Wednesday, July 21, 2010

The Bucket List

I feel I'm a bit young to be writing a bucket list. But for a multitude of reasons (which I won't go into now), I've been giving it some thought.

While there are many things that I would like to do, most are just arbitrary desires: travel, lifestyle... mostly travel. I don't feel these things would change me or my life immensely. Don't get me wrong, they'd be fun and worth my while, but I could just as easily do without them.

The truth is that the only thing I can think of that would cause me regret would be to be silent on my observations and intuitions about the world around me. Communication, convergence, competition, and cooperation seem to me to be as natural as the universe.

It's not that I know what others do not. Quite the opposite, I think. Nor do I believe to have answers or influence. The act of expressing my ideas helps me refine, examine, and judge them. I have strong opinions, but try to base them on facts, experience, and logic (which has reliably resolved many of the problems I've faced.)

I am motivated by the seemingly incurable human condition of suffering, and the seemingly infinite search for truth. This is the reason I started this blog. It's the reason I'll continue blogging. The beginning and end are certain, it's the middle that defines.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

iPhone 4 Recall Is 'Inevitable,' 'Critical,' Say PR Experts


Smells like Toyota... User error... My iPhone 4 works just fine. Just like the 2 Priuses I've owned. Negative propaganda benefits competition, so let's see what smartphone can get a higher Consumer Reports rating. With an overall score of 76 points it's the highest rated smartphone reviewed by CR. Information is the only cure for misinformation.
Read the Article at HuffingtonPost

Monday, July 12, 2010

Jon Kyl: Extend Bush Tax Cuts For Wealthy Even If They Add To Deficit


Class warfare? Naaaahhhh. I only hope Congressional Republicans continue speaking honestly about what's on their minds: Screw the poor and the needy... Dismantle the safety net for the disabled and elderly... Hell, sell the country to foreigners... Borrow a trillion or two and hand the cash over to the military industrial complex... But let's make sure the rich keep as much of the spoils of their exploitation of the country. Invest in the U.S. infrastructure, in local and state governments, in keeping people employed? Hell no. If Republicans stay on message, perhaps the upcoming election wont be as damaging to the Democrats as speculated. Of course, I'm assuming that voters are listening as well as hearing.



Anyway, I'm happy to see so many comments on this article. It must be striking an important chord.
Read the Article at HuffingtonPost

Friday, July 2, 2010

Government Violence Against Citizens

Being Puerto Rican, and having lived there for more than a few years, has given me the opportunity to experience firsthand what colonialism feels like. As the United States celebrates it's declaration of independence from it's colonial master, I look at one of it's modern day colonies in disarray. The sad state of affairs in Puerto Rico is rarely examined by the U.S. media, mainstream or otherwise, and hence the country and it's situations are alien to most people in this country. Having grown up there, I can assure that Puerto Rico and the U.S. have many things in common.

Subject to U.S. laws and benefiting from federal financing, Puerto Rico seems on the surface to be rather similar to other states, with the exception of any significant representation in the federal government. And so, it suffers from the same sort of issues that face state governments throughout the nation: high unemployment, budget deficits, and a lack of comprehensive tools to deal with those problems.

It is with great sadness that I read about the abuse of power taking place inside the Capitol of the Commonwealth. Having closed off the Senate chambers unconstitutionally, and preventing access to citizens and press, the legislature was pressed by a public demanding their constitutional rights of access and assembly. The aggressive use of force by police in removing all non-employees from the grounds on the afternoon of June 29th resulted in pepper gas being deployed inside the Capitol, and members of the press and public being abused indiscriminately.

Overwhelming public condemnation of the events by religious, academic, and labor-union figures was immediate. But the police defend their actions and dismiss allegations of abuse while political figures applaud and support them. The lack of national media attention only adds to the insularity and disassociation of a country that has known nothing else for five hundred years. I see this as a harbinger.

Puerto Ricans are mostly working class and welfare recipients. The country is far from self-sufficient. And the suffering imposed by austerity has magnified the problems, unleashing even greater social violence than the country has regularly experienced. In the face of democratic opposition to their measures, the government resorts to oppression. Violent oppression and repression against citizens supposed to receive protection by those charged with protecting them.

This calls into question many things. Things that have been taken for granted by many. The role of government, of democracy, of police and security, of finance, and of individuals and groups are all evolving and competing against each other. We should be watchful and weary of abuse and use of force against the public and should shine a light wherever such injustice is found. I truly hope that more media catch on to the idea that the real story is about people, not just power and wealth, or else I fear that even greater atrocities and a trampling of rights will result from our current course.