From the category archives:

Society

Warren Kinsella tweeted a link to an article he wrote this AM in the Toronto Sun (read it here). The gist of it is that the best political ads don’t tell anyone anything, don’t try and make a pitch, and don’t try and score points – rather they surface and wrap context around whatever the viewing voter is already feeling. He goes on to say that the ads miss the mark because Canadians are really ambivalent about a coalition – the central thrust of the ads being that coalitions are bad, and conservatives are the alternative.

You be the judge – the commercials are embedded below.

Interesting side note: Kinsella references the “Daisy + Nuclear Apocalypse” ad that won Johnson his second term as president in 1964, as an example of an ad that surfaces voters fears and points them in a voting direction without badgering them with political messaging. Here it is, courtesy of YouTube:

5 stars out of 5 – Commercial One: I think this one is right on target, great messaging, if delivered a bit solemnly.

1/5 – Commercial Two: Michael Ignatieff is back in Canada mainly to eat your children, right after he forms an evil coalition government:

4/5 – Commercial Three: Great messaging – higher spending, higher taxes, higher prices. Nice. Though arguably our current deficit fits nicely under the “higher spending” banner:

1/5 – Commercial Four: That mean spirited Ignatieff! What a jerk! Personally, I’d probably be appalled at things I said 20 years ago too.

If you haven’t had enough yet, there’s two more here.

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Why Chinese Mothers Are Superior (Wall Street Journal)

by Rod Edwards on January 10, 2011

What Chinese parents understand is that nothing is fun until you’re good at it. To get good at anything you have to work, and children on their own never want to work, which is why it is crucial to override their preferences. This often requires fortitude on the part of the parents because the child will resist; things are always hardest at the beginning, which is where Western parents tend to give up. But if done properly, the Chinese strategy produces a virtuous circle. Tenacious practice, practice, practice is crucial for excellence; rote repetition is underrated in America. Once a child starts to excel at something—whether it’s math, piano, pitching or ballet—he or she gets praise, admiration and satisfaction.

via Why Chinese Mothers Are Superior – WSJ.com.

I have to imagine (as a non-parent) that there other factors that contribute to a child’s “success.” The definition of “success” for example, or the peer groups that they are exposed to. Nonetheless, an interesting perspective on a key psychological difference between two societies.

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Whoa: Facebook Credits coming soon; a tax-free, global consumer currency

March 24, 2010

A perfect end-run around online taxes. How long will it be before Facebook’s 400 million users, now armed with their own currency, start siphoning off material percentages of nation’s economies? Add one more piece of evidence to all of those rumors about an impending launch of a Facebook virtual currency at the upcoming f8 conference [...]

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Scary Fundamentalist pegs the Burka Debate

July 10, 2009

Wow – an excellent, well-reasoned post on Burkas, human rights, religious freedom, and politician’s duties on matters of this nature: Edit: I shared Scary’s post on Reddit, which is always seems to stir up good debate. There are many arguments in support of banning the burka that, at first blush, are convincing. The burka is [...]

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What does a modern work ethic look like?

June 22, 2009

InfoWeek: “Top Indian CEO: Most American Grads Are Unemployable” The article continues to point out that this is a reflection of work ethic, not intelligence, quality of education, etc.: Many American grads looking to enter the tech field are preoccupied with getting rich, Vineet said. They’re far less inclined than students from developing countries like [...]

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