Tuesday, January 10, 2006

confession: sometimes i'm a bit strange. i don't want to admit to myself that i want to watch the election candidate's debate, so i'm sitting in my room fussing with the guitar with the TV on - almost inaudible but not quite - in the living room. my current take on politics: i don't believe in it, but i also kind of do. i care, but i wish i did not.

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my chinese neighbour got his canadian citizenship a couple of weeks ago. he came back home one night after having sworn in front of a picture of the queen that he would be faithful to this country. he passed an exam, sang oh canada, shook a couple of hands and became a canadian. when he came back his wife asked him if he could sing the chinese national anthem for her.

he sang the first two lines (qing lai, qing lai...!) and realized he could no longer remember the rest.

now, though, he wants to join the PQ and hopes one day to run for them. of course, considering he's learnt quite a bit of his french by watching the late night debates of the provincial government on TV, he probably has what it takes and is used to that kind of circus.

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speaking of circus

the quote of the day goes to gilles duceppe, leader of bloc quebecois, during the english debate.

"when mr. martin is talking about a democratic deficit, i find it quite surprising, because quite frankly i think *he* is a democratic deficit."

thanks for the amusement gilles. you're funny, sometimes, but you still won't get my vote.
please tell me that my accent is not as bad as his is.

4 Comments:

At 9:14 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

i wonder if you have to believe to care, necessarily.

 
At 6:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Lol, you don't have an accent at all! It's funny, I find Gilles quite amusing too. And don't worry about pretending to watch the debate, I was doing the same thing the other night too, so if everyone's doing it, it must be "normal".

 
At 9:05 PM, Blogger cynicalcosmopolitan said...

"i wonder if you have to believe to care, necessarily."

this is such a sahi sentence. love it. simply love it.

sometimes you have a way to make my head turn a full 360 with a single sentence. thank you.

 
At 9:08 PM, Blogger cynicalcosmopolitan said...

it's marcy (c)rocker ;)

you know, i think i was more frustrated with the french debate than with the english one, because the stuff they were saying was even less substantial because of the language barrier.

seriously, at this point in time i'm still debating between eating my ballot (and going straight to jail, without passing GO and getting 200$) or voting for the NDP. ah well!

 

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