Previous Ramblings
Tuesday, December 22, 2015
Thank You
But, since I'm below average on the creativity scale-- I go weeks without having an original thought. My lack of creativity dictates the slow pace of updating for this blog.
When KIUC approached me, it was the first time since college that I had to force myself to sit down and write. Reflections on living off-grid weren't bouncing around in my head trying to get out, they were lying dormant in a dusty corner. And I had to force myself to try and polish those thoughts into something worthwhile.
This cover story for their monthly magazine is the result...
However, a more important result was the realization that I enjoyed that writing process even more than the "sit and wait" style that I was used to. Just like forcing myself to exercise when I'm tired or forcing myself to socialize when I'm an introvert-- writing that KIUC article was unexpectedly satisfying.
And so I've decided to try and pursue a wider audience for my writing.
After hashing out my thoughts on Syria over three blog posts, I committed myself to sit down and clean them all up into one coherent essay. Which I tentatively submitted to Civil Beat. To my surprise, they published it.
I submitted two more pieces to Civil Beat, one of which was for an Emerging Writers Contest that they were holding. Again to my surprise, they published both-- and I ended up winning the contest.
Both articles began with me facing a blank page-- intent on writing but with no idea what to put down. A process that was foreign to me.
The first piece is on how we're letting demagogic politicians dominate our conversation, while ignoring the harder conversation of climate change.
The final Civil Beat piece, and the one that won the contest, is on fear. Since I had no idea what to write about, I used my accident as fodder for a broader discussion on rational vs. irrational fear.
While I'm not very good at coming up with ideas on a regular schedule, I do plan to continue attempting to submit to Civil Beat. However, they will not publish anything that has been published elsewhere-- including this blog. So, if you are a regular reader and no new posts are popping up here, you can stay up to date by periodically checking this link at Civil Beat for new pieces.
While I'm not giving up on this blog, I do want to say thank you to all of you who have read it regularly over the last few years. Without your support, and periodic debate, I would not have had the fortitude to continue writing. So, thank you very much-- I really appreciate your words of encouragement.
Aloha,
Friday, December 11, 2015
Fear of the Other
It took me about seven minutes of sitting through a biology lecture on my first day at college before realizing that I wasn’t cut out to be a scientist. Immediately afterwards I went to the registrar to find out what else I could take. The only option still available was a seminar on Middle Eastern History. I didn’t know what seminar meant and I’d only taken one history class at Kaua'i High. Because of extenuating circumstances, we spent most of that high school semester watching Blockbuster (literally, from Blockbuster) movies. So, my vision of history was Mel Gibson with long hair.
But, it was either history or biology-- and I knew I couldn't handle a semester of biology.
Almost all that I knew about the Middle East was that our president said that Iraq and Iran were part of the Axis of Evil, that they flew planes into the World Trade Center, and that Muslims have to pray five times per day towards Mecca. Oh yeah-- and my favorite movie was True Lies, where the bad guy’s name is Aziz.
I wasn't a bigot-- just ignorant.
But maybe that's the same thing?
It was the most challenging semester of my life. When people talk about that one class that changed their life-- this was mine. Though there were only 13 of us and we sat in a circle for a three-hour continuous dialogue, I don’t think I said a single word during the first month.
I remember the day that I finally tentatively offered my opinion on a subject. It may have been my first time speaking in any college class. I had like fifteen pages worth of notes on the book we were discussing, and I felt confident in the subject matter. Regardless, my heart was racing and I could feel my throat choking off as I tried to get a word in. I opened my mouth and out fell a jumble of unintelligible sounds. Something about fear of the other. And then for a horrifying moment—nobody spoke. Nobody knew what to make of the quiet kid finally saying something.
And then the professor nodded his head, smiled, and expanded encouragingly on my thought. And then the kid across from me also took up the topic. And the ball of dialogue began bouncing around the room again.
Through the rich history of the Middle East, Professor Khazeni changed my life. I switched my major to history, he became my advisor, and, most importantly, he encouraged me to have a voice.
I never would have stepped foot in that class if it hadn’t been the only one available to me. It forced me out of my comfort zone and into a realm that I knew nothing about.
The Internet was supposed to do the same thing: to be the great intellectual equalizer. We have unprecedented access to nearly all of human knowledge and culture. If I wanted to, I could start a conversation with a thirty-year old in Algeria, Afghanistan, or Australia.
But I don’t think that any social scientist twenty years ago would’ve guessed the actual result of the internet age. All we’ve done is isolate ourselves. We can always find friends who agree with us and a news source to reinforce us. It feels good, because we are never wrong—never really challenged.
Most importantly, it allows us to always blame someone else.
An article in Vox yesterday uses the theory of “ethnic outbidding” to explain what is happening in today's vitriolic politics:
...multi-ethnic democracies seem at times unstable and prone to conflict. The basic problem... comes from ethnic parties. When a party’s base is overwhelmingly from one ethnic group, politicians inside that party have a strong incentive to appeal to that group’s particular interests. One really effective way to do that is to appeal to xenophobia and fear of outside ethnic groups.
This can create a demagogic arms race. When one politician gets traction by demonizing other ethnic groups, others follow suit-- and even try to one-up them.Whether it's our county council or the race for U.S. President, the venom in our politics is because of us. We create it and we demand it.
If we want a better system-- then we need to start stepping out of our comfort zone. Whether it's a class in Middle Eastern History, socializing with a different crowd of people, or simply reading a book from an opposing ideology.
Sunday, November 22, 2015
Thoughts on Syria: part III
It’s Sunday, and Social Media seems to have quieted down after the fear mongering outrage of last week’s refugee crisis. Yet, while we’re spreading our beach towels and scolding our kids for not putting on sunscreen, the bloated bodies of decomposing Syrian children are still washing up on Turskish beaches. But, we’re Americans; we have a lot of issues; Thanksgiving is coming up; it’s apparently time to move on.
When I was at college in California one of the professors had her car tires slashed and her windows spray-painted with racial slurs. There had been some racially charged events on campus the month preceding this and it happened during a conference on campus racism. So, as you would expect, the student-body exploded. There was an organized classroom walkout and then a candlelight vigil against racism. There were seminars and panel discussions which culminated in a concert to end the hate. At the finale of the event they brought out a surprise guest: the victimized professor. Nobody had seen her since the incident, so we all went wild in support.
A few days later she was arrested. Two witnesses identified the victim as the perpetrator and the stuff she'd reported as stolen was found in her own closet. In an effort to galvanize the campus against racism, the professor slashed her own tires and spray painted her own windows. The ends justify the means, or something like that. We all felt betrayed.
Life went on. No more vigils, no more seminars, and definitely no more concerts. It's been ten years and college racism continues unabated. The same campus has been repeatedly in the news over racial tension.
Earlier this week Facebook was blowing up due to Governor Ige’s announcement that Hawai’i would comply with Federal law and accept Syrian Refugees. In an attempt to respond to the over-hyped fear mongering on Facebook, I wrote a post on the Syrian Refugee crisis. Five thousand people read it.
In the coming months the Senate will pass the SAFE Act. Obama will veto it. Republican members of Congress will then threaten a Government shutdown if the SAFE Act isn’t signed into law. The Syrian Civil War will continue, the refugee crisis will get worse, and children will keep washing up on beaches.
Yet the nation, especially Social Media, will have long since stopped paying attention. A refugee will commit a crime somewhere and politicians will say “I told you so, these people are dangerous” Tulsi Gabbard will sweep her way to reelection as our representative in Congress without ever having to defend her vote to halt the flow of refugees. And Governor Ige won’t mention the issue again.
Our dysfunctional political process is fueled by our chronically short attention spans.
I have one simple plea for this holiday season: don’t stop paying attention. We all can vote, we all have a voice, and we’re all human. In a democracy, that’s all the tools we need to make a difference.
And, in a brief interruption of your happy Sunday adventures, here are some pictures of Syrian children at the beach.
Friday, November 20, 2015
Thoughts on Syria: Part II
"In the absence of any guiding principle, politics becomes a naked struggle for power."
-Bertrand Russell
Remember the fury over the Wall Street bailout and inflation? Or the Obamacare death panels? Or the insistence that we can't allow Africans into the country during the Ebola epidemic? Or the current theme that any action against climate change will cripple our economy?
In yet another example of the fear mongering and partisan pandering inherent in American Democracy, yesterday the Republican party (with the support of some conservative Democrats, including Hawai'i' Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard) passed the American Security Against Foreign Enemies (SAFE) Act. I won't go into the details, because I know that you'll close the browser window, but, if it becomes law it will temporarily halt all refugee resettlement and ultimately add a cumbersome layer of bureaucracy to an already cumbersomely bureaucratic process.
The US has accepted 1,500 Syrian Refugees since the civil war began. In comparison, Turkey has taken in 2.2M, Lebanon 1.2M, Jordan 1.4M, Saudi Arabia 100-500K, Iraq 247K, and Germany 200K.
I don't think that anyone who is not running for an election is saying that our Syrian refugee program is too lenient.
So, what if the Republican party wanted to actually do something to limit the chances of terrorism in the US. How about making it so that terrorists can't buy guns? According to the Government Accountability Office: "Membership in a terrorist organization does not prohibit a person from possessing firearms or explosives under current federal law... Between 2004 and 2014, suspected terrorists attempted to purchase guns from American dealers at least 2,233 times. And in 2,043 of those cases-- 91 percent of the time-- they succeeded."
This insane loophole was highlighted by an al-Qaida operative in 2011 who released a video saying: "America is absolutely awash with easily obtainable firearms, you can go down to a gun show at the local convention center... So what are you waiting for?"
Despite widespread support among Democrats, gun safety advocates, and even the Director of the FBI-- the NRA opposes any legislation limiting the rights of terrorists to purchase guns. As the NRA goes, so does the Republican Party. Congress has repeatedly failed to pass a measure that would ban guns for those on the FBI's terrorist watch-list.
Yet, instead of gun control, Presidential candidate and Senator Rand Paul thinks it would be a better idea to eliminate all welfare support for resettled refugees from 34 mostly Middle Eastern countries.
My wife is a refugee. She subsisted off of food stamps for her entire childhood. She lived in government sponsored housing until she was eighteen. She went to college with federal aid. And now she pays the government somewhere around $20,000 a year in taxes. She is a proud American who is a productive member of our economy. That's how our system works.
When you cut off aid to refugees you create a second class tier of citizens. When you refuse to integrate those citizens, you create a hotbed of terrorism-- regardless of religion. Which is what is happening across Europe. And is exactly what ISIS wants.
The [Charlie Hebdo] attack had “further [brought] division to the world,” the group [ISIS] said, boasting that it had polarized society and “eliminated the grayzone,” representing coexistence between religious groups. As a result, it said, Muslims living in the West would soon no longer be welcome in their own societies. Treated with increasing suspicion, distrust and hostility by their fellow citizens as a result of the deadly shooting, Western Muslims would soon be forced to “either apostatize … or they [migrate] to the Islamic State, and thereby escape persecution from the crusader governments and citizens,” the group stated, while threatening of more attacks to come.
In a 2004 letter to Osama bin Laden, Abu Musab Zarqawi, the Jordanian-born leader of al Qaeda in Iraq, laid out his proposal for provoking such a conflict, calling for terrorist attacks against the Shiite majority population that would lead to a harsh crackdown on the Sunni minority. In such a scenario, his group could then coerce the Sunni population into viewing it as their only protector. “If we succeed in dragging them into the arena of sectarian war,” Zarqawi wrote, “it will become possible to awaken the inattentive Sunnis as they feel imminent danger and annihilating death.
... Through increasingly provocative terrorist attacks, hostage executions, and videotaped threats, the Islamic State is consciously seeking to trigger a backlash by Western governments and citizens against the Muslim minorities living in their societies. By achieving this, the group hopes to polarize both sides against each other, locking them into an escalating spiral of alienation, hatred and collective retribution. In a such a scenario, the group can later attempt to pose as the only effective protector for increasingly beleaguered Western Muslims.
As The Wahington Post reports, Donald Trump "is refusing to rule out extreme measures that include warrantless searches or faith-based identification cards." When asked how his plan differs from that of Nazi Germany requiring Jews to register, he responded, "You tell me."
Speaking of fascism, Presidential Candidate Ben Carson who has repeatedly compared the Obama administration to Nazi Germany is now saying that "you have to reject the tenets of Islam" in order to be President of the United States.
Good thing that Ted Cruz is setting the record straight by reminding Ben Carson that "the Constitution specifies there shall be no religious test for public office... The president's faith is between him and God." But Cruz's religious tolerance doesn't stretch much further than the Oval Office. He is advocating that the US only accept Christians from Syria, because, in his words, "there is no meaningful risk of Christians committing acts of terror."
We could dismiss these bigoted and unconstitutional claims if these three guys weren't the front runners. But between them, they represent 64% of the Republican electorate. The more inflammatory they get, the higher they rise in the polls.
This, in my opinion, is much more frightening: in one South Carolina poll, 40% of respondents said that "Islam should be illegal in the United States," and 72% said that "A Muslim should not be allowed to be President of the United States." More broadly, a Gallup poll found that 50% of Republicans "Feel a great deal of prejudice against Muslims."
Just like we can't separate the recent terrorist events from the extremists wing of Islam, we also can't separate the nationalistic fear mongering and blatant bigotry from the conservative wing of the Republican Party.
But, it does help Donald Trump.
Wednesday, November 18, 2015
Thoughts on Syria
I was robbed on Friday. They took four computers, jewelry, and possibly our two favorite ducks. I have never felt such shame and anger towards my fellow humans. This feeling is new to me. But not because some young punk broke into our house and violated our privacy. Crystal meth is creating a lost generation on Kaua'i who are driven to unconscionable acts. I can understand that.
It's our collective response to the worst humanitarian crisis since World War II that makes me want to vomit. It's the venom that is coming out on Social Media that's making me lose faith in humanity. From my friends-- people I know to be smart, good people.
That, I can not understand.
In case you missed it, Governor Ige said that Hawai'i would welcome Syrian refugees with aloha. And Social Media exploded in vehemence. This xenophobic outburst caused Governor Ige to partially retract his statement yesterday by saying "I suppose in hindsight I should probably be more thoughtful about my statements."
Yes-- Governor Ige, you should have known better. While we don't talk about it, we all know that under the thin veneer of the aloha spirit, Hawai'i harbors an intense distrust towards outsiders. But no-- Governor Ige, you shouldn't have to apologize for Hawai'i's lack of humanity. This is one of those rare times where it's important to say "fuck public opinion, I'm doing what's right."
My wife was born in a Cambodian refugee camp. My grandparents and great-grant parents were refugees. Most of my grandfather's family were shot or gassed because they could not get political asylum quick enough. Jews were painted as communists, and communists were thought to be dangerous. Nearly 70% of Americans were opposed to accepting Jewish refugees on the eve of World War II.
And the wheel of history turns.
According to a recent Bloomberg Poll a majority of Americans do not want the US to allow Syrian refugees into our country. The Syrian crisis is our generation's holocaust. We're using the same xenophobic arguments against Muslims as were made against Jews. We're using the same Nationalistic arguments against foreign aide as were used then. And it's sickening to be an impotent witness.
I used to wonder how the world remained silent for so long in the face of Nazi atrocities. Now it's my generation's turn, and we're making the same obscene mistake.
Before I go on, I should clarify that I did read an article that said that liberals are exacerbating the situation by making this a moral issue. Since as soon as you mention "morality" you lose your reader. Conservatives think "self-righteous liberal, are you that out of touch?" And, instead, we should focus our conversation on something we can all agree on-- like increasing the security process to gain entry. Sorry, but I have more respect for whoever is reading this blog than to pander to that bullshit. If you think that minimal background checks are a problem, then take 14 seconds to google the process. It takes two years of security clearance to gain entry as a refugee. So, unless you're a politician looking to avoid substantive conversation on the issue (cough cough, Tulsi Gabbard), then can we all agree to discuss the real issues?
There are two main streams of argument against accepting Syrians. A) Muslims are terrorists and shouldn't be allowed in, and B) we should focus on our own homeless problems first. There are plenty of fringe arguments that I don't think are worth addressing- such as the fact that neighboring countries to the East are not taking in many refugees (when was the last time we compared our human rights standards to the Middle East?)
So-- are Syrians terrorists?
There is a line of reasoning that goes: Terrorists are Muslim. Syrians are Muslim. So Syrians are terrorists. This flawed logic and elementary thought process is what fuels all racial hatred. It's what is driving Marco Rubio and Paul Ryan to say that the US, despite international law, shouldn't accept any Syrian refugees. Despite anti-discrimination laws, it's driving Ted Cruz and Jeb Bush to say that we should only accept Christians. It's why Donald Trump is going as far as saying that we should deport all current Syrian refugees from the US. It's why 31 governors (it's worth mentioning that that's all but one of the Republican governors in the US) are saying that they won't accept Syrian refugees in their state, despite the fact that governors have no say over refugee placement.
Since state level job re-training and English language programs for refugees are funded by grant money through the Federal Government, all that the governors can do is block funding for those programs-- thereby starving refugees of the resources necessary for integration into the fabric of American society, and ensuring that it takes longer for them to become economically productive members of our community (more on that later).
But, are Syrians terrorists? Only 1% of refugees who apply for resettlement are accepted by the UN. And then only a very small portion of those actually make it into the US. In order to gain entry you have to prove that you've never had any association with a terrorist group. Imagine that ISIS killed your mother and raped your sister. And your dad, in angry desperation, gives a pack of cigarettes to a young resistance fighter engaged in a pursuit against ISIS. Your entire family is now disqualified from ever gaining entry to the US.
Further, 75% of Syrian refugees are either female or under 18 and 38% are under the age of 12. That doesn't sound too threatening to me.
So, the answer is no. The chances of your own mother being a terrorist are currently higher than a Syrian refugee in America being a terrorist.
For the most part, what people in Hawai'i are focusing on isn't terrorism, but homelessness. So, will Ige's willingness to accept Syrian Refugees increase our rates of homelessness?
A quick slip into partisanship. Since this is mostly a conservative argument, speaking of homelessness, where was the outcry when your party was cutting food stamps? Or blocking unemployment benefits? Or opposing an increase in the minimum wage? Or reducing the expansion of veteran's benefits? Or blocking funding for the Affordable Care Act and Planned Parenthood?
Back to the topic: in the last decade, Hawai'i has resettled 21 refugees. For all the heat that Obama is in, he is only proposing that the US accept a paltry 10,000 refugees (out of 4.2 million looking for resettlement- for comparison, Germany, 1/26th the size of the US, is saying they will take in one million refugees this year). Proportionate to our state's population, that means our share would be 40. And Kaua'i's share will be two.
A recent World Bank study says that the inflow of Syrian refugees into Turkey caused average wages in the country to increase. Syrians now account for 20% of the population in Jordan, and the influx has caused no rise in total unemployment. Looking at the US, a study of the economic impact of refugees in Cleveland shows that "refugees are more likely to be entrepreneurial and enjoy higher rates of successful business ventures compared to natives. The literature also supports the argument that immigrants in general do not take jobs away from natives."
I'm currently writing this blog on the product of a Syrian refugee. Yeah, Steve Jobs, the guy who founded the most profitable company in history which created more than one million US jobs is the son of a Muslim Syrian refugee. Imagine if he never gained entry into the US.
Homelessness is a very serious issue in Hawai'i. When compared to the rest of the country, we have the second highest proportion of residents without a roof over their heads. And there seems to be no end in sight. But, the causes and solutions to homelessness are very different than the refugee crisis. Most of the fleeing Syrians are members of their educated middle class. They provide economic benefit and skills for the workforce. And, regardless of the economic value of Syrians, this is a humanitarian issue that is very different. Homelessness in Hawai'i is a complex mix of high home prices, failing public education, lack of shelters, and a lack of support for displaced Native Hawaiians. There is no evidence that Syrian refugees will impact those conditions.
Instead of offering any type of smug conclusion to this horrible issue. These pictures and captions of Syrian children taken by Magnus Wenman conclude this much more clearly than words can.
All of the captions are his words and are taken from his album on Facebook.
Walaa, 5, in Dar-El-Ias, Lebanon
Thursday, November 5, 2015
Renaissance Selfies
We visit Florence to see the cradle of the Renaissance. Botticelli's Birth of Venus. Michelangelo's youthful optimism of David. The uninhibited celebration of the human form. Of life.
But what happened to Botticelli for him to paint Calumny of Apelles? The darkness of medieval man overwhelms the innocence of the Renaissance. That's not how the story is supposed to go.
And how could Michelangelo, he who saw beauty as the embodiment of heaven, paint the grim foreshadowing of the Last Judgement underneath his creation story masterpiece which sprawls across the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel?
Maybe Florence's veneer of eternal spring is best pierced with the pain of a miscarriage. No. That last word is not a metaphor.
The luminescence of each brush stroke of the Renaissance has been replaced by the glowing fluorescence of tourist's iPhones reflecting off their slack faces while they gorge on a first course of tagliatelle and a second course of tripe. Ghosts contemplating death in the city of eternal youth. The lonely couple, sitting in the orange glow of Italy's street lights, staring silently at each other-- wondering what went wrong.
Cobblestones. Narrow lanes. Santa Maria Novellas on every block. Old women, eyes gleaming with the spark of adolescence. Domes and gothic spires. And the Piazzas which keep the city confined to a pedestrian scale-- the Rennaisance's human-centric influence on urban planning. Florence is just like the guide books, except nobody mentions the gross self idolation of the tourists.
"Selfie stick?.. Selfie stick?" You can't approach a famous European sight without pushing through a maze of vendors hawking that ultimate expression of our own vanity.
Where the Romans erected Egyptian obelisks in front of their greatest creations to show how they conquered the Pharohs-- we now snap photos of ourselves in front of their masterpieces simply to show that we exist.
While Renaissance man reveled in the glory of human form, the modern human form revels in the glory of itself.
What drove Botticelli to burn his own art? And Michelangelo to paint himself into the Last Judgement as an empty skin being dragged into hell? Could they have begun to doubt the same humanity who's form they idolized?
We did David.
We did the Duomo.
We did the Uffizi.
Even our language and the dysfunctional relationship between subject and predicate justifies the tourist's domination over art. In just 48 hours I've lay claim to the entirety of the Renaissance. I cringe when I have to share her with the gawking crowd. And the vanity of the Selfie Stick feels like rape. But there have been 500 years of tourists like me, all laying ownership to someone else's creation. How could Botticelli do anything other than burn his work? And what could be left of Michelangelo but an empty skin?
Yet, I do understand the urge of the Selfie. When we look in awe at these masterworks of creation we need to justify our own feeble existence. It's the same creationist urge that is pushing me to record my own anger. It's the same urge that pushed Rennaisance man through a fury of creation. Social media has just channeled that human desire towards self vanity.
I write. And so I exist.
Here is my face. Please like it. And so I exist.
But, what about the child that we conceived six weeks ago that we just flushed down the toilet of a cheap B&B. She, the masterpiece of my life, no longer exists while Michelangelo's David and Botticelli's Venus still do. While our Selfies will still haunt the web long after we're gone, our child never even had a sonogram. And so, as we face mortality in the city of eternal youth, we do all that we know how to do.
We hold out our arm and snap the picture. And so we exist.