let me hear your voice tonight (
alexseanchai) wrote2011-10-31 09:43 pm
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So
hells_half_acre is doing the five-questions meme. I'm not asking anybody questions, because I suck at coming up with questions, but I asked her to ask me some. Et voila.
1. What is your favourite thing about the country/state/city you live in? What is your least favourite?
I love the US Constitution and Bill of Rights. I hate what people insist the US Constitution is, apparently without ever glancing at what the damn paper actually says.
2. You are very vocal about human rights and LGBT issues (yay!) - do you ever find yourself getting discouraged (like a form of activist-burnout)? Or do you manage to stay positive about the future despite any and all setbacks?
Oh hells to the yes, to the first one. The other evening Mom had a fit about the trans girl who joined Girl Scouts; this is why my parents don't know I'm genderqueer. And I think it was the Ms. Magazine Blog that had these statistics most recently: forty percent of the world's population doesn't have decent sanitation. An overlapping set of a billion people don't have clean water. Fucking depressing. We can fix it, I know we can, but it depends on a thousand social and economic factors and sometimes it just seems like it's too damn big a mountain to climb.
3. If you could go on holiday (or to live) anywhere in the world, where would you go? Why?
I'm torn between Australia and Canada. In my head, both places have all the upsides of the US and none of the downsides. Of course, Canada's cold all the time, and Australia has more extreme seasons.
4. What is your favourite smell, sound, or taste?
Gah, you're making me choose? Right now I'd have to go with Celtic music. "I've a heart to let and no tenant yet..."
5. If you could meet anyone living today, who would it be and why? What would you say to them?
Probably President Obama. Thank him for finally growing a spine and doing things that don't require legislative action, and ask him where the hell that was when it wasn't a year till election day.
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1. What is your favourite thing about the country/state/city you live in? What is your least favourite?
I love the US Constitution and Bill of Rights. I hate what people insist the US Constitution is, apparently without ever glancing at what the damn paper actually says.
2. You are very vocal about human rights and LGBT issues (yay!) - do you ever find yourself getting discouraged (like a form of activist-burnout)? Or do you manage to stay positive about the future despite any and all setbacks?
Oh hells to the yes, to the first one. The other evening Mom had a fit about the trans girl who joined Girl Scouts; this is why my parents don't know I'm genderqueer. And I think it was the Ms. Magazine Blog that had these statistics most recently: forty percent of the world's population doesn't have decent sanitation. An overlapping set of a billion people don't have clean water. Fucking depressing. We can fix it, I know we can, but it depends on a thousand social and economic factors and sometimes it just seems like it's too damn big a mountain to climb.
3. If you could go on holiday (or to live) anywhere in the world, where would you go? Why?
I'm torn between Australia and Canada. In my head, both places have all the upsides of the US and none of the downsides. Of course, Canada's cold all the time, and Australia has more extreme seasons.
4. What is your favourite smell, sound, or taste?
Gah, you're making me choose? Right now I'd have to go with Celtic music. "I've a heart to let and no tenant yet..."
5. If you could meet anyone living today, who would it be and why? What would you say to them?
Probably President Obama. Thank him for finally growing a spine and doing things that don't require legislative action, and ask him where the hell that was when it wasn't a year till election day.
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Victoria is a beautiful place and quite mild year-round. Summers rarely climb into the 80s (℉) and winters are usually only below freezing for a handful of days each year. It's not nearly as wet as Vancouver; Van tends to get rain while Vic gets drizzle. (The downside is that both are quite pricey and have two-season weather: six months of sun followed by six months of grey.)
Not that I would try and sway your decision, of course. ^_^; Australia would be an equally fine choice, especially given the large numbers of mind-blowingly amazing Australian folks who hang around DW.
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Yeah, immigration law sucks (IMNSHO). I think it's telling that of all my time spent in different countries, the only people I met who appeared concerned about my compliance with immigration laws were the folks at the border. Most other folks seem shocked that Immigration is a Thing, including, amongst others, prospective employers.