Friday, August 3, 2007

Fear and Loathing in America II

I've expanded my Fear and Loathing in America article because a local magazine would like to use it as an editorial! I've cleaned up some of the wording and lengthened it to 1,000+ words to fill a predetermined space. I'm not getting paid for it, but I don't really care. The fact that an unbiased someone likes my writing and is willing to publish it is all I need right now.


Fear and Loathing in America (Revised)

The culture of fear in America is pushed on its citizens under the guise that we are creating a united front by spying on our neighbors and reporting every action that we don’t understand to the authorities. In fact, the opposite is true. For all our subterfuge and constant vigilance, our cities and towns are no safer than they were before 9/11. Implications by the Bush administration that we are under constant threat of imminent attack and that anyone could be a terrorist has turned neighbor against neighbor. Anyone who may act or look different can and could very well be considered a suspected extremist and be reported to the authorities immediately.

Yes, it is true that anyone can be a terrorist. We should be vigilant and look out for our neighbor. But when one hears stories like some that have surfaced in recent times, it seems more and more people are instead scared of our neighbors and for no other reason than perhaps their skin is a darker color, they hold particular beliefs, or they appear “different.”

Take for instance Kazim Ali, a poetry professor at Shippensburg University in Pennsylvania. He had a lot of explaining to do when a “concerned citizen” reported to authorities that a man of Middle Eastern descent had just placed a suspicious package next to a trash can on campus. The bomb squad and the state police were called to the scene, classes at the campus were cancelled, buildings were evacuated, and the university was effectively shut down. Colleagues of Ali’s, who had over-heard a description of the “suspect” and his car, were briefly considered to be accomplices when they tried to explain to police that Ali was a member of the faculty. In reality, the only true crime committed was by the citizen for assuming that the only package a darker skinned person could be leaving on a university campus would contain a bomb. And what of the suspicious parcel by the trash? It ended up being a box of old poetry that he had left to be recycled. Who would have ever thought that trash would have been left next to a trash bin?

Last year, six Muslim imams were removed from a U.S. Airways flight departing from Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. They were forced off the plane, searched, handcuffed, and held for several hours without the offer of an explanation. These events happened after several passengers reported them to authorities, as they viewed the imams’ appearance and prayers to be suspicious. If their skin had been any other color and they were reciting a Hail Mary before their flight, there would have been no report.

In another example, there is Andrew Feldmar, a well-known psychotherapist who is highly respected in his field. He previously traveled to the United States several times a year for work and to visit his family. Last summer, he was permanently denied entrance into the country after a Homeland Security officer Googled his name and discovered an article he had written about his experimentation with, and the possible psychotherapeutic uses of, LSD. Never mind that his experimentation and experiences with the drug had happened nearly 40 years ago, before the substance had been outlawed in 1970. This man is a holocaust survivor and scholar, an intelligent and thoughtful person who has worked closely with the U.N. in Sarajevo and in Minsk with Chernobyl victims. He has much to offer this country, but because the war on drugs married the war on terror and he has at one point in his life consumed an illegal drug, he has been branded a threat to national security and is barred from the country.

He isn’t the only one branded a terrorist over an idea or experience. The American Civil Liberties Union has filed a lawsuit that challenges an “ideological exclusion provision” that is part of the Patriot Act. It basically means that the government is allowed to deny a visa to anyone whom it believes "endorse[s] or espouse[s] terrorist activity" or "persuade[s] others to endorse or espouse terrorist activity." However, the administration is using the provision to deny entry to people with political views that are simply unpopular. It’s been used to prevent countless scholars and activists from entering the country, simply based on their spiritual beliefs or personal convictions. When did our society become afraid of free speech, religious freedom, and knowledge?

The product of this culture of fear in which we live glaringly made its presence known earlier this year in one of the most expensive terror-scares-over-nothing in the U.S. to date. It happened when over $1 million was spent in Boston after “suspicious-looking devices” at various locations throughout the city were reported. Major highways, parts of the subway, a bus station, and various other areas were entirely shut down as police investigated the blinking boxes, at least one of which was detonated by the bomb squad. What the “suspicious devices” amounted to were basically over-glorified Lite Brites with pictures of cartoons on them, meant to be a creative advertising campaign for the upcoming Aqua Teen Hunger Force movie. In fact, the signs had been placed in 10 cities throughout the U.S. without incident and had been on display for weeks by this time, seemingly unnoticed. The police force of Bean Town made themselves appear as fools nationally, since coverage of the events were broadcast all over the country.

However, even after the true origin and purpose of the curious objects were discovered, the farce continued. The two men who had been paid by Turner Broadcasting System to install the devices were arrested, charged with placing a hoax device and disorderly conduct, and now face up to five years in prison. The company itself was forced to pay the city $1 million in compensation and the CEO resigned over what has been dubbed “The 2007 Boston Mooninite Scare.” Authorities in the city known as The Cradle of Liberty have never taken any responsibility for its part in escalating the situation to the heightened frenzy it reached.

The effect of the Bush administration’s fear-mongering has caused troubles that are two-fold. First, it has set us on such high alert that we are afraid of our own shadows, causing us to suspect and report everyone and everything that is unfamiliar. Secondly, it creates a situation that is very much like the old story “The Boy Who Cried Wolf.” When something really happens, will we be prepared after so many false alarms? Will we be able to find the true enemy through the fog of mistaken accusations?

As far as our society is concerned, the terrorists are winning. They have us precisely in the position they want. We are allowing ourselves to be terrorized and held hostage by fear. We are so busy pointing our fingers for the smallest differences between ourselves and our neighbors that we have become a nation divided beyond any damage political lines have caused. In order to bring us back to a truly United States, we must stop being afraid, start taking action, and for pity’s sake we have to stop being so paranoid. When fear turns ordinary people and objects into suspects and explosive devices, we have truly ascended to a new height of hysteria.

Friday, June 15, 2007

Highway 55 Pac Man 2.0

They said it wouldn’t last, but they were wrong. The Pac Man that had been spray-painted onto the pavement of Highway 55 in Buffalo, Minnesota, was fading, but he recently received a fresher, thicker coat of paint, seemingly making him a more permanent fixture on the road.

For the uninitiated, during the summer of 2006, the Minnesota Department of Transportation embarked on a $15,000 project to paint large white dots 225 feet apart in the middle of the lanes on a section of Highway 55 that has a high accident rate. The theory is that if every driver keeps two of these “Distance Dots” between themselves and the driver in front of them, there would be fewer incidents of tailgating and accidents, as this is how much distance you’re supposed to leave anyway. The project has apparently met with success in Pennsylvania and Maryland.

Last December, on one wintery Minnesota night, someone braved the elements and the traffic to spray-paint a giant Pac Man onto the road, strategically placed so that it appeared he was simply gobbling up the long line of white dots stretching down the highway. Officials in the county had hoped that the addition would wash away with the winter snows, and indicated as such in a Star Tribune Article that is no longer in the archives. However, they were stymied on repeated occasions, as whenever Pac Man’s shape started to fade, inevitably it seemed some unseen hand would re-apply yellow paint in the middle of the night.

This spring, however, there has been a dramatic change.

Previously, the yellow paint had been opaque and was not quite thick enough to block out the blackness of the pavement beneath it. Now it appears that whomever is painting the popular video game character has gotten serious about his or her craft, as quite recently a fresh coat of bright yellow paint has been applied, far thicker and more defined than before. It would take some cash, serious scrubbing, and lane closures to remove Pac Man from the pavement at this point, in fact.

The painting adds a bit of amusement to that stretch of Highway 55, and brings attention to the tailgating project. The project here is still young, so there were no statistics for Minnesota’s project available at the time of this article, but according to one Pennsylvania statistic the program resulted in a 65% drop in tailgating accidents in those areas from November 2000 to March 2001 compared to the previous year.

This article can also be found at The Bloggernews Network.

Friday, June 8, 2007

A Matter of Definition

To give you a quick glimpse and brief idea about why I chose to name this blog Sense & Serendipity, I thought I would bring the specific words that make up the title in the spot-light. According to Mirriam-Webster's Dictionary:

sense (1)
Function: noun

1 : a meaning conveyed or intended
2 : conscious awareness or rationality -- usually used in plural
3 a : capacity for effective application of the powers of the mind as a basis for action or response : INTELLIGENCE b : sound mental capacity and understanding typically marked by shrewdness and practicality


sense (2)
Function: transitive verb

1 a : to perceive by the senses (hearing, sight, touch, taste, smell) b : to be or become conscious of
2 : to comprehend
3 : to detect automatically, especially in response to a physical stimulus such as light or movement


ser·en·dip·i·ty
Function: noun

: the faculty or phenomenon of finding valuable or agreeable things not originally sought for; also : an instance of this


The contents of this blog will hopefully reflect the attitude of these words.

Monday, June 4, 2007

Your Health & Personal Freedoms At Stake

Are you one of millions of Americans who take a multi-vitamin every day? Do you enjoy a V8 with your afternoon lunch? How about take a fish-oil supplement to keep your arteries in good working order? Believe it or not, you may not be able to do these things for you health in the future if proposed legislation is passed.

Docket No. 2006D-0480, which seeks to have all vitamins, supplements, natural remedies, garden herbs, even water in some cases, regulated by the Food and Drug Administration, would take all of the natural options you have regarding your health and put it all in the hands of the government. Chemical based, synthesized and lab-produced medicines will still be available to you over the counter. But naturally grown ginseng, gingko biloba, ginger root, and all other natural medicines will have to be purchased through your doctor.

Think this doesn’t apply to you? Don’t know what is likely to follow? Developments that could take place after this legislation is passed may make growing common garden herbs an arrestable offense, raw sprouts and other anti-cancer foods may be regulated as drugs, even bottled waters and teas, which could “treat” dehydration, could become a thing of the past. Suddenly herbal remedies and food flavorings, used for hundreds, maybe thousands of years by humans to season food and treat common ailments, will be regarded as illegal and may bring you jail time.

Not ridiculous enough? What about the fact that such innocuous items as dumbbells and weight machines, mainstays of fitness for decades, will need to pass individual inspection and receive a stamp of approval? Or perhaps FDA regulation of massage oils and handheld massagers? Even the heated stones massage therapists use to help relieve muscular tension will be regulated under this legislation.

Yes, this means they will actually look at a pile of rocks and determine whether or not they are medical devices.

Certainly the FDA has more important issues to be addressing than rosemary and thyme. Perhaps the Vioxx scandal isn’t keeping it busy enough? As of March 31, Merck knew of 27,250 lawsuits alleging 45,700 incidences of personal injury or loss due to Vioxx. How about the new scandal regarding Avandia and its 43% increase in heart attacks and possible 64% increase in cardiovascular death?

The FDA has a problem with herbal remedies, from which very, very, very few people have ever died, and yet approves chemical and synthetic drugs that categorically resulted in the deaths of thousands? The disconnect here is vast.

Please, contact your representatives and senators and let them know that Big Government is big enough, and certainly the FDA has more important issues with which to wrangle.

This article can also be viewed at the Bloggernews Network.

Stop FDA's plan to implement Docket No. 2006D-0480

Dear Friends,

I have just read and signed the petition: "Stop FDA's plan to implement Docket No. 2006D-0480"

Please take a moment to read about this important issue, and join me in signing the petition. It takes just 30 seconds, but can truly make a difference. We are trying to reach 5,000,000 signatures - please sign here:

http://www.thepetitionsite.com/takeaction/305121404

Once you have signed, you can help even more by asking your friends and family to sign as well.

I will also be writing an article regarding this issue shortly.

Thank you!

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Writer's Block

Fleeting thoughts
Blurry images
Details fade
Attention fails
Interruptions abound
Spaces between
Tip of tongue
Top of head
Tip of pen
Empty caverns
Awaiting fulfillment
Left wanting

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Fear and Loathing in America

The culture of fear in America is pushed on its citizens under the guise that we are creating a united front by spying on our neighbors. In fact, the opposite is true. For all our subterfuge and constant vigilance, our cities and towns are no safer than they were before 9/11. Implications by the Bush administration that we are under constant threat of imminent attack and that anyone could be a terrorist has turned neighbor against neighbor. Anyone who may act or look different can and could very well be considered a suspected extremist and be reported to the authorities immediately.

Yes, it is true that anyone can be a terrorist. And we should be vigilant and look out for our neighbor. But when one hears stories like some that have surfaced as of late, it seems more and more people are scared of our neighbors and for no other reason than perhaps their skin is a darker color, they hold particular beliefs, or they appear “different”.

Take Kazim Ali, a poetry professor at Shippensburg University in Pennsylvania, for instance. He had a lot of explaining to do when a “concerned citizen” reported to authorities that a man of Middle Eastern descent had just placed a suspicious package next to a trash can on campus. In reality, the only true crime committed was by the citizen for assuming that the only package a darker skinned person could be leaving would contain a bomb. The suspicious parcel by the trash? A box of old poetry that Ali had left to be recycled.

In another example from British Columbia, there is Andrew Feldmar, a well-known psychotherapist who is highly respected in his field. He traveled to the United States several times a year for work and to visit his family. Last summer, he was permanently denied entrance into the country after a Homeland Security officer Googled his name and discovered an article he had written about his experimentation with and the possible psychotherapeutic uses of LSD. When did his experience happen? Nearly 40 years ago, before it had even been outlawed in 1970. This man is a holocaust survivor and scholar, an intelligent and thoughtful person who has worked closely with the U.N. in Sarajevo and in Minsk with Chernobyl victims. He has much to offer this country, but because the war on drugs married the war on terror and he has at one point in his life consumed an illegal drug, he has been branded a threat to security and is barred from the country.

He isn’t the only one branded a terrorist over an idea or experience. The American Civil Liberties Union has filed a lawsuit that challenges an “ideological exclusion provision” that is part of the Patriot Act. It’s been used to prevent countless scholars and activists from entering the country, simply based on their religious beliefs or personal convictions. When did knowledge, ideas, and the exchange there-of become the enemy?

And finally, six Muslims were removed from a U.S. Airways flight after another passenger viewed their appearance and prayers to be suspicious and panicked. If it had been any other color of person saying a Hail Mary, there would have been no report.

As far as our society is are concerned, the terrorists are winning. They have us in precisely the position they want us to be in. We are allowing ourselves to be terrorized and held hostage by fear. We are so busy pointing our fingers for the smallest differences between ourselves and our neighbors that we have become a country divided beyond any damage political lines have caused. In order to bring us back to a united front, we must stop being afraid, start taking action, and for pity’s sake we have to stop being so paranoid. When an advertisement of a cartoon character that looks like a child’s light-bright toy can be mistaken for an improvised explosive device, we have truly ascended to a new height of hysteria.

This article can also be found at Bloggernews.net

The Thought Police

Terrible feelings of Outrage. Embarrassment. Fear. This Tyee article incites these emotions about our Government. Since when is Google considered to be reliable enough of a tool for Homeland Security to use as a device to determine entrance eligibility into a country? Is all of the information it provides truly that dependable?

Oh wait. Its easy forget that the U.S. has been descending a spiral into madness. No, scratch that: Mind-boggling idiocy. The article says basically that we have gone beyond a state of surveillance, beyond a state of paranoia, we have actual thought police. “These are your ideas? These are your thoughts? No U.S.A. for you.” The words weren’t even threatening in any manner, this was simply a recollection of a memory, not guns, bombs, and blood.

Forget the fact that the specific Google article it brought up (and the one for which he was barred from the U.S.) was about this psychotherapist’s acid trip in the 60’s and his beliefs that hallucinogenic drugs could have therapeutic uses. Who is to say illegal drugs have no medicinal uses? After all, our fair President recently stated that Politicians shouldn’t be trying to make the decisions of Generals. Therefore it should follow that Politicians and Presidents shouldn’t be trying to make medical decisions that Doctors and Patients should be making.

There are far more intellectuals besides Andre Feldmar barred from ever entering our country simply because of the thoughts, ideas, and beliefs they hold. If our Government is so concerned with education, peace, and living as one big happy global family, why are we stopping professors and human rights leaders from coming here?


This article can also be viewed at Bloggernews.net.

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

I Had a Point Around Here, Somewhere

Since I seem to be having troubles getting this blog off the ground, this post is going to be very frank.

The purpose of this blog is threefold.

1) This will be my own personal writing project to get myself into the habit of writing. I am a writer by nature, but I have been completely uninspired for years. Most of my work as of late has been for job related reasons or have read like research papers. I love constructing informative articles, but I want there to be more emotion to my writing. With a platform such as this, I am giving myself a place that is available whenever (and mostly where-ever) the inspiration strikes. Its quick, easily published, and I can write whatever I want. The bonus is it is public so hopefully people will read it and their comments will inspire me to write even more.

2) This will also be a social experiment of sorts. My friends and I are probably some of the most well-informed people on just about any current or real-world event. We are constantly soaking up information regarding politics, religion, and culture, then sharing and discussing what we learn amongst ourselves. Our sources are varied, and we all have our “regular” sites that always seem to contain information that is useful. I want to see how long it takes for one of my friends to stumble across this blog and link it to the rest of us. That would make me incredibly happy. It wouldn’t necessarily mean that my blog has become super popular or anything, but it will mean that people are finding it and reading it.

3) I don’t want to be a proofreader forever, but a nice place to get my foot in the door to work in the publishing field. It’s only satisfying to a point, however. If I’m every going to move on into writing as a profession, I need to start doing more of it. I’ve used my “slacker time” after college wisely, procuring entry-level jobs that have given me enough experience to command a salary that actually pays enough to cover my expenses. I probably won’t seek a new job for a year or two, as I just started my current one in January, but the next one will be closer to what I want to do with my life and will pay better. No, I’m not greedy. I want to make a difference though, and it seems that nothing can be done in this world without money. Not that this blog is going to fix that, but if it can help me to become inspired or if my experiment works, I feel that it could only help to enhance my writing, provide a public forum for criticism, and give me more practice.

Basically, if this blog accomplishes either 1 or 2, 3 will most likely follow.

Now its time to get ready for work.

Its Been Over A Month... But I'm Baaaaack!

Okay, so maybe creating the blog first and then hoping that I wouldn’t have an excuse to write didn’t exactly work. I still have managed to not write anything. Part of that has to do with a certain on-line game that I have been playing far, far too much of. But, now that its nice outside, that monkey is off of my back.

The rest of it seems to be that I am struck by inspiration when I am no where near my computer or when I am inspired near one, I’m have too much work to do and need to do that instead.

Fear not, I will get it together and get on with my intentions for this blog.

Saturday, March 17, 2007

A Less Than Dazzling Beginning

This blog has been in the works in my head for months now, possibly even a year, and I always have come up with some excuse as to why I couldn't start it. "I'm too busy," "I'm too tired," "I have to come up with the perfect beginning." I'm through with excuses.

I don't have anything particularly clever to write this evening (or early morning, depending on your perspective), I simply intended at this juncture to have the blog in place so the next time inspiration strikes, I will have no more excuses. Here the blog is, waiting for my submissions.

I suppose that soon I will have to introduce myself and perhaps explain why I chose the title of Sense & Serendipity, but not tonight. No, this is simply a night for beginnings, not explainations or introductions. No need to overload the start of what will hopefully be a long project with too much information, for we have plenty of time to get to know each other.

I’m not sure who will be reading this, but it is going to be a mix of journaling with various type of writing interspersed in the spaces between. I am attempting to penetrate nasty bit of writers block and I hope Sense & Serendipity will by my muse. I have so many ideas until I attempt to put any of them into written form.