Sunday, October 31, 2010

Congressman Rush Holt & Mr. Scott Sipprelle

Point #1: November 2nd is election day. In the 12th district of NJ, the two candidates are Rush Holt & Scott Sipprelle.
Point #2: while the Chinese population has made enormous contributions to America's economy, it is frequently left out of the political mainstream. Many times, they want to be involved but don't know where to start.
For this reason, I invited Mr. Rush Holt to visit HuaXia East Brunswick (HXEB) Chinese School yesterday (10/30) so the Chinese population in the area can meet him and know who he is as a candidate, Congressman, and as a person.
Mr. Scott Sipprelle was also invited by the HXEB school administration to visit.


It turns out that a lot of Chinese parents, grandparents, and teachers were quite interested in know what these two candidates' views were regarding a number of issues, and what they hope to do as representatives. Of course, many people were concerned about the economy and government spending. There were also some  who asked about immigration reform, US/China relations, and the international economy (i.e. exchange rates).   Those with kids naturally were worried about the education system, including Math/Science/Foreign Language programs.
Overall, the event was very successful. This is a major first step for many families to learn about and get more involved in their community.


A group's political influence comes primarily from its voter turnout of that group. It does not matter how many government officials that group has. It does not matter how big the group's population is. What matters is how many people choose to vote and become involved -- how else will representatives know of and respond to the concerns of that group?
The act of voting itself seems simple. However, while many people know of major elections like that of the President, they do not know of campaigns "smaller" that that. It is important that we remain informed about these elections, particularly those of the state and local levels, as these are the people who will be representing our issues and concerns to the national government.

No matter what your citizenship status is, no matter if you are eligible to vote or not, you are still living in the United States of America. Our government's decisions will definitely  impact you. What you can do is to make sure you are involved, particularly with the people who may be directly representing your opinions, your concerns, and your rights to the national government.
Powers and rights come from our participations of political process. If we give up "by people", then we will not have "of the people" and "for the people".
 
Mr. Scott Sipprelle

 
Congressman Rush Holt

Mr. Holt & myself.


On another note: HAPPY HALLOWEEN! 
(& to those who are going for the Nov. 1 deadline, like me, have fun & good luck!)

Thursday, October 28, 2010

"I hate you all" (love you too Jess Yang)

AP IPLE. It depends on gmail/gchat/google docs. That's all.

Of our IPLE Unit, three out of four of us use gmail. The exception is Jess (Yang), who is fixated on hotmail.She actually has a gmail, she just refuses to use it.

The moment she came over my house, Mike and I linked her hotmail to her gmail. And so ensued a 30min. meltdown. Goodness we should have filmed it.
In between sorting through all the unread messages that gmail automatically ripped from hotmail, our frequent reassurances that it would not be difficult to set up her "system" again... that filters and labels are not horrible... she was saying "I hate you all"

Jess, I must tell you, a month from now, you'll love us again. :D

Gmail is for the common good.

On another note, Jess and I have decided not to use our English names in IPLE anymore. It is too horribly confusing. Particularly if, during competition, someone were to say "I disagree with Jess.... but I agree with Jess in that...". Or one of us would end up contradicting ourselves in trying to disagree with the Jess that it not ourself. If that made any sense at all. In any case, we will be now know by our Chinese names, which I will write here and tally how many people are successful at pronouncing it.
Jess Yang: Zexi
Jess Fong: Xinyi

On a final note, I'm about to embark on novel #3. I'm utterly insane.

Friday, October 22, 2010

Chronicles of (a summer in) China


I really don't want to do college essays. I'm used to 200-300pages, not 250words. Goodness.
So while I'm procrastinating, I'll finally decide to post about my internship ("traineeship" as my fellow Belgians call it) as a translator in China... through photos because I am awfully sick of writing.

06.17.2010: I wake up at 7am to go to JFK, the most confusing airport in the world. And wait for 3 hours because my flight was at noon. -.-"
21 hours later (14hrs to Tokyo, 3hr layover, 4hrs to Beijing): a family friend picks me up to spend the night at their house before I fly to Wuhan. China is in World Cup Craze. I slept so much that my body has no sense of time whatsoever -- no jetlag :)

06.18: Beijing airport, where I first met the delegates I'd be translating for (I was with a Belgian trade delegation).






Followed by a 1hr flight from Beijing to Wuhan, then we immediately went to 3 different factories.

Dinnertime with family & my little 6 year old cousin! (last time I saw him, he didn't know how to walk).
 

06.19: this is after the first company meeting.
 

06.20: second & third company meetings. business the chinese way. such good food.
 

06.22: another company meeting (sorry no pics this time)
afterwards... adventures along the yangtze river!
lol

06.23: arrival of another delegate + family. his daughter spoke no english, only french, dutch, & some german. i spoke chinese, english, & spanish. --> hand motions for the next 2 weeks! <3
Wuhan Historical Museum. then lunch & sightseeing.

06.24 - 06.30: and then we traveled around for a week.
Wuhan >> Shanghai. took the maglev train = [!!]. my nonenglishspeaking friend & i managed to converse for the entire 6hrs without asking any of the delegates for translation. we are that awesome. she spoke french, i alternated spanish & english, we scribbled on a notepad. :D
Shanghai >> Changzhou. went to a huge company + its factory. epic dinner at a restaurant that looked like an ecological exhibit (see picture below). almost got a cold -- it was actually kind of chilly there while Wuhan was at 40Celsius.
 

Beijing. Forbidden city pictures are on my uncle's camera D:

Then the delegation went back to Belgium. I hung around China for another week and then flew back to find myself in the middle of a heatwave. Reaction? It was around 110 in Wuhan everyday. heat wave? I think not.

Overall? An amazing trip and something that I definitely want to do again. It combined everything that I love in life: travel, good food, talking, international affairs, meeting people...
Hoping for more traineeships in the future.

And now in need of sleep.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Switchiness!

I confess. I did have a blog before, embedded on my website (jessfong.com). I have not managed it well--not at all--so I will start anew on this one.

I think I shall move over some of the posts on my other blog, so this is not abjectly empty...

One more thing: in English and Spanish speaking countries, I'm a novelist. In French, Italian, and Portuguese speaking countries, I'm apparently a romance artist. :)