Archive for September, 2006

Banned Books Week (September 23-30, 2006)

Thursday, September 28th, 2006
Bbw "Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions. It is the one un-American act that could most easily defeat us."—Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas," The One Un-American Act." Nieman Reports, vol. 7, no. 1 (Jan. 1953): p. 20.

"[I]t’s not just the books under fire now that worry me. It is the books that will never be written. The books that will never be read. And all due to the fear of censorship. As always, young readers will be the real losers.Judy Blume

"Where they have burned books, they will end in burning human beings." (German: "Dort, wo man Bücher verbrennt, verbrennt man am Ende auch Menschen.") —Heinrich Heine, from his play Almansor (1821)

This week marks the 25th anniversary of the Banned Books Week, which is usually celebrated during the last week of September. I’m not sure if many people are familiar with it. I, myself, only acquainted to it this year by pure accident, as I was googling, looking for a nice e-book to download.

And now I’ve stumbled upon the site American Library Association website, which keeps an accounting of "objectionable" reads.

Here are 10 of the most challenged books of the 21st century:

1. Harry Potter series by J.K. Rowling
2. The Chocolate War by Robert Cormier
3. Alice series by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor
4. "Of Mice and Men" by John Steinbeck
5. "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings" by Maya Angelou
6. "Fallen Angels" by Walter Dean Myers
7. "It’s Perfectly Normal" by Robie Harris
8. Scary Stories series by Alvin Schwartz
9. Captain Underpants series by Dav Pilkey
10. "Forever" by Judy Blume

These books were challenged due to one or more of the following reasons: violence, sexual content, homosexuality, nudity, racism, or offensive language.

And for several years, J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series topped the list.

Personally, I don’t like the idea of banning any literature from being kept in the shelves of libraries or bookstores. If you don’t like a book or you don’t like the ideas that book is perpetuating, then leave it alone. Or tell your friends/neighbors not to read it because you think it’s not good. Anyway, it’s your right to say what you think of the things around you. But don’t IMPOSE your will on other people just because you think you find these books "objectionable".

For more information about Banned Books Week, go here.

For information about book burnings in the 21st century (I think this is the modern version of the witch burnings. Remember Fr. Regino Cortes, O.P., biblical scholar, and his group of "believers" burned copies of the Da Vinci Code in protest of its contents?), go here.

(By the way, Fr. Regino Cortes already died a few months ago at the age of 64. May he rest in peace and God bless him, even if he burned hundreds of books of Dan Brown, whose books may contain inaccuracies, but nevertheless, I think, did not deserve the burning.)

I love my freedom of thought and speech. AND I WANT TO KEEP IT!

Wishful Thinking

Wednesday, September 27th, 2006

Tomorrow, classes at all levels, even at postgrad level, are suspended in the Metro Manila and Bulacan areas due to typhoon Milenyo. 

Hay, pati kaya clinic suspended din?  :-(  Wish ko lang.

Nakakatamad na talaga pumasok.  I do feel so tired of being a doctor, at times.  And with that, I wonder, will I still have the energy and enthusiasm left when I start my residency training?  I already feel so worn out.  As if everything that I do isn’t really paying off too well. 

Sigh. 

I hope soon the day will come when medical practice in the Philippines will return to its former glory…the glory that I think it fully deserves. 

Her Best Pose

Tuesday, September 26th, 2006

Kaye_4

I think this is her
best pose in the magazine so far. I bet you, guys, are fantasizing that
you are the ones in between Kaye Abad’s legs and not the couch’s arm
rest! Hehehe.

 

 

                                                                                               from Maxim Magazine

 

The Sickest Crime Story I’ve Ever Read

Monday, September 25th, 2006

Perfect_victim_coverFrom Publishers Weekly

Hitchhiking from Eugene, Ore., through northern California in 1977, 20-year-old Colleen Stan thumbed a ride into hell. Her kidnappers, sadistic lumber mill worker, Cameron Hooker, and his battered wife, Janice, subjected her to seven years of torture and sensory deprivation. She was made a sex slave, kept locked in a wooden box and brainwashed into believing that an underground network of sadists would recapture her if she attempted to escape. Did Colleen fall in love with Cameron and make herself a willing partner in a love triangle, as the Hookers’ defense lawyer asserted? The jury found otherwise, convinced by the evidence marshalled by coauthor McGuire, state prosecutor in the case, a trial that journalist Norton attended in 1984. Not for the squeamish, this harrowing tale shuttles between the courtroom and the grisly doings in the Hookers’ basement.

Check it out at Amazon.com.

Just A Bit Of Gab

Friday, September 22nd, 2006

I haven’t really prepared anything to post today.  It’s been really an ordinary day.  Nothing much exciting happened because I was just home, doing ordinary things.  I’ve been staying home for the past few days.  Haven’t got the energy to go anywhere.  And I just don’t have the reason to go out, really.  My Honey isn’t here :-(. 

But, late this afternoon, my Honey and I were chatting at Gmail.  I really, really, really, really miss him.  He’s still in Texas and he says it’s been getting cold lately.  I missed him more because he kept on teasing me about the things he’ll do to me when he gets home. Hehehe.  *Censored*.  Hihi.

And then, I think he missed me more, too, because he decided to just call on the phone and we chatted for about an hour.  Goodness!  It didn’t feel like an hour.  I thought we were just chatting for 15 minutes, or something like that. 

He said he’s coming home in October, around second week.  Yehey for me!

At least, I just have to wait for one month more before seeing him again.  It used to be months.  But now, it’s just one month.  I can wait for one month. 

I wish it’s October already, though.  Sigh.

Top 10 Signs That Your Boyfriend Is Gay

Wednesday, September 20th, 2006

#10.  He uses your hair straightening iron more often than you do.

#9.  He knows all the characters and episodes of all telenovelas more than you do.

#8.  If you hear that more than 3 of your friends/classmates/acquaintances think that he is gay, it’s probably true, even if you heard it from a person from another fraternity than that of your BF.

#7.  You and your BF watch a romantic movie together but he doesn’t raise the arm rest in between his seat and yours.

#6.  He sings Josh Groban songs.

#5.  He asks you to watch Brokeback Mountain with him.  And it’s not because he wants to see Anne Hathaway’s boobs.

#4.  He asks you to go romping into a new bar, which turns out to be a gay bar.

#3.  He goes to the gym regularly but doesn’t have a regular sport.

#2.  He kisses you on the lips without touching your waist or your butt.

#1.  He doesn’t kiss you down there.  It just flat out reminds him that he is fucking a pussy and not an A-hole.

Ten Signs That You And Your Best Friend Aren’t Just “Friends”

Wednesday, September 20th, 2006

#10.  People around you and your best friend thinks that there is something going on between the two of you.  Both of you deny it, of course, but no one believes it, really.

#9.  You talk about your best friend to other people all the time.

#8.  One always knows where the other person is or what he/she is doing.

#7.  You and your best friend, when with a group of friends, would suddenly talk about an event or a gimmick which only the two of you remember.  Then your friends will say, "Where were we when that happened?"

#6.  You and your best friend watch movie together/have dinner or lunch together at least once a week…   

#5.  …and both of you are "single".

#4.  You and your best friend exchange text messages 24/7.

#3.  He/She gets upset when you talk about your "ex".

#2.  You call each other Sweetie.

#1.  You two are caught by someone you know kissing inside your car.

Busy-Ness

Tuesday, September 19th, 2006
It’s been a few days since my last post.  Been quite busy building the barkada’s blog.  Want to take a peek? Click here.

Smart Bro is Up!

Thursday, September 14th, 2006
Yahoo!  After 1 week of waiting…finally!  Broadband na sa wakas! :-)  Now I can download all the songs that I want!

The President’s Apathy Towards The Medical Profession

Thursday, September 14th, 2006

As of habit, my family and I have dinner while watching the evening news and discussing the day’s events. Few nights ago, as I sat down for dinner, I heard my parents talk about how our little water station business is not doing well. Same old story: prices of goods going too high but prices of our products we can’t increase for fear of losing customers to the competitors. We’ve been continually tightening our belts, hoping time soon will come when business will be okay again.

Then we heard on TV that the president was discouraging medical practitioners from shifting to nursing. But rather, doctors should not worry about their low income because there is still the medical transcription profession to turn to for better salaries.

I swear my dad could have hurled the fork he was holding at the TV and at the demon speaking in it, if only he hadn’t thought of not having enough money to replace or repair the TV if it gets damaged. Having spent all his money just to send his only daughter to medical school and being told that her doctor daughter could just go being a medical transcriptionist instead of practicing medicine, if the going gets tough, is just too much. All our hardships just thrown aside as if nothing. Reluctantly, he just turned back to eating, mumbling how insensitive and ignorant the president has been, making those remarks, and how the country’s situation is getting worse. I couldn’t really blame him for saying that or for even having the urge to throw the fork at the TV. I would have hurled a knife.

What evil days are we coming to?

The President doesn’t understand how much it takes to produce a doctor. To be qualified to enter medical school, a person must have a bachelor’s degree already with the required number of units in life sciences and pass the National Medical Assessment Test (NMAT). Getting into the top medical schools would be harder because each would prefer candidates with high NMAT scores and a good college record. Each medical school may administer additional exams and/or interviews to further screen the applicants. Then, there’s the ever increasing tuition fees and the expensive books and expenses for procuring the tools of the trade (e.g. stethoscope, diagnostic kit, etcetera). And on the last year of school, medical students (called medical clerks) pay P140,000/year to undergo clerkship, a.k.a. "slaves", in training hospitals: going on 24-hour duties every 3 days, spending most of their from-duty and pre-duty days being humiliated at case presentations/conferences and then going back to pushing patients’ stretchers, doing bedside monitorings and being scolded at by a handful of powertripping nurses, not to mention spending some ill-fated days being human ventilators to ICU patients. Add to these the ever-present pressures of studying for exams and recitations. Being tired or "toxic" from a 24-hour duty will never be a valid excuse for a lousy case presentation or a failing grade in an exam. That is the medical clerkship that each doctor wannabe undergoes. It is the equivalent of an OJT (on the job training) that is required in other college courses prior to graduation. But, just imagine, a student going on OJT pays, perhaps, only a tenth of the tuition paid by a medical clerk for clerkship. But the former gets allowance for doing office work while the latter pays ten times more than the former just to be a slave in a hospital.

And the toxicities of clerkship goes on and on until the day/ night (depends on what post) before graduation day, when some students march down the aisle at PICC with raccoon eyes despite the makeup because they have come dead tired from duty. Good thing nobody fell off while going up the stage to claim his rolled piece of white paper telling him that, finally, his hardship from pushing stretchers in the hospital, from toxic consultant and residents, and from powertripping nurses, have borne fruit, may it be sweet tasting but bitterly bought.

And the President wants us, doctors, to cast all of those aside to work as medical transcriptionists? Did she think the whole exodus was just due to "low salaries"? If she did, then she has a shallow understanding of the nobility of the medical profession.

At least, my parents understands how much it took me to be what I am now. They would have asked me to drop my quest for that elusive chance to do residency training abroad, in favor of working as MT and earning to help the family during these hard times. If I trained and worked as MT, it could have meant more food in the dining table, more capital for our business and more money to pay-off piling debts. It could have meant an easier life at the soonest possible time. But my parents never did ask me to forsake my chosen career.

However, the President, in her seeming apathy and ignorance, has done otherwise. She seems to be belittling the country’s health professionals. Maybe she thinks the P434 increase in salaries of government hired health care professionals would be enough to stem the medical crisis we are having today. Why couldn’t she just think of a way to improve the health care services, so as to benefit the poor patients and the medical practitioners at the same time?

Maybe she is aware of the gravity of the medical hemorrhage today. But, I fear, she’d rather set a temporary solution for it so she could go back again to her busy work of turning Philippines into a nation of human answering machines and data recorders. After all, these are the two professions that has been raking in the money, and not the medical profession.

It’s just so sad that in a crisis, such as we have, the leader of the nation thinks it all boils down to money, money, and more money.