Monday, October 26, 2009

Praised by the Wise

"Never in the history of the world had such a scheme been put forth, so free from any superhuman agency, so independent of so even antagonistic to the belief in a soul, the belief in God, and the hope of a future life."

Professor Thomas William Rhys Davids, British Oriental lexicographer and the first person to chair comparative religion in a British university.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Democracy

after 54 years in power, Japan's LDP finally lost control of the Diet this year.

in neighbouring Malaysia, the Barisan Nasional coalition is crumbling after leading the nation since 1955.

on a sidenote, this is how a Westminster parliament should be like.



Singapore holds the (dis)honour of having the longest-ruling elected party in the world. when is it our turn? when will we finally see some democracy like that?

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

i like motion pictures

Rules of Engagement (2000)

the lure of this military/legal/political film is the central question of right vs wrong, blurring that thin line under extreme conditions, a frequent issue in the military. very much in the same vein as A Few Good Men. i must admit i didnt come in expecting too much, due to its lack of fame, but i must say i came away satisfied and enthralled. Tommy Lee Jones was the standout, blowing us away with his performance as the average soldier, average lawyer, but with values hard as hell. Rules Of Engagement also pits the hardcore battle-worn soldier against the high-flying scholar, and explores to what length is the rulebook a bible, when hard but morally ambiguous decisions have to be made.


---

Guy Pearce plays Maj Biggs, the prosecutor.

Maj Biggs: Sir, if I may say something? I accepted this assignment... 'cause I believe in the merits of the government's case. I am not gonna stack the deck against this guy. I will try this case on good evidence only.

---

Maj Biggs: This guy is the warrior's warrior. A Navy Cross, two Silver Stars for composure in battle. He has no wife, no kids, just the Corps. He was our best. That's why he was sent. He's not on trial for the good service he gave the country, but for what he did in Yemen, period.

anonymous Marine officer: Major, nobody wants to say it, but it occurs to me we're trying to set an example here. So let's set it and show the world we mean business. The first charge supports the death penalty, and I say we go for it.

Maj Biggs: No more death. I'll see that he never gets another command and I'll put him in jail, but I will not seek death for a man who served his country honorably.

---

Maj Biggs: What do you think would happen if a Yemeni killed 83 Americans? He'd have a trial that would last for one day, and they'd take off his head.

Lt-Col Hodges: Major, do you know what the life expectancy was for a second lieutenant... dropped into a combat zone in Vietnam in '68?

Maj Biggs: I don't have time for 20 questions, sir.

(later, to himself, solemnly) Two weeks. Life expectancy of a second lieutenant... in combat in Vietnam was two weeks.

---

Lt-Col Hodges: Were your men annihilating that platoon of marines?

Col Cao: Yes.

Lt-Col Hodges: Did Colonel Childers force you to call your men off?

Col Cao: Yes.

Lt-Col Hodges: Do you believe his actions were calculated to save the lives of American marines?

Col Cao: Yes.

Lt-Col Hodges: Would you have done the same thing Colonel Childers did if the situation had been reversed? Colonel Cao, would you have shot a captive American radio operator in the head if you thought it would persuade Colonel Childers to spare the lives of your own men?

Col Cao: Yes.

Lt-Col Hodges: No more questions.

---

Lt-Col Hodges: I'll make you a deal. If you can tell me right now what the life expectancy was for a second lieutenant dropped into a hot LZ in Vietnam in '68 I'll tell you everything I remember about Ca Lu.

Maj Biggs: One week.

Lt-Col Hodges: Negative. Sixteen minutes, Major. Sixteen fucking minutes. And that's all I remember.

---

and the final scene. i saw it coming and waited for it to happen in the courtroom. but the best was saved for last. Col Cao and Col Childers saluting each other, eyes filled with respect, though once war enemies, yet understanding that what had to happen, happened, and they did what they had to. war is never about right or wrong. it's about each fighting for his own right.

but. drawing from this film's wiki entry, i hate its guts for what i vaguely felt while watching it. it is seriously an immensely racist film.

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Praised by the Wise

"True Buddhism is not the worship of Buddha as God; it is rather a following of the Buddha into a sphere of simplification where there is no need of God."

G K Chesterton, English novelist and journalist

Thursday, October 08, 2009

the adhocs of the 16th

foc: a song for viola
outside ntu.
maintained the precedent of high attendance.
groundbreaking films made for the camp.

dnd: old tales of hollywood
out at sea.
for one night, the school, a family.
a committee, a commitment, and an enterprise like no other. respect.

paparazzi: the concrete skies
weathered storms.
an original script.
a senior-junior collaboration.

i must say, im really very proud of you guys. you're like my kids, just like your projects are your babies.

long live, 16th ci club. let's wish the future can outdo us.

from what i see, it'd be a hell of a job for them to do so.