war we let get started by handing Vietnam to the French after WWII. Whose leader actually came to the US first asking for help to build a democratic society but who was ignored by those in power do to his "communist" connections because they were the only organized resistance against the French in the 1920's. To discredit the anti-war movement of the late 1960's early 1970's as just people not wanting to go to war is ludicrous and ignores the reality of the time and the underlying factors of that war.
my love for body mod?
I haven't gotten a new tattoo in almost 2 years, I left my earrings out for too long and the holes kinda closed so now I can't wear those
i got a 46/100
Hippies weren't the only group in that generation. The conservatives weren't going to let them enact groundbreaking change and they were the ones who gave us Reaganonics, not the hippies.
I would put this in with there being assholes everywhere. And I knew plenty hanging around when I was growing up in the red diaper culture. But I think it's relevant that the very thing you're talking about--throwing around money and showing off the lifestyle--is one of the very things that the hippies were so powerfully critiquing. That some of them failed to absorb the message does not in the end, I think, undermine it.
*sheds a single tear*
This is liberalism's endgame! Fairness and equality kept in check by hypersenstivity!!
I watched that movie the other night.
Christ alive it was traumatic.
i completely agree with this!
i guess i have never worked a job where this was done
then again i have never worked on the west coast
*nods thoughtfully*
tell me all of your most liberal languages so I can learn them
no no no no
... March 23rd ...
NO NO NO NO
... returning April 10th ...
NO GOD NO OH GOD NO NO
It's almost as if your boss found a small imperfection in the clothing you wear that protects you during battle
rage donkey
rage
Ah I didn't know you were into piercings and stuff too outside of the ear stuff.
I can't even remember if I wore mine at the last PAX dinner or if I was afraid of the scrutiny and removed it.
I am so weak!
Do you remember if I had it?
I can't until/unless I work some place more chill : (
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bHX4PWtpKvw
I like skirts. In general I feel that they are worn best over the head
iykwim
They should be so short they could star in The Hobbit!
I requested info from the school yesterday, I believe part of the stuff they will send will be examples of classes so I can see how they work
Skirts are fine
Kilts are not
my friend is having quite positive experience afterwards
makin codes
ugh when are you going back to mucous dystopia?
I sorta hate tight and short skirts
They are ugly
the idea of that makes my hands sweat
I tell him already, I will go but I have the following requirements:
We'll see where I get on these demands.
no I did not know
over time I have had my eyebrow pierced twice, my upper ear, and stretched lobes
I have nothing now : (
also I would like an industrial
but he had a CS degree from Columbia which is something and was reasonably good at code
but the apple store did pay him pretty damn well for a retail job and whatnot so that's good
but i'm glad, he just got into a 6 month corporate program at cupertino
something about proprietary software they're using at retail stores
so that's cool
Skirts are great!
As long as they aren't like so short you can't bend over.
Medium skirts... flowy skirts... skirts are great!
It changes a lot but right now Scala is probably the up and comer, it's sort of like java but trying too hard to be cute. Java is big, ruby is really big, objective C is big if you're interested in mobile development.
twitch.tv/tehsloth
a kilt as made for and by nerds are ugly, but what item of clothing wouldn't be
SiG.. SiG pls...
yeah so
pros of one of those code boot camps: way faster transition, lots of in-person working with people, networking
cons: opportunity costs from leaving my job make it more expensive than doing the longer program and keeping my job, no credential at the end
it seems more risky to me
Caveat: a formal kilt is swank as hell.
A utilikilt is something that a dude wears when he's desperate to prove that he has nothing to prove.
You're a hedgehog, that's enough.