Category: General

A tale of two weekends

I send weekly emails to my friends and family back home. Sometimes I am going to post them here. They have been edited to ensure that certain private details never see the light of day!

Elvis Rromano is an Elvis impersonator who also happens to be Roma. He plays Rock and Rrom, which is a melange of Western music and the kind of traditional music you hear at weddings and funerals. The latter style is distinguished not by proficiency but by performance; you want your music to have character and energy, even if it does not necessarily sound professional.

Which is not to say that the Romanian Elvis cannot play; his finger work with the guitar was exemplary, but his Elvis performance… Not so much. But then I could only go by the scant phrases sung in English, because a lot of the rewritten lyrics (like “Viva Constansa” and “Don’t step on my Gypsy shoes”) were political songs sung in a register and language I still do not understand.

We were at the Elvis Rromano concert at the Londophone near Parcul Cismigiu to celebrate a colleague recent awarding of a PhD. Ironically, said colleague was not with us, having (one could say predictably) developed the kind of tension-related migraines one gets when the body suddenly realises it can start focussing on the fact you’ve been putting your body under a lot of stress for quite some time (but have not had the time to deal with it).

So, sans our special guest, five Fellows and a few friends met up in a crowded underground bar to watch an Elvis impersonator play.

And play.

And play.

One of the few Romanians in the group pointed out to us after the fourth set that Elvis and his retinue would play all night if the crowd demanded it; the expectation was that the audience would decide when the performance would end, not the performers themselves. This was all part of the particular musical culture Elvis Rromano was manipulating; when you get someone to provide the music for a wedding or funereal celebration you want someone who will play as long as possible. For those of us with more Western sensibilities around going to a gig this was a bit confusing; no one wanted to leave until it was over but the performer would only go home when we did.

As luck would have it, it was the bar staff who decided that the show could not go on; when your work shift is about to end and you still need to clean the bar it doesn’t matter that Elvis and his fans are in the building.

Capitalism always wins out in the end.


We were locked into the room by a Romanian man whose name I never found out. He told us that we had one hour to solve a series of increasingly difficult puzzles. My partner in crime stared at me. We knew the cost of failure; it was not an option. But we did not know what might befall us before the hour was out. Surrounded only by books on esoterica and maps of unknown islands, we set out to free ourselves.

How we had got into this predicament I will reveal shortly, but I guess I should speak to what would happen if in an hour’s time we had failed in our task. There would have been embarrassment, a wealth of it. After all, a world renown expert on conspiracy theories and a systems architect on a six figure (British Pounds) salary should have no trouble puzzling our way out of anything… Except we were operating on less than three hours sleep after having had quite the night.

Step back some twelve hours to the night before. My friend had come over from London to spend Easter weekend with me (his Easter, though, and not mine; Romania is an Eastern Orthodox country and Easter this year in their calendar was the next weekend). Wanting to show him a good time, I recommended that we have drinks with some of my fellow Fellows at the NEC (having introduced him to my friends from the ICUB the night before) and the night had gone (as the kids say) large. One of the Fellows (she who had failed to attend her own PhD awarding celebration the week before) joined us and insisted we go to one of Bucharest’s most popular clubs for a few drinks and some dancing.

We did not get home until after five.

I’m not opposed to dancing (something many people seem to find surprising) but noisy dance clubs are not exactly my scene. But I both wanted to show my guest a good time and appreciated that this was my colleagues first chance to properly blow off steam post her PhD. But I had made what was, in retrospect, the mistake of booking my UK-based friend and I into an Escape Room the next morning. Escape Rooms require some amount of concentration; dancing into the wee hours and getting little sleep after, however, tends to dull the mind.

For those of you not sure what an Escape Room is, it’s a series of puzzles which terminate either in utter failure or finding the key to get out iof the room. They tend to be themed and I had found the perfect one (for me at least): the Secret Society. My partner-in-crime and I were too unlucky researchers who had discovered that the secret society we were researching was all too real, and we were now its victims.

Armed only with coffee inside of us, we began our work, deciphering puzzles, locating objects from hidden spaces, and discovering that in my sleep-addled state I had forgotten that there was a V in the alphabet. It was, then, a miracle we finished the thing on time, but part of our problem was often overthinking the solutions to puzzles, inferring there was some extra step we had to take. The best of example of this? We found the key to get out of the room but assumed it was just the next item to be unlocked. Eventually the organisers had to slip a note under the door to say we had finished the room and could unlock the door now…

The lesson? Don’t stay out until five in the morning when you have cognitively-challenging work to do the next day. Or realise that if a Kiwi is going to come and stay, maybe organise activities for the afternoons only.

Podcast – Occupy Garnet Rd & Agenda 21

A talk at Pitzer

Another paper – The Problem of Fake News

Behold, a paper on fake news which isn’t (hopefully) fake news about fake news, written my me’self. Consider it a first pass at analysing the problem; I have a lot more to say on the matter.

Read it here.

Another paper – The Problem of Conspiracism

Voting

So, today I enrolled to vote and subsequently voted. Took all of five minutes. And it required no ID whatsoever. That, my friends, is how a democracy should work.

Having been overseas for a year in the build-up to a general election, the Electoral Commission had tried to get in contact with me at my old address. When I failed to confirm my details (due to the fact I was in Romania and not residing in Grey Lynn, Auckland) my registration elapsed. As such, I returned to Aotearoa as someone who wanted to vote but had to go and register as a voter to do so.

Now, I could have enrolled to vote in Romania via the post (if I had been at home I could have done it online), but as I knew I would be back at least a week before the election, I decided I'd enrol in person. It would be cheaper (no envelope or stamps) and faster (no waiting on the post).

Enrolling to vote this close to an election isn't difficult; you can enrol to vote right up to the day before the election. In my case it was easiest to go to an advance voting/polling station. These are many and designed to be easy to get to; mine was literally a five minute walk from Mum's house. I entered, said I need to enrol and was given a form. I entered my name, my birth date, my current address and the address where I was last enrolled and, without much fanfare, I was enrolled. Didn't even need to show any ID.

Now, because I was enrolling a week before the election I had the option to either vote straight away (because you can advance vote two weeks before polling day) or vote on the day. I chose to vote immediately because I will likely be out-of-district on election day and thus would have to cast a special vote regardless. Special votes are votes which either get cast outside your electorate or cast before polling day. They get counted slightly differently from other, 'normal' votes; if I voted on polling day in my electorate my name would be crossed off the list when I cast my vote. A special vote gets counted after the non-special votes are counted; basically each booth checks with the others to make sure the person who cast the special vote hasn't voted elsewhere.

Casting a special vote requires another form. It's not a complicated process; it's just name, birth date and address. Said form gets popped into a sealed envelope and then you get given your voting papers. Fill that out, pop into the other half of the sealed envelope, and drop it into the special votes box.

Time taken for this process: less than give minutes. Had I already been enrolled it would have taken half the time, and had I voted on polling day it would take less than a minute. Maybe three if there was a queue.

Why am I posting this? Because a feature of certain U.S. conspiracy theories is talk of voter fraud or voter suppression. The U.S. has rules and barriers designed to combat or aid this (depending on who is speaking) and, frankly, voting seems like much more of an ordeal or piece of rigamarole in the U.S. than it need be. We have very little to almost no voter fraud in our system, and we have little to no barriers to enrol and vote. There's no ID required. We weed out fraudulent voters via the general or Māori roll and by counting special votes separately after the rest of the votes have been tallied. It is not difficult. Indeed, the lack of difficulty in our system makes voting easy, fast (no one queues for more than about fifteen minutes to cast their vote on the day) and—due to the protections built in to both voting and voter registration—pretty much fraud free. Democracy can be remarkably simple.

Just like politicians.

I'll fetch me coat.