Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Snaaake

I found a snake in the kitchen earlier. It was thin, long and light brown. Thankfully, it was not a baby cobra (I've had a close encounter with a 3m long yellow cobra that looked really upset with me, and that was not fun). MikEms and I caught it in a cooler bag and took it outside. It was very cute and cuddly. Wait, what'd I just say? Errr...
well, it was kinda slippery to the touch. I couldn't resist (well, I had to "encourage" it to go into the bag and all that). After that, we went back out a little while later again and found a pissed off scorpion running about with its tail up. Yay. This place is a zoo. Bats, spiders, scorpions, snakes, geckos, masses of random insects and the occasional frog. Woohoo.

Saturday, December 09, 2006

What more do we need?

These are some random thoughts I had today that ended up not being so random after all:

People make the world complex when it'd be better off simple. There are only 2 rules needed: don't hurt anyone (physically or mentally), and don't screw anyone over (whether they are aware of it or not). Everything that is wrong should be able to fit either category, and if it doesn't, it's probably not wrong (exceptions should only be made if the people directly involved decide so).

If someone hurts a person or screws with them, let the people who were affected by his actions decide what to do with him. And if that decision will affect more people, they should have their say in the matter as well.

Simple is good. Complex is unnecessary and causes trouble. Trying to organize simple things ruins them. Examples: faith is restricted by being organized into religions, learning is restricted by being organized into schools, love is restricted by being organized into relationships. All of which are controlled by fear and expectations ("you'll go to hell if you don't believe in X", "you're a failure if you don't achieve X", "you don't love me if you do/think/say/whatever X"). They don't always say it in those exact words, but it being implied is enough.

Society and the economy are just abstract concepts, and if people stopped thinking about them, they would cease to exist.