23 December 2007

ayiti: the cost of life

unicef’s online game this time: your goal is to help the Guinard family get an education and improve their lives.

haiti, the game?

haiti, the game?

22 December 2007

god bless america(n tv)

because I’ve had constant access to multiple tvs lately, I’ve been watching quite a bit of cnn. amazing. actually, I’m not sure I’m supposed to be laughing so much when watching the news. no, I never really thought about “what jesus would REALLY do” when it comes to buying. the commercials about christian persecution in communist countries are great: “they beat my feet until I was treading in the path of my own blood.” and it was educational to see a dramatization of a gun threat over the phone. but the best is how cnn’s seasonal theme song is a threatening version of “carol of the bells.” if it ain’t entertaining, it ain’t news.

15 December 2007

an empire wilderness

by robert d. kaplan

two passages strike me, each within a page from one another. have been thinking lately of Belley’s lecture about corporate totalitarianism: when efficiency/rationality overrides all other values, individual liberties start to fray…

“It’s nonsense to think that Americans are individualists,” Dennis Judd, an urban affairs professor at the University of Missouri’s St. Louis campus, told me. “Deep down, we are a nation of herd animals: mouselike conformists who will lay at the doorstep all our rights–if you tell us that we won’t have to worry about crime and that our property values will be protected.” Americans, he explained, willingly put up with restrictions inside a corporation that they would never put up with in the public sphere. Then he added that life within some sort of corporation is what the future will increasingly be like. “Just look at our [gated community] suburbs,” he said. “We are going to depend less and less on the public sphere.”

and we become unable to deal with the ‘irrational’.

As I drove through the St. Louis suburbs, I was struck by the inverse relationship between material possessions and conveniences on the one hand and social unity on the other. Are we, I wondered, increasingly a nation of overworked, lonely people? What struck me here was the high number of cars in the office parks late in the evening. In The Time Bend: When Work Becomes Home and Home Becomes Work, sociologist Arlie Russell Hochschild claims that many women are actually fleeing their disorderly and tense home lives for the “reliable orderliness” of their work. In the 1980s and 1990s, the American worker’s work year increased by a month–164 hours. The link between overwork and the decline of the family seems obvious to me.

12 December 2007

UNCCC blog

Wednesday, 12 December, 3:00 p.m. — Yesterday it was penguins. Today it is snails. The complaint was that governments were moving at a snail’s pace in addressing climate change.

And an update: the jackets and ties worn this morning have not lasted. By afternoon, most participants all looked like NGOs again.

and here are some korean polar bears (CBC story on Canadians storming out when Environment Minister Baird cancelled an appearance in Bali).

8 December 2007

paddington the refugee

Paddington, the bear from Peru, will be arrested and interrogated over his immigration status in a book marking his 50th birthday. (BBC)

He has no papers to prove his identity as his Aunt Lucy arranged for him to hide on a ship’s lifeboat from Peru when she went to live in the Home for Retired Bears in Lima.