Tonight, as I was driving over the bridge to the grocery store, I saw a small crowd assembled around some candles. It hit me a moment later, that it was about this time last year when the body of a young lady was found in the early AM hours on the railroad tracks. Every day for a year, there has been a small memorial set up in her honor, which I have past on my way in and out of hte neighborhood. Though I’m unfamiliar with her story, I can’t help but feel touched in some way by her life. My heart goes out to her family and friends as they move forward with the grieving process.
Author: cdymek
Columbus Day
Columbus Day is a funny holiday in current American culture. Once upon a time it was a holiday where Americans celebrated the discovery of the North American continent and the arrival of the Europeans, in a way different from the meaning conferred upon Thanksgiving. Never quite a full-fledged holiday like Memorial Day, Labor Day, Independence Day or the winter holidays of Christmas, Thanksgiving, New Year’s and President’s Day, it was closely associated with the ethno-centrism that has fallen from grace as a worldview. As a result, today’s Columbus Day has an almost negative conotation, being affiliated primarily with an “invasion” of the continent and by what today’s standards would likely be called the genocide of the Native American population.
There are two topics that have been percolating for a few days, of which I’m planning to write about. From my window, hough, I have a great view of the outside world, and it looks as though it’s more fun than sitting at the computer.
Checking my e-mail from work, I’ve had a bad week. The worst part? I wasn’t actually there.
Usually, I don’t like to talk about this. And I won’t really ever say anything, but tonight my Irritable Bowl Syndrome (IBS) struck. A painful stomach cramp indicates the onset, followed by a sudden urge to hit the restroom. Given the relatively short lack of warning, it has been a major inconvenience. Like when I’m out at a metro station and suddenly need a bathroom.
Why does it happen? Stress, most often. Or a mix that usually involves some alcohol and food combination.
Bull Moose
An in-depth look in to the world of the Republican Party, and why the author’s voting for the Dems in 2004.
The Beltway Blows Goats
Wake up. Shower. Rush out the door. Get into the car. Drive 3 miles to Route 95 in 5 minutes. Get on 95. Hit gas. Hit brakes. Gas. Brake. Gas-Brake-Gas-Gas-Brake-Brake-Brake-Brake-Gas-Gas-Brake. Merge on to 495. Brake-Brake-Brake-Brake-Brake-Gas-Brake-Brake-Gas-Brake-Gas-Gas. Get off 495.
The time to travel 27 miles from Laurel, MD, to Rockville, MD, takes over an hour. Without any accidents. How do these people do it every day?
SpaceShipOne Captures X-Prize
Today SpaceShipOne completed its second flight within a week, capturing the $10 million X-prize. My congratulations to the team responsible.
The Fog of War
I just finished watching the documentary “The Fog of War”, which is a 100 minute long discussion with Robert McNamara, the Secretary of Defense during the Kennedy and part of the Johnson administrations, during the Cuban missile crisis and the escalation of the Vietnam War. The lessons from his experiences are many, though the most poignant, and applicable, to our current situation in Iraq come through clearly. He articulates two guideposts to making a decision to go to war, that any such action should not be taken unilaterally, except in the case of immediate defense, and that in order to be successful it is necessary to empathize with the enemy in order to understand their motivations.
It becomes clear, with those principles as guides, how the Iraq war has failed, and is at this point irreriersible. The US failed to suffieciently convince the world of the case for war, particularly the people and governments of the West, our fellow nations of like-minded values. While there was inherent corruption within such programmes as the Food-for-Oil swap, and cheating on sactions, had sufficient evidence been discovered and the appropriate diplomatic channels been followed, a case for war would have been made, or a war would have become irrelevant. Either would have avoided the conflict before us today.
The second element, and perhaps even more important, is that it is the understanding of the “enemy” that is necessary in order to make the appropriate decisions to have any conflict come to a successful resolution. This, even more than a failure to convince our fellow nations of a case for war, is responsible for the current situation that we face in Iraq. We have failed because we have not understood what motivates the Iraqi populace. We have ignored the aspect of revenge among Iraqis, the sense that many Iraqis are fighting for their freedom against us. That we are not seen as their to grant freedom, but to colonise them, to secure oil supplies for our own consumption, to subjugate them to Western rule, Western values. We have failed to grasp this, and as a result we are losing. And it may be, and in fact likely is, already too late to change the course.
During the documentary, this lesson became extremely clear when McNamara met in 1995 with former officials of the Vietnamese government. He spoke of how they disagreed, how the Vietnamese saw this as a clash for independence and that the US were an imperial power, while we saw this as securing their freedom from China and Russia. The disconnect between the two sides was huge, and in our situation today in Iraq may be similarly large.
I do not know that there is any way the situation can be salvaged, or if changing Presidents can in any way alter the course upon which we have been set. But I cannot fathom how rewarding the man who is singularly accountable for setting us on this path with a second term will even become to resolve the conflict. Especially with the lessons that should have already been taught.
Keeping America Scared
Video courtesy of Joi Ito.