Showing posts with label Disaster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Disaster. Show all posts

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Coming Home


The DOD recently decided to continue not awarding the Purple Heart to solders with post traumatic stress disorder. The blogosphere has been set aflame with the debate over the issue with one side arguing that this would make a substantial step toward acknowledgment, reducing stigma, and treatment of the disease within the military, and the other side trying hard to find new ways to say that PTSD doesn't exist while not overtly saying that.

This was followed the next day with the revelation that military suicides have reached a new record and have surpassed the rate of suicide in the general population. The close timing gave me pause to think about the significance of the two stories in relation to each other. I am not saying that awarding a medal for having PTSD would reduce suicide among military veterans. I just think that there needs to be a better way of serving those who have done their service to protect us. Having veterans among my family, friends, and co-workers, I have found that many of the combat vets are too proud too seek help even when they need it. You would think that psychologists could find a way to communicate directly with a soldier's experience and explain that getting treatment doesn't detract from their valor or self reliance. But I am not a soldier and I don't have any answers. I just don't like the toll that the psychological wounds of war are taking.

Sunday, January 04, 2009

Of Urinals and Broken Zippers


This is a picture of the pull tab from someones fly in the bottom of a uninal at my work. Its been there since before Christmas. Just wanted to share that with you.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Cleveland Ohio: Terrible American City or the Worst American City?

It has been such a long time since a Cleveland article that the city must have thought it had to do better. Yesterday a 42 inch, 111 year old, water main ruptured in an industrial neighborhood of downtown Cleveland cutting off water to half the city. Schools and commercial buildings were closed due to unsanitary conditions and the risk of fire. This being Cleveland the Federal building promptly caught fire. Today there was a boil water alert because of the microbes and toxic industrial chemicals that contaminated the cities water supply as a result of the breach. This happened on a day where the low temperature was 23F in a City that gets as cold as -10F yearly. Tonight there is a massive ice storm bearing down on the Mistake by the Lake and attempts to flee the flaming wreckage of the city by air have been eliminated as the barely operational airports in the region cancel flights. Sure there is a lot about Cleveland to cause a resident to complain, but apparently Clevelanders even do a good job of exporting reasons for people in other regions of the country to take note of Cleveland when they leave the city. What a wondrous place.

Sunday, December 07, 2008

Property Rights = Civil Rights


Some months ago I discovered that my wife keeps a large supply of cash in a secret location. She does this to be prepared for emergency's. One of those emergency's is the possibility of leaving me and having to leave immediately. I was not particularly threatened by this revelation and jokingly acted hurt that she might abandon me in some tragedy or that she thought I would transform into some raging monster after we have been together for almost 10 years. I also was not threatened because it is a sensible plan and I wholly endorse this for all women. Not that I need to, because as I look around and ask women I know and my female relatives they all have an escape fund. It seems like most modern western women have the good sense to be financially independent from their men or to preserve the ability to sever the financial connection on short notice.

It seems related to some of the conclusions reached by the UN Commission on the Status of Women. I paraphrase; they found that due to the vast imbalance in earning power and property ownership of women relative to their percentage of the world population and the percentage of the worlds labor performed by women that efforts should be taken to improve the equality of women's property rights worldwide as that inequality tends to multiply the terrible consequences of tragedy's like war and natural disaster, leading to increase in HIV infection among other things.

To spell out what that means, after a mudslide or tornado or flood damages a village some of the women might be left without their husbands due to deaths in the tragedy. Because they cannot earn as much from their labor or perhaps because they cannot claim ownership of their dead husband's property they are forced into prostitution in order to make enough money to survive or to keep their children alive. This would be bad enough if it didn't also obviously increase the spread of STDs and increase violence against these women, amplifying the personal tragedy set in motion by a natural disaster.

If the personal tragedy of each individual were not enough there is the social cost. With property rights or equal earning potential, these women could continue to be productive members of society, producing value through their labor through farming, or producing other tangible goods. Instead they end their lives destitute, in medical care funded by charity, government spending, and privately subsidized medicine. This cost is shifted to some degree on to western persons through government aid and pharmaceutical companies selling novelty lifestyle drugs for erections and sleep aids at overinflated prices to recoup the costs of the discount AIDS medication they sell to African countries and charities.

In this way, the very real costs of human tragedies on the other side of the world financially impact the life of every American such that even the most cynical and selfish should care for real equality. Even if just out of concern for the cost of their next 4 hour erection.

Monday, May 12, 2008

More Fucking Earthquakes!


The last year leading up to the Olympics has taught us many things about China and reenforced some old lessons about what to expect from a one-party communist state. One thing in particular that China has had an unfortunate chance to display is their efficiency at disaster relief. As this article attest the Chinese don't fuck around when it comes to responding to a natural disaster. The real test comes in the long term aftermath where the response is measured in terms of how quickly life returns to normal for the residents of the disaster struck region. I don't foresee a state-run news outlet covering anything less than a complete victory.

Friday, April 25, 2008

The World Food Crisis


The world food crisis entered the perception of the average American this week when Costco and Walmart started rationing rice. I came upon rice at half the market rate today in the grocery store and bought up the thirty pounds you see to the left. I also snapped up a gallon of vegtable oil since land used for rice has been converted to the palm oil cash crop and will rise in parity with rice.
The prices of all foods, and all comodities, are linked in this global economy. The staples Wheat, Rice, and Corn have all drasticly gone up in price over the last year. The rise is due to a number of factors that feed back on one another because of the global economy.
In the United States the farm lobby has pushed congress to invest in corn based ethanol. This created an incentive outside of the market for U.S. farmers to dedicate feilds that had been used for producing rice and wheat for food in the past, to corn, that is being burned for fuel. The President spoke of using switchgrass but the money has gone to corn. So this decreases supply of staple foods that the U.S. would otherwise export to the world. With the falling dollar our exports would be very attractive except the cost of rice is fixed to the dollar so it faces the pressures of inflation. The cost of fuel feeds back into the cost of food because of the energy used in transport and processing.
High Gas prices wouldn't effect the hungry as devistatingly if their own countries produced enough food to feed them. Then they wouldn't have to import the food they need from the U.S. Around the world farmer's decisions about what to plant have been influenced by the U.S. economy over the last few years. The black hole of ever increasing imports to America due to ample credit have encouraged foreign farmers to switch to cash crops. Farming has always been a poverty industry since the beginning of time and how can you begrudge an Egyptian farmer who chooses sugar over wheat when its ten times the price?
This global trend to switch to sugar and oil instead of rice and wheat, or poppys in Afghanistan, has driven world food supply even lower. But it has done so in a highly localized way. Major rice exporting countries have cut shipments to ensure they can feed their own people and the major rice importing countries now face a crisis where the whole supply thretans to go into the black market. When the bottom dropped out of the U.S. economy and the falling value of the dollar started an upward trend toward inflation the whole world suddenly realised they had been catering to U.S. luxury demands instead of feeding themselves.

Saturday, April 19, 2008

Why Isn't Anyone Talking About All The Earthquakes?


OK, so lots of people are talking aobut the earthquake in Illinois. But what about the ones that have been shaking the ring of fire over the last week or so? Oregon Quake Swarms, Alaska, French Guiana, Maluku, Guatemala.
In the face of clear signs of the apocylapse I am compelled to ask all of you:
What is your zombie plan?