I was rooting for Chelsea yesterday. As an Arsenal fan, I would normally not. Even for neutrals, it was difficult supporting a team bankrolled by a Russian oil tycoon. They are not a glamour side, but in fact are the worst Chelsea team for years.
Nonetheless, it is their story that moved me. Their triumph over two of Europe's best teams in Barcelona and Bayern is a testament to human spirit and teamwork. They showed that faith indeed can move mountains. A lesser side would have capitulated a long while ago, but they stood together and with a bit of luck, defeated the odds to scale the pinnacle.
For many of the old guard, such as Didier Drogba, Petr Cech, and Frank Lampard, the final was the culmination of years of hard toil. They had gone through seven managers since Jose Mourinho, but time and time again the European Cup eluded them, often in dramatic circumstances. But they persevered and deserve the fruits of their work, especially Drogba and Cech's outstanding performances.
Yesterday, I attended the Joint minority bar judicial internship program's orientation for this year's intern class. I remember taking part just a year ago as a student intern in last year's class. At that time, I was like the others yesterday - mystified about the law but eager to learn. This year, I have come back as an alum and am glad to see the new faces who will continue to make the program strong.
My experience last summer has led me to where I am now. Through the program, I met Yang and learned about AABANY. I joined the association before the summer and have actively participated in its programs, such as helping to plan this year's program. I also met Emily, with whom I share a similar background. That led me to working with her at Success and becoming interested in education reform.
The journey remains long and there are many opportunities and challenges ahead. I will board the next train tomorrow. Where that leads me is unknown, but I must be the conductor of my own route. As I close one chapter for another, I will not forget the journey thus far - everything that I have learned and everyone whom I have met. One day, I hope to find myself like the old guard of Chelsea yesterday, holding aloft a grand prize after years of hard work. For now, I content myself with knowing that my investment last summer in the JMBJIP is coming to a full circle.
Sunday, 20 May 2012
Saturday, 12 May 2012
Falling Out with Josh Beckett
I still remember Thursday night, Oct. 18, 2007, with the Red Sox on the brink of elimination in the ALCS by the Cleveland Indians, Josh Beckett took the game into his own hands and delivered a clutch pitching performance that turned around the postseason. He, more than any other player, was responsible for the Red Sox's seventh title. I, as well as many New Englanders, knew we had a great pitcher who was the paragon of every boy's sports hero: someone who can produce in the clutch and carry a team on his own.
Fast forward five years and that Josh Beckett is nowhere to be found. With the Red Sox dead last in the AL East and his ERA south of 5, Beckett turned in a whole stinker Thursday night against the Indians. The Fenway Park crowd booed vociferously. It's not just Beckett's performance that rankled me and fans - it's his attitude. Still recovering from a reputation tattered last September through leading the club's "beer and chicken ring", Beckett did not help his case by golfing on a day off when he was supposed to be healing a muscle problem. That was extremely poor judgment, which he compounded by defending his choice to do as he wills on his days off. For me and every other fan, that attitude speaks of arrogance and stupidity. He should know that fans view the situation differently, and hold the players to a higher standard. The team's performance made the situation more tense. To many fans, Beckett was someone who was so taken by himself and did not care about the team. That went over the line. The team continues to defend Beckett, but for how much longer?
I once revered Beckett for 2007 and what he gave the Red Sox. But I can no longer. His actions speak of unpardonable lack of judgment and arrogance for himself over the good of the team. No athlete, however talented, can get away with that. Beckett has forgotten the number one insuperable rule in sports: talent will eventually fade, and it's attitude that distinguishes the greatest from the good. Athletes, paid so much at a time when others are struggling to make ends meet, are not excepted from the rules of good character. Beckett has lost it, and character lost is rarely regained.
Fast forward five years and that Josh Beckett is nowhere to be found. With the Red Sox dead last in the AL East and his ERA south of 5, Beckett turned in a whole stinker Thursday night against the Indians. The Fenway Park crowd booed vociferously. It's not just Beckett's performance that rankled me and fans - it's his attitude. Still recovering from a reputation tattered last September through leading the club's "beer and chicken ring", Beckett did not help his case by golfing on a day off when he was supposed to be healing a muscle problem. That was extremely poor judgment, which he compounded by defending his choice to do as he wills on his days off. For me and every other fan, that attitude speaks of arrogance and stupidity. He should know that fans view the situation differently, and hold the players to a higher standard. The team's performance made the situation more tense. To many fans, Beckett was someone who was so taken by himself and did not care about the team. That went over the line. The team continues to defend Beckett, but for how much longer?
I once revered Beckett for 2007 and what he gave the Red Sox. But I can no longer. His actions speak of unpardonable lack of judgment and arrogance for himself over the good of the team. No athlete, however talented, can get away with that. Beckett has forgotten the number one insuperable rule in sports: talent will eventually fade, and it's attitude that distinguishes the greatest from the good. Athletes, paid so much at a time when others are struggling to make ends meet, are not excepted from the rules of good character. Beckett has lost it, and character lost is rarely regained.
Sunday, 6 May 2012
The Story of May Fourth and Chen Guangcheng
May Fourth is a significant yet often misunderstood day in China. Today, people know it as "Youth Day" when teenagers and students get half day off school. The origin of the day, however, was the May Fourth movement that culminated in famous intellectual demonstrations in Beijing on May 4, 1919. That history, like most history in China, has been told differently and some might say misrepresented, by the Chinese Communist Party and official views. Chen Guangcheng's story happening today in fact parallels the true idea of what May Fourth was about.
May Fourth, as it should be remembered, was the story of an intellectual rebellion. The connection to students remain because many of them, some of whom studied in the universities in the West, led the voices that culminated in May Fourth. They rebelled against the inequities of the day: a weak, unresponsive national government in Beijing; a country divided by warlords and incapable of solving great social problems; and a backwards culture that was dragging back China's progress into the Twentieth Century. China's suffering at the Versailles Treaty, despite contemporary accounts, played little role in the intellectuals' frustration.
That clash of ideas was what underscored May Fourth. Intellectuals of all stripes and persuasions came to voice their dissatisfaction with the country and proposed ideas for change. The times provided the opportunity for students to voice themselves and their dissent with authority. One of the ideas that attracted attention was Marx-Leninism, that China should follow the Russian Revolution that had just happened up north. But Marxism was not the only idea or the main idea behind the movement, contrary to what official history relates. May Fourth was about many ideas coming and clashing, rather than one idea triumphing.
Chen Guangcheng fits within the ideals behind May Fourth. His role in pointing out the inequities that exist in China today and daring act of fleeing to the American embassy are as audacious and ground-breaking as those of the intellectuals who led May Fourth. He, like many of them, is voicing displeasure at problems in the country and how the politicians were fostering them. His act of dissent - some may call foolhardy while others may call defiant - is what May Fourth is about. Celebrating May Fourth as a mere youth day betrays the true origin of what's it's about and its contemporary significance - and does more injustice to people like Chen Guangcheng. The Chinese Communist Party is fine with that, but what about you?
May Fourth, as it should be remembered, was the story of an intellectual rebellion. The connection to students remain because many of them, some of whom studied in the universities in the West, led the voices that culminated in May Fourth. They rebelled against the inequities of the day: a weak, unresponsive national government in Beijing; a country divided by warlords and incapable of solving great social problems; and a backwards culture that was dragging back China's progress into the Twentieth Century. China's suffering at the Versailles Treaty, despite contemporary accounts, played little role in the intellectuals' frustration.
That clash of ideas was what underscored May Fourth. Intellectuals of all stripes and persuasions came to voice their dissatisfaction with the country and proposed ideas for change. The times provided the opportunity for students to voice themselves and their dissent with authority. One of the ideas that attracted attention was Marx-Leninism, that China should follow the Russian Revolution that had just happened up north. But Marxism was not the only idea or the main idea behind the movement, contrary to what official history relates. May Fourth was about many ideas coming and clashing, rather than one idea triumphing.
Chen Guangcheng fits within the ideals behind May Fourth. His role in pointing out the inequities that exist in China today and daring act of fleeing to the American embassy are as audacious and ground-breaking as those of the intellectuals who led May Fourth. He, like many of them, is voicing displeasure at problems in the country and how the politicians were fostering them. His act of dissent - some may call foolhardy while others may call defiant - is what May Fourth is about. Celebrating May Fourth as a mere youth day betrays the true origin of what's it's about and its contemporary significance - and does more injustice to people like Chen Guangcheng. The Chinese Communist Party is fine with that, but what about you?
Monday, 9 April 2012
Yesterday's Boston Globe articles
1. Campaign Finances: Fund-raising game upended in 2012 race
What hath Citizens United wrought? It will take time, but not that much, to find out whether money has incorrigibly corrupted our political process.
2. Student Loans: Senior citizens continue to bear burden of student loans
We are a nation indebted into debt. For now, we need to revise the bankruptcy code to allow discharge of student loans beyond "undue hardship." But the rising and unaffordable higher education system is at the root.
What hath Citizens United wrought? It will take time, but not that much, to find out whether money has incorrigibly corrupted our political process.
2. Student Loans: Senior citizens continue to bear burden of student loans
Kofi Annan's efforts are laudable, but does anyone believe Assad would abide by the ceasefire?
4. Gender: Is there really a gender war?
I agree - there really isn't, nor should be, a war between the genders. Framing the question as justice versus injustice is a better way to go, but it's harder because it's more abstract and less emotional.
5. Supreme Court: Civil liberties, skewed by the Supreme Court
I agree - Florence was a horrible decision and showed how out of touch nine unelected judges can be from actual human experience. I fear, especially if the Court strikes down the mandate in June in name of "economic liberty," that we are returning to the pre-1937 Lochner era when economic substantive due process reigned while civil liberties were hardly protected.
6. Church Restoration: A story of rebirth, ending still to come
Wonderful. Enough said.
7. Wages and Labor: Wages haven’t kept pace with recovery, study finds
This is unfortunate, and it will only further squeeze the middle class. Corporate coffers are up, while ordinary Americans' savings accounts remain flat. Is this trend sustainable?
8. Democracy and the Internet: How democracies clamped down on the Internet
This is troubling, and reminds us how easy it is to clamp down on dissent and uncomfortable ideas in the name of security. Do not take free expression for granted.
I loved watching the Stooges while growing up. I, too, think they do not get the respect they deserve. But this article and the numerous allusions to Buddhism confuse me.
10. Baseball Players: Are fat baseball players a problem?
Of course they are. Fitness is essential for any sport. Look at the September 2011 Red Sox for proof.
11. Bookstores: 10.5 ways local bookstores beat Amazon
I always shop at the Brookline Booksmith whenever I visit Boston. There are so many ways that local bookstores beat Amazon and B&N.
12. Animals: Pete the Moose: What really happened
A great tale of man and his enduring longing for a connection with nature. RIP Pete.
13. Historical Reenactments: For Patriots Day, a full reenactment of Parker’s Revenge
It's good to see these forgotten events get their due. One day they will make it into our history textbooks, either as their history - of our forefathers - or our history.
Sunday, 11 March 2012
Spring Break Thoughts
Has it really been almost four months since I last posted? And almost two months since the new year (of the Dragon) and when the spring semester started? The 2L spring is going by so fast that I hardly found time to take a breath. When spring break finally arrived yesterday, I felt at a loss because for the first time in ages, I did not have pressing things to get done.
Anyway, taking some time away from the law (as much as I could) and from New York City has been salubrious. I felt the peace and energizing spirit as I stepped off the LIRR at Garden City station. I jogged, free from time and the cars whizzing by, down the broad boulevards from Garden City to Manhasset. I finally saw my family. Today, I indulged in a concert with Haydn and Beethoven - much welcomed after weeks immersed in the law.
I hope this weekend will bring me some renewal and new purpose in making this semester and year fulfilling. There is much to do and many to encounter. I hope I will arrive back refreshed and more committed to my goals and principles. For break, I am catching up on reading Steven Brill's Class Warfare, a book about education reform and featuring my organization. It's worth a read, for all of us who are concerned about and interested in the next generation of Americans.
Anyway, taking some time away from the law (as much as I could) and from New York City has been salubrious. I felt the peace and energizing spirit as I stepped off the LIRR at Garden City station. I jogged, free from time and the cars whizzing by, down the broad boulevards from Garden City to Manhasset. I finally saw my family. Today, I indulged in a concert with Haydn and Beethoven - much welcomed after weeks immersed in the law.
I hope this weekend will bring me some renewal and new purpose in making this semester and year fulfilling. There is much to do and many to encounter. I hope I will arrive back refreshed and more committed to my goals and principles. For break, I am catching up on reading Steven Brill's Class Warfare, a book about education reform and featuring my organization. It's worth a read, for all of us who are concerned about and interested in the next generation of Americans.
Thursday, 24 November 2011
Many Reasons to be Thankful
I promised that 2011, the Year of the Rabbit, would be a vintage year and when I will take the great leap forward (mind the no capitalization). As the year draws to a close and the time to reflect beckons, I can relate so many things I am thankful for. Especially in a time of national and international uncertainty, such blessings should be cherished.
1. Changing law schools. It was a difficult decision to leave behind many friends and memories at Emory and Atlanta, a place which I truly enjoyed. The choice had to be made and the bargain has worked thus far, especially for my professional growth.
2. A unique summer. I had the opportunity to take part in two summer experiences after my 1L year. They are both instrumental for my future career and I thoroughly enjoyed both. My highlight was bringing a basket of farm fresh blueberries to court chambers.
3. Nonprofit experiences. I had wonderful supervisors whom I met and developed relationships with through networking. It puts much joy to contribute my legal and outreach skills to causes that matter to our communities.
4. Penn. I found my time meeting up with Penn friends and fellow alumni quite satisfying. Perhaps it's the two years that have elapsed or the memories that remain - I hope to build on the connections.
5. AABANY. It was a blessing to join and work with and learn from the talented attorneys at AABANY. I am happy to contribute my time and skills to the organization.
6. Classic rock music. Listening to the Beatles, Beach Boys, the Who, etc. saved my sanity during the study of the law. Because I don't get much of modern music, I am thankful for the classics.
7. A trip to California. It was for a law firm interview but done over my birthday. I got to enjoy the sunny weather and beaches in SoCal and did not want to come back.
8. Time to do so much. Time has never become a more scarce commodity during 2L year but I am glad to find enough to do most of what I am passionate about. Reaching out beyond law school is so often overlooked.
9. Family and friends. Nuff 'Ced.
It's time to build on these blessings and leave this year on a high (there are still two months left, properly). For now, time to enjoy pecan pie, the rare great weather in New York, and football...
1. Changing law schools. It was a difficult decision to leave behind many friends and memories at Emory and Atlanta, a place which I truly enjoyed. The choice had to be made and the bargain has worked thus far, especially for my professional growth.
2. A unique summer. I had the opportunity to take part in two summer experiences after my 1L year. They are both instrumental for my future career and I thoroughly enjoyed both. My highlight was bringing a basket of farm fresh blueberries to court chambers.
3. Nonprofit experiences. I had wonderful supervisors whom I met and developed relationships with through networking. It puts much joy to contribute my legal and outreach skills to causes that matter to our communities.
4. Penn. I found my time meeting up with Penn friends and fellow alumni quite satisfying. Perhaps it's the two years that have elapsed or the memories that remain - I hope to build on the connections.
5. AABANY. It was a blessing to join and work with and learn from the talented attorneys at AABANY. I am happy to contribute my time and skills to the organization.
6. Classic rock music. Listening to the Beatles, Beach Boys, the Who, etc. saved my sanity during the study of the law. Because I don't get much of modern music, I am thankful for the classics.
7. A trip to California. It was for a law firm interview but done over my birthday. I got to enjoy the sunny weather and beaches in SoCal and did not want to come back.
8. Time to do so much. Time has never become a more scarce commodity during 2L year but I am glad to find enough to do most of what I am passionate about. Reaching out beyond law school is so often overlooked.
9. Family and friends. Nuff 'Ced.
It's time to build on these blessings and leave this year on a high (there are still two months left, properly). For now, time to enjoy pecan pie, the rare great weather in New York, and football...
Sunday, 11 September 2011
Coming to Age after 9/11
Today is a solemn moment for all of us to remember and reflect. While I did not directly observe the events of that day, I attended high school only a few blocks from the Twin Towers. I remembered the confusion that all of us felt as Stuyvesant administrators and teachers led us walking north to 59th street, and then told us to find way back home (to Brooklyn) on our own. It was a terrifying time, and I felt I was thrust into the middle of a gigantic moment when I barely turned 14.
Ten years later, I find myself a more knowledgeable and responsive citizen. I realize that my education and life growing up would have been different had 9/11 not occurred. But in a sorts, it made me more engaged with what is going on home and abroad. I trace my current fascination with current events and geopolitics from reading and following 9/11 and the aftermath. This sense of responsiveness I carry with me as I continue my growth as a lawyer and citizen.
But 9/11 has left an almost indelible scar with me: the sense of insecurity. Since 9/11, all of us have witnessed a more guarded and cautious America, with some political freedoms curtailed and suspicions easily aroused. This sense has percolated to many of us, including me. I strive to not let 9/11 affect me, and continue to be open, tolerant, and understanding. But a part of me remains guarded and vigilant; maybe all the ups and downs of maturing and entering into an unstable economy has taken its toll. Or perhaps I have finally grown up since that fateful day ten years ago, and am ready to engage fully and honestly with myself and the world.
Ten years later, I find myself a more knowledgeable and responsive citizen. I realize that my education and life growing up would have been different had 9/11 not occurred. But in a sorts, it made me more engaged with what is going on home and abroad. I trace my current fascination with current events and geopolitics from reading and following 9/11 and the aftermath. This sense of responsiveness I carry with me as I continue my growth as a lawyer and citizen.
But 9/11 has left an almost indelible scar with me: the sense of insecurity. Since 9/11, all of us have witnessed a more guarded and cautious America, with some political freedoms curtailed and suspicions easily aroused. This sense has percolated to many of us, including me. I strive to not let 9/11 affect me, and continue to be open, tolerant, and understanding. But a part of me remains guarded and vigilant; maybe all the ups and downs of maturing and entering into an unstable economy has taken its toll. Or perhaps I have finally grown up since that fateful day ten years ago, and am ready to engage fully and honestly with myself and the world.
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