September 4, 2007

Can America(ns) change?

NPR's All things Considered discusses Americans century-old love affair with their cars.
Americans drive bigger cars than any other country. And, even if they're currently trendy, fuel-efficient cars still don't sell as well in the United States as elsewhere. Can America change?
I say...yes, why not? Its all about mindset - change to lifestyles and attitudes will come automatically after that. Yes...there are many oil-friendly powers that be that would like to keep the status quo going. But I believe in the power of information and if Al Gore's movie is any indication, it shows that what may be thought to be a kooky fringe movement can snowball into a nation-wide movement. And if the people say they do not want the gas guzzlers, believe me... the car companies will deliver. For instance, we have seen how, after initially debunking Honda's and Toyota's foray into the hybrid market, the Big 3 have now woken up to hybrid cars; athough asking the US tax-payer to fund research on hybrid cars to help them catch up with the Japanese simply does not cut it!

Meanwhile, sales of hybrid cars continue to hit
record highs with the "once frumpy cars" now showing some verve. Though Honda was the first to introduce hybrids in the US with its Honda Insight in 1999, today, Toyota has driven to the top and has the indisputable champ in its Prius models, with Honda trying hard to catch up.

That said, fuel-efficient cars* are not the only way to change. For far too long we have been led into this habit of thinking that conservation is only a virtue, not a necessity. We need to use resources not only efficiently but also intelligently. Slowing down the rate at which we guzzle them is one mark of intelligence, in my mind. For example:
hybrid SUVs, which is where the Big 3 have focused their efforts, makes as much sense to me as a 7500 sq. ft. EnergyStar home for two or the whole ridicculous concept of carbon offsetting, which has rightly been decried as a "papal indulgence that allows consumers to ease their conscience for a pittance without actually changing their behavior." Note that I do understand that this is the only way perhaps that makes sense to Detroit from a business standpoint because a large majority of their sales comes through minivans and SUVs, thanks in no part to their decision in the 80s to counter the Japanese taking over the sedan market by introducing these gas-guzzling monstrosities.


* See my earlier posts on the subject of fuel-efficient cars:
1, 2. And this post about hydrogen as fuel.

Also read these articles:
'Green' concept cars of 2007
Extreme 'green' cars of the future

Disclaimer: I rarely preach but have decided to do so on this topic. And if you are wondering what I drive... its a VW Passat we bought in 2002. Whenever I get rid of it, I will be buying a hybrid. We have always driven manual cars which gave us > 30 mpg on the highways. The stop-n-go city driving these days in Boston is highly frustrating not only because of the agony of driving that way but also due to the lower mileage attained.
That is one reason why we always avoid driving when we can walk (as I do to work and also often to the public library, the bank, etc.: anything within a mile - 20 minutes of walking - is very do-able, even in Boston winters.) And if you don't like walking, try a bike. Its healthy and efficient and not as time consuming as walking! Like I said
above, changes in lifestyles are as important as driving more efficient cars.

Wucha dun did now?

City officials in Houston, Texas are investigating a "Ghetto Handbook" distributed by the local police to its officers. The booklet, subtitled “Wucha dun did now?” contained, among other items, a glossary that would enable the police to communicate “as if you just came out of the hood.” Terms defined in the glossary included “foty” for a 40-ounce bottle of beer; “aks” for “to ask a question”; and “hoodrat” for “a scummy girl.”

Elsewhere in this crazy world,

Atlanta's city council debated whether or not to outlaw baggy pants

Another elementary school—this one in Colorado Springs - banned tag.

China declared its one-child policy an environmental weapon

A wild male elephant
elephant burgled a circus in eastern India, making off with an attractive female elephant.

Scientists in Louisiana determined that some obese people may be infected with
a fat virus.

and last but not least, following in the footsteps of Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr., and her friend, Paris Hilton, Nicole Ritchie can now claim she has spent time in jail. Wonder if she found time to write a prison diary :)

She was released from jail in Los Angeles after serving 82 minutes for drunk driving

All of the above gems are from this week's Harper's Weekly review. This free weekly review provides endless fodder for mirth and blogging ideas.

Fantastic Freedom Institute

Per an article published this weekend in the NY Times, Bush, in an interview conducted last December, announced his intention to found a "fantastic Freedom Institute" after he leaves office..
First, Mr. Bush said, “I’ll give some speeches, just to replenish the ol’ coffers.” With assets that have been estimated as high as nearly $21 million, Mr. Bush added, “I don’t know what my dad gets — it’s more than 50-75” thousand dollars a speech, and “Clinton’s making a lot of money.” Then he said, “We’ll have a nice place in Dallas,” where he will be running what he called “a fantastic Freedom Institute” promoting democracy around the world. But he added, “I can just envision getting in the car, getting bored, going down to the ranch.”

Nice...this is what the world needs. A Freedom Institute from the man who has waged two wars in the name of freedom.

P.S. Aided by
damn lies and spin about progress, the man continues to be delusional. There is the reality and then there is Bush-speak! During his "surprise" visit to Iraq yesterday, he made a "first-hand assessment":
...if the kind of success we are now seeing continues, it will be possible to maintain the same level of security with fewer American forces.
So...this is success that we are seeing? The mind shudders to think of what failure would look like. (Oh.. don't remind me - we have been in the "last throes" of this violence for over couple years now!)
Kinda related essay:
Bush, Freedom, and Responsibility.

Life imitates Art

Why MI5 spied on Orwell for a decade (Article was found via a post at India Uncut)

The word irony gets used wrongly in many contexts these days but I think it is appropriate here. Also, "expected" comes to mind.

Related: Highly recommend seeing last years Oscar winner for best foreign film: the German movie,
The Lives of Others,
which deals with spying by the government on its people.

September 1, 2007

Indians in the news - 3


I had never heard of Judge Pal before!

Decades After War Trials, Japan Still Honors a Dissenting Judge


An Indian judge, remembered by fewer and fewer of his own countrymen 40 years after his death, is still big in Japan. Among the memorials at the Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo is a monument to Judge Radhabinod Pal of India.

Radhabinod Pal, the only one out of 11 Allied justices who handed down a not guilty verdict for Japan’s top wartime leaders at the post-World War II International Military Tribunal for the Far East, or the Tokyo trials.

In recent weeks alone, NHK, the public broadcaster, devoted 55 minutes of prime time to his life, and a scholar came out with a 309-page book exploring his thinking and its impact on Japan. Capping it all, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, during a visit to India last week, paid tribute to him in a speech to the Indian Parliament in New Delhi and then traveled to Calcutta to meet the judge’s 81-year-old son.
Previously: 1, 2

You know them better as - 2

Some well known Bollywood playback singers, actors, and a world famous music director/composer in the 2nd round of this series. (Earlier in the series - 1)

Not one more refugee death, by Emmy Pérez

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