Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Harsh Working Conditions, Harsh Reality


We like to think that the days of child labor are over. We like to think that the 14 hour work day is finished. We like to think that sweat shops are empty, and that no one shall ever work there again. We like to think these are true, but we couldn't be more wrong.
Sweat shops across the world are actually becoming MORE popular than what they were in the US 70 years ago. They are springing up in places like Brazil, China, and India. These are countries that are known for being highly populated and having a large lower class and a small upper class. These are all descriptors of the US around 70 years ago. Then, just as the working conditions got as bad as they possibly could get, protests broke out, and labor laws, minimum wage, and unions were established. Eventually, the sweat shops disappeared from US soil. However, now they have apparently sprung up in other countries. You can thank gigantic companies (like Nike, Gap, and Apple) for that.
Yes, we like to think that those harsh times are over. We like to think that the world works a 9-5 job. However, we can only make progress if we wake up from this fantasy we are in. We must take greater steps to help other countries in need rather than simply putting our work there. We actually must take our sweatshops out of foreign countries in order to help them. We have to use charity to help these people, not 14 hour days in a cramped room.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Banned Books Begone!


 All Quiet on the Western Front, Animal Farm, The Da Vinci Code, The Grapes of Wrath, and Uncle Tom's Cabin. 
What do all of these books have in common besides being highly acclaimed? They were all banned. Sure, they all deal with touchy subjects such as race, religion, and politics; but isn't that what makes them great? Should Huckleberry Finn be added to this list?
 Lets take All Quiet on the Western Front, for instance. I was required to read that book in the eighth grade. It was to much of my surprise when I found out that it had been banned. I was stunned: "There must be other books that dehumanize war" I thought. After some research, it didn't surprise me that it was Nazi Germany who banned it.
Next, lets find out why Animal Farm was banned. It deals with the fall of Socialism in communist Russia. Its not to hard to figure out why the USSR banned it. 
The Da Vinci Code. Even in the United States, a land that was based on the ideal of freedom of speech, is this work scrutinized. I can remember turning on CNN a few years ago and watching Christian Priests denounce Dan Brown. However, the actual banning of the book took place in Lebanon, where the Christian leaders deemed it offensive to their religion.
Why was The Grapes of Wrath banned and burned in California? It "made the residents of this region look bad" (same link as above).
As for Uncle Tom's Cabin, lets just say that the future Confederate States of America didn't like the idea of a Pro-Abolition story narrated by a slave.
Now I will ask you one more question: What do all of these explanations for the banning of books have in common? They all challenge the popular belief of their time. Or, at least, the authority's belief. Huckleberry Finn definitely challenges the authority of it's time. The book should be mentioned in the same breath as All Quiet on the Western front or Uncle Tom's Cabin, but it shouldn't be banned. None of these books should have been. I believe in freedom of speech and the ability to challenge popular belief. Should a radio personality be taken off the air because of a negative comment about the Rutgers Basketball team? Should "French Fries" be called "Freedom Fries" because of political disagreements? Of course not! While censorship may be needed for decency (like a certain Super Bowl Half Time scandal) it is not needed for hiding opinions. After all, a wise man named Mark Twain once wrote: "Nature knows no indecencies; man invents them".

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Romanticism in the NFL


TRUE fans don't sleep the night before the NFL draft. They clutch their pillows, turn on the night light and cry like babies in the fear that their favorite NFL team will not choose the right college superstar. They live in fear of the "Ki-Jana Carter" pick of 1995. They dream of the "Payton Manning" pick of 1998. They anxiously await for Tim Tebow to graduate in 2010. TRUE fans know who to take in the first, second, and last round of the draft. Even if they end up Ryan Leaf (never heard of him? Exactly.)
Come on sports fans! If anything, NFL history has taught us that your ranking in the draft means nothing. Ray Lewis got drafted as the 26th pick in the first round. I can think of plenty of teams that need him right now (like the Detroit LetDowns, I mean, Lions). The hype of the NFL draft is simply too much. People live and die on these choices, yet they rarely make much of a difference. ESPN dedicates it's entire day of programming to the NFL draft. Granted, Payton and Eli Manning did go as first-round picks, but do you know who else did? Akili Smith and Mike Junkin (irony included in their names). The draft gets so romanticised that people hang on every moment it and go to bed feeling like their sky has fallen. We, as human beings, need to step back and realize that the draft is simply an event. The only thing that matters is the score of the game. All TRUE fans know that.

(The picture is of the all-time bust of a draft pick, Ki-Jana Carter
)

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Great (and Terrible) Expectations


Like most students during the "blog moratorium", I used my blog-free time following the inauguration of Barack Obama. I saw it with my own eyes, and then I looked around the room. Nothing had changed. The ground didn't quake, the sky didn't fall, and the country was still in an economic slump. The hype leading up to the inauguration was more ground breaking than the actual event. With the way I had read about it, seen news stories about it, and heard about it from friends, I expected many things from the inauguration. First of all, I expected someone to try to kill the new President. Don't get me wrong, I definitely DID NOT want that to happen, but I had heard from every news channel that the president was "beefing up" security because of death threats and suspicion. I learned that his limousine had 3 inches of steel covering the doors. I also learned that he wore a bullet proof vest when he delivered his acceptance speech, and that he spent millions more than any other president on security for his inauguration. Secondly, I expected that everything evil in America would disappear. In a way, President Obama fulfilled some of that expectation. He shut down Gitmo on his first day. It is a great start, but with the way the media had hyped him, he APPARENTLY should have cured cancer by now. I guess President Obama "transcends race" but he does not transcend his own humanity. Besides, he is only 12 days into the job. Personally, I'll give him 4 years to change the world.