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Friday, May 4, 2007
Vultures
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Sunday, April 29, 2007
What I Missed This Weekend
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Note: I did not take nor do I own the copyright to this photograph
The Impeach message was the work of activist coordinator and SF cab driver Brad Newsham who was hoping to have 2,000 protesters at the event which was scheduled to coincide with the National Day of Protest Demanding Impeachment by the group Impeach'07.
Watch a great video from the event HERE.
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
No Brakes? No Problem!
Look closely, is there anything missing on this bike? If your answer is 'no' your either a SF hipster or your not looking hard enough.
"Fixed gear" refers to a kind of street bicycle with no back brakes and if you're really bad ass, no front brakes either. In their advanced evolutionary development these bikes also managed to shed traces of any gears. Once the pride of of any high pedaling cyclist, those 12, 18 and even the 24 "speed" gears are now considered unnecessary junk, damned to the scrap pile. These days A true sign of San Francisco machismo is going without gears!
So just how do San Francisco trendsetting cyclists coast their trusty mounts to a stop? Well let me tell you how I came to find out...
I do some volunteer work with the San Francisco Bicycle Coalition, including promotions and helping out with the Fix Masonic Campaign. This past week myself and the two other SFBC volunteers from USF manned a table at the Health Fair in USF's Harney plaza. While I was there I had the opportunity to try one of my colleagues "fixies" and he explained that since the pedals are permanently fixed to the chain, and thus the wheel axle, all I had to do was push back hard on the pedals and I would lock up the back tire, laying down rubber while coming to a screeching, smokey halt.It's kind of like peeling out in your mom's car when you were 16, totally unnecessary yet totally fun. The rubber burns about as fast too.
Sunday, April 22, 2007
Thursday, April 19, 2007
Half Mast
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Monday, April 16, 2007
Playing with Audio
The audio is an interview I conducted with a Resident Advisor in one of the residence halls at the University of San Francisco.
Listen: part 1, part 2.
My next step will be to record cleaner sound, with constant audio levels, which can be downloaded.
Planet Earth: still awe inspiring after all these years
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Thursday, April 12, 2007
From "is" to "was" the Passing of a Cultural Icon, My Hero, Kurt Vonnegut
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Tuesday, April 3, 2007
Dick Cheney to Give Commencement Speach to BYU Class of '07
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Sunday, April 1, 2007
A Claim to Fame
Saturday, March 31, 2007
Critical Mass
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Wednesday, March 28, 2007
A Comment on The Media and Photography
Here, Nadelmann looks to be making a compassionate point. He seems caring, trustworthy, a "good guy."
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Here he looks vicious, malicious, like someone you want to avoid in a dark alley.
It's easy to make a photograph bend to your whims, I wasn't even trying here, and I'm not talking about Photoshop, which makes a whole new realm of distorted truth possible. These two shots are taken within seconds of each other from the same spot where I sat on the floor in the front of the room, and tell the same story: man talking at podium. Yet the message and mood of these shots couldn't be further apart.
As campaign season heats up earlier than usual this election cycle, I expect to see a lot of this kind of advertising, distorted and loaded with spin. I vow to let me decisions be based on fact and issue, not songs, slogans, banners, photographs, and manipulated truth. Unfortunately, I feel that dramatic 30 second TV ads are what most impact the average American voter's election decision.
Tuesday, March 27, 2007
Experimenting with Atlas
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I don't know what the point is, but someone took the time and effot to mail it.
Sunday, March 25, 2007
Poleng for Dinner
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Don’t take my word for it, see what people are saying on Yelp.
Saturday, March 24, 2007
A Profile of My Street
When I come back starving from the gym, or a long Thursday night meeting, there is always Papalote to greet me and offer up one of its delicious super burritos. The fresh, healthy, Mexican inspired food here is cheap, delicious, and they’re fast. I’m in and out the door in 5-10 minutes with a hot, made to order burrito and a side of chips with their amazing salsa, for around eight bucks. I eat at Papalote at least one a week guaranteed, sometimes several times per week, and this is every week for the past 6 months. That’s at least 24 meals. Oh, and I only ever get one thing: the Super Burrito. This monster comes with cheese, avocado, and sour cream, along with the usual trimmings of beans, rice, salsa, and your choice of meat. I almost always get chicken.
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Wednesday, March 21, 2007
Indie Film Festival to Indie Rock
I went to the Human Rights Film Festival today in USF's Presentation Theatre to see Winter In Baghdad, a documentary by Javier Corcuera about his time in that city in 2004. I am fascinated by alternative points of view on the Iraq war, and this film did not disappoint. Corcuera follows several local Iraqi people, including one memorable little boy, a shoe shiner by trade, as they struggle for survival, normality, and peace of mind in what has become the most dangerous city in the world. Corcuera complies commentary from dozens of Iraqi men, women and children on how they view their life today. Many of the children expressed fear and mistrust of the American military machine; one little girl described a bad dream where she was gunned down by a US Army helicopter. The young shoe shiner describes how US soldiers are afraid of the wooden box he carries, which houses his supplies, because they think he has a bomb.
Watching footage of US soldiers armed to the teeth, and on guard, as they patrol the streets of Baghdad in pairs conjures up my own childhood memories from the movie Star Wars, when the imperial forces, in their white plastic body suits, patrol the desert space port looking for two missing robots. Star Wars simplifies this situation to bad and good, with the white "storm troopers" as bad, and our hero Luke Skywalker and his friends as good. In Baghdad, the situation is more complicated, there are no absolute forms of bad and good, the US soldiers are not bad, and neither is the US Army, while the Iraqi people are by majority, innocent bystanders. Yet despite this realization, I still feel a sense of fear brought on by the all powerful, overshadowing nature of these US foot patrols, in much the same way I felt about the storm troopers in Star Wars as a child. This feeling was further developed when the film showed what the US bombing of the city looked like from the perspective of an Iraqi at street level. There are flashed of light, roaring explosions, and the scream of jet engines in the dark sky. From street level, the bombing of Baghdad feels like a rain of terror willed by God. If my city were Baghdad, I would no doubt distrust and fear the owner of those bombs, and those troops.
I wish there were a way for us to explain to the people of Iraq that all we want is for them to have a peaceful country, with a just, democratic government, free of radical fundamentalists and terrorists.
Are current US operations in Iraq part of the problem? YES! Is leaving the solution? NO! Even if we have no other task than to keep the peace, we must stay in Iraq, leaving would lead to even greater destabilization, chaos, violence, and death.
Some people in Iraq hate America, and some hate other factions of Islam, and some people from both groups are willing to kill to release this hatred. Staying in Iraq will most certainly cost more American lives, and more taxpayer dollars. Leaving will cost US credibility abroad, and future global security.
Everyone loves to wash their hands of the fault and responsibility for this war. I stood shoulder to shoulder with thousands of my fellow Americans on the frigged streets of New York City on February 15th 2003 for the "No Blood for Oil" protest against an invasion of Iraq. I was 17 years old, I'd travelled more than 6 hours to get there. I knew that Al Qaeda and Saddam Hussein had no connection, this was an understanding I shared with painfully few of my fellow citizens. Later, when President Bush found the justification he needed: whispers of hidden weapons of mass destruction, and speculation of African uranium, I changed my vote. I was ok with the war, a quick, find the bombs, restore democracy, turn around and come home kind of war. The majority of Americans were on my side.
Today, the bombs never existed, and we're stuck in a bloody, "no light at the end of the tunnel" war. Most Americans disapprove of the President, most disapprove of the war. What happened to all the yellow "support our troops" bumper stickers? The American people flip flop like a teeter totter, and the bottom line is that its not fair to the people of Iraq. We can't bomb their country, kill their leader, brew up a storm and then leave because it gets messy.
The indie rock part of this post's title refers to the concert I went to after the film. It was The White T's at Slims.
Saturday, March 17, 2007
Final Reflections from Alternative Spring Break 2007
Overall, I have warm, positive memories of my time with the Alternative Spring Break program this past week. We helped paint a house, clean and paint a warehouse, and put down tile flooring in another house. All of our projects were with Habitat for Humanity.
This week, I got an inside look at how Habitat works, and also interacted with AmeriCorps volunteers all week, learning the ins and outs of that organization. We also met survivors of Hurricane Rita, Red Cross volunteers, the Mayor of Lake Charles, and the Police Jury for Calcasieu Parish.
This week I learned that there are a lot of public misconceptions about Hurricane Rita, which was very different from Hurricane Katrina. When Mayor Randy Roach of Lake Charles came to speak to us at the United Way shelter he explained that Rita is the most powerful hurricane to ever strike the Gulf of Mexico, yet not a single person died as a direct result of the hurricane. Mayor Roach explained that the reason Hurricane Katrina was so destructive and resulted in mass loss of life was primarily because the levees broke in New Orleans. Relative to other hurricane emergency operations, the Rita evacuation was well organized and executed. Also, the crime, murder, and disregard for human life that became a national news spectacle in the aftermath of Katrina were not prevalent in South-West Louisiana where Rita struck land and did the most damage.
The general feeling among the people of Lake Charles is that they have been forgotten. Hurricane Katrina greatly overshadowed the destruction caused by Rita, leaving those in South-West Louisiana to fend for themselves and dig themselves out of the physical and psychological chaos caused by the storm. This week we witnessed destruction on an incredible scale. Before the trip to Lake Charles, I was unsure how devastated the area would be; wondering if there would be stores or internet access. In actuality, the commercial heart of the town has recovered, including a Wall Mart Supercenter, movie theatre, and a dozen or so fast food restaurants that crowd the main thoroughfare through town. Driving through town it is impossible to tell that just two years ago a storm of wind and water ripped the area apart. Miles of rail cars line up outside refineries which in the next few years will increase output to 25% of domestic oil supply to the US.
The woman on the right, and her daughter pose with some of my ASB team members in front of their new Habitat for Humanity house.
Wile commercial interests like Wall Mart and Citgo have fared well, propped up by their deep pocketed corporate parents, the fringes of society continue to suffer. Those living in poverty before the Hurricane have returned to find splinters and toothpicks where their houses once stood. These people turn to organizations like the United Way, Habitat for Humanity, and AmeriCorps, to fill the void left by federal and state assistance. This week we have met many people in a seemingly hopeless position, rescued from an uncertain future by these charities.This check, presented by ASB 2007, represents the amount of money raised for the State of Louisiana to repay their debt to FEMA. Jason, from University of New Hampshire, Eric, the team leader from Montana, and myself pose with the check for a photograph.
More than helping build and re-build houses, we were also helping the State of Louisiana repay its debt to the Federal Government. FEMA, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, stipulates that all aid given in an emergency must be matched by an equal amount of State aid. Right now Louisiana needs to contribute many millions of dollars to meet this Federal requirement. Every hour of work an ASB student does counts as $18.50 of State aid, and at the end of the week we presented a check to the State of Louisiana in the amount of $173,517, good toward its debt to FEMA.
I think Alternative Spring Break is a great idea, and truly great things have been accomplished in South-West Louisiana as a result. The program requires a tremendous amount of planning and coordination, but if we could make it a yearly event I think that would be great. Maybe it won’t be in Lake Charles, but there will always be cities in need, be it the result of natural disaster or other circumstances.
Friday, March 16, 2007
Day 7, The Last Day of Work.
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This week my group, animal code name "The Owls," has shifted between four Habitat for Humanity sites doing odd jobs and helping other groups with their projects. However, we haven't had the opportunity to see our own project through from beginning to end, which was a bummer for some team members as it became apparent that we were the only team in this situation. Today, we were at a Habitat home that was reclaimed by the organization after the owners defaulted on their 0% int erst loans to Habitat. Our job was to help the contractors remodel the house to the specifications of the new owners. This job included interior painting, which a group from Michigan did last week, and re-tileing the floor which was our job today. None of us had ever done tileing before, so after a week of painting and cleaning the warehouse we were happy to have an interesting project.
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Now, I am back at the United Way shelter, the general mood is that people are ready to go home. Sleeping in a bunk bed in a huge room with 50 other guys is not much fun. I'm happy that we were able to help some of the people down here in Lake Charles, Louisiana, and assist Habitat for Humanity and AmeriCorps. I have learned a lot about both organizations, and also about life in Louisiana, and about the effects Hurricane Rita had on the area.
I hope our being here sets an example for other college students and people in general to answer the call for help wherever it may be. Publicity takes a central role in Alternative Spring Break, we put our signs up at the work sites and headquarters, and were on the front page of the local paper a few days ago. MTV is our media partner, and their camera crew had been around all week shooting footage for the upcoming special: The Amazing Break, which will air on MTV later this month. Hopefully the more people hear about our story, the more they will be inspired to lend a helping hand.
The truth is that the ASB program is unorganized, we send more students to work sites than there are jobs for them, and many of us spent significant amounts of time hanging out, or waiting for materials or instruction. One day we went to a Habitat home and ended up waiting in our van for 30 minutes for the contractor to come unlock the house and show us what to do; he never came so we left. Our first two days here there were 24 students at a work site with two houses where the job was to put cabinets in the kitchens. This job requires only a hand full of people. The rest of us painted some trim boards, put in a few door knobs and then basically sat around. I didn't mind relaxing and socializing with my new friends, but I felt that we were a ready and eager labour resource that was being wasted. In total, we didn't accomplish a lot of work. We did help out a lot, but didn't put in the solid weeks worth of work that I would expect from 10 workers. This is why I hope our story is one of inspiration that challenges others to do good when and where they can.
Thursday, March 15, 2007
A Community of ASB Blogs
http://blog.unitedway.org/asb/
Here is a community collection of ASB 2007 photos posted on Flickr.
http://flickr.com/groups/asb
Day 6, Back to the Warehouse
Earlier this week , we had the opportunity to try jambalaya, which is a spicy chicken and sausage sauce over rice.
In general, I do not like Southern cooking, dishes like grits, collared greens, and deep fried everything don't particularly appeal to my northern pallet. However, I do like the Cajun flair added on to the Southern style, and if offered a hot Cajun meal, I wouldn't turn it down.
Today, at our work site we packed sandwiches for lunch, but after looking across the road at Church's Chicken all day, we didn't have the heart for prepackaged pbj when it came time to sit down for a lunch break. Church's Chicken is a fast food restaurant specializing in fried chicken, like KFC. I think Church's is a Southern chain, because none of my teammates from outside of the deep South had heard of it. The food was delicious after a hard morning of painting.
We were suppose to go to a new work site to put in the floor of a Habitat house, but the construction man never showed up, so after waiting a long time, we finally were told over the radio to go back to the warehouse we worked at yesterday. We finished painting the main lobby and one of the hallways, then spent the rest of the day cleaning the other walls of the building with sponges to get rid of the cobwebs and dirt that have accumulated after four years of dormancy.
I think my team has been feeling a little let down this week because we have not had the opportunity to do significant work on a house, nor had the opportunity to interact with or directly help people affected by Hurricane Rita. I think at the time we signed up, we were envisioning helping people get their lives back together, like helping remove a tree from the house of an elderly couple. Now that we are down here, it seems like all of that type of work is already finished. At the same time, helping out isn't always glamorous and we try to remind ourselves that all of the work down here is important. Our role in restoring the warehouse so Habitat for Humanity can use it will enable more houses to be built more efficiently in the future.
Wednesday, March 14, 2007
Day 5, The Warehouse.
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FexEx special deliveries brought us PizzaHut for lunch. In the afternoon we painted two rooms which will be the entryways for building. We worked at this site because it rained all day, and for the same reason forwent a planned trip to a Gulf Coast beach.
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The most interesting thing I did today was talk with the two Ameri Corps members who work with out team. I call them our “embedded Ameri Corps members.” They are Emily and Janet and both are really chill and nice. They aren't our bosses, but do take a natural kind of leadership role in the group. Jody is 24, and graduated from St. John's College with a degree in politics. Interestingly enough, it is forbidden for the Corp's members to talk about their political opinions, it is also against the rules to swear and they are subject to random drug tests. Both Jody and Emily are from the Sacramento, California, office and they have a bit of a rivalry with the Corp's members from Denver who are also down here helping out with Alternative Spring Break.
Jody said that while their team has yet to be drug tested, the Denver team, which is newer than her team was just drug tested. She speculates that their might be some shady characters on the Denver team, some of which might not be around too much longer she added. We all know that she is talking about one specific Denver team member, we've nicknamed Stars, for the tattoos on her arms.
Tuesday, March 13, 2007
Finishing the House
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Monday, March 12, 2007
More Thoughts on Today's Project.
Building a House!
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All that remained of the school we visited was the brick gym, the rest of the building, the classrooms and all, was gone. Now, the students use temporary trailer-like buildings for classrooms. However, even this is a recent achievement, before the temporary buildings were built the students were bussed to another school district that had not been as badly hit by the hurricanes. During that period of time, the students from the two districts split their time at the school. One group would go to school for the first half of the week, and the second group, for the second half of the week. Two and a half days of school proved trying for the students, their parents and the community. Parents were forced to get additional child supervision or change their work schedules. During the tour, we listened to speakers from the Red Cross who have been helping in south west Louisiana since the hurricanes hit (and even before). One Red Cross volunteer told us about how the refugees staying at the church-turned-shelter in Lake Charles became a close nit community, and how some of the children became sick after eating the candy in the relief kits because their families had never been able to afford such luxuries as chocolate and soda. The woman from the Red Cross also told us how she was frustrated when some women from the shelter left to gamble on the river boats, neglecting their four and five year old children who were left to wander around the church.
Today, we were up at 6:45 am. I sprang out of bed, rushed through a bowl of fruit loops, ate an orange, and stuffed a trio of mini muffins in my mouth, just in time to hop into the van with my team and roll out to meet the Habitat for Humanity team we will be assisting this week. We went through a brief orientation, learned about the Habitat program, were give some quick pointers and safety advice and were off again, this time to the work site.
Our project this week is to complete two houses which volunteers have been working on for the past three weeks. The houses are side by side, and are identical from the outside, but have slightly different floor plans. The contractor, project head, and our boss, Chester, a native of Louisiana, and staunch LSU fan, guided us through the finer points of trimming widows and doors, hanging cabinets, and putting on door knobs. He also provided us with hilarious stories about his life, and the lives of his coworkers, that could be summed up as being in line with our perceptions of “backward southern living.” And no thats not being narrow minded on my part, we heard the story about one of Chester's coworkers who caught his wife cheating with her brother in law. No, wait, that story was about Chester himself! But what's not to love about Chester, he's got a sense of humor, a heart of gold, and is about as lovable as a little puppy.
The Habitat for Humanity house that we worked on today costs $65,000 to build. Its a seven room, single story home, with three bedrooms, kitchen, living room, dining room, and bathroom. The house is small, yet cozy, and provides a nice living space for a medium size family. This particular house will go to a single mother with a young daughter, and a son who is in a coma.
Chester predicts that this house would cost $150,000 to build. It costs Habitat significantly less because the labor is volunteer, and some of the materials, including windows, doors, and stove and refrigerator are donated. The recipients of Habitat homes are obligated to pay for their house, through a no-interest loan in an amount equal to the cost of the house. The mortgage on the house we worked on today will cost about $300 a month for the next 25 years. The home owner is also obligated to complete 300 hours of volunteer work, either on their own house, on another Habitat home, or at a community organization.
I'm back at the United Way center now, blogging and waiting for dinner. I also need to shower, I'm sweaty and muddy, it rained hard for part of the day.
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Saturday, March 10, 2007
The Team Assembles
Our next task would prove trying. The normal two hour trip between Houston, and Lake Charles, Louisiana, our spring break destination, was significantly delayed by a tractor-trailer wreck. We ended up hauling into the United Way center after spending five hours in the van. The upside of this setback was that my van had tons of time to bond and play “getting to know you” games like Two Truths and a Lie. Any ice that may have existed between us at the airport was shattered on this trip. We had great conversations, and the ride was actually kind of enjoyable.
The United Way headquarters reminds me of an elementary school, with a few large classrooms converted to dorm rooms. All the guys are in one large room packed with bunk beds, and down the hall is a similar configuration for the girls. In total, 120 college students will call these two rooms home for the next seven days. The complex also has a cafeteria where out meals will be prepared, this room also houses the internet cafe, which was specifically set up for us and features 25 new laptops with a high speed wireless connection, everything for the cafe was provided by FexEx, who is one of the major sponsors of ASB (Alternative Spring Break) 2007.
I was assigned to a work group which will support an ongoing Habitat for Humanity home construction project in the area. Tomorrow we will tour the site, and then on Monday morning we'll throw on our work clothes, pull out our hammers and tools, and start building. There are 12 volunteers in my group. Other groups are doing similar projects, and some groups are cleaning up a kids camp.
Its midnight here, and the staff just declared a full on knock out tournament in the gym, I'm there!
Friday, March 9, 2007
Background on Lake Charles, LA.
I'll be in Lake Charles for a week, and will be heavily documenting the experience for my blog coverage, as well as for the Foghorn (the college newspaper of the University of San Francisco).
I've been doing some preliminary investigating, here is some basic background information on the area:
Lake Charles is in south western Louisiana, it has a population of about 70,000 and a 50%/50% African American/White mix with other Race's representing 1% or less of the population. The median household income is about $30,000, and nearly 15% of families are a single mother household. Per capita income is $17,000 and 20% of the population live below the poverty line.
Louisiana has the third lowest per capita income of any State in the US. In contrast, San Francisco's per capita income is $35,000, and we have one of the highest rates of homelessness in the country, suggesting that those who are working are earning even significantly more.
To keep its economy afloat, Lake Charles relies on the petro-chemical companies Citgo, ConocoPhillips, and PPG Industries, as well a thriving tourist trade related to legal gambling.
As I do some background research on the area, a picture of a very stereotypical southern town develops in my mind, and I can also understand why these people need my help. Before the hurricane, many people here were just-getting-by, now that it has ripped their town and their lives apart, they have nothing, no money and no support, to help them rebuild and get back on their feet. I hope the work we do with the United Way this spring break makes a real difference in the quality of life of the people in Lake Charles. We're about to find out how much good 300 college students can do!
Note: I don't know how much of a technology black hole Lake Charles is, I may not be able to post many pictures, or much of anything until I get to San Francisco next Saturday.
Wednesday, March 7, 2007
Prepare for Departure!
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Saturday, March 3, 2007
Busy Day at Lake Tahoe
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Due to the huge traffic volume, it is no wonder that car companies and ski resorts have a strong relationship. Ski resort patrons are the natural targets of marketing campaigns by car companies because most people who go to ski resorts drive themselves, usually meaning they own their own car, and also because the majority of skiers are affluent consumers who buy new cars fairly often. At my home mountain of Stowe, in Vermont, the resort has a partnership with Chevrolet making Chevy "the official vehicle of Stowe Mountain Resort," and several of their shiny new SUVs and trucks are parked next to the base lodge. Stowe is like many other US ski resorts that have entered into promotional agreements with car companies, however these car companies aren't trying to market all of their models, but rather focus specifically on their all-terrain and four wheel drive line up. Companies like Subaru, Audi, Ford, and Chevrolet are all heavily marketed at ski resorts.
Now, it took a conversation with my European friend on the ski lift today for me to realize the irony of this situation. Global warming is here, and we know its here even as governments including our own, intentionally shield the public from such information. Cars, specifically fuel inefficient vehicles like SUVs and four wheel drive trucks are adding greatly to the problem, while at the same time it would be relatively easy to reduce the problem by switching to more fuel efficient vehicles. One would think in an industry like skiing, where global warming will have a tremendously negative impact, that the companies in that industry would have more foresight geared toward survival and longevity instead of focusing on the bottom line for today.
My "European friend" is actually Tito Hubert, a USF junior like me, with whom I share a passion for snowboarding and the natural environment. On the lift today he told me about the small Swiss ski town of Zermatt where cars are not allowed, except the electric kind, which of course was declared dead in the US this year by the film, "Who Killed the Electric Car?"
Ski resorts make a business of giving people access to the beautiful outdoors, I would like to see them also take more responsibility for the mountains and environment which has helped them become profitable companies. As the US consumer continues to back away from the SUV market in search of more economical vehicles it is possible that the problem will to a large extent fix its self. However as was evident today by the majority of SUVs in the Squaw parking lot, ski going consumers seem to be resisting this trend and still largely prefer the kind of vehicles that they can depend on to plow through mother winters nastiest, and also the kind of vehicle that companies have made synonymous with the ski industry, through marketing.
I'm waiting for the day when I see a Smart Car with a roof rack full of skies zoom up the road to Squaw. Maybe then there will be enough room for all the cars to fit in the parking lot.
Thursday, March 1, 2007
UPDATE on DEATH at USF
This has truly been a horrifying day at USF. A young man from LA, up in San Francisco to promote a retail event saw his friend and co-worker hit and later pulled out from behind a car to be brought to the hospital. A woman was struck and subsequently died from the car crash, her husband went to work at USF today expecting to come home to his wife tonight. Two young USF students hang in the balance as the drivers of the two vehicles involved, where fault has yet to be placed. The USF community, expecting the academic week to wind down leading to a fun weekend, was instead faced by a flood of police and rescue workers, and now are immersed in the cloud of sorrow that hangs over the campus.
BREAKING NEWS: 1 DEAD 1 WOUNDED after TRAFFIC ACCIDENT AT BUSY INTERSECTION AT USF CAMPUS
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The young man was standing on the corner of the intersection distributing promotional fliers for a jeans sale held by his LA based company. The man and a coworker had flown up from LA and were attaching the fliers to cars around campus when the accident occurred. Nothing is known about the deceased woman.
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I heard what sounded like squealing tires followed by a crash, from a third story room of the USF Harney Science Center located one block from the accident, where my math class was winding down for the day around 3 pm. Several minutes later I looked out the window to see the street full of police cars and ambulances. Police officers were beginning to rope off an area around the crash. I quickly rushed down to the Foghorn office, passing my co-worker Bobby Lee on the way, he was rushing to the scene of the crash with his video camera, I grabbed my camera and ran after him up the hill to the bottom of the Lone Mountain steps where the accident took place.
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On a more general note, I feel strongly that it is the responsibility of journalists, photographers, filmers, bloggers, exc., to get the story. It may be hard, people may not like you, they may hate you, but that is your job, even more, it is your duty at a journalist to get the shot and to share it with the world. If a president does something bad, he may hate you for intruding and taking a picture, but it is your job, and also it is the right of the world to have access to that story. How many images have you seen of a child or parent holding a loved one who has just died in a war zone from a bomb or gun wound or other act? That person must have hated the journalist who took their photo in their darkest of hours, but I believe that the information it conveys to the masses is more important than the apparent insensitivity shown by the photographer at the moment. Thus it can be the hardest job to be a photographer, but what we do is important, information is power. Please know that I am not defending the paparazzi, or other celebrity photographers, they are profiting and making peoples lives miserable for a purely economic gain, the information they provide is frankly garbage. I am defending the acts of dedicated responsible news photo-journalists who are strong enough to remain objective in the face of an extremely emotional event so that the world may understand, and learn and comment and as is our hope, work toward changing what went wrong so the future is brighter.
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This photo from last weeks the week in pictures from msnbc.com is a perfect example of what I am talking about. This is war, this is tragedy, its terrible, but should we not take these pictures? Should we not show these photos? Should we not talk and discuss these photos? Will images like these not force us to accept what is REAL and what IS HAPPENING RIGHT NOW in the world, and prompt us to DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT? Or, of course we could always live censored lives, because it is not appropriate or sensitive or "nice" to collect this kind of news.