Friday, December 9, 2011

Tubas and Test Tubes

     Thomas Friedman's The World is Flat brings up some interesting points in the chapter 'Tubas and Test Tubes'. The overall theme of this book is that the world is changing, and everyone, especially Americans, need to be ready for it. In 'Tubas and Test Tubes', Friedman trys to make it a bit more clear how we should educate in this new world. "It is not how much we educate, but rather more important how we educate.
    We will need certain skillsets that will become very useful in the new flat world. New technology will call for people to become more tech savy, and the ability to communicate will mean breaking language barriers. 

    Technology is always changing, before you know it your iphones, laptops, ipods, computers, androids etc. will all be out of date. Soon, the latest and greatest handheld technology will be as useful as a brick and you'll be behind. To solve this problem, you will need to stay up to date on all the new technologies of the flat world. This is a difficult task, for you see, humans are creating technology at a rate never before seen in our history. Not only that, but the technology that we are creating at such a fast pace, is the most advanced our world has ever seen. We need to teach how to master the new technology that will become such a big part of our lives, living in the flat world.
    To effectively transmit and recieve information from one place to another around the world you, will need to be able to understand the information you are getting, and the information you send needs to be understood on the other end as well. Unfortunately, the seven-billion people (and counting) people on this planet do not speak the same language. There is no magic global code that is understood all around the world, so it is for this reason that languages will become very important in the new world.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Five Years of My Life: an Innocent Man in Guantanamo Blog

"I thank God that  Murat kept his sanity in the hell of injustice and torture of nearly 5 years in Guantanamo so he could tell his story. May it be studied in every school and college in Europe and the USA. May it help to close down all the illegal and secret prisons and camps, as well as Guantanamo, and restore the prisoners to their families. I am sure Murat's book will educate a whole generation about justice and the defense of human rights." -- Vanessa Redgrave
 
      I really agree with Vanessa's review. This book needs to be studied by the rest of the world, so the mistake that is Guantanamo is not repeated elseware around the globe. It needs to be studied by Americans too, Abu Ghraib isn't the only prison-related atrocity we, America, are guilty of. The horrors of Guantanamo are very real, if every American read this book, and flooded their congressman's mailbox- I believe we could see Murat Kurnaz's hell of 5 years be shut down.
      Not everybody in these prisons around the world are guilty of their accused crimes, innocent much like Kurnaz was. To deny that this happens, after reading Five Years in Guantanamo... it would be ignorant to say that while I'm writing, an innocent man is not being detained for a crime he did not commit. It would be ignorant to say that everybody in these prisons is guilty, and they were all given the right to a fair trial.
      What makes a trial by jury an American right? Because we said so? We don't hold exclusive ownership of that right, it should be universal, for every human on this Earth to be given that right, regardless of what their backround is or what crime they commited. As humans we need to unite, and stand together. We treat our own species as animals in camps like these, we need to unify as the human race and put an end to it. What made Murat Kurnaz deserving of spending 5 years of his life in Guantanamo for no reason at all? He didn't deserve it, he was treated less than human. It's a despicable thing that we allowed these prisons to be established, the best thing we can do now is shut them down.
      This book really opened my eyes to what horrific things transpire in Guantanamo and more than likely others like it as well. It was a close look through the eye of an innocent prisoner, at what it is really like.

Friday, October 21, 2011

Novel Writing

I'm really looking forward to this assignment. I've actually already gotten an early start on my novel, and I've really been enjoying it. An idea hit me for a novel about a week and a half ago, so instead of sleeping on it, and potentially losing my idea, I started to write out my idea in the form of a snyopsis. The novel I've started writing is a futuristic/dystopian/war novel. It has a deep plot, including some plot twists. It also provides social comentary on many things in our world, like our current economic crisis, the recent rebellions around the world, and the war in the middle east. I'm really looking forward to the continuation of my writing to see where it takes me.

Friday, October 7, 2011

My Week

Clancy's Deli, where I work.
I've had a week where things happened. Sunday, I watched some football, but pretty much just sat around and chilled all day. I played an MMO later that night before I went off to bed for the night.
Monday was a pretty normal mundane day, nothing special happened on that day. I didn't have to come into work, so that was a plus. After school I just went home and chilled until it was time to go to bed. I went to school on Tuesday, and lifted weights with the wrestling team afterward. Unfortunately, I strained my hamstring while doing squats and it still hurts quite a bit. After I lifted weights I went home. I logged onto the MMO game that I play. I found out my guild's raid, an event which 10 or 25 people participate and coordinate to achieve a single goal within the game, had been canceled. This cancellation being just the newest in a series of raids being canceled, I quit the guild and applied to a different one.
A group of victorious raiders
Wednesday, I went to school and headed to work afterwards. I worked with Rachel Klichman at Clancy's deli, then I went home and did homework. I watched some of the show I'm currently watching (blogs about that show come later. I don't want to reveal what show it is in fear of then being exposed to spoilers.) then went to bed for the night. I usually go to bed around 11:30 every night, I find it gives me enough time to relax, yet still wake up the next morning and be alert enough to take on the day ahead of me. Thursday, I went to school, then to work afterwards.
Thursday I worked with Michael Swanigan, then headed home and continued to watch my show while I did my homework. I answered some questions asked by the people reviewing my application to the guild. They are supposed to get back to  me tonight on whether or not I've been accepted.
Friday (Today), I woke up and got ready for school. I listened to my usual radio program on the way to school, stopping at the gas station for a to-go breakfast on my way.
(I only listen to news/talk radio however, I find music to be lacking on today's radio stations. Censorship and mass appeal Have played a large factor in making radio unattractive to me. Even still, I usually disagree with the highly opinionated views of the news radio-broadcasters I listen to. Today's media is corrupted, but that's a topic for a different post.)
I headed into Mr. Balbo's first hour psychology class when I got to school. We talked about early childhood/language development of the human, and finished the movie 'Pursuit of Happiness', which by the way is a good movie in my opinion. I then went to my English 12 class and had an advisory period about the different thing in life that we resp
Lakshore is in trouble, we are the bears.


I plan to go to the St.Joe Bears-Lakeshore Lancers game tonight after work. Then probably relax, but get to bed early so I'm ready for work tomorrow. I work Saturday 10-4:30, then after that I'll do any homework I may have, or work on writing some lyrics. Then, I'll most likely hang out with my girlfriend if she's not busy, then stay up late Saturday night watching my show or playing a game. Sunday, our neighbor is making some really good bread, so my Sunday morning breakfast will most likely be bread-based.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

The media will focus on your death, not your life

I've noticed the way the person dies decides how a story will be covered, be it the paper/local or whoever covers your death, will be more interested depending on the circumstances.
Let's take "Joe Smith", Joe suffers a heart attack, one day, while working at the factory. Joe leaves behind a wife and two children, he was 57.
That's all that will be said, maybe an obituary in the paper, that's all. In this first scenario Joe is basically a nobody, minimal reaction from the news media.
Second scenario, we don't change anything about Joe, instead we change how he dies. Instead of having a heart attack, he will be gunned down by gang members on his way home from work one night. He still leaves behind the same kids, same wife, he had the same job at the factory, the same life. The media's reaction however, is completely different. This time, there will be outrage in the community, but is it because Joe died, or HOW Joe died. This third scenario may make it more clear.
This time, Joe was at a party and drank to much. While intoxicated, he dove into a pool with no water in it, broke his spine and died. The local news or newspaper would cover this differently as well. Joe was drunk and dumb! It will probably receive a few "lol's" from newspaper readers and news viewers. Again, Joe is the same person and lived the same exact life. Nothing has changed about Joe's life, yet his death was covered in 3 different ways.
Joe has been, a nobody, a symbol of the community, and an idiot. This is the same person all three times, just seen differently because of the way he died. This is the power that the media has, to completely change a LIFE on the way they cover the death of the person.