Archive for the 'politics' Category

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Breeders

Ahh, the Onion strikes again. I love it.

We Must Preserve The Earth’s Dwindling Resources For My Five Children

We must take steps immediately to devise safe, alternative energy sources that my future offspring can safely consume. If we don’t develop new fuels now, there will be none left for those who issue from my loins to burn and continue to burn for all time. I don’t want my 625-odd great-grandchildren to have to wait 20 or 30 precious seconds for their toilets to flush. I don’t want their 3,125 children to live in a hellish society where they cannot own their own snowmobiles. And I shudder to think that my 15,625 great-great-great-grandchildren may not be able to have TVs in every room that they can leave on all day and all night. Is it our right to deny my progeny of their gargantuan RVs and motorboats, as well? Of course not.

Hold The Line

I’ve had this damn Toto song, “Hold The Line”, in my head for days since hearing it on the bus on Saturday. The sad part is that it was one of the few good songs I heard the entire time. For some reason the radio stations here like to play the same 5 shitty pop songs over and over and over again. I guess they do that in the States too, but I’d rather be subjected to listening to Pink a few times a day than tortured by the terrible shit they have down here. Ugh. Somebody needs to import some variety.

I have only 4 more weeks left here at EARTH. In some ways I’m glad the time is coming to a close… my only real regret is that I can’t take some of my friends back home with me. I have met some truly amazing people here and it is going to be sad to have to say goodbye.

EARTH is an interesting place. They sell the picture of sustainability, but there is a lot here that is not sustainable at all. And in general the campus is permeated with a lot of bad attitudes, primarily among the students but also staff as well. Despite that it is supposedly hard to get accepted here and there is a selection process, many of the students are some of the most apathetic, mindless individuals I have ever met who seem to really care nothing for the environment. One of the students here, for whom I have much respect, told me that she wouldn’t be surprised if only 10% of the graduates actually go on to do something important after they graduate. I think this is an under-exaggerration but it does illustrate the point.

Just last week, when I was at La Flor (EARTH’s recently-acquired new farm) on the Pacific side of the country, we were served lunch in styrofoam to-go boxes (with a top and bottom part hinged together). I couldn’t believe they were using styrofoam, especially to-go boxes which have double the amount of waste. So I started a trend to cut (separate) the top and bottom portions and make two bottom parts from them. This way we could at least halve the amount of trash. Other students seemed to pick up on it, and I think we saved about 20 containers. However I was surprised that the other 60 people who went through the line before me made no effort whatsoever to reduce the amount of trash — especially since it was styrofoam, the worst offender!

And then, after lunch, there were no separate trash bags provided to separate the “paper”, “plastic”, and “other” materials for recycling. Actually there were, but they were about 50 feet away from where we were eating. Apparently whoever organized this thing thought we were all too lazy to walk over to the recycling bins to dispose of our trash properly, so they provided single trash bags in the dining area.

One of my friends suggested I talk to the guy who runs the farm, as he was standing right in front of us in the dessert line, and ask him about all of this. I was polite, but curious, about the use of styrofoam and not separating the recyclables. His answer was basically this:

I’m the only one running this place. Just me and my secretary. We don’t have any other administration to organize things right now. And the president of Costa Rica is coming here in 15 days, so that is our priority — not dealing with the trash.”

My friend and I were floored. Here is a guy who is working for EARTH University, which promotes sustainability and eco-consciousness — and he’s too fucking lazy to pick up paper plates instead of styrofoam, and he can’t tell everyone to use the pre-existing recycle bins for their trash, instead providing normal trashbags for everything? What the fuck?

Now I guess some of the blame for the trash should fall on the students as well, who put everything in the same place when the recycle bins were in plain view just 50 feet away. But still, it was disappointing.

How does EARTH expect these students to go back to their communties after graduation and care about recycling, re-use, and proper trash disposal when they don’t lead by example?

Gas Prices

I got one of those stupid chain emails today that attempted to equate the price of gas with the price of eggs. Basically it said that if you only buy a little bit of gas at a time, instead of filling up your tank, it will create a surplus gas supply and the producers would be forced to lower their prices to move the product. Forgetting for a minute that this is complete bullshit, I have other suggestions on what to do about rising gas prices.

1) Walk

2) Bike

3) Bus

4) Carpool

5) Vote Democrat

Seriously, it’s a sad state of affairs in this country that we have a president and vice president who have extremely close ties to the oil industry, the Saudi royal family, the United Arab Emirates, and big business in general. Exxon made record profits last year. Prices at the pump were at all time record highs. The government is doing nil about it. Coincidence? I don’t think so. Bush may talk out of his ass about renewable energy, and about doing something about the rising gas prices, but it’s all just talk. His approval ratings are at 36% — what do you expect him to do? Look at the policies… look at the action. He has done nothing substantial that will actually make a difference.

Minimum wage is $5.15. At current prices, that won’t even buy you two gallons of gas.

If Bush really wanted to do something, he would push to raise minimum wage to at least $7.00. It hasn’t been changed in almost 9 years! Meanwhile, as the price of oil rises, the cost of everything increases — food, gasoline, heat, etc. How is someone making $5.15 an hour supposed to make ends meet these days? It wasn’t so bad in 1998 when gas was $0.85 per gallon… now it’s 4 times that much in some parts of the country! Insane.

Ecuador Protests Global Trade Deals

There are many reasons I love Ecuador.

Here’s one more:

Ecuador protests

An indigenous Ecuadorean woman walks in her community of San Miguel del Prado, north of Quito, Ecuador, Wednesday, March 22, 2006. Thousands of police and soldiers were deployed to clear blocked highways Wednesday after President Alfredo Palacio’s government declared a state of emergency in four provinces to curb protests against a proposed free-trade deal with Washington. (AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa R.)

Ecuador’s President Declares a State of Emergency

President Alfredo Palacio of Ecuador declared a state of emergency late Tuesday as growing antiglobalization protests by thousands of Indians threatened to paralyze Latin America’s fifth-largest oil producing country.

. . .

Still, indigenous leaders said the protests would continue. They demanded that the government back out of negotiations with the United States for a free trade agreement, saying such a pact would decimate rural farming in Ecuador.

Take that, globalism!

Hurricane Katrina

I’ve been trying to figure out what to say about Hurricane Katrina. The victims. The damage. The loss of life. The inability of the government to do more. It’s just… completely shocking.

The more I read, the more speechless I become.

I can’t even imagine what it’s like to watch video of it on TV.

What are these people going to do with their lives? They’ve lost everything. I can’t fathom that. How can they recover? Only with our help.

I only have 3 words worth saying: Donate, donate, donate!

Although I don’t have much money to spare, I just donated to the Red Cross Hurricane Katrina Relief Effort. I challenge everyone to do the same (minimum donation is $5 — if you’re on the internet, you can afford it). It’s easy. Just go a few days without buying beer, eating out, going to a show, or driving your car. Feel lucky for what you have — and do without for a while. These people need our help.

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