May. 11th, 2004

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Saturday, I went to Starbucks. I was inspired to go by this post on the [livejournal.com profile] queens livejournal community, which promised a protest at 11 o'clock. Alas, by the time I'd gotten there at 11:05, the protest had either dispersed or failed to materialize at all. (I did notice some colourful chalk scrawls on the sidewalk, one proclaiming that "Starbucks hurts communities!" and the other calling on Starbucks to follow a nearby deli into backruptcy.) I went inside and bought a tall fair blend mix coffee for two dollars. I rather liked the coffee, price included, although any other coffee that involved a degree of preparation would have been vastly more expensive.

Sunday, I went to Tim Horton's. It was in the evening, and I was feeling a bit restless. I walked up from the Graduate Residence towards Princess Street, zigging and zagging past the local Catholic cathedral and some nice rows of brick buildings, the sort that PEI lacks owing to its lack of construction materials apart from wood. I went inside and bought a large ice cappuccino along with a Canadian Maple donut, for just under four dollars. I finished the donut by the time I'd gotten to the next street south; the coffee I nursed for another half-hour, as is my wont.

Today, I went to the Sleepless Goat on lower Princess Street. I took a roundabout route, though.

Digression: The Waterfront. )

On finally arriving at the Goat, I bought a cup of coffee, Sumatran blend.

This post was prompted by the above-mentioned proposed protest over Starbucks' expanded presence in Kingston. (There's already a Starbucks in the Indigo on Princess Street just a half-dozen blocks up, but that doesn't count, apparently.) Certainly, Starbucks has done bad things as a business, like running its new operatinos at a loss to drive other coffee shops out of business. Then again, it has done a lot of good things, simply by raising the bar for what people expect out of coffee houses. Too, without Starbucks would anyone even care about fair-trade coffee?

In my case, Starbucks' presence doesn't divert my interest in buying coffee, but rather stimulates new interest in more coffee. Not much interest, though; their tall coffee was reasonably priced, but everything else was unreasonable. Besides, I like the Goat's food and the atmosphere of the place.
rfmcdonald: (Default)
I've been listening to the Xerxes 2004 remix of Tori Amos's "Me and a Gun" a lot, I know. That's simply because it's a very good remix, pulling her vocals to the forefront while backing it with a disturbingly sedate background. I got it from Here in My Head, which has an excellent download section for rare mp3s--live performances, unreleased songs, fan remixes, and the like.

I like the original version of "Me and a Gun." This remix, though, adds quite a lot.

i haven't seen BARBADOS
so i must get out of this
rfmcdonald: (Default)
As of this posting, since the 19th of April, at about 11 o'clock, I've received 2255 hits on the livejournal's main page and on the other pages that my counter tracks, excluding views on people's livejournal friends pages. This is nice. I think I could just possibly make it as a writer.

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Daniel Pipes has written an article entitled "Muslim Europe". Yes, it's about that Muslim Europe.

Pipes being Pipes, he's gotten coverage from points as far afield as Front Page Magazine and the Jerusalem Post. I've been active at the former site's comments page criticizing his sloppy use (and in some cases, total ignorance) of the data at hand, to the predictable responses. Sigh.

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I'll be picking up my bike from the shop tomorrow. I'd left it outside for part of the winter, and I felt it my responsibility as someone concerned with my safety to get it checked out. I do want to bike again, and not only because it will give me added mobility; Kingston in spring is beautiful, I want to go around taking pictures, and a trip to Wolfe Island might or might not be out of the question. Biking is fun.

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The weather in Kingston is beautiful. Yesterday afternoon, though, I was surprised by the amount of mist coming off of Lake Ontario, so dense just after noontime as to obscure the sight of Wolfe Island. I wonder if that's regular for this time of year?

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This article in The Globe and Mail is interesting, as is this one. I'm not yet sure how they will affect me. Paternity, though, is a question that concerns me.

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Oh. Last night, I ate some Korean food--bulgogi rice--with a friend and then watched Van Helsing with her. It was, as expected and reviewed, a standard mishmash of tropes done poorly in the context of a completely ahistorical Transylvania (beyond the fact of monsters). It was entertaining though, if only because of Hugh Jackman and Kate Beckinsale and their appearances.

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More substantive material later. I promise.
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