Tag Archives: Social Issues

Christmas Culture

A while back I commented on a clip from the excellent documentary God Grew Tired of Us, reflecting on how this particular scene got me thinking seriously about how we celebrate Christmas in our culture.

It looks like somone posted this excerpt up on YouTube, so I wanted to share it here. I plan to post a more lengthy summary of my thoughts on the holiday season when I have time, but for now, this is food for thought.

Again, I highly recommend this film for anyone who hasn’t seen it. It documents the journey of several “Lost Boys” who fled Sudan as children and have grown up in refugee camps in other parts of Africa, and are eventually given the opportunity to come live in the US. Their first experiences with so many things we take for granted (electricity, showers, etc.) as well as our culture in general range from humorous to thought provoking. It really is a must see, if you trust my opinion at all.

All the Wrong Questions

Courtesy of the Off the Hook radio show, I heard about this news story from Philadelphia regarding surveillance cameras that just goes to show how people / society can get so worked up about something that they end up fighting for / demanding things that might not be in their best interests if they really thought about it.

I’ll chop the quoted story up here and comment as it goes. Read More »

Freedom Day

onevoicetoendslavery.com

Boo!

Not a threat

Scary, isn’t it?

Pizza for pesos

Texas-based pizza chain accepts pesos, takes heat

DALLAS — A pizza chain has been hit with death threats and hate mail after offering to accept Mexican pesos, becoming another flash point in the nation’s debate over immigrants.

“This is the United States of America, not the United States of Mexico,” one e-mail read. “Quit catering to the … illegal Mexicans,” another said.

Dallas-based Pizza Patron said it was not trying to inject itself into a larger political debate about illegal immigration when it posted signs this week saying “Aceptamos pesos”–or “We accept pesos”–at its 59 stores across Texas, Colorado, Arizona, Nevada and California.

Pizza Patron spokesman Andy Gamm said the company was just trying to sell more pizza to its customers, 60 percent of whom are Hispanic.

This article is an exaggerated example of the way I see the anti-immigrant crowd. I know it’s not really accurate, but I can’t help but make the association.

Yes, I realize that not all people who are really into opposing illegal immigration are this disgustingly racist, and some of them may not even be racist at all. Most swear up and down that it has nothing to do with race whatsoever, but rather economics and such. While I recognize all that, I also can’t dismiss the fact that the vast majority of racists don’t come right out and say that they are racists either; they usually talk about all the “problems” associated with the particular people group in question (who just happen to be of the same racial background) but attempt to deny that race plays any part in their opinion.

Anyone else want to try this?

Shopping Sabbatical

What would it be like, 10 environmentally conscious friends wondered as they discussed the state of the planet, to go a year without buying anything new?

Twelve months later, the results from their experiment in anti-consumption for 2006 are in: Staying 100 percent true to the goal proved both harder and easier than those who signed on expected.

And while broken vacuum cleaners and malfunctioning cell phones posed challenges, some of the group’s original members say the self-imposed shopping sabbatical was so liberating that they’ve resolved to do it for another year.

[Read full story]

Selective media

As an off-shoot of a side conversation Dan and I have been having here on this post, I got to thinking about the main drawback (in my eyes) of the new “subscription” culture (for lack of a better term) that RSS and the internet in general affords us. Obviously, being able to consolidate the stuff you read and listen to (news particularly) is very convenient, and probably even essential in the days of information overload we live in. The problem is that when there is so much that you have to prioritize what you can read and listen to just for the sake of there never being enough time to read and listen to half the stuff you’d really want to.

While this leads to a very pleasing diet (so to speak) of media consumption, I wonder whether it could be considered a healthy one. To extend the analogy further, no one in their right mind would plan a meal schedule that consisted only of the foods they enjoyed eating the very most, because it would almost certainly lack vital elements that would not make the top of the taste list. Likewise, when we restrict our media input to only what we consciously choose to consume, I can’t help but get the feeling that we will always be missing stuff that we “need” (or should be seeing / hearing), especially the stuff that we can’t imagine or think of being interested in now.

I’m constantly in a state of re-evaluating and trimming my podcast subscription list, because even listening to them for a good number of hours every day while working & driving, there are still too many out there to keep up with. One discipline I’ve had to force myself to maintain is to as it relates to this post is listening to the radio every now and then to hear stuff that I haven’t pre-selected and may hopefully catch me by surprise. Of course, when I say that I’m referring to non-commercial radio; I still get the occasional small dose of the mid to right portion of the dial too (since Emma always wants to listen to B95.1 these days), but like any junk food, I tend to try and stay away from the commercial stations whenever possible. :)
After going through a recent round of cleanup on my RSS feeds over the last couple days and starting fresh / caught up with a more manageable sized list, I kind of feel the need to go back out and add a few more blogs and sites I don’t generally agree with to the list, or at least ones that tend to give a wide range of perspectives on the issues.

TV is notably lacking from this list and I don’t feel too bad about being “unbalanced” in leaving that out of my media diet either. It’s generally too inefficient (time-wise) for me to handle, although I will make exceptions for rare shows like Lost.

At first glance, this may seem like another boring tech post, but in my mind it goes a little deeper than that. I think that our culture in general is experiencing this same phenomena (selective media consumption) in a way that was never before possible, and I honestly think it’s a great danger to any society. Considering (even seeking out) other points of view and new information is vital to living together in any context, and maybe my perspective is whacked out but that’s something I see as seriously lacking in our culture today. Whether it’s politics, religion, or any other subject that generally divides us, there is a constant barrage of information in all sorts of formats that strives to hammer home the party line of whatever the source’s side is supporting, and if we embrace those streams that we tend to agree with to the exclusion of the others we are setting ourselves up for division and lack of understanding.

Still feeling secure?

Sure, all these added “security measures” like dumping out fluids at airports and the larger general disregard of privacy and constitutional rights are a real pain, but at least people can’t fly airplanes into tall buildings in New York anymore.

Oh, wait, they still can.

Luckily this one wasn’t piloted by people who actually intended to do some damage, because if it were, it could have easily been loaded with quite a lot of explosives and there isn’t a thing we could have done to stop it. Unfortunately, I think that point will continue to be lost on those who favor the loss of liberty for the sake of perceived security, as the saying goes.

Getting ridiculous sad

A Defining Moment for America - The president goes to Capitol Hill to lobby for torture.

President Bush rarely visits Congress. So it was a measure of his painfully skewed priorities that Mr. Bush made the unaccustomed trip yesterday to seek legislative permission for the CIA to make people disappear into secret prisons and have information extracted from them by means he dare not describe publicly.

Dark Days - recommended

Just watched Dark Days, and excellent documentary chronicling a community that was build underground (literally) in the NYC subway system. It was excellent, and I highly recommend that you add it to your Netflix queue.

Thanks to Jason, whose Netflix rating of this movie encouraged me to pick it up.