Sunday, June 28, 2009

Mountaintop Removal


Dear President Obama,

Please add my name to the list of people you'll be hearing from this week, in particular, who are asking you to go to West Virginia. See for yourself what Mountaintop Removal is doing to the land, water, and people.

I'm sorry you have so much to do, but there is much to do.

Thank you,

Vicky

*****

Read the article in Daily Kos that prompted my letter to the President...

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Blog Projects


1. English 101
2. The Supreme Court
3. Chapter by Chapter
4. International Relations by region

My intention for this blog has been to develop my writing skill, track my visual arts development, and share my opinions and random thoughts.

It all begins with enjoyable, articulate writing.

I'm not improving in that regard. I still have trouble focusing my thoughts and ideas, presenting my ideas in context, and serving it all up in way that someone else would enjoy reading.

The idea that popped into my head while I tossed and turned tonight is that I need to go back to English 101.

If you went to college, you took English 101. I did in my first quarter at the local community college. I recall we wrote 5 essays during the course, each with a different focus: 1) tell a story, 2) write an opinion piece, 3) present an argument, 4) and 5) I don't remember.
At the time, I thought it was elementary because we'd learned essays in High School.
32 years later, I forget what I learned.

So, my first project is to start over; go back to the techniques and ideas I learned in English 101. Well, re-learn them.

That is job one.

Once I have a handle on how to write with clarity and effectiveness (to the best of my ability anyway), I'll tackle my other ideas:
a. The Supreme Court. I've always enjoyed the ideas, arguments, and philosophies highlighted through cases brought to the Supreme Court. I'd like to summarize and think about the arguments presented in Supreme Court cases, make my own decision, and then look at what the Supreme Court decides. Was I able to see and articulate all the reasoning the Justices thought of? If so, I'll feel proud of myself (ego!) and If not, I'll learn to see things in a different way. I think this is an exercise in debate, right?
b. Chapter by Chapter. I still don't read enough. I thought it might be helpful if I wrote about each chapter I read in a book. Its a smaller bit than writing about the whole book so it would be easier to tackle. I have two goals associated with writing about my reading. 1) once a book is read, it gets donated. I don't have room in my apartment to keep books anymore. I need to get rid of the ones I have. If I write about the plot and story and what it means to me at the time, I won't need the physical book on a shelf to remind me. 2) Fully experience the books. I tend to read quickly for the plot alone. By reading fairly quickly, I miss subtleties and don't develop an appreciation for the author's artistry. Writing about the books will help me be 100% in the moment while reading the book.
c. International Relations. I recently remembered I considered majoring in International Relations or Public Affairs when I was in college. It didn't fit my life at the time so I didn't pursue it at all. But, I'm interested to see that the things I most write about on this blog are International Relations and Public Affairs. I think it would be fun to pick a region of the world, and consider the history and how it is affecting our current politics with that region. It would involve a lot of research that, in theory, I like. In practical terms, am I focused and diligent enough to be a good researcher? This will be an issue in the Supreme Court project as well.

I'll also continue documenting my card making and photography.

Once I'm a better writer, I'd also like to write about Philosophy. That's interesting to me as well.

Friday, June 26, 2009

What if...



What if, devastated by Michael Jackson's death, Kim Jong Il's heart changes such that he no longer wants to nuke his perceived enemies, and in that way Michael Jackson becomes the saviour of the world, like he always wanted to be? What if?

*****

No disrespect to Michael Jackson.
I was as affected by him as anybody during the Off The Wall , Thriller, and Bad years. I'm still inspired by "Man In The Mirror" (written by Siedah Garrett and Glen Ballard). He could be an exciting performer. I'm sorry he had such a troubled life and I wish him peace in the next lfe. Any other comments I have about him (including the crack above about him wanting to be the saviour of the world) is really about how the media manipulates and changes people - both the ones in the spotlight and those of us watching the spotlight. Michael Jackson did the best he could during his lifetime. As do we all.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

North Korean government is at it again...


I'm slightly obsessing about the North Koreans and their verbal antagonism. I don't want to play into their paranoia and threats, but I'd like us to approach them the same way we'd approach any mentally unstable friend or relative.
I don't trust the North Korean goverment to be logical when making their decisions. The instinct for self-preservation may fail them. Or, their delusions of their own invincibility will blind them. I'm concerned they'll do something we'll all regret.

From the AP this morning:

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea threatened Wednesday to wipe the United States off the map as Washington and its allies watched for signs the regime will launch a series of missiles in the coming days.

Off China's coast, a U.S. destroyer was tailing a North Korean ship suspected of transporting illicit weapons to Myanmar in what could be the first test of U.N. sanctions passed to punish the nation for an underground nuclear test last month.

The Kang Nam left the North Korean port of Nampo a week ago with the USS John S. McCain close behind. The ship, accused of transporting banned goods in the past, is believed bound for Myanmar, according to South Korean and U.S. officials.

The new U.N. Security Council resolution requires member states to seek permission to inspect suspicious cargo. North Korea has said it would consider interception a declaration of war and on Wednesday accused the U.S. of seeking to provoke another Korean War.

"If the U.S. imperialists start another war, the army and people of Korea will ... wipe out the aggressors on the globe once and for all," the official Korean Central News Agency said.

The warning came on the eve of the 59th anniversary of the start of the three-year Korean War, which ended in a truce in 1953, not a peace treaty, leaving the peninsula in state of war.

The U.S. has 28,500 troops in South Korea to protect against an outbreak of hostilities.

Tensions have been high since North Korea launched a long-range rocket in April and then conducted its second underground atomic test on May 25.

Reacting to U.N. condemnation of that test, North Korea walked away from nuclear disarmament talks and warned it would fire a long-range missile.

North Korea has banned ships from the waters off its east coast starting Thursday through July 10 for military exercises, Japan's Coast Guard said.

South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported Wednesday that the North may fire a Scud missile with a range of up to 310 miles (500 kilometers) or a short-range ground-to-ship missile with a range of 100 miles (160 kilometers) during the no-sail period.

A senior South Korean government official said the no-sail ban is believed connected to North Korean plans to fire short- or mid-range missiles. He spoke on condition of anonymity, citing department policy.

U.S. defense and counterproliferation officials in Washington said they also expected the North to launch short- to medium-range missiles. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive intelligence.

South Korea will expedite the introduction of high-tech unmanned aerial surveillance systems and "bunker-buster" bombs in response to North Korea's provocations, the Chosun Ilbo newspaper said, citing unidentified ruling party members.

Meanwhile, a flurry of diplomatic efforts were under way to try getting North Korea to return to disarmament talks.

Russia's top nuclear envoy, Alexei Borodavkin, said after meeting with his South Korean counterpart that Moscow is open to other formats for discussion since Pyongyang has pulled out of formal six-nation negotiations.

In Beijing, top U.S. and Chinese defense officials also discussed North Korea. U.S. Defense Undersecretary Michele Flournoy was heading next to Tokyo and Seoul for talks.

South Korea has proposed high-level "consultations" to discuss North Korea with the U.S., Russia, China and Japan.

___

Associated Press writers Jae-soon Chang in Seoul; Pauline Jelinek, Pamela Hess and Lolita Baldor in Washington and Min Lee in Hong Kong contributed to this report.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Mom's First Car

 

 

 

Posted by Picasa


My Mom is much more photogenic than I am!

Mom and Great Grandma

 

This is a test. It is only a test. The people are real.

I opened Picasa, selected a picture, clicked the Blogger icon at the bottom.

(I'm not understanding how my hard drive folders, Photoshop Elements Organizer, Picasa 3, Picasa Web Albums, Facebook photo albums, and Blogger photo uploads can best be used together.)
Posted by Picasa

Surrender to Peace


Today I'm thinking about Surrendering to Peace.
I have ideas about all the levels of fighting: fighting ourselves, fighting others, fighting among nations.

Surrender to who you really are. Its much more peaceful there. Stop fighting against your nature to accommodate someone else's idea of what's expected or desired. Be true to yourself and find peace.

Surrender the need to be right. What do you care if someone's opinion of you is wrong of if the other person is right. What difference will it make in the truth of your existence? Will you be different or 'less than' because someone doesn't agree with you or see your point of view? No.

Surrender the need for power or excess or control. It only creates a false sense of security anyway, and causes needless suffering. Eventually the reckoning will come. It always does. You'll be left raw and naked for all the world to see.

I find it most interesting to consider what might be happening at the moment before surrender.

For instance, in a war, the goal of the war is thought worthy of the death and destruction it causes. Then, at some point, someone thinks - no, this is not worth it anymore. Suddenly, acceptance of reality seems an okay compromise. But, if its an acceptable compromise at that moment, why couldn't it have been an acceptable compromise before the death and destruction?

The answer is because fighting and war are emotional reactions to perceived slights.

Peaceful actions are successful because a conscious choice is made to redress a wrong. Its not an emotional reaction, its a choice. In that instance, we are fighting WITH peace.

*****
I wanted this to be a very powerful and profound essay on surrender and peace. Today I don't have the required skills to write the kind of essay I envision.
But, I needed to get it written down somehow. I hope I'll remember to react with conscious thought rather than emotion the next time I instinctively feel my 'personhood' is being challenged.

The Bottom Line:
The truth of who I am cannot be challenged by anyone outside me. There is nothing to be gained by fighting to protect what cannot be challenged without my permission.

I truly believe those same principles can be applied to countries as well as people.

Let's all choose to surrender our emotional needs to peace.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Making a movie...

A post title on Andrew Sullivan's blog caught my eye. Its called "Tick Tock M***F***s".
On A Blog About Things I saw a link to XtraNormal

I combined the two. Warning - the M****F**** word is spoken.



I made this little gem in about 44 minutes. Go to XtraNormal.com to make your own movie.

In case its not obvious, my point was only that the regimes that keep people's voices silent in order to maintain power, can't keep the voices silent for long. Eventually, the repressive government will be toppled. Its only a matter of time.
Which folds right into my Tick Tock, time's a wastin' theme in the last couple days.

Village Idiots

People talk too much.
People think too much.
We're all village idiots enamored with our own shadows,
oblivious to the setting sun.

From "In Plain Sight"

Friday, June 19, 2009

Nonviolent Protests in Iran

The protestors...

vs. the theocracy.

In his Friday sermon, Khameini said the protests should cease, the election is over, Ahmadinjad won. Further, if there are continued protests and rallies, the government will restore order using violent measures. And..."If there is any bloodshed, leaders of the protests will be held directly responsible,"

Of course, I'd like to see the Iranian government swtich from a theocracy to a democracy. But, should the people stand up to threats of bodily harm?
There are so many levels to the protests, I'm not sure what the right answer is.
a. divisions between the clerical elite - specifically Rafsanjani and Khameini.
b. some of the elder reformers/protestors and government supporters have a shared history from the 1979 revolution.
c. the election was the reason for initial protests, but the story has outgrown the election now. The people are protesting how their government is treating them - today and in the past 10 years at least (a student uprising in 1999).
d. the media is agog over the stunning events - does their fascination encourage the potestors to continue beyond where they might have gone without any narration?

Is now the time to fight, or is now the time to wait to fight another day?
I can't tell from where I sit.
If the time is now, I hope they're all in it together so the numbers are so big the government won't be able to follow through on its threats.
If the time is not now, I hope the impatient people can be held back so things don't get out of control.

Nonviolent protest is the most effective weapon in the world. But, it takes an enormous amount of courage. It also requires a great organization and a level of respect and control from the top down and back again.
If they have the organization, if they have the leader, they could pull this off.
If not, the fight will wait for another day.

If the whole thing fades away for now, what will the Iranian government be like to deal with? What will their attitude in the world be? Defensive? Aggressive? Or will they retreat a bit to heal their wounds?

I don't think the Iranian people have an easy choice to make tomorrow.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Ready? Set. Go!

I like being a Slowsky. I'm proud to be a Slowsky. Long live the Slowskys!!


But, sometimes I wanna....?



and then I just gotta...?


(see more drawings by Mel Kadel here)



Time waits for no one.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

And don't forget Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq, Palestine, Venzuela, and Mexico - News happens everywhere!

Most recent headlines from Google News related to...

PAKISTAN

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Army surveillance planes flew Wednesday over suspected militant strongholds in Pakistan's northwestern tribal district where a major offensive is planned, and helicopter gunships hit several targets in advance strikes, officials said.

NEW DELHI, July 17 (Reuters) - Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said on Wednesday that Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari had sought more time to act against anti-India militants because Islamabad's fight with the Taliban had entered a crucial phase.


AFGHANISTAN

WASHINGTON (AP) — The House has narrowly approved a $106 billion bill to ensure financing for war operations in Iraq and Afghanistan over the coming months.

KABUL, June 17 (Xinhua) -- As the date for election campaign of presidential candidates formally begun on Tuesday in Afghanistan, several contenders for the country's highest executive post have launched their maiden drive to win over people's support.


IRAQ

BAGHDAD (AP) — Iraqi forces acting on tips Wednesday arrested a suspected al-Qaida in Iraq leader who was believed to be a mastermind of the assassination of a prominent Sunni lawmaker in Baghdad, officials said.

BAGHDAD (AP) — The U.S. military says an American soldier has been killed by a roadside bomb southeast of Baghdad.


PALESTINE

Reporting from Washington (LA Times) -- U.S. officials reacted skeptically Monday to an Israeli proposal that the United States and other world powers guarantee that a new nation of Palestine remain demilitarized as a condition of its statehood.

JERUSALEM, June 16 (Washington Post) -- Former president Jimmy Carter said Tuesday that Palestinians in the Gaza Strip were being treated "more like animals than human beings" by Israeli rules that have limited travel, banned the import of all but basic goods and prevented reconstruction since a three-week war ended earlier this year.


VENEZUELA

Caracas (Business Week) - Lawmakers loyal to President Hugo Chavez gave final approval on Tuesday to a bill paving the way for Venezuela's government to take a minimum 50 percent stake in the country's petrochemical companies.

(CNN) -- The government of leftist Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez heightened its battle Tuesday against the only critical private broadcaster left in the nation, launching a fourth investigation into the Globovision network.


MEXICO

WASHINGTON, June 16 (UPI) -- U.S. border agents will now check for guns and drug money in vehicles heading south over the border into Mexico, officials say.

(CNN) -- The killing last weekend of a Catholic priest and two seminary students in southwest Mexico marked the first time that drug cartel hit men have purposefully targeted a clergyman, said Manuel Corral, public relations secretary for Mexico's Council of Bishops.

North Korea - Still Crazy After All These Years...

Following a joint statement by the United States and North Korea in Washington in which the countries reiterated that North Korea should not continue its nuclear weapons program, North Korea threatened a 'thousand-fold' military retaliation if provoked.
Russis and China are even starting to get tired of them. They also issued a joint statement urging North Korea to return to the 6-party talks.
Japanese and South Korean sources tell us the North Koreans are planning to test fire another long range ballistic missile.

The Colbert ReportMon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Stephen's Sound Advice - How to Be a Totalitarian Nutjob
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full EpisodesPolitical HumorStephen Colbert in Iraq

Viva La Revolution!


I'm not a good judge of what makes a revolution.
When the communist countries started falling in the late 80's (?) I thought it was just a mirage.
When Tiananmen Square happened in the early 90's (?) I thought it was going to overhaul the Chinese government.

So, it is with cautious hope and optimism that I watch the events in Iran unfold. I would like to see an Iran the US can work with, that isn't so restrictive to women, and an Iran that doesn't support (financially and otherwise) fear-inducing groups.

This could be the people's moment. Even if it doesn't turn out to be, they've shown great courage and strength. Their efforts won't be in vain. They've planted a seed at the very least.
But, it is the Iranian People's moment. Not ours to influence.
Some people in America (Bill Kristol, Pence in the House et al) are trying to shame President Obama into officially siding with the supporters of opposition candidate Moussavi. I really can't see how they could have a more knee-jerk reaction than that. I think 'jerk' is the operative word in that sentence.
Revolution comes from within - both personally, and as a nation. Leave them be. They know we support democracy. They know we're watching.

Strangely, the fact that the Iranian government knows we're watching makes it odd to see the government acting with such a heavy hand. They made themselves look guilty of rigging the election by responding with violence and cracking down on the opposition and media reports. That wasn't very smart. Even I would have known that much.

Its interesting to see many of the rally signs, for both Moussavi and Ahmadinejad are written in English.

A key point I've been hearing a lot about is that Moussavi has views that aren't entirely different from Ahmadinejad's views. And since the Supreme Leader is the one who wields the most power, the 'revolution' of Moussavi won't be much of one.

However, there has been news today that the Council of Experts (who select the Supreme Leader) are meeting today and THAT could be the real revolution. And, it would mean there could be real change in Iran.

Given that Moussavi wasn't all that different from Ahmadinejad, it seems the people are really protesting how the government handled the election and Moussavi is an accidental beneficiary. I wonder what made the reformers side with Moussvi? Is it becuase he's the least worse candidate? Or is he worthy of being a reformer?

I think the bottom line is that the protestors are fed up with a government that lies and isolates the country and tries to manipulate and threaten their own citizens.
Moussavi as the President must be incidental.

For more information about the Iranian election aftermath, go to...
Huffington Post - Liveblogging the Uprising

Sunday, June 14, 2009

And then there's Iran...

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, here at a Sunday news conference, said elections were 'soundest of their kind.' (from CNN)


Here is video of protesters in Tehran on Saturday June 13, or Sunday June 14.
The protests are broken up by police on motorcycles. One of the police motorcycles goes down. We next see the motorcycle on fire, and the police person being led away - presumably by protesters who are trying to give him medical aid.




There was plenty of talk in 2000 and especially 2004 of fraudulent elections in the United States. If, in 2004, those of us who couldn't believe there wasn't fraud in that election had taken to the streets (on an equal scale as Iran, proportional to our population), it could have looked exactly like this video.

Go here to see pictures of protesters in Salem, Oregon from 2004. Not quite as many people.


Alleged fraud in America vs Alleged fraud in Iran. In 2004 we hoped we'd survive the next four years of Bush so we could get another chance to change the tone of the government.
Maybe we should have gone out in the streets.

Something to think about...in a country that values the 'rule of law' is it best to peacefully protest election fraud in the streets and risk violence (because you can't know how people will respond or be assured of the purity of everyone's motives). Or is it better to allow the fraud to stand and then work to make change for the next election?

In any event - I support the Iranian protesters and I think Ahmadinejad is a loser (both literally and metaphorically). His responses to the protests reveal a gap in what he says and the reality we can see. That's the most obvious symptom of a corrupt and illegitimate government.

Update: The video below is from CNN - a discussion of Iran on Fareed Zakaria's GPS. I've heard Reza Aslan discuss Iran before and like how he explains the politics and motivations of Iran. This is a good discussion that also includes Afshin Molavi and Nicholas Burns.

North Korea really bugs me...

The two photos below come from a slide show about Kim Jong Il from the Telegraph of London.

This article was also in the Telegraph - headline is "North Korea claims US could provoke nuclear war"

According to North Korean lore, Kim Jong-il's birth was foretold by a swallow and heralded by a glorious double rainbow and the appearance of a new star. His official biography says he was born on White-Headed Mountain, the highest peak on the Korean peninsula. On top of the mountain sits the volcanic Heaven Lake


However, a set of grey and prosaic Soviet Union records say Kim was born in 1941 in the remote Siberian fishing village of Vyatskoye, where his father was commanding a scraggly army battalion made up of Chinese and Korean exiles


The rhetoric and drama created by North Korea right now is manufactured by the North Korean government to convince the people of North Korea they're about to be attacked or invaded. They'll be very grateful to their dear leader when they are not attacked, or, when they learn Kim Jong Il's intelligence and power have repelled the (alledged) invading armies in a remote region of North Korea. It becomes another example of why the Kim Jong Il family is destined to rule - which means whoever is named by Kim Jong Il to succeed him will be accepted. That's my version of the scenario they want to convey.
The reality, I think, is that the North Korean government is like a tweaked out meth addict waving a loaded gun in a crowded room. Maybe they're trying to get one small thing accomplished for their own benefit, but they could accidentally kill us all in the process.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Quick Thoughts...

1. I enjoyed my birthday yesterday - it was exactly the level of celebration I wanted...people at work said Happy Birthday, we exchanged hugs, and MFJ came over for the evening. Mom called in am, Maggie in afternoon, Sis in pm, niece a little later. And I'm sure my nephew thought about it...:)

2. I'm sorry that Ahmadinejad won the election in Iran. It reminds me of our 2004 election when those of us who didn't like Bush couldn't imagine that people would really vote for him a SECOND time! Four more years of hateful, negative rhetoric will get old eventually. I hope it won't be too late.

3. The leadership in North Korea is seemingly off its rocker. I thought we were trying to ignore them, but that makes them more agitated. In response to North Korea's own decision to test nuclear weapons and ballistic missilles, the Security Council announced new sanctions yesterday. It completely feeds into North Korea's false narrative that everyone wants to hurt them. Which makes them feel justified when they announce they're going to "weaponize" their remaining supply of plutonium in addition to begin enriching uranium in order to make nuclear weapons. And if anyone crosses them it will be a declaration of war.
I'm not alone in thinking North Korea is demonstrating some mental illness am I? I feel bad for the people because they've been isolated and infected by the mental illness as well so they aren't in a position to stop the crazies at the top

Friday, June 12, 2009

Special Edition...

Today’s blog entry is to mark a milestone.

I was born 50 years ago today. At 1:28 am - just like this post!

My father and I...

My mother and I...


On one hand I want to commemorate this day because - well, it IS an accomplishment to finish 50 years of life on this earth, right!?!
On the other hand...meh - its another day. Any day can be a special day - profound and joyous and life-affirming.

Truth telling time -
I've tried to write this post all week. I want to say something meaningful on my 50th birthday.
I want to tell the truth.
But the truth is, sometimes I feel like a nut - sometimes I don't.
Sometimes my life feels great and sometimes it doesn't.

The truth is, I still have a lot of things to work on, but I don't want to write about them because it doesn't matter. It only matters that I keep trying to be the person I want to be. As hard as I've tried over the years to be that person, I don't know why it hasn't happened yet. But, I'll keep trying. I only wish I had another 100 years to do it because I must be a slow learner!

And on this day, I'm thinking about my natural parents, my Mom and Dad, my sister and her kids, all the family I've known and not known, my friends over the years - the ones I don't see and the ones I see every day, I'm thinking of all of you and I thank you for the special gift each of you gave me - your time, your presence, yourself.

Youth gets better with age.
Its easier being youthful, in mind and spirit at least, as you get older.
I hope I'm always young at heart, believing in the future, and working toward a new goal.

Happy Birthday to me!

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Most recent cards...

In the last several weeks I've made a few cards I kinda like.
In fact, its a new experience for me to look at the cards and feel proud of myself.
I'm not used to it.
Its very confusing.

A sympathy card...


A 'de-stress' card...


A birthday card...friend


A birthday card...nephew


A birthday card...one year old.

Hanging my head in shame...

Hello Dear Reader...
A mere 49 days ago, I committed to you that I would, at the least, blog on Thursdays and Sundays.
Sigh.
I did not submit an entry for last Sunday.
I failed after 44 days of success.
All I can do is pick myself up, dust myself off, and try again.
I hope you'll stick with me while I try to be better and do better, dear reader.

Enough said - one of the things I can do 'better' is be succinct!

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Obama is still the best president ever!


This evening I sent a quick e-mail to Obama letting him know I support him again. I didn't even make a copy to post here because its really the same thing I always say. This time I specifically referenced his position on the Israeli settlements in the West Bank, and the Cairo speech he gave earlier today. Obama has taken the first step in reestablishing the United States as a trusted and honest broker in the world - particularly between Israel and Palestine.

And, that's all I have to say today.