Friday, July 30, 2004

So unless you've never read this blog or have never spent a moment in conversation with me, you know that I am not the biggest fan of the current Administration, and am a big JKerry supporter. I actually have this humongous plot post planned explaining why I do not support the reelection of the current Administration, and why I support JKerry. I've started jotting down notes. Seriously. It's that important to me that I express how I feel and why I think the way I do.

But now is not the time or place for that. I'm tired. I stayed up late watching the convention and having an awesome discussion with my roommate. Seriously. Nothing energizes and gets me going more than a good discussion on politics, values, religion, etc. Awesome. As for the speech, I thought it was good. I thought JK really threw it down, and I agreed with a lot of what he said. I think my favorite part of the evening was when his daughters spoke- those girls are great speakers. Overall, the evening made me want to work even harder to elect Senator Kerry.

Oh man. August begins Sunday, and you know what that means. August and September are going to be my HARD CORE studying months. It's on like donkey kong folks. So get ready for Hannah the Studying Machine.

 

Tuesday, July 27, 2004

It's been a while since I blogged. Why? Well, simply put, because I have nothing new to say.

I've been having some fun weekends. Lots of hanging out with church friends (by the way, I love my church out here, and my church friends. They are awesome. Praise God.) Tried to go watch Bourne Supremacy Friday night and it was sold out. Buuuuuummer. I'll try to watch it again this weekend. Either that or Harold and Kumar go to White Castle!!!!

Exciting couple weeks ahead. Might have some visitors, going home in two weeks, more LSAT studying. Can't believe the summer is half over. CRAZY. Where has July gone???

Watched the convention last night. Gonna watch it the rest of the week (roommate willing). I'll probably be watching the Republication convention too-- just with a lot more yelling.

 

Wednesday, July 21, 2004

Today is going to be a long day at work, and I realized yesterday in class just how much I need to get my ass studying. Which is hard, because when I have a long day at work my ass just doesn't want to study. Big problem here.

Anyone want to buy me a digital camera? Or a mini Ipod?

I'm so sad. Everyone and their momma is leaving at work, abandoning me for greener pastures.

Props to Julie Graham, who sent me a signed copy of Dav1d Sedaris' new book, with my name and a message in it!! I'm very excited to start reading it.

I just figured out why I'm so sleepy. Skipped my morning caffeine fix. Going to go remedy that right now.

Monday, July 19, 2004

To all my friends out there who are Asian, APA or aZn, read this and then get the heck out there and do something.
 
Asian Population Lacks Political Clout

Mon Jul 19,10:37 AM ET

Add Elections - AP to My Yahoo!
By GENARO C. ARMAS, Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Asian Americans are the country's second fastest-growing minority behind Hispanics. But unlike Latinos, they have virtually no national political clout. 

Eager to change that, activists and political leaders are relying on tried-and-true methods like voter registration drives and educational efforts to get more people to the polls.

Yet when it comes to courting Asian voters, political parties appear to be more influenced by some simple math, courtesy of the Census Bureau (news - web sites):

_There were more than 9 million Asians in the United States of voting age in July 2003, up 1 million from three years earlier. Among minorities though, Asians lag behind the 26.3 million Hispanics and 25.7 million blacks of voting age.

_People of Asian-Pacific Islander background comprised just 2 percent of voters in the 2000 election, compared with 10 percent for blacks and 5 percent for Hispanics.

_Nationally, Asians represent just 4 percent of the U.S. population, and there is a large immigrant segment in the United States who aren't citizens and therefore can't vote.

"Asian votes should be courted, not taken for granted," pleads Cao K. O, executive director of the Asian American Federation in New York.

"At the same time, politicians and the political parties don't know how to court the Asian vote and many in the community do not know enough about the political process," he says. "There's no easy answer."

David Lee of the Chinese American Voters Education Committee in San Francisco calls it a cycle that "feeds into itself." Parties historically haven't sought Asians' vote and spend little money to get them registered.

Census data shows the nation's Asian population rose 12.6 percent between 2000 and 2003, behind only the 13 percent increase among Latinos. Hispanics tend to lean Democratic though their votes are increasingly being targeted by Republicans.

But deciphering how Asians vote can be tricky given the lack of detailed study in the area, says political scientist Paul Watanabe at the University of Massachusetts. Exit polling in 2000 found 55 percent of Asians backing Democrat Al Gore (news - web sites) and 44 percent for President Bush (news - web sites). Watanabe cautions against reading too much into such figures because data on Asians are often based on interviews with a small number of voters.

Drawing on rough estimates, Lee, O and others say there appear to be a roughly equal number of Asians registered as Democrat or Republican, plus a large contingent of independents. In theory, that means Asians could be pivotal in deciding a tight presidential campaign.

Yet another factor that may be affecting the influence of Asians is that the states in which they constitute the largest shares of the population, such as Hawaii, California and New York, aren't considered toss-ups for the election.

Of those states generally considered battlegrounds, Oregon, Nevada and Washington have the largest Asian population, though they still make up no more than 6 percent of the state's total population in each case.

Several nonpartisan groups have targeted those battleground states to get more Asians registered to vote.

But the efforts can also be stunted by the large number of different languages among those Asians who speak something other than English. That means more money to pay for education efforts or registration drives because ads and materials have to be printed in many languages.

"It can be very costly, very quickly," Lee says. 

S.B. Woo, a former Democratic lieutenant governor of Delaware, heads a group called the "80-20 Initiative" that hopes to garner 80 percent of the Asian vote nationally this fall behind one presidential candidate, regardless of the party.

Woo says that would transform Asians into a critical national voting bloc.

Watanabe is critical of the strategy. Efforts should "principally be concentrated at the local level than attempting to influence politics at the presidential level, where Asian Americans because of their numbers have the least decisive impact."

Counters Woo, who is now an independent: "You play the hand you are dealt with."
"To have one minority ignored by the political establishment is not healthy."

Friday, July 16, 2004

I think I got fat this week. Sunday I ate a lot at the BBQ. Monday I got taken to Pizza Paradiso and ate a lot. Tuesday my coworkers bought pizza and I ate a lot. Wednesday I went to Jaleo with Jess and ate a lot. Yesterday I ate lunch with Noel and Charlene and ate a lot. Tonight I'm going to Tequila Grill with my nudz girls and eating a lot. Yes. Hannah is a fatty.
 
Hey! All of a sudden blogger has all these cool features. Fonts, uploading, text color. Cool.
 
Plan for the weekend is studying like crazy. Perhaps catching HP2 again?
 
Bought a ticket yesterday to spend labor day in Boston!! It was either Boston or North Dakota, but tickets to North Dakota are SO EXPENSIVE. So I'll just have to send a gift and keep Katie and Kevin in my prayers. But I am really excited about Boston-- Jane, Suki, Suha, Dank, Perfesser and me. Reuuuuuunion. Hollla.
 
Alright back to work. But I'm going to play with these new features for a bit. WOW

 
 

Wednesday, July 14, 2004

Thanks to everyone who called, wrote etc. yesterday! I felt very very loved. Yup, I turned 23 yesterday. Crazy. I still feel very very young. But as Jessica Simpson once so eloquently put it-- "I'm 23, which means I'm almost 25, which is almost mid-20s!"

Tuesday, July 13, 2004

Lately, I've been so busy having fun I haven't had time to study!! It's really tragic. Saturday I went to little Ella's 1st birthday party, and Sunday we had a big pool party/BBQ for church peeps. Yesterday I had dinner at Pizza Paradiso with Joy and DP, and then ice cream at Ben and Jerry's. Props to roommate Joy for hooking a girl up with good food all weekend!!

All this celebrating, just for me? I feel loved.

I have SO MUCH work to get done this week at work and for LSAT stuff it's making me a little dizzy. So enough blogging. Newletters, updates, invitations await!

Friday, July 09, 2004

People are idiots:

Republicans dip freedom fries in "W Ketchup", not Heinz

WASHINGTON, (AFP) - Americans allergic to the subtle Democratic flavor of Heinz ketchup can now plunge their "freedom fries" into a 100-percent guaranteed, patriotic alternative: "W Ketchup."

"You don't support Democrats. Why should your ketchup?" says the W Ketchup Internet site wketchup.com, which promises a totally US-made condiment, right down to the bottle.

Heinz ketchup is an institution on American dining tables.

But the taste has soured a little for Republicans because Heinz empire heiress Teresa Heinz-Kerry is married to John Kerry (news - web sites), the Democrat hoping to unseat George W. Bush -- also known simply as "W" -- on November 2.

W Ketchup insists its initial stands for Washington, as in first president George Washington, whose face adorns its bottle beneath the Stars and Stripes.

The new-comer makes no attempt to hide its leanings, even sporting a poetic homage to Republican icon Ronald Reagan (news - web sites), who died June 5 at 93, on its Internet site.

"G5s (Gulfstream jets) or GIs? A Tough Choice," W. Ketchup tells prospective customers.

"Choose Heinz and you're supporting Teresa and her husband's Gulfstream Jet, and liberal causes such as Kerry for President," it warns.

"When you choose W Ketchup, you also support the Freedom Alliance Scholarship Fund, which provides scholarships to the children of our brave heroes who have fallen in battle."

Heinz has 57 varieties, but also 57 foreign factories, it claims.

"W Ketchup comes in one flavor: American."

"We are simply a group of friends who came up with the idea at a barbecue in upstate New York a few months ago. We are all investors," said W Ketchup chief operating officer Susie Oliver.

Thousands of bottles had been sold in the three and a half weeks of business, she said. Orders are taken in batches of four bottles for 12 dollars plus shipping.

Testimonials on the company's Internet site are glowing for the Republican-style ketchup.

"Thank you for giving us a delicious American alternative to the standard Heinz Ketchup. Henry Heinz may have been a great American, but I have absolutely no interest in supporting The Kerry's anti-American causes," wrote "S.S" of Akron, Ohio.

Heinz says it is non-partisan, stressing that all the Heinz family trusts together hold less than four percent of the stock. Neither Teresa Heinz, nor her husband, have any role in management, it stresses.

The ketchup war is only the latest political skirmish to be fought on the battlegound of American menus.

Many Americans, angered by France's refusal to back the war in Iraq (news - web sites), switched last year to calling their French fries "freedom fries."

Star Spangled Ice Cream was also launched last year as a conservative alternative to the produce of Ben and Gerry's, the ecology-leaning company whose founders Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield had supported Democrat Dennis Kucinich (news - web sites)'s unsuccessful campaign for the presidential nomination.

Among the flavors offered by Star Spangled Ice Cream: "I Hate The French VANILLA (Real American Vanilla, NOT French Vanilla)" and "Nutty Environmentalist (Rich Buttery Ice Cream with Roasted Pecans.


Anyone who calls French Fries "freedom fries," or thinks they're more patriotic or thinks they're showing their patriotism by buying "W" ketchup cannot be my friend. The amount of effort people put in to doing things like providing a conservative alternative to ketchup or ice cream astounds me. Like that really matters. Instead of making your patriotic alternative brand ketchup, perhaps you should use that energy to, I don't know, volunteer, help those less fortunate, have a voter registration drive etc.
ARGH. I know I should just laugh at this ridiculousness, but it seriously annoys me.

Thursday, July 08, 2004

I am exciiiiited about the Kerry/Edwards ticket. I'm excited about any ticket that has a chance to beat Bush. But one thing this announcement has confirmed for me is that I am the biggest nerd. There's something about the whole political process, especially the presidential race, that I just love. I think it's so exciting. From now till November I'm going to be the biggest news whore. I'm that girl who reads all the articles and profiles and watches all the debates. Nerdiest of all: I LOVE watching the conventions. Well, the Dem. convention. The other convention ends up making me angry and yelling at the TV. But I love the enthusiasm, the speeches, the process of the conventions. Man, I'd LOVE to be at Boston this year. Oh, and another reason I love my party-almost 40 percent of our delegates are minorities. That's cool. Now if only we could get more minorities in power. That's just something I'll have to work on. Anyways, I'm a nerd. And I love being in DC right now.

If anyone can give me tips on how to balance studying for LSAT's and working, please let me know.

Also, happy birthday to Miss Gela Park!!!! It's been a while since I've seen her, but I still love her. Keep in real in the motherland, baby.

Tuesday, July 06, 2004

I love three day weekends! I slept, watched movies, studied and had a an all around great fourth of july weekend.

Movie Reviews: On Friday night I went to see Dodgeball. It was ridiculous, but extremely funny. I dug the cast, and I thought the dodgeball scenes were excellent. Not as funny as some of the other Frat Pack movies, but funny nonetheless.
Yesterday I did my patriotic duty and went to see Fahrenheit 911. It was extremely interesting and thought provoking. I thought the first half was weak and the second half was excellent. I think that Michael Moore is often overzealous and over the top, but you gotta admire a man who really believes in something, and then does something about it. I think the movie would have been better off with less commentary from him, letting the connections and "facts" he uncovers speak for themselves. I found myself turned off, and kind of annoyed at his sarcastic comments, and thought he took the Bush bashing too far, even for me. But when he moved past his wild theories, and got to talking to real people and the war's effect, that's when it was excellent. Talking to soldiers and real citizens, looking at enlistment efforts, reading the Patriot Act, and the soldier's mother from Michigan-- those parts made the movie worth it. I would recommend this movie, because even as you scoff and get annoyed at some of his theories and tactics, some of the things he brings up make you stop for a second and really think. And that's more than most movies out there ever do.

sidenote-- Is anyone else disturbed by the fact that the U.S. Senate is 96% percent white? The only minority senators are the two Asian-American senators from Hawaii. There is not a single African-American, Hispanic American, Native American or mainland Asian-American senator out there. WTF??

Concert Review: On Saturday night, Sylvia and I went to the steps of the Capital and watched the dress rehearsal of "The Capital Fourth" concert they always hold. It was hosted by Barry Bostwick (the mayor from Spin City) and performers included Yolanda Adams, Vince Gill, Amy Grant and CLAY AIKENS. Vince Gill and Amy Grant were okay, Yolanda Adams was awesome, and CLAY AIKENS was GREAT. He just sings so well. Also, the National Symphony Orchestra performed. Overall, it was a great night of great music, made even better by the fact that it was a completely clear and beautiful night, and we were sitting right under the Capital building. Awesome.

I gotta say, Washington DC is a great place to be over Fourth of July. And I love my country, and all the freedom and diversity it offers.

Kerry/Edwards in 2004!!!!!

Friday, July 02, 2004

Friday thank goodness. Long weekend THANK GOODNESS!! I'm going to do a whole lot of playing, relaxing, sleeping, lounging. Good times. I want to catch Fahrenheit 911 and Spiderman 2. Fourth of July fireworks of course, and I'm contemplating braving the disgusting crowds and trying to see the Capital Fourth thing. Why? Cause my man Mister Clay Aikens is going to be performing. Now how can I pass that up?

Chopped my hair last night. It's a bit lower than my chin. I feel like a weight has been lifted off my head.

So I read my sister's away message yesterday, and it said eating In N Out and watching Spiderman 2 with Minsoo. And I was jealous. I want InNOut!!!!