Sunday, August 15, 2010
Saturday, August 14, 2010
This is America
In the above speech, President Obama not only fully endorses and defends the controversial and so-called "Ground Zero Mosque", but also successfully weaves Muslim-Americans into the historical tapestry of our country.
Like so many other immigrants, generations of Muslims came to forge their future here. They became farmers and merchants, worked in mills and factories. They helped lay the railroads. They helped to build America. They founded the first Islamic center in New York City in the 1890s. They built America’s first mosque on the prairie of North Dakota. And perhaps the oldest surviving mosque in America —- still in use today —- is in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.He also makes it clear that our struggle is not against Islam, but against extremists and mass murderers, with Islamic leaders standing fast beside us against the evil of terrorism.
Al Qaeda’s cause is not Islam -– it’s a gross distortion of Islam. These are not religious leaders -– they’re terrorists who murder innocent men and women and children. In fact, al Qaeda has killed more Muslims than people of any other religion -– and that list of victims includes innocent Muslims who were killed on 9/11.
Friday, August 13, 2010
Pehaps I Should Brush Up on My German
While most of the industrialized world still struggles to keep from teetering off the recession cliff into depression gulch, Germany is actually seeing economic growth. Believe it or not, the German unemployment rate has actually gone down in the last five years, a trend that they maintain now, even after spiking up slighting at the beginning of this year.
As this graph attests to, in spite of US and European Union trends, Germany has managed to slash unemployment while their allies have seen their own rates explode. Clearly the Germans are doing something right. Hopefully they can drag the rest of us out of the hole with them, or at least the EU; as the NYT notes, higher employment in Deutschland means more German tourists vacationing and spending euros in places like Spain and Greece, the later of which saw their economy shrink by 1.5% this year, as compared to Germany's growth by 2.2%. Being an unemployed American, and looking at the gulf between US and German unemployment rates in the above graph, I have a strong urge to dust off my German dictionary from high school and become fluent enough to work in a land that has more promising job opportunities than here.
Apple Falls into the Uncanny Valley
You may have seen ads in Apple's latest iPhone campaign like this one:
Clearly, the intent here is to advertise the device's video chat feature that will allow the user to have touching, memorable moments with his or her loved ones even when they are thousands of miles apart. I have no problem with this. Sometimes a traditional phone conversation or email exchange just won't do. What I do have a problem with are the ads themselves. They show these touching moments, but each one is obviously scripted by cynical advertisers and performed by actors; they fall into what robotic scientists call the uncanny valley.
Wikipedia explains:
(shudder)
Clearly, the intent here is to advertise the device's video chat feature that will allow the user to have touching, memorable moments with his or her loved ones even when they are thousands of miles apart. I have no problem with this. Sometimes a traditional phone conversation or email exchange just won't do. What I do have a problem with are the ads themselves. They show these touching moments, but each one is obviously scripted by cynical advertisers and performed by actors; they fall into what robotic scientists call the uncanny valley.
Wikipedia explains:
The [uncanny valley] theory holds that when robots and other facsimiles of humans look and act almost like actual humans, it causes a response of revulsion among human observers. The "valley" in question is a dip in a proposed graph of the positivity of human reaction as a function of a robot's lifelikeness.This theory can and has been applied to various forms of media, most notably the not-quite-human CGI characters in films such as Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within and The Polar Express. And now I'm applying it to these iPhone ads. If these commercials featured actual footage of regular people having real, spontaneous conversations, then I would not find them disturbing. Similarly, if they swung in the other direction, and were perhaps animated, they'd be just as acceptable. But as they are, I cannot help but be repulsed; they're are like the TV equivalent of one of these creepy Japanese robot girls:
(shudder)
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
Iran the Nation vs. Iran the Idea

Should it really be a surprise that Iran has such a cultural, political, and military influence on its neighbors? We talk about Iran as if it is some esoteric concept, when really it is sitting right between the United States' two biggest current military commitments, Iraq and Afghanistan. It is a living, breathing country.After spending several weeks in Kabul, one can hardly deny the extent of Iranian influence in Afghanistan. As a major player in the region, Iran has a vital stake in how its Afghan neighbors are governed. I paid closer attention to this after spending several days with an elite Afghan commando unit tasked with guarding a key site for high-level meetings. These commandos had been trained not only by U.S. Special Forces, but also by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, the highly skilled paramilitary group accused of arming and training the Shia insurgents in Iraq.
I'm reminded of a film by Iranian auteur Majid Majidi called Baran, which explores the relationship between these two countries. It's a really charming, gorgeous, and Chaplin-esque fable about a young Tehrani man who falls for an Afghan girl who works illegally in Iran disguised as a boy.
Wild Fires in the Nuclear Age
The Russian wild fires have apparently spread to areas contaminated by the Chernobyl disaster.
The Emergency Situations Ministry also said that at least six wildfires were spotted and extinguished this week in the Bryansk region - the part of Russia that suffered the most when a reactor in the Chernobyl nuclear power plant exploded during a test in 1986, spewing radioactive clouds over much of the former western Soviet Union and northern Europe.More from Al Jazeera.
Disaster Round Up
Deadly floods in Pakistan, deadly wild fires leading to deadly smog in Russia, and now a deadly mudslide in northwest China.
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