I could be totally wrong, but isn’t Dick Cheney just an older version of Gollum, from Lord of the Rings?
Filed under: Similarities
I could be totally wrong, but isn’t Dick Cheney just an older version of Gollum, from Lord of the Rings?
Filed under: Similarities
It’s a sad little story of arrogance, intransigence, greed and, possibly, racism. In 1992, Jin Nam Chung, Ki Chung and their son, Soo Chung, moved from their native South Korea to the U.S., intending to start a new life and experience the power of the “American Dream”.
At first, all went well. The family opened their own dry cleaning business, which thrived. Then, along came Roy L. Pearson Jr with a number of suits to be altered. When Mister Pearson returned next day to collect his clothes, a pair of trousers was missing.
Mister Pearson isn’t a nobody. Mister Pearson is an African-American working as an administrative law judge in Washington, D.C. He used his knowledge of Washington’s strict consumer protection laws to attempt what can only be described as “legal extortion”. Pearson’s trousers were recovered within a week, but he refused to accept them, saying they weren’t his – despite being the right size and with his cleaning ticket attached – and demanded recompense to the tune of $15,000. The Chungs offered first $3,000, then $4,600, and finally $12,000, but Pearson refused them all.
Now, having put the Chung’s through hell for five years, he is suing them for $67,000,000.
Why that figure, can be revealed by reading the full story HERE if you missed it on the BBC World News this morning. Judge Roy L Pearson Jnr has certainly achieved world-wide infamy.
The real question to be asked is, why? Why has this man hounded a family for five years over something as innocuous as a pair of trousers?
Obviously, this has nothing to do with mislaid clothing. This is one man exercising his own supposed superiority, arrogance, greed and racism over those in a weaker position than himself.
This story is interesting because hidden within it is an analogy perhaps not immediately obvious. It may become clearer, however, if I suggest that the Chungs, despite their ruined lives, bitter frustrations, and disillusion with the “American Dream”, probably won’t resort to attacking the Manhattan skyline.
Filed under: Unfair play
With the possible exception of the whole Iraq war, there can scarcely be a better example of the inability of this American administration to think things through before making decisions, than the case for bio-fuel from corn. Not only was the idea not adequately considered, but it indicates the extent to which this government is controlled by so-called “big business”.
The idea, as publicized by George Bush, was to produce ethanol from corn to supplement imported oil. Ethanol burns more cleanly than gasoline, making it – theoretically – more environmentally friendly.
In practice, that is not necessarily the case. As George Monbiot points out the use of biofuels may have a disastrous effect on the planet, accelerating global warming rather than mitigating it.
Using corn to produce automobile fuel has even more immediate effects than catalyzing global warming. We are experiencing them right now, and it’s going to get much worse. The US normally has a healthy corn surplus each year, driving prices down and keeping animal feeds at a realistic level, but analysts back in May 2006 were suggesting the surplus will vanish in 2007/8 and predicting a deficit of around one billion bushels.
The effect on prices is obvious, as not only animal feed costs will rise. Almost everything Americans eat and drink contains corn in one form or another.
As though determined to add insult to injury, this administration’s fiasco in the Middle East has ensured oil prices will remain artificially high for the foreseeable future. The effect of high oil prices is to raise the cost of everything else. So, not only is our government intent on forcing more money from the pockets of its citizens by raising corn prices, but it’s also delivering a “quick one-two” to the nation’s solar plexus by artificially inflating crude oil costs.
Still, it can be argued one or two mistakes hardly constitute a disaster. The catastrophe results from cock-up number three.
Last year, the American president trumpeted the advantages of ethanol over petroleum, but also suggested hydrogen, a truly clean motor fuel, could very well replace ethanol in the not-to-distant future. That now seems unlikely to happen. According to InfoFastLane.com:
“Ethanol is only one clean energy solution that has been discussed recently. Oil is out, and all ideas are welcome. But in the light of cold, hard reality, the dreams of hydrogen are fading fast. There are very few distribution systems for hydrogen, making mass production almost impossible, and it’s hard to market a product as expensive as hydrogen. Right now, it’s just not a viable solution……….”
As George Bush throws all his eggs into the single basket of ethanol production from corn, he neglects to note the hazard of climate change on America’s ability to produce adequate amounts for the purpose. Already, we have noted, the grain surplus in this country has been eroded to nothing by the thirst for ethanol. Over the next few years the U.S. will become dryer, crop production stunted. Corn prices will skyrocket.
Farmers are already experiencing the effects of climate change in the west of the nation. It’s just a matter of time before the rich cornfields of the Mid-West fall prey to the consequences of global warming, and the irresponsibility of this country’s government.
Meanwhile, Americans are already in the grip of spiraling food and fuel prices. Traditionally, the result will be many more falling beneath the poverty threshold.
The wealthy will, of course, get richer as they cream off the profits from oil and corn. Even they may eventually suffer if, as seems more and more likely, the planet eventually warms to levels that create unbearable living conditions, but for the relative few, immense wealth will enable them to live far more tolerably than most of the population. Short-term greed, the refusal to look beyond their profit margins, and a total indifference to the fate of their fellows, may prove the undoing of all us.
Meanwhile, the vast bulk of this country’s people are going to find life harder and harder, the family budget stretched way beyond breaking point.
Some may continue to believe their government really cares.
Filed under: Chaos