Tuesday, November 10, 2020

Breaking Off The Limits

 This Australian Model is in high demand because she's not just a model, but she's also unique!

Madeline Stuart oozes certainty when she swaggers down the catwalk, pausing at the ideal second to slide her hand on her hip, look to the crowd and turn easily in high heels. She is the first world famous super model who has down syndrome.

“I’m happy to change the way society looks at people with disabilities,” Madeline Stuart said. “I want the world to be more accepting. That is my dream.” She breaks the stereotypes of what a model should look at, such as being tall, willowy, and disability free. She transcends not just her disability, but she also breaks off the mindset of others that people with down syndrome needs special care and can't do anything well.

Though she can't communicate completely, she rocks off the stage and is now in high demand in the fashion industry!


Monday, October 5, 2020

World's Incapacity

 

The World's Incapacity
Our planet can offer a personal satisfaction practically identical to that appreciated in the European Union to close to 2 billion individuals. With a populace of 8 to 10 billion, government assistance per individual on a world scale will drop to that of a helpless rancher who can barely give adequate food to himself and remains unaware of government assistance. Furthermore, along these lines we should share everything reasonably so as to dodge questions or war.

Overpopulation is one of the major problems not just in the Philippines, but also to the whole wide world. Due to the amount of people in totality, there are limited resources to supplement the increasing population. 
To numerous midcentury demographers, futurists, and sci-fi scholars, it surely anticipated one. Expanding the course of events, they saw an awful future ahead for humankind: human civic establishments continually near the precarious edge of starvation, frantically swarmed under awful conditions, draconian populace control laws forced around the world. 

People tend to need increasingly more government assistance. Worldwide the quantities of vehicles and coolers are expanding directly in front of us. Yet, there will come when populace development and government assistance impact. There is a sensibly decent possibility that surges of individuals will travel everywhere on the world looking for more food and government assistance.

Seeing the situation of starvation and insufficient support from the government, questions now circles around my internal mind regarding the poor people. People coming from this status often have a large amount of children, which makes their lives more miserable and hard. Imagine having a hard time eating three meals a day even with you and just your spouse, how hard would it be with a more people in the house.

As time flies, having myself involved to social science and Philippine economics, answers came to me naturally. Due to lack of education, people does this in hopes of being richer. Other reasons would be supported and mentioned in this link, 
https://ecavo.com/overpopulation-causes-effects-solutions/

In my own personal opinion, overpopulation may be both positive and negative effect to the world (hence, https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/ezra-klein/post/the-upsides-of-overpopulation/2011/10/26/gIQAdzJ7IM_blog.html). I mean who am I to judge the perspective of this people? As long as they are married, there is nothing wrong with giving child. But I am more leaned on the negative side. There are lots of downsides of overpopulation and there are solutions for it. I believe that if there's a solution, then there's a problem. Overpopulation will not decline unless average birth rates drop below an average of two per woman (or per man) in the world. And the further the birth rate drops, the sooner humanity will reach a truly sustainable population level.

There are two different ways populace can decrease. One route is to make no move so nature heartlessly does it – through more starvations, asset wars, dry seasons, hopelessness, enduring and early passing. No sympathetic individual needs to see that. 

The other route is to lessen human populace accommodatingly. What's more, there is just a single method to do that: intentionally and significantly diminishing births so absolute numbers float down to a really maintainable level. With proper education and family planning, then birth rate will lessen and other problems such as pollution and climate change will decrease as well.  

The atmosphere is changing – and it makes a difference little whether this can be accused on human movement or on changes in the close planetary system. The ocean level just needs to rise marginally so as to cause a lot of significant farming area to vanish. At present we assume that we can stay in front of starvation with the utilization of counterfeit composts, by the heartless rearing of creatures and other endurance techniques.

What would the world be like in the future as overpopulation still occurs and the birth rates are still increasing? There might be no space and resources for the future generation. The Earth might even give up on us with its limited resources and inability to support each individual.

Every child is a blessing, life is indeed a gift. But planet Earth also has life which people keep on abusing, be wise before its too late. 


Saturday, February 29, 2020

Haiku


Thunderstorm clash-
Roaring over peaceful night
Soaring the dark

Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Literary Critique




“Parasite”
­­stimulates the audience’s mind.

               
Bong Joon-ho has come back to Cannes with a sumptuously watchable and mocking tension dramatization. It runs as purringly smooth as the Mercedes driven by the lead character, played by Korean star Song Kang-ho. Parasite is a peculiar dark comedy about economic wellbeing, desire, realism and the male centric nuclear family, and individuals who acknowledge having (or renting) a hireling class.

                This truly is an awfully captivating film, splendidly composed, eminently structured, with a perfectly cast actors and actresses set to work in a carefully plotted nightmare. It truly played with the audiences’ emotions and mind as the story went on through ups and downs.

                The story started showing Song Kang-ho plays Ki-taek, an indolent, jobless man who lives in a chaotic, stinky and dirty basement with his significant other, Chung-sook, his brilliant yet uncanny daughter, Ki-jung (Park So-dam), and son, Ki-Woo (Choi Woo-sik). They portrayed what low class family experiences in other to live—connecting to the neighbor’s wifi, having people pissed on the wall in front of their window, and letting the window open for ‘free’ insecticide.

                Living the life of having no cash and work, a former school friend of Ki-Woo offered Ki-Woo a lucrative tutoring job. Talk about luck! With a fake college diploma created by Ki-jung, he shows up at the fabulously lavish home of the Park family, wealthy entrepreneur Mr Park (Lee Sun-kyun), his delicate, unworldly wife, Yeon-kyo (Cho Yeo-jeong), their teen daughter, Da-hye (Jung Ziso) and her wacky kid brother, Da-song (Jung Hyeon-jun). They have a loyal, live-in housekeeper named Moon-gwang (Jeong-eun Lee).

                Without much trouble, Ki-Woo got the job, and an admirer, Da-Hye, whom he would be teaching. Yeon-kyo, reveals that she also needs an art tutor for her young son, to mold his painting talents. This where things get thrilling as Ki-Woo recommended his sister, Ki-Jung, with the alter ego of Jessica. In short order, Ki-jung frames the Park chauffeur to get him fired, after which Ki-woo suggests their father, Ki-taek (Song Kang-ho), as a replacement, though he doesn’t identify him as such; and soon they hoodwink the Parks into abandoning their longtime housekeeper and hiring their mother, Chung-sook (Jang Hye-jin), though she’s not identified as such.

                 When the Parks go on a camping trip, the Kims move in and savor the luxury and peace. They think they’re a natural fit. They imagined how it feels like to have all the champagne and cool breeze of the aircon; how it feels like to have Da-Hye as their in-law, as the relationship of Ki-Woo and Da-Hye was getting deeper. Everything was going fine, during the first half of the film. It definitely seems like the Kims manipulation were going easy.

                But Bong could never just settle for that, all those fun and excitement of the Kims vanished into thin air as it started to rain and surprisingly, the Parks went home instead. You could never call Bong subtle. After a symbolic rain causes the symbolic sewers to overflow and symbolically flood the Kims’ symbolic basement apartment, Kim Sr. is forced to perform at the Parks’ fancy house party in a symbolic Native American headdress. The climax, though surprising in its splatter quotient, is telegraphed.
                The calm of each family instantly transformed into a horrific, gore, and dreadful party for the Parks’ youngest child, Da-Song. Each character portrayed their roles perfectly, which lies to the question, “Who is the real parasite?” The poor who connect themselves to the rich or the wealthy who suck the marrow of poor people? Or simply the framework the parasite itself, drawing its vitality from the violent communication among rich and poor?

                From the cinematography, acting, and plot, Bong Joo-Ho’s Parasite is something you must consider if you are into drama movies. Its guaranteed that this movie will open your mind to the harsh reality of the poor and rich. Other than this, there are no excuses for watching the movie.