On to a more touchy topic now.
So apparently most Americans would believe any drone attacks by a foreign power on American soil to be a terrorist attack. As most of you know, the US military regularly conducts strikes of their own on foreign soil, and Americans may wring their hands or cheer on depending on their viewpoint. They may be outraged at the fact the strikes are killing civilians or may be cheering on the death's of the nation's perceived foes. Personally, I have yet to hear a person call such strikes an act of terrorism on our part. Perhaps it has been said before, but it definitely isn't said enough for it to be a mainstream opinion. They are the terrorists if they do it to us, we aren't if we do it to them.
I'm fairly sure a person can pick out the hypocrisy using the above information. So is it an act of terrorism in both cases then? Or is something else entirely?
Some believe such a strike on American soil would be considered an act of war. We would then, once again, hear the tramp of boots and the roll-out of vehicles. If it were an act of war, there are some considerations to be had here.
If as a method of war-waging, the drone is simply a new weapon. It kills people as any weapon does. It kills combatants, and civilians. All weapons are capable of doing so. War in general is reprehensible and I am not defending the act of killing or war, but one must take into consideration the fact that the drone is a weapon and a tool. Weapons have been killing for a long time, all of them.
This post was made to address those who view drone strikes as an act of war. As an act of terrorism, well, I don't have much of an opinion on that.
Friday, November 30, 2012
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
The Financial Cliff: Some Notes
Well now. I may be a little in covering this story, but I believe there are somethings to be said about this topic.
A rundown of situation.
A rundown of situation.
Shortly after election season ended, all talk shifted to this looming disaster. The financial cliff, a term coined by Ben Bernanke, chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve, is a series of deadlines and end dates all coming together in one massive economic blow. Tax cuts will end. Taxes will rise. Spending will be slashed. The deficit will be cut down tremendously in a short amount of time, but at the cost of causing a depression within the country. In other words, a deal must be made in congress, a compromise on how to deal with such an fiscal cliff.
Now congress must decide whether or not to raise taxes for and end tax cuts for the rich, a plan favored by the Democrats, or to lower taxes and prop up tax cuts for the rich and middle class, a plan favored by the Republicans. Whatever happens next, the following I believe will occur in some shape or form.
1. If congress misses the deadline for solving the problem, the financial cliff will not set in immediately.
It will take some time for the measures found in the financial cliff to manifest themselves. Congress has until then to bicker among themselves and find compromise, so that they may appease a fearful citizenry and outraged economy. With those two groups preemptively knocking on the door, congress will be much more likely to pass a compromise then, a month or so after the deadline set, as some project.
2. If the US goes off the financial cliff, people will blame the GOP more.
53% of people counted on the poll would view the GOP unfavorably while 45% say all the blame would go on the GOP. There is more to the story than I can cover at this time, go here to read more.
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
When Good Things Go Bad
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/17/business/yourmoney/17costco.html?pagewanted=all&_r=1&
The anti-Walmart huh?
So, let us delve into the murky and mysterious of retail news. The Thanksgiving season Walmart strikes have been popping up into the headlines. Fighting for fairer pay and more benefits, scattered strikes occurred across the nation on Black Friday. While it didn't dent the mega-chain's bottom line, it definitely scored a symbolic victory and I personally believe it highlights an issue that should be addressed eventually.
American retail recently, at least within the larger chains, have been building up a mentality within their employees that they are simply put, disposable and worthless. The idea that workers are an investment and not a disposable entity is no longer prevalent in today's business mentality, with it being replaced by a mentality of greed and a tireless drive to increase the bottom line. Once implicitly held among all of American companies, the idea that treating your workers with basic respect and at the very least listening to them has been eliminated. Instead, they decide to arrest and gag those who attempt to protest against the mega-chain.
Walmart used to be so much better. When Sam Walton, the original founder of the chain, ran the company, he had a reputation for kindness and a drive to sell American-made items. With his death, his sons too over, and everything went for the worse. It then became about the bottomline, not the worker.
This isn't a good mentality to establish. It shouldn't be all about the money. It shouldn't be all about pleasing the investors. Don't get me wrong, if you want to be a successful business, you need to pay attention to these things. People should always come first though.
The anti-Walmart huh?
So, let us delve into the murky and mysterious of retail news. The Thanksgiving season Walmart strikes have been popping up into the headlines. Fighting for fairer pay and more benefits, scattered strikes occurred across the nation on Black Friday. While it didn't dent the mega-chain's bottom line, it definitely scored a symbolic victory and I personally believe it highlights an issue that should be addressed eventually.
American retail recently, at least within the larger chains, have been building up a mentality within their employees that they are simply put, disposable and worthless. The idea that workers are an investment and not a disposable entity is no longer prevalent in today's business mentality, with it being replaced by a mentality of greed and a tireless drive to increase the bottom line. Once implicitly held among all of American companies, the idea that treating your workers with basic respect and at the very least listening to them has been eliminated. Instead, they decide to arrest and gag those who attempt to protest against the mega-chain.
Walmart used to be so much better. When Sam Walton, the original founder of the chain, ran the company, he had a reputation for kindness and a drive to sell American-made items. With his death, his sons too over, and everything went for the worse. It then became about the bottomline, not the worker.
This isn't a good mentality to establish. It shouldn't be all about the money. It shouldn't be all about pleasing the investors. Don't get me wrong, if you want to be a successful business, you need to pay attention to these things. People should always come first though.
Friday, November 2, 2012
The Majority Becomes the Minority
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-20187325
The United States of America from the very beginning has always been a country of immigrants. Throughout its relatively short history it's seen some pretty heavy immigration from around the world. Something I would like to speculate about is when and if the white, non-Hispanic portion of the US will become a minority within the country.
As it currently is, the number of non-Hispanic white births are the minority. How will this change the face of America? As alluded to within my title and assuming you watched the BBC video I linked, I believe that within our life-times, America shall become a country of many faces old and new, made mostly of the sons and daughters of immigrants from other lands, and where non-Hispanic whites are no longer the majority.
Now, one may ask, is this a good, or bad thing?
That is for you to decide. I will say though, that without the immigration America's population would surely be declining or at the very least staying stable. Let's look at another country for a moment. Japan's population is currently declining at a rate that may prove to be problematic in the future. Their population is composed entirely of ethnic Japanese. This is the fate of all developed countries. After the massive boom experienced in the development phases of a country (Africa's high birthrate for example), the population becomes stable or begins to decline. However you view immigrants, all I will say is that we will always have a population of people ready to work.
The United States of America from the very beginning has always been a country of immigrants. Throughout its relatively short history it's seen some pretty heavy immigration from around the world. Something I would like to speculate about is when and if the white, non-Hispanic portion of the US will become a minority within the country.
As it currently is, the number of non-Hispanic white births are the minority. How will this change the face of America? As alluded to within my title and assuming you watched the BBC video I linked, I believe that within our life-times, America shall become a country of many faces old and new, made mostly of the sons and daughters of immigrants from other lands, and where non-Hispanic whites are no longer the majority.
Now, one may ask, is this a good, or bad thing?
That is for you to decide. I will say though, that without the immigration America's population would surely be declining or at the very least staying stable. Let's look at another country for a moment. Japan's population is currently declining at a rate that may prove to be problematic in the future. Their population is composed entirely of ethnic Japanese. This is the fate of all developed countries. After the massive boom experienced in the development phases of a country (Africa's high birthrate for example), the population becomes stable or begins to decline. However you view immigrants, all I will say is that we will always have a population of people ready to work.
Freedom of Internet
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-20106293
The internet nowadays, I doubt anyone can call frivolous or trivial in importance to the world today. Everyday, money, ideas, and countless hours of work flow from it. Revolutions are started on it and our endless appetite for videos involving cats doing hilarious things are sated by its never ending stream of information. The internet has grown up and become a power player in this world.
And yet, no one talks about it. I guess it's due to how it has become such an integral part of our lives now, we simply do not give it much thought anymore. Well, for all of you reading this, that is probably the case. Think of all those without this wondrous tool you are wielding right now. Not just children in some far off under-developed country, in your country, in your neighborhood. We are quickly reaching the point where everyone can assume one has internet access of some sort. Yet, not everyone has access. Interior America is a good example of this. There, among the endless fields of corn and wheat, school computer labs are the closest one can get to the internet. In comparison to the children in urban areas, the sons and daughters of farmers are at a severe disadvantage.
What do our politicians think of the internet? They do one of two things. They either don't talk about it, thinking the issue insignificant, or try to regulate it, crushing the free nature that made the internet what is is today. This is unacceptable in totality. Politicians should be at the very least acknowledging the important nature of the internet. They should not bury their heads in the sand, and they should not be trying to crush internet usage through regulation. The future lies on the internet and thus, our politicians should be having some form of positive discourse about it. And yet, not a single question was proposed in the presidential debates
Some food for thought.
The internet nowadays, I doubt anyone can call frivolous or trivial in importance to the world today. Everyday, money, ideas, and countless hours of work flow from it. Revolutions are started on it and our endless appetite for videos involving cats doing hilarious things are sated by its never ending stream of information. The internet has grown up and become a power player in this world.
And yet, no one talks about it. I guess it's due to how it has become such an integral part of our lives now, we simply do not give it much thought anymore. Well, for all of you reading this, that is probably the case. Think of all those without this wondrous tool you are wielding right now. Not just children in some far off under-developed country, in your country, in your neighborhood. We are quickly reaching the point where everyone can assume one has internet access of some sort. Yet, not everyone has access. Interior America is a good example of this. There, among the endless fields of corn and wheat, school computer labs are the closest one can get to the internet. In comparison to the children in urban areas, the sons and daughters of farmers are at a severe disadvantage.
What do our politicians think of the internet? They do one of two things. They either don't talk about it, thinking the issue insignificant, or try to regulate it, crushing the free nature that made the internet what is is today. This is unacceptable in totality. Politicians should be at the very least acknowledging the important nature of the internet. They should not bury their heads in the sand, and they should not be trying to crush internet usage through regulation. The future lies on the internet and thus, our politicians should be having some form of positive discourse about it. And yet, not a single question was proposed in the presidential debates
Some food for thought.
A Little Side-Tracked
I'm going to be talking about trains for a bit. See what I did there? With the title?
More accurately, I'm going to be talking about the California High Speed Rail.
Proposed in 2008 and approved in 2012, this rail is to begin operating to some degree in 8 to 11 years. It runs all the way from Sacramento in NorCal to San Diego in SoCal. It is to cost approximately 55 billion dollars to build, create 100,000 jobs, and bring in 2.23 billion in net revenue by 2023.
Needless to say, this is an ambitious project. America is currently lagging behind most other developed countries in terms of these mechanisms, and this rail will likely become America's first dedicated high-speed rail system (The Acela Express on the East Coast doesn't count as it is not a dedicated system).
I am quite excited for these developments as a person living in SoCal. Infrastructure projects of this type are sorely overdue in America, and are needed if we wish to keep up with our friends overseas in Asia and Europe. While it may take a while, I'm hopeful that this project will bring great good to my state and community.
Of course, there are some critics of this rail. For one, conservative farmers who must sell off their lands so that the rail may be built and for whom the rail will not directly benefit. Anti-spending organizations have also voiced their concerns over the validity of the numbers proposed by the CHSRA, the organization from which the numbers I am using originate. All are valid concerns, but as of now, the rail is continuing its progress, and we'll all see if it was worth it in the future.
Thursday, November 1, 2012
How I View Politics
I think I should make a post that outlines my political views. A disclaimer of sorts for the people who read my blog. We all have bias, but as a mostly opinion based blog, I believe readers deserve to know what kind of bias they'll be seeing here. So here it is.
I am a left-leaning commentator. I am solidly liberal. I will be picking up on issues that I believe to be issues, and will be taking a left-leaning stance on them. I will not take anything to a logical extreme however. I do not believe in polarizing politics. I believe those who take the extremes of either end of the political spectrum are, simply put, insane. I will support their right to believe what they want and for them to speak of it, but so help me, I will believe them to be insane. Thus, I attempt to take a fairly moderate tone on all of my posts. You will not see rousing speeches or moving calls to action here. You will simply see a high school student looking at an issue, and commenting on it with a slight slant.
This excludes my stance on polarizing politics, as I call them, as previously seen in my other blog posts.
And that is my disclaimer for the time being. I do hope any readers I may have don't mind the bias, and simply enjoy the ride.
I am a left-leaning commentator. I am solidly liberal. I will be picking up on issues that I believe to be issues, and will be taking a left-leaning stance on them. I will not take anything to a logical extreme however. I do not believe in polarizing politics. I believe those who take the extremes of either end of the political spectrum are, simply put, insane. I will support their right to believe what they want and for them to speak of it, but so help me, I will believe them to be insane. Thus, I attempt to take a fairly moderate tone on all of my posts. You will not see rousing speeches or moving calls to action here. You will simply see a high school student looking at an issue, and commenting on it with a slight slant.
This excludes my stance on polarizing politics, as I call them, as previously seen in my other blog posts.
And that is my disclaimer for the time being. I do hope any readers I may have don't mind the bias, and simply enjoy the ride.
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