Archive for March, 2011

Mar 19 2011

Surrogate blogging about Japan

Published by under Uncategorized

I checked into a hotel and it had a banner saying “Welcome Gonzaga Alumni Association”. Since I am stuck here tonight-wonder if that means I can score free beer.

 Here are some more of the S.O.’s thoughts on what is going on in Japan:

Near Tokyo, earthquake cloud was found on 19th. I’ve never seen this cloud but I saw several earthquake clouds on TV when I was in Japan. Scary, everyone, please be careful and stay safe!

The Japanese word is Jishingumo. Link to pictures can be found here. I had never heard of an earthquake cloud.

He should have shown up in front of nation earlier. His tear doen’t solve anything, TOO LATE!

This is in reference to the press conference with the chief of Tokyo Electric Power Company. It is going to come back to hurt them.

Miracle happend! 20′s male was rescued in Kesennuma/Miyagi pref. 8 days (186 hrs) after tsunami. He was found in the blancket inside the destroyed house. Happy News!

The story is here-but I do not have an English link.

Now the world knows new words: Fukushima Daiichi, Sendai, Kesennuma, Kamaishi, etc. My home town Fukushima became SO famous. Is it good? NO! At the western part (mountain side) of Fukushima is so beautiful, lots of pretty lakes, Mt. Bandai, yum rice, fresh fruits though… Where is Utsukushina Fukushima now?

Utsukushina Fukushima means Beautiful Fukushima. The Western part of the prefecture is a beautiful place-with lots of really nice small ryokans (country style inns).

?1 wk passed from the last earthquake, 6,911 death, 380K evacuee, made worst record, worth than Kobe earthquake (’95). Still supplies’re short, 320K blackout, no water supply 450K, no gas (propane). But good news is 2 towns in Iwate will start building temp. housing (300) from 19th!

And the numbers are going to get worse.

A famous Japane author Ryu Murakami’s report about last earthquake. It’s tranlated to English from Japanese. Please read when you have time.

It is worth a read. Here is an excerpt:

And it was then that, without really thinking about it, I adopted my fundamental stance toward this disaster: For the present, at least, I would trust the words of people and organizations with better information and more knowledge of the situation than I. I decided to believe the building wouldn’t fall. And it didn’t.

The Japanese are often said to abide faithfully by the rules of the “group” and to be adept at forming cooperative systems in the face of great adversity. That would be hard to deny today. Valiant rescue and relief efforts continue nonstop, and no looting has been reported.

Away from the eyes of the group, however, we also have a tendency to behave egoistically — almost as if in rebellion. And we are experiencing that too: Necessities like rice and water and bread have disappeared from supermarkets and convenience stores. Gas stations are out of fuel. There is panic buying and hoarding. Loyalty to the group is being tested.

Which gets to what I wrote about earlier. You can’t take Japanese culture and transplant it to America. We can learn lessons from the Nihonjin but thing is-being Japanese is a total package.

Guess I need to head out for dinner-and I guess I will have to root for Gonzaga !

3 responses so far

Mar 19 2011

Things to do in Denver ( again)

Published by under Uncategorized

Well, that’s it. I am stuck in Denver for the second time. They had absolutely no way to get me a seat out till tomorrow night when my first flight got canx.

So- it’s time to do some laundry then hit the streets!

No responses yet

Mar 15 2011

The view from abroad.

Published by under Japan Living

I can tell its driving the S.O. nuts not to be in Japan right now. (Its driving me nuts-I want to be there and help).  Some selected quotes from the S.O:

On CNN live report from Japan, most reporters’re telling that they’re amazed how calm and patient victims are, no one is yelling even on the long line to get food, gas, etc. They’re also amazed how good descipline Japanese culture is. I’m sure those reporters went to many disaster places all over the world and saw misery before. I’m very happy to hear that and proud of being Japanese!

Actually I am kind of amazed that American reporters are picking up on this. Anyone who has lived in Japan is not surprised-but trying to extrapolate a lesson for Americans is a stretch I think. Americans would never put up with everything else that goes with being Japanese-except if they live in Japan. And even then, most of us there in Japan, try to assimilate into the culture-only to realize we can’t.

The Governor of Tokyo, Ishihara said to the press that the tsunami was judgment. How rude! I’m sure many victims in Tohoku will be upset. He was trying to say that current Japanese government is using tsunami for changing their disrepute to reputable, but I think he is too thoughtless as a Japanese & as a governor!

Not really surprising about Ishihara. If you have followed him carefully-he will find a way to blame it on the Gaijin soon enough.

Couldn’t stop crying. This girl (Minamisanriku townhouse employee) kept telling to entire town by disaster prevention radion “Run, run away now, escape, evacuate!” till tsunami attacked. Later someone saw that the girl was swept away..Very sad story.

It was a sad story. I felt like crying too.

Heartbreaking! Whenever CNN news features Sendai’s disaster, my heart is crying! I was born in Sapporo but my family moved to Sendai when I was 9 months baby. I grew up there till Ele. school graduation. It’s like a my childhood hometown, warm people, ???all kinds of fresh sea food, local diarect, happy & good memories, etc. I do hope Sendai will be retrieved, ??? Sendai!!

Sendai is a great city. And the S.O. did spend her childhood there. She counts Sendai as home-the same way I count Pittsburgh as home.

18 responses so far

Mar 15 2011

Point of order

Published by under Uncategorized

I am getting tired of reporters referring to Fukushima Daichi # 2, 3, or 4. The name of the plant is not Fukushima Daichi.

Dai is a counter used in Japanese that is the equvalent of “Number”.

So it is Fukushima Dai-ichi, Dai-ni, Dai-san, or Dai-yon. Fukushima no dai ichi genshiro, if you want to be totally correct.

6 responses so far

Mar 15 2011

Even The Atlantic understands….

Published by under Navy

That the Navy’s shipbuilding priorities are all screwed up.

Of the 11 commissioned U.S. warships ships en route to Japan, almost half are big Cold War-era amphibious assault vessels purpose-built to land Marines on hostile shores. But while these unglamorous transport ships dispatch helicopters and critical aid to a grateful ally, they’re being marginalized by a Navy that tends to fixate on the capabilities to wage a high-tech, blue-water war, while underestimating the importance of mundane disaster-response work in maintaining our global power and influence.

Of course what The Atlantic does not realize is that all parts of Navy shipbuilding are broken.

No responses yet

Mar 14 2011

Out the door

Published by under Uncategorized

On a trip all this week. A weeks traveling beats a lot of things-so ergo, I am a happy man!

3 responses so far

Mar 13 2011

Day Three

Published by under Uncategorized

The S.O. talked with her mother last night. All is well-but the china stock in her mom’s house is down a bit. A fair amount of things came flying off the shelves. She was all right but shocked by the earthquake. Many dishes were broken, furniture damaged, and she thought the house would be collapse- but it was ok. She is going to be busy cleaning up the mess for a while. We are making it a point to communicate once a day to member of her family.

Rolling power blackouts start today in Japan. They will be in  Ayase city druing 0620-1000 & 1650-2030… Only apply to those who lives off base.

HS-14 has already gone into action moving supplies:

Moving supplies:

Flying over Sendai:

You can give to the Japan Red Cross here.

5 responses so far

Mar 12 2011

Totebaggers-to the barricades!

A long post  follows. It is worth your time to read-because not everything, contrary to the opinion of many conservative bloggers-can be adequately discussed in just a couple of paragraphs.

The recent incident involving acknowledged reprobate and con man James O’Keefe, who –through a combination of almost criminal deception and conspiracy with other ultra conservative zealots(especially Pamela Gellar)- was able to obtain and edit a video recording that caught Mr. Ron Schiller saying some disparaging remarks about the Tea Party and other things that were not particularly smart to have yourself on tape saying.


Cue the outrage! The usual suspects, immediately swung into action, holding their heads up high and saying how this “proves” NPR and Public Broadcasting is nothing but a bunch of panty-waisted liberal vermin that looks down their noses at “real Murrika!”.  Phib had a recent post on his blog-that was more than a little emotional on the subject:  “ I’m not sure which I find more disgusting, the anti-Semitism, the Dhimmitude ( what the hell does that even mean anyway?), the arrogance, the smugness,…” Etc, Etc, Etc. Then close with praise for a dipshit   “citizen journalist” like O’Keefe who is supposedly “doing the job the MSM used to do”.  A cheery head nod, a  “tut, tut”, and off to the next task sure in the knowledge of their inherent goodness and high mindedness.

So much that is so wrong with that-and with the attitude of the majority of his commenter’s. Where to begin?

Let’s start with the bottom line up front, it’s not NPR that maybe smug and arrogant-it is the more than arrogant to refuse to recognize who the real villain is in this event. And that villain is not public broadcasting.  The second-and equally important point- is that the truth of the event, compared with the first reports, show that the reporting about this particular event are not accurate. In their rush to judgment, and to excoriate public broadcasting, they have ignored the evidence that mitigates NPR and provides much needed context. That’s not surprising, facts are never high on the conservative hierarchy of needs-getting the message out to the uninformed is. What’s unfortunate , to quote James Fallows, “is that it has allowed Fox and its political allies to position NPR as something it is not, and in the process to jeopardize a part of American journalism we can’t afford to lose. “ Especially now.

 I guess that makes me smug and arrogant. Oh well, that’s just a cross I’ll have to bear.  Some people deserve to be looked down upon. James O’Keefe and his mentor Andrew Breitbart are among that group. If their rotund and rather close minded colleagues in the Tea Party are offended-well -that’s just a bonus.

The Economist has summed up the major issues quite well:

Anyway. Over in America, meanwhile, there are a bunch of smart people who know how this works, too. Earlier this week, they managed to catch an outgoing NPR executive calling the tea-party movement “racist” while talking to two undercover punk-ers dressed up as Muslim advocates of sharia law. In my inbox, Tea Party Nation’s Judson Phillips celebrates:

If James O’Keefe were a liberal, he would be a national hero today. If his targets were conservatives, the liberal media establishment would be falling all over themselves to see what they could offer him.

Again, for a far-right political movement, this stuff is pure gold. The sense of aggrievement felt by tea-party adherents and sympathisers at the accusation of racism is very similar to that felt by PVVers(A european right wing party)  at any hint of a reference to Nazism. The involvement of government subsidies provides the hook one needs to turn this into a public issue. The fact that one executive of the organisation says he thinks the tea-party movement is racist becomes the trigger not just for an offensive against an organisation unfriendly to hard-right ideology, but for a further solidification of the us-versus-them recruiting strategy. (“See? The liberal media thinks we’re racists.”)

What is the scandal here? That an NPR employee said something politically charged? Not on the air-but it what was supposed to be a semi-private setting? And that it was more Democratic sympathetic than GOP sympathetic? You will hear views like this—and their mirror image from the right disparaging the progressives and unions—at almost any Washington lunch. It is just lunch. Lunch is where deals are closed. Being the facilitator of deals means you have to put up with a lot:

But we’d last about 15 seconds in the fundraising business if every time a potential donor said something crazy or offensive, we told them to shut their pie hole. When people donate money, they feel even more entitled than when they’re sitting in their home bank-vaults running their fingers through their cash. Rich people love to give their money away, but they’re always attaching strings, and one common string is “You agree with me, right?” Can you begin to imagine the bizarre string Joan Kroc, heir to the McDonald’s fortune established by Ray Kroc, must have flung around the room as she prepared to give her NPR handlers $200 million? Ms. Kroc also gave $1.5 billion to the Salvation Army and assorted millions to peace institutes. Those gifts, plus her support of nuclear disarmament, were clearly designed to raise her dead husband, an ardent Nixon-lover and hard-right-winger, from his grave. (The efforts failed. Ray is still dead. But so is Joan.) 

If I voiced my concern over every stupid thing I heard at every meeting I ever went to-I’d get nothing done. Living here in Shopping Mall, one develops a strong tolerance for nonsense.

Then again, there are still moments when I find myself saying, “They can’t really be that stupid,” or maybe, “They can’t really think the rest of us are that stupid.” People who unreservedly believe the word of James O’Keefe have me saying that.

Lets start with the lunchtime conversation itself.  Business Insider has a pretty good rundown comparing and contrasting the actual conversation from the full video to the carefully edited version (another Breitbart-James O’Keefe trademark) released. Here is an example of the lack of context from the luncheon:

Schiller’s negative comments about Republicans and conservatives have gotten a great deal of attention.

He clearly says some offensive things, while being very direct that he is giving his own opinion and not that of NPR. Still — a wildly stupid move!

But you may be surprised to learn, that in the raw video, Schiller also speaks positively about the GOP. He expresses pride in his own Republican heritage and  his belief in fiscal conservatism.

4. The “seriously racist” Tea Party

NPR exec Ron Schiller does describe Tea Party members as “xenophobic…seriously racist people.”

This is one of the reasons why he no longer has a job!

But the clip in the edited video implies Schiller is giving simply his own analysis of the Tea Party. He does do that in part, but the raw video reveals that he is largely recounting the views expressed to him by two top Republicans, one a former ambassador, who admitted to him that they voted for Obama.

At the end, he signals his agreement. The larger context does not excuse his comments, or his judgment in sharing the account, but would a full context edit have been more fair? See what you think.

 By comparing the unedited footage with the version widely circulated, the analysis concluded that that Project Veritas’ editing of the tapes was “questionable” and “deceptive” enough to be “unethical” by journalism standpoints.

Wow! I am completely shocked that someone who sucks Breitbart’s dick  mentored at the feet of Andrew Breitbart would do such a thing!

What is surprising, however, is who did the video analysis. It was completed by The Blaze, the news and opinion site founded by Glenn Beck. Wonder how long it will be before it comes down. ( No I will not link to it-as a matter of principle- it was founded by Glenn Beck).

I have a hard time with moral outrage about what the NPR personnel said without moral outrage about what is clear deception and potentially illegal actions.  NPR at least took action against its own employees-who disciplines Breitbart and his clones?  

No one it appears-and they get away scott free with what can only be described as truely loathesome conduct.

When you support acts like this, you are no longer simply encouraging a particular point of view, you are saying- by your consent- that you have no issues with people engaging in unethical and  potentially illegal acts for the sole purpose of destroying a person’s professional livelihood. Andrew Breitbart does not have a “right” to that. Anymore than I have a right to beat the sh*t out of James O’Keefe. ( Much as I would like to).

In closing, I think it would be worth remembering that Public Broadcasting fills a need-and provides a service. When the Congress cuts off funding-its not just people they don’t like that they are screwing over, it will be their own constituents.  Contrary to the idea that Phib and a lot of others want to tell you-NPR and Public Radio in general has a pretty broad based audience. Certainly more so than Fox News.

Second,  Ron Schiller’s a fundraiser, not a news director. NPR keeps a high, thick firewall between its successful development office and its superb news division.  They want it that way because they have a tradition of wanting to get their news reporting right. As James Fallows wrote a while back about the Juna Williams firing:

In their current anti-NPR initiative, Fox and the Republicans would like to suggest that the main way NPR differs from Fox is that most NPR employees vote Democratic. That is a difference, but the real difference is what they are trying to do. NPR shows are built around gathering and analyzing the news, rather than using it as a springboard for opinions. And while of course the selection of stories and analysts is subjective and can show a bias, in a serious news organization the bias is something to be worked against rather than embraced. NPR, like the New York Times, has an ombudsman. Does Fox? [I think the answer is No.]
 
One other factor affects my view of NPR. There are jobs where people are mainly motivated by the hope of big money. (Finance in general.) There are jobs where the main motivation is job-security. And there is a category of jobs where, as absolutely everyone recognizes, it makes a tremendous difference that “employees” care about something beyond pay, hours, and security. Teachers. Soldiers. Doctors and nurses. Judges and police. Political leaders, if they want to be more than hacks. And, people in news organizations. …..I have felt privileged to work at the Atlantic through, now, three decades because, among other reasons, I know that every person in every job is doing everything possible to make the magazine the best it can be. Everyone is personally embarrassed if there’s a mistake in the magazine, or if we cover a topic — and someone else does it better. In the news business, this is the spirit that characterizes any first-rate operation, from CBS News in its glory days to the Washington Post of the ‘All the President’s Men’ era to today’s great magazines (New Yorker, NY Review of Books, many others) and broadcasts (eg PBS News Hour) and, yes, web sites. I have seen enough of NPR’s operations to know that it has the same spirit.*** Most people there don’t make a lot of money. Their compensation (as with a lot of people in journalism) comes partly in enjoying what they do, and partly in being proud of being on this team. Alumni of NPR — reporters, producers, and hosts who learned their skills there — are all over the journalistic establishment.
 
We don’t have so many first-rate institutions — in general, and especially in journalism — that we can afford to let one this valuable be delegitimized. Its leadership made a mistake in its handling of Juan Williams, but people who care about the news environment should recognize how much it has done right and defend it against the current cynical attack.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

And finally-this culture of “gotchaism” is nothing more than a race to the bottom. When James O’Keefe does things like this, it will spur someone to pull a retaliatory prank. And so and so forth. It leads no where good for either side. There is actually a double standard in place now-whenever someone at NPR does anything that offends the Fox Nation, somebody gets fired. When Roger Ailes calls NPR executives Nazi’s-all he got was a bonus. Its wrong and it has to stop.

To borrow a line from Animal House, ” They are going to nail us no matter what we do”-so NPR might as well develop a spine.

But for all its flaws, consider an America without public media. Consider a society where the distortions and dissembling would go unchallenged, where fact-based reporting is eliminated, and where the field is abandoned to the likes of James O’Keefe, whose “journalism” relies on lying and deceit.

Those folks are right-and those who support O’Keefe and Breitbart are  wrong. Nuff said.

6 responses so far

Mar 12 2011

Before and after

NASA Satellite pictures taken before the Tsunami on 26 February:

Please note the outlines of the coast in the center of the screen.

Now look at the after picture:

Info on how to send help to Japan here.

3 responses so far

Mar 12 2011

More coverage

Published by under Uncategorized

The streaming link to NHK is proving a handy thing. I am finding watching the news direct from Japan to be far more useful than watching the American broadcast networks-which are obsessed with Fukushima Dai ichi nuclear power plant. A worry to be sure-but the sheer level of wreckage that the Tsunami caused is a lot more than that.

Its all in Japanese-but even if you don’t speak or read Japanese, there is still good coverage here.

We have been told S.O.’s mother is safe-but still have been unable to talk with her by phone. I suspect its going to be a few days before we can.

3 responses so far

Mar 11 2011

The day they prayed would never come.

Published by under Uncategorized

Tai Hei You Okina Jishin to Tsunami.

Pacifc Ocean Large Earthquake and Tsunami.

The S.O. has been assured by several e-mails / Facebook posts that her family is safe-although she has been unable to talk to her mother in Fukushima. We’ve been in electronic e-mail contact with her sister and her niece. The phones in Fukushima seem to be out.

The S.O. spent a good deal of her youth in Sendai where this video of the quake was taken. 8.9 means one hell of a jolt:

The Atlantic has 48 pictures here. The refinery in Chiba is visibile from the S.O.’s apartment. We used to see it across Tokyo Bay when we first started seeing each other I started going to see her at her place.

I have a good friend-his wife is Japanese and she was supposed to go to the United States this weekend. As of last communication she had gotten to her family’s house and was trying to figure out how to get back to her home in Kanagawa. She spent 8+ hours trapped at Narita airport. Another friend was coming back from Korea and picked the wrong day to change planes at Narita.

I showed the S.O. how to stream NHK video so that she can watch the news about the quake in her own language. I’ve shown her this before-until today she expressed no interest in it. If you want to watch NHK streaming on the internet, go here.

The S.O.’s family lives in Fukushima Prefecture-but on high ground in the mountains. Still it would be nice to know if her mother has power.

This is all very bad-but then again, this is Japan. They learned a lot from the Kobe Earthquake-and made their building codes stronger. Other nations could learn a lot from their example.

Evidently -according to the NHK live broadcast, Shinkansen service is starting up. That, to me, is simply amazing. What a strong and resilient country!

No responses yet

Mar 11 2011

Jishin!

Published by under Japan Living

Is the Japanese word for earthquake. As bad as it is, it could have been much worse. This is why you invest in infrastructure:

The main damages is centered on Miyagi and Iwate prefectures:

6 responses so far

Mar 10 2011

Guess it happens back in Japan too.

Published by under Japan Living

Seems the term “Not for attribution” has no meaning anymore:

According to students who attended the speech on “Military Bases and Their Impacts in Okinawa” at the State Department on Dec. 3, Maher started off by explaining the general situation surrounding U.S. forces in Japan.

In the process of the presentation, he delved into cultural traits, referring to the Japanese tendency to build consensus.

Maher went on to suggest that by pretending to seek consensus, Okinawan people were trying to get as much money as possible from Tokyo, according to the students.

Maher was quoted as saying “Okinawans are masters of manipulation and extortion of Tokyo.”

Maher also pointed out that Okinawa’s main industry was tourism. While an agricultural industry existed, “other prefectures grow more (goya) than Okinawa,” Maher said, in reference to the key vegetable eaten by local residents.

“Okinawans are too lazy to grow goya,” Maher allegedly said.

Other points Maher supposedly raised included the Japanese tendency to differentiate between “tatemae” (face value) and “honne” (true intentions) when speaking and that while “Okinawans claim MCAS (Marine Corps Air Station) Futenma is the most dangerous base in the world, they know it is not true.”

He went on to point out that other commercial airports in Japan are also built in densely populated areas, according to the students.

He also reportedly said that Okinawan politicians will agree to a deal in Tokyo only to return to Okinawa and claim they did not reach an accord.

Tetsuji Shingaki, a prefectural assembly member who heads the Okinawa chapter of the Liberal Democratic Party, blasted the reported comments as “discriminating against Okinawa. Such a person should step down from the post as director of Japan affairs.”

Maher served as consul-general for three years from 2006 through 2009. The Okinawa assembly resolution noted that Maher had suggested during his tenure in Okinawa that the Futenma airfield was not particularly dangerous.

Maher currently oversees the negotiations on the Futenma relocation issue.

Uh, he did oversee negotiations on Futenma…until he got fired.

Now actually-what he had to say is rather true-especially from the outside looking in, and anyone who has watched the DPRI dance that has been ongoing since 2005 can attest that its not just the Okinawans who are being manipulative-the fair denizens of Atsugi got good and royally screwed as a result of “manipulation“.

Nonetheless, soon after came the obligatory apology:


apology usa by jentertainments2

UPDATE: It would appear that part of this story has to do with deliberate mis-translation. Maher’s statement , “Okinawans are masters of manipulation and extortion of Tokyo.”-was translated into Japanese as “usuri no meijin” which  has a far worse meaning in Japanese than what Maher said in English.

One response so far

Mar 10 2011

Here’s to me and my tanjoubi!

Published by under Fun things!

someecards.com - You're only as old as you feel while getting wildly fucked

And that is always the best birthday present! Too bad the S.O. develops a hearing and comprehension disorder every year on this day. :-(

4 responses so far

Mar 10 2011

Only in America….

This post is loving dedicated to all those (Say Hi Curtis)-who along with others- believes that Tea Partiers are just plain folks who want to take their country back.

Unmitigated selfshiness and stupidity is a form of “thuggery” too.

The Republican party is now in the hands of spoiled children. Children who wouldn’t know what is right and what is good if it bit them on the ass.

And these are the same folks who are appalled at NPR.

Not liking the Tea Party is not elitist-its a public obligation.

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