Wednesday, December 31, 2003

A quiet new year spent in Hull before I head to Barcelona next wednesday. I came back to do some work and the internet here was down for 2 days... (maybe I got more done!?) anyhow, extremely bored, no-one to talk to and not getting much work done. I find this lull in activity around xmas and new year very distressing. nothing to do and too much time to do nothing in. I have a report for my final year project due in a couple of weeks, and tonnes of work to do for the actual application that I'm developing, but still I find I have no urgency to do anything as I have another 2 weeks holiday. I work so much better during the term when I have no choice but to get on with it. tonight is new years eve and I plan a quiet night of food, guitar and chinese practice with Qi Ming who lives down the road.
happy new year to you.
John

After talking Swedish business and time management with Emily's dad PerOlaf in Varnamo I said goodbye to her and her brother Daniel and got on a train to Gothenburg, where Eden (who lives down my road here in Hull) met me from the Station and showed me to a hostel she had booked for me.

Gothenburg is a wonderful city, very compact but lots of open spaces as well. We visited Liseburg(?) park , which was all decked out with christmas lights, and as with all the christmas lights in Scandanavia they were tastefully white.

unfortunately it started to spit that evening and by morning it was a horribly drizzly day, I had decided to head to Oslo so I could see Alex before he went home, but I text Johannus, who I was going to be staying with in Oslo and he said that he wasn't going to be in Oslo intil the day after, Monday. I had already decided I was leaving Gothenburg because of the rain, so trekked to the bus station and took the bus to Oslo anyway. A snow storm hit us on the way, I have never seen so much snow, and was regularly amazed as the 60 mph bus changed lanes through a foot of thick snow. Obviously very used to it, as we still arrived on time. When Snow hits the UK and everything stops. I hope it snows here this year, my house mate Andrew from Malaysia is looking forward to it.

I stayed in the Perminalen in Oslo, in the heart next to Carl-Johannes Gate
, the central street. Very nice place, 28 quid, but only one night and there isn't much cheaper (14) I had heard, and it was booked up.

Oslo was great too, again very small, 500,000 but very nice, and full of snow. I think I preferred Oslo to the other cities I visited. Met Alex (NTU singapore), who I had not seen in a year and we went for a hot chocolate in a Jazz cafe-nice. Met with Johannus (ntu singapore, usm malaysia) the following morning, he drives an ambulance when he's not studying, and had promised to take me on a whistle-stop tour of the streets, unfortunately people were needing him in the ambulance, so had to put that plan on ice.
Took the train to Tonsberg and was met at the station by Magnus (Ibero, Mexico) had a fantastic two days around the area south of Oslo. Went to the end of the world (that's its name in Norwegian) and back again, which was awesome, blue, ice, shivering waters. Stayed with Magnus's mum in Tonsberg who's house opens out onto a beutiful river. Met Stena again, Magnus's sister who had come to Mexico to visit him. I met the rest of the family too whilst Magnus went to work at the local shop.

Magnus gave me a lift to the airport the next morning and I arrived back to the UK at 13.00 I think, on xmas eve. mum and dad picked me up and I enjoyed a relaxing christmas at home in Watford with the family. I got itchy feet very quickly and came back to Hull to get some of my project done, now back and the internet is down here in my house! So slightly frustrating, but I think I have aeverything I need. Here for new year, but no big plans. Back to Watford on Friday for Ted's birthday on Saturday. Looking forward to that and going out with Jon and Mike, Stuart, Iain, Lewis, Rachel, Sean, Karen, all the old school friends.

Went to a party at the Billingtons on Saturday, saw lots of people I havn't seen in 2 years, Tom's band Mohare still looking to make it big, they came to Hull Uni in October, but I didn't see anything about it unfortuantely, would have been good to see them again.

All is good. will apply to Edinburgh, Newcastle, Manchester for Bioinformatics Masters, this week I think- John

Connect the Dots

September 25, 2003
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN

The U.S. war on terrorism suffered a huge blow last week - not in Baghdad or Kabul, but on the beaches of Cancún.

Cancún was the site of the latest world trade talks, which fell apart largely because the U.S., the E.U. and Japan refused to give up the lavish subsidies they bestow on their farmers, making the prices of their cotton and agriculture so cheap that developing countries can't compete. This is a disaster because exporting food and textiles is the only way for most developing countries to grow. The Economist quoted a World Bank study that said a Cancún agreement, reducing tariffs and agrisubsidies, could have raised global income by $500 billion a year by 2015 - over 60 percent of which would go to poor countries and pull 144 million people out of poverty.

Sure, poverty doesn't cause terrorism - no one is killing for a raise. But poverty is great for the terrorism business because poverty creates humiliation and stifled aspirations and forces many people to leave their traditional farms to join the alienated urban poor in the
cities - all conditions that spawn terrorists.

I would bet any amount of money, though, that when it came to deciding the Bush team's position at Cancún, no thought was given to its impact on the war on terrorism. Wouldn't
it have been wise for the U.S. to take the initiative at Cancún, and offer to reduce our farm subsidies and textile tariffs, so some of the poorest countries, like Pakistan and Egypt, could raise their standards of living and sense of dignity, and also become better customers for U.S. goods? Yes, but that would be bad politics. It would mean
asking U.S. farmers to sacrifice the ridiculous subsidies they get from our federal government ($3 billion a year for 25,000 cotton farmers) that make it impossible for foreign farmers to sell here.

And one thing we know about this Bush war on terrorism: sacrifice is only for Army reservists and full-time soldiers. For the rest of us, it's guns and butter. When it
comes to the police and military sides of the war on terrorism, the Bushies behave like Viking warriors. But when it comes to the political and economic sacrifices and
strategies that are also required to fight this war successfully, they are cowardly wimps. That is why our war on terrorism is so one-dimensional and Pentagon-centric.
It's more like a hobby - something we do only until it runs into the Bush re-election agenda.

"If the sons of American janitors can go die in Iraq to keep us safe," says Robert Wright, author of "Nonzero," a book on global interdependence, "then American cotton
farmers, whose average net worth is nearly $1 million, can give up their subsidies to keep us safe. Opening our markets to farm products and textiles would be critical to
drawing many nations - including Muslim ones - more deeply into the interdependent web of global capitalism and ultimately democracy."

The U.S. and Europe, argues Clyde Prestowitz, the trade expert and author of "Rogue Nation," should actually shrink their farm subsidies unilaterally, even if developing
countries don't immediately reciprocate. "Such a move is essential," wrote Mr. Prestowitz on the YaleGlobal Web site, "not only as a matter of providing a badly needed boost to developing countries, but also because the failure [of Cancún] poses a serious threat to
the main hope of generating the economic growth necessary to lift developing countries out of poverty."

If only the Bush team connected the dots, it would see what a nutty war on terrorism it is fighting, explains Mr. Prestowitz. Here, he says, is the Bush war on terrorism: Preach free trade, but don't deliver on it, so Pakistani farmers become more impoverished. Then ask Congress to give a tax break for any American who wants to buy a gas-guzzling Humvee for business use and also ask Congress to resist any efforts to make Detroit increase gasoline mileage in new cars. All this means more U.S. oil imports from Saudi Arabia.

So then the Saudis have more dollars to give to their Wahhabi fundamentalist evangelists, who spend it by building religious schools in Pakistan. The Pakistani farmer we've put out of business with our farm subsidies then sends his sons to the Wahhabi school because it is tuition-free and offers a hot lunch. His sons grow up getting only a Koranic education, so they are totally unprepared for modernity, but they are taught one thing:
that America is the source of all their troubles. One of the farmer's sons joins Al Qaeda and is killed in Afghanistan by U.S. Special Forces, and we think we're winning the war on terrorism.

Fat chance.

Friday, December 19, 2003

I slept at 3am and was up again at 5.20 to catch the 6.20 train from Hull to London. At 6.19 I realised I had forgotten my passport. so ''jumped off the train just in time to go back and get it. went back to bed before getting the next train at 10. unfortunately I missed seeing Elina in London, as she went back to Finland, but I met with dino and had lunch with him. At home long enough to catch up with a few friends and family before heading off to Scandanavia.

Sweden is cold, but I was expecting colder. It gets light at 8am and dark at 3.30, so not that different from home either. I arrived in Stockholme at about 10pm after a two hour flight from Stanstead airport to Vesteras about 70 minutes east of Stockholme. I took a bus into the cente and Erika, who was also in Hall 1 with me in Singapore, met me from the bus. She is not studying at the moment and was visiting her dad, who lives on a small island to the east, only reachable by boat in the summer. As it is winter here now, a foot bridge is built across the water as the boats cannot cross if ice forms on the surface. Erika's dad is a scientist at Stockholm University and Kayak's to work, through the Baltic Sea every morning.

On Thursday I met up with Kat from Hull, who I hadn't seen in two years, her, myself and Erika went on a relaxing tram ride around stockholme before I got on a train at 13.00 to Varnamo in southern Sweden, where Emily met me from the station. Varnamo is quiet with not much going on, but it is nice to see Emily and her family and see how people live. Lots of christmas food here at the moment, i feel stuffed already.

The food I have really liked so far has been Janson's Temptation, with potatoes and anchovees (my mum has been making this for years, but I never realised that it was swedish). Caviar comes in a tube here, I really like that too. Glögg is a great christmas drink similar to Mulled wine, it comes in alcoholic and non alcoholic forms, both are very nice. good with almonds in too.

Alchohol can only be sold by the state owned company System Bolaget in Sweden. At most of these shops you take a ticket and wait for someone to serve you, you must be over 21 and the shops shut at 7pm. Bars and clubs can sell alcohol to over 18's. Home brew is popular, but owning a distillery for spirits is illegal. Snus is a popular tabacco here, even amongst young people who are notallowed to buy it until they are 18. It is rolled into a small ball and put under the upper lip.

Christmas is celebrated on the 24th December (christmas eve) here, which isa day of eating, presents and celebration with the family. Christmas day is spent with friends and people might go out, this is the opposite to the uk, where the 25th is the big day.

Everyone I have met has been exremely friendly here, which I expected after meeting so many nice Swedes travelling before.

Prices are about the same as the UK I think, some things a little cheaper, some a little more expensive. The swedish train company offers Sista minuten tickets, (last minute) from the web site at good prices. only available in Swedish, if you click the english button they disapear!

Tomorrow I am heading to meet Eden from Hull in Gothenburg, where I will spend two days, do some shopping, before taking a train to Oslo in Norway. All is going well, I like Sweden, everything is clean and nicely designed, a nice place to live I think. John

Friday, December 12, 2003

Hello,

only exam finished on the first day, and went ok-lah. not so good. marks for japanese came back, two 1sts and two 2:1, ok but I would have liked to have got higher for japanese to keep my marks high in computer science...

Going home on Monday by train, then meeting Dino (malaysia) and Elina (finland/uni malaysia) in London before Elina goes home and Dino goes back to Birmingham, where he is studying.

Going to Stockohlme in Sweden on tuesday. visiting Swedish friends I had met over the past few year (Erikkam, Kat, Joakim, Emily, Eden) and then off to varnamo and Gottenburg before going to Oslo in Norway to meet up with Magnus from Mexico and Alexander, Johannes, et. al from Singapore and malaysia.

back in the uk on xmas eve, for christmas with my family. Going to Barcelona for two days in January 7th-9th, to meet up with Marie-Jose and Adriana from Mexico too.

Hasta luego,

John