This is a writer/author/artist and culture blog. This blog is used for short stories, art projects, writings, music or art that is interesting. For information or comments; steveotto2001@yahoo.com or ottozero2001@yahoo.com.
Counter-culture Journals (文革)
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Saturday, January 28, 2012
Imbolc
It is candle day or
Imbolc. For those who practice the ancient ways, Light a candle on the night of
Feb. 1st. Let it burn all night.
From The Celtic Connection;
Imbolc, (pronounced "IM-bulk" or
"EM-bowlk"), also called Oimealg, ("IM-mol'g), by the Druids, is
the festival of the lactating sheep. It is derived from the Gaelic word
"oimelc" which means "ewes milk". Herd animals have either
given birth to the first offspring of the year or their wombs are swollen and
the milk of life is flowing into their teats and udders. It is the time of
Blessing of the seeds and consecration of agricultural tools. It marks the
center point of the dark half of the year. It is the festival of the Maiden,
for from this day to March 21st, it is her season to prepare for growth and
renewal. Brighid's snake emerges from the womb of the Earth Mother to test the
weather, (the origin of Ground Hog Day), and in many places the first Crocus
flowers began to
spring forth from the frozen earth.
Suicides at the Foxconn Plant
According to the New York Times,
workers at a factory in Shenzhen, China, owned by Foxconn (a
company that manufactures iPhones, iPads and other devices for
Apple) regularly work sixteen-hour, seven-day work weeks.
They stand until their legs swell and they can’t walk, and they perform repetitive motions on the production line for so long that some permanently lose the use of their hands. To cut costs, managers make workers use cheap chemicals that cause neurological damage. There has been a rash of suicides at the Foxconn plant, and 300 workers recently threatened to jump off the roof over a safety and pay dispute.
In short, as one former Apple executive told the New York Times, "Most people would be really disturbed if they saw where their iPhone comes from."
Mark Shields, a self-described member of the "cult of Mac," started a petition on Change.org
demanding Apple exert its influence on its suppliers to improve
working conditions for the factory workers that make iPhones,
iPads and other Apple products. Click here to sign Mark’s petition right now.
Apple knows it
can play an important role in ensuring safe and fair working
conditions for the workers at its suppliers, like Foxconn. In 2005,
the company released a supplier code of conduct, and it performs
hundreds of audits each year in China and around the world to confirm
its suppliers are meeting the code’s expectations.
But that’s where Apple’s commitment falters: the number of supplier violations has held steady year to year and Apple hasn’t consistently publicly stated which suppliers have problems or dropped offending suppliers.
The bottom line, Apple executives admit, is that they’re not being forced to change.
One current executive told the New York Times
that there’s a trade-off: "You can either manufacture in
comfortable, worker-friendly factories," he said, or you can "make
it better and faster and cheaper, which requires factories that
seem harsh by American standards. And right now, customers care more about a new iPhone than working conditions in China."
That means
public pressure is the only thing that can force Apple to ensure
its suppliers treat workers humanely. If enough people sign Mark’s
petition -- and tell Apple they care more about human beings than
they do about how fast the company can produce the next generation
iPhone -- the company could be convinced to make real change for
the workers at Foxconn and other factories.
Friday, January 27, 2012
Venus comes to life
Now we may find life on Venus. Just check out this article;
A Russian scientist claims to have spotted
signs of life in the most unlikely spot in the universe: Venus, the
arid, scorching second-closest planet to the sun.
Venus is widely considered to be lifeless
and barren, thanks in part to superheated clouds of sulfuric acid that
cover the planet. NASA’s Solar System Exploration
site says the scorched world has temperatures higher than 880 degrees
Fahrenheit (471 degrees Celsius) -- that's hot enough to melt lead.
Indeed, probes that have landed on Venus survived only a few hours
before being destroyed by the incredible temperatures, NASA notes.
For more click here.
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Sunday, January 22, 2012
Thursday, January 19, 2012
Panama Red New Riders
Some youngsters under the age of 20 may not know what this song is actually about.
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
New Monument to the greatness of Wichita’s Corporations
From Wichita Peace and Freedom Party Examiner;
During the Cold War, the west was quick to show us pictures of great monuments to great leaders in the Soviet Union, and its allies, that were supposed to deify their leaders as gods. For example there are many museums to the leader Kim Il Sung in DPR(North)Korea.
Here in Wichita, KS we have similar public art to remind us who are real leaders are. Our local corporations really believe they our people, (that is what the Supreme Court said). As capitalist deities they seem to find it necessary to build monuments to themselves. The recent one is a light-up-giant cog looking design dedicated to the Wichita Rotary Club and the Coleman Co. It seems W.C. Coleman, and his son, Sheldon Coleman, devoted 103 years to the Rotary Club of Wichita and both served as presidents.
The $1.18 million project includes a huge parking lot put in to replace the down town Coleman Building near 2nd and St. Francis. The Wichita Rotary Charitable Fund donated $300,000 to move and display this monument to their own greatness. According to The Wichita Eagle, County officials wanted to remember downtown’s history. To do that they took bricks and pieces from the old building to build the monument.
So when do we create a monument to the dedication of the hard working people who keep these corporations in business instead of waging a class war on them? Apparently it will be no time in the near future.
During the Cold War, the west was quick to show us pictures of great monuments to great leaders in the Soviet Union, and its allies, that were supposed to deify their leaders as gods. For example there are many museums to the leader Kim Il Sung in DPR(North)Korea.
Here in Wichita, KS we have similar public art to remind us who are real leaders are. Our local corporations really believe they our people, (that is what the Supreme Court said). As capitalist deities they seem to find it necessary to build monuments to themselves. The recent one is a light-up-giant cog looking design dedicated to the Wichita Rotary Club and the Coleman Co. It seems W.C. Coleman, and his son, Sheldon Coleman, devoted 103 years to the Rotary Club of Wichita and both served as presidents.
The $1.18 million project includes a huge parking lot put in to replace the down town Coleman Building near 2nd and St. Francis. The Wichita Rotary Charitable Fund donated $300,000 to move and display this monument to their own greatness. According to The Wichita Eagle, County officials wanted to remember downtown’s history. To do that they took bricks and pieces from the old building to build the monument.
Advertisement
In this time of class war, where the Occupy Wichita movement and
other Occupy movements across the country are complaining that these
corporations are waging class war on the majority of us, including the
working poor, this monument is one more reminder who really owns this
city and its governments, both city and Sedgwick County. Sedgwick
Country took part in the big tower’s dedication.So when do we create a monument to the dedication of the hard working people who keep these corporations in business instead of waging a class war on them? Apparently it will be no time in the near future.
Wednesday, January 04, 2012
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