
Finland’s Wii users answer: Which is better, summer or winter?
Originally uploaded by Chiva Congelado

I read this article and this book and of course they got me thinking. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: my biggest problems with the Finnish immigration debate are twofold:
Furthermore, I watched the presidential debate of a couple of weeks ago, and I have to say I’m somewhere in between what current President Halonen and ex-President Ahtisaari mentioned: yes, people should be welcomed to come here and immigrants are a resource, but we shouldn’t make the same mistake Germany and Belgium did with their Gastarbeiter programmes of the 60’s. Instead, we should be aware that first and foremost an immigrant is a person, and should strive to continue building our society(ies) together (after all, some of them might have invested a lot of themselves into their new place of residence after living there for some time, right?).
Therefore, it was very interesting to read Mr. Legrain’s book (for a good overview of his ideas, you can check out this interview at the Freakonomics blog). Even though I wouldn’t go so far as propose to open all borders indiscriminately, he does touch into quite a few interesting points regarding why the current system doesn’t work, what the current situation is and what do countries and immigrants need to do to adapt to each other, rightly pointing it’s a two-way street.
Let’s see how the situation develops with the precarious economic situation.
This week I donated blood, and urge you to do so. In Finland over a thousand donors are needed every day. One good place to start is your local Red Cross or Red Crescent.
Lives might depend on it. One day it could be you.
Now I’ve definitely seen it all. 😀
(Cántese con la melodía de “El Rey”, de José Alfredo Jiménez)
Un hielito en el camino
me enseñó que mi destino
era bajar y bajarBajar y bajar
Bajar y bajarDespués me dijo un reno
que no hay que llegar primero
si no hay que entero arrivar…
Seguramente el maestro Jiménez estará revolcándose en su tumba. 😉
First world music, now ethnic foodstores and even ethnic passengers (see second paragraph)? Can’t these individuals understand people are just people like any other?
The usage of these kinds of terms to describe different points of view seems to me rather, erm, ethnocentric.
When I was a student I won a small award for academic achievement, and with that money I bought myself a set of cross-country skis with matching poles & boots.
I don’t regret that in the slightest. Keeps you trim, helps develop balance and is the most fun you can have when there’s snow around. It also helps that I’ve never been forced to do it 😉
I won’t go into the whole story of who the Sámi (also known in other languages as Lapps) are, where they live and what their culture is like as Wikipedia already does a much better job than I ever could. However, it was very nice to see a traditional reindeer farm while we were in Levi.
Santa’s mounts were also kind of cute.
One of the most interesting features of Finnish dance halls besides the age group, the music mix of tango, ballads, humppa and rock & roll and the fact that a few of the men seem to need too much courage of the liquid variety is that there are signs like this one here that also give the sexes turns to ask for a dancing partner, so that if the first line is on women look for men, the second men look for women and the third signals the “free-for all”.
At least dancing is something I more or less know how to do, and I already have a good partner ;-).
This far up the Artic Circle, the changes in daylight are quite dramatic during the year. Already slightly after the spring equinox the length of the day exceeded 14 hours.
In the height of summer the sun won’t set, whereas in the darkest times of winter you will experience the dusk of kaamos.