high and mighty about sports
NASCAR dads go green?
Back in my days as a reading comp. teacher in Bangkok, I recall, the school chose to use an American reading supplement. It was from this supplement that most of the lessons were derived. This could be troublesome as much of the material was centered around American culture or was simply mundane. One of the least interesting stories covered the importation of the kudzu vine from Japan to the American South and how the vine became an instant menace to farmers. Imagine how exciting this story was for my fourth graders…
Anyway, this story comes to mind as some people in NASCAR are considering kudzu as a potential source of ethanol.
Things are indeed changing.
Sport and humanity
A man I have great respect for once asked why I waste my time watching sports. It’s not difficult to see his reservations about contemporary professional athletics. The money-driven, inflated importance of sports in our society is an easy target, especially when so many athletes are exposed for their moral shortcomings. Generations before us can look to unimpeachable stars of yore and tout them as heroes, especially in comparison to what we have today. Still, social responsbility has never been what sports are about.
In reading the Times piece on Jim McKay’s interview of Fidel Castro, the view of sports as a celebration of humanity was reinforced for me. While limitless competition and glorification brings out some ugliness, athletic competition also reminds us of the many strengths (and weaknesses) we commonly share.
I don’t remember a time that I so thoroughly looked forward to the Olympics. When I was younger, the games were pretty dull. Mostly a bunch of unknown athletes competing in one-dimensional events (running, jumping, swimming). Now, though I’ll admit that many of the events won’t garner my attention, I’ve come to a place of greater appreciation or the games. Some suggest that, in light of China’s human rights record, the US should not participate in the Beijing Olympics. I couldn’t disagree more. If anything, the games place a spotlight on China. To view them as a political bargaining chip undervalues their true weight. By fully participating in the games, we are not condoning human rights abuses, but instead invigorating the spirit of openness that may someday help us better address injustice.
bananas and canaries are both yellow
It is only in the past few years that the media has caught up to the idea that globalization is not an issue to support or oppose, but it is instead a truth to accept or deny. The conversation has shifted from protectionism/internationalism debate to one about how best to manage the inevitable changes that we are incurring. Society is changing on many fronts, not only toward a global economy, but also in the physical makeup of cities. Even the corporate news outlets are picking up on urbanization.
With this in mind, I found Dan Koeppel’s piece on bananas a fitting illustration of the times to come. As the market for bananas represents a shockingly backward artifice, so too does the current arrangement of the global economy, in which everyday necessities produced thousands of miles away are more accessible than comparable things produced within walking distance. This is changing in a painful way. Another parallel to be drawn is the susceptibility of bananas due to homogeneity. The same can be pointed to the state of affairs in the global economy, which has hinged so heavily on the consumption of the US. Now it would be easy to view this as a bleak forecast, especially considering the fate of the Gros Michel banana, but, as we’ve come to accept globalization, we will also accept regionalism as an agent of greater diversity. In fact, while we worry about the price of bananas and other perishables from abroad, we could just as easily see these price hikes as a much-needed counterbalance to the woes of the globalizing economy.
Regionalization, by which self-sustaining economies exist within national and global structures, is not an abstract solution never to be realized, but instead something of imminence. Unfortunately, some places are much better equipped for this than others, due largely to the intellectual capital they’ve accrued and the adaptability of their respective populations. Bill Bishop’s discussion on bloggingheads offers some insight, as he outlines the growing disparity between cities and regions in this clip. Of course, this seems to be obvious when you look at the direction of the economy for the past 30 years. We are far beyond believing that the US can return to being a leading exporter of low-tech goods and produce. To the contrary, we’ve been steadily heading the opposite direction. We get more of our goods and food from overseas, while the industrial base withers at home. Some cities are still feeling the sting of this, lacking the social mobility and political wherewithal to adjust. Other places have moved quickly to embrace the global economy, almost to a fault. Now, as the weaknesses of an over-connected system become apparent, we are ebbing some and seeking to strengthen local economies, though certainly by different means than in the past. Successful cities in the future will export knowledge and technology while self-sustaining in terms of low-tech goods and food. These places will shift away from buying trinkets and mass-farmed produce from overseas as energy costs make unfettered international trade less lucrative. Because of these truths, the quality of life in regionally-nourished, but globally active cities will continue to improve. In cities still dealing with industrial withdrawal, the question will not only regard whether they can accept globalization, but whether enough regional coherence can be achieved to cultivate and attract the intellectual capital to be a global partner.
Like so many things, the fate of cities rests in the organization and passion of its citizenry. Fortunately, the mayors of major cities are more aware of the pressing need for new infrastructure than is the federal government. As we emerge from recession in the coming years and, hopefully, attempt strengthen regional economies, nothing will prove so important as the maintenance and development of our transportation infrastructure. Of course, the push for more government investment in transportation becomes increasingly palpable as oil prices inflate and ridership balloons for metros across the US.
Who’d have thought bananas would be such an apt window into emerging economic realities? Mr. Koeppel’s book, Banana: The Fate of the Fruit that Changed the World, is officially on my list.
VBS
To the few I’ve told repeatedly, I apologize, but here is yet another plug for Vice Magazine’s .tv station, VBS. It’s easy to watch the programming and think that it’s hipster bullshit (which much of it is), but there’s also an unpretentiousness to it, particularly in the “documentaries”.
A clear favorite is the Vice Guide to North Korea. Once you get beyond the initial few episodes, the series is like a 14-part trip to bizarro world. While the Vice crew is somewhat lacking for traditional journalistic integrity, Shane Smith’s guttural responses to the endless flow of oddity actually serves to humanize the situation. This is one of the finer things on VBS.
Less accessibly poignant is the new series, Shanghai Supergirl. When I initially began watching, I came away thinking that it was merely another cheap-shot at Chinese popular culture (or all Asian popular culture, for that matter). Though I refuse to get sanctimonious about it, there’s nothing novel about capitalizing on the alien, yet strangely parallel cultural trends that occur across the pacific. I have to say, though, that this series really does offer a lot more than mockery. Yang Lei, the “Shanghai Supergirl”, is the winner of a nationwide “idol” tv show. Her new-found stardom shines through in a sort of glowing optimistic materialism, but she also shares some interesting insights into the development of modern Chinese society from both a personal and historical perspective (she was a schoolteacher before winning the competition). While she’s not likely to win a Nobel Prize, her articulate perspective gives insight into the direction of China’s youth and how, even filtered through the mind of a superstar, there are more parallels with the West than not.
Equally intriguing about Shanghai Supergirl is how democratic ideas are slipping into Chinese popular culture in a significant way.
For something less thoughtful, but more artfully executed, check out the three part series on los Ranferis. No VBS reporter walks the tightrope of ridicule so well as the tux-clad Trace Crutchfield. Great stuff.
There is plenty of other content worth checking out on VBS, especially if, like me, you don’t have a television.
Obama for the masses
Listened to John Harwood’s interview with Candidate Obama on the Times’ website. You have to admire Obama’s self-possession. That said, the guy’s writing a lot of verbal cheques. It will be interesting to see if, provided he wins the election, Obama can actually turn any of it into meaningful legislation. His blueprint for change is just a little ambitious. Still, better to be ambitious than ambivalent.
Getting to the Oval Office is going to be difficult in the first place. While racial reservations are inevitable, Candidate Obama’s politics are also responsible for for his lack of popularity in some regions. Democrats from traditionally conservative districts are already distancing themselves from the presidential nominee for his decidedly left-leaning stances. Though I generally support Obama’s priorities, to say they’re liberal is no misrepresentation. Here in Oregon, at least so far as local punditry is concerned, Obama’s failure to captivate blue-collar America is due less to his politics and more to his ancestry. What infuriates me about these types of assertions is that they insult the intelligence of entire swaths of the population while at the same time exacerbating Obama’s problems in creating inroads. Surely some people see Obama’s race before anything else, but his aggressive, progressive politics are surely a greater reason for pause. While stately and articulate, his professorial idealism just doesn’t jive in places where desirable change means a return to the better days yore. To appeal in these places, Obama must step beyond the cult of personality that has formed in his wake and permeate an image of a reasonable, adaptable reformer. Though the candidate seems to understand the value in unity and pragmatism, he has been riding a wave of angry progressive supporters whose educated self-righteousness puts Obama’s greatest strengths at risk. Going toward the general election, Obama must shed his air of hopeful inevitability to truly reach undecided skeptics.
Paul Krugman wrote an insightful piece in the Times regarding race and politics at this juncture in US history.
In a related note, it’s curious that many of the people who were calling on Hillary Clinton to drop out earlier for the sake of the party now reject her as a VP candidate. Polling suggests that her addition to the ticket strengthens Obama against McCain, so wouldn’t it be in the best interest of the party that she run? Though Obama hardly wants the Clinton shadow lurking over him, how can he reasonably reject Hillary, with her 18 million supporters, as the VP candidate if that’s what will lock up victory?
back in digital form
Recently, I had one of those reminders that life is all too short. For a moment, the inevitable fear of death crept down upon me. I guess I’m just getting older and my feelings of invincibility are not what they once were. Perhaps this is why I’m more productive than I used to be. Anyway, that’s really why I’m here. I had a myspace blog for a bit, but I allowed that to die unceremoniously. Still, there’s been an expressive void since I’ve purged myspace from my life. Time’ss ticking and my thoughts are fleeting, so this is my attempt to catch a few of them before they disappear into oblivion.
Apologies for the grimness. Truth be told, this is a very exciting time to be alive. There are a lot of reasons to worry, but such worries are interspersed with potential solutions that can reshape everything.