Archive for category miracle
While You Were Mourning…
Posted by zoboxrox in environment, health, international, malfunction, miracle, not news, politics, religion, science, tragedy on July 2nd, 2009

So my favorite eatery has captioned CNN on their television at all times (hence, my favorite) and while the 24/7 media channel has a tendency to be a little hokey, perhaps overblown, and often downright dramatic (but no news is good news right?), I respect them simply for the fact that they are huge enough to sink their perfectly manicured, yet often clumsy, claws into most every major news item au current. I can’t help myself, then, from feeling majorly disappointed that this generally satisfactory and overly accessible outlet for information is, at this very moment, reporting “BREAKING NEWS: VIDEO OF MICHAEL JACKSON’S FINAL REHEARSAL RELEASED.” (Here it is if you’re curious… entertaining, but not news)
I have to ask myself, is this really breaking news? And don’t get me wrong, I love MJ. I was a die hard Jackson fan even when it was embarrassing to admit. My list of favorite songs include some of the lesser known, deeper felt (”She’s Out of My Life” now has a whole new meaning), and I’m proud to say that while its not a consistent ability, I have successfully moonwalked on occasion. BUT — before I am a Michael Jackson fan, I am a citizen of the world, and my deeper concern lies in what has happened in the week since his untimely passing. So here is the list of Top 5 News Events that occurred while you were mourning:
1. Lets start with the ridiculously important act by the House last Friday, June 26, which, after years of ignoring the inconvenient truth, passed H.R. 2454, or The American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009. While the act itself is far (far far far far) from perfect, and in truth it dragged itself across the finish line at the last second, winning by only seven votes, it is hugely significant because it is the first time Congress has formally recognized what every other thinking American knows as Global Warming, Climate Change, the Greenhouse Effect (remember that one?), the End of the World, etc:
The vote was the first time either house of Congress had approved a bill meant to curb the heat-trapping gases scientists have linked to climate change. The legislation, which passed despite deep divisions among Democrats, could lead to profound changes in many sectors of the economy, including electric power generation, agriculture, manufacturing and construction.
President Obama hailed the House passage of the bill as “a bold and necessary step.” He said in a statement that he looked forward to Senate action that would send a bill to his desk “so that we can say, at long last, that this was the moment when we decided to confront America’s energy challenge and reclaim America’s future.”
But I bet a lot of people didn’t hear about this. After all, we’d only had a day since Michael’s passing. Who cares about… you know, the world…?
2. Two days later, on Sunday June 28th, a little place called Honduras, you may have heard of it, its part of our continent, went ahead and had themselves a coup.
Back story is as follows: Left-leaning President Manuel Zelaya (think Chavez, with a mustache) was pushing for legislative reform which would allow him to lift the term restrictions for presidents, enabling him to run again (think Mayor Bloomberg, without the cash). Apparently the military found this completely unacceptable, and in the middle of the night, took over the government and exiled Zelaya to Costa Rica (actually, that sounds pretty nice).
In the first military coup in Central America since the end of the cold war, soldiers stormed the presidential palace in the capital, Tegucigalpa, early in the morning, disarming the presidential guard, waking Mr. Zelaya and putting him on a plane to Costa Rica.
Mr. Zelaya, a leftist aligned with President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela, angrily denounced the coup as illegal. “I am the president of Honduras,” he insisted at the airport in San José, Costa Rica, still wearing his pajamas….
Church services were canceled and most people stayed home. Several thousand protesters supporting the president faced off against soldiers outside the presidential palace, burning tires.
The government television station and a television station that supports the president were taken off the air. Television and radio stations broadcast no news. Only wealthy Hondurans with access to the Internet and cable television were able to follow the day’s events.
Normally a coup would be pretty big news — HUGE. Remember in Pretty Woman when she goes back into the store to tell them what a mistake they’ve made by not letting her shop — HUGE MISTAKE — well this is huge the way that was.
3. Another two days later, in the early morning of Tuesday June 30, a passenger plane, an Airbus 310 to be exact, carrying 153 people, crashed on its way from Yemen to the Comoros Islands. 
While normally this would be an instant global tragedy for the world to rubberneck, the story becomes even more unbelievable, as a sole survivor, a 14 year old girl who can barely swim, is rescued, found floating in the Indian Ocean. The young woman, Bahia Bakari, was traveling with her mother and three siblings, all of whom are believed to be dead, and cannot explain how it is she managed to stay alive.
A severely bruised young girl believed to be the only survivor of an Indian Ocean p
lane crash flew back Thursday to Paris, where she was embraced gently by her father, who tried to lift her spirits with a joke.
Bahia Bakari, 12, returned to France from the Comoros Islands on a French government plane. The Falcon-900 jet with medical facilities left the archipelago nation, a former French colony, and arrived at Le Bourget airport just north of Paris…
Bahia, described by her father as a fragile girl who could barely swim, spent over 13 hours in the water clinging to wreckage before she was rescued. She was found suffering from hypothermia, a fractured collarbone and widespread bruises to her face, elbow and foot….
“In the midst of the mourning, there is Bahia. It is a miracle, it is an absolutely extraordinary battle for survival,” France’s cooperation minister, Alain Joyandet, who flew back with her, said at the airport. “It’s an enormous message that she sends to the world … almost nothing is impossible.”
And yet, there are people who don’t even know this story, haven’t even heard of Bahia, because Michael Jackson died last week, and there’s only so much room for misery in one’s life.
4. Later that very same day, Al Franken defeated Norm Coleman in the final battle of the war for the Minnesota Senate Seat.


Apparently Coleman had to dip into his dental fund to continue the lawsuit, and when pressed with the idea that he may be required to shell out even more cash, decided to call it quits, like a true conservative. Obama now has 60 friends in the Senate. He can basically do anything he wants. Even Bush never had it this good. And while I’m sure people know this happened, no one really seems to care. All of the passion Americans have put into politics over the past year, seems to have died with MJ.
5. Finally, the people of Iran continued to struggle for basic human rights, like freedom, and fairness, and safety. They continued to protest, continued to recieve beatings, continued to be kidnapped, murdered, or worst of all, disappeared. They continued to document their troubles as well, but couldn’t post the images online, their main resource at this time, because the inernet had basically crashed with Michael Jackson frenzy.
So here’s a little video someone put up on YouTube to remind us all, its not over, its only just begun.
(Amanda — don’t watch this)
Specter Spectacular
You may remember when I wrote about Arlen Spector a few months ago and said I’d most likely never thank him again. Well I was wrong, cause I am certainly thanking him right now.
Senator Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania said on Tuesday he would switch to the Democratic party, presenting Democrats with a possible 60th vote and the power to break Senate filibusters as they try to advance the Obama administration’s new agenda.
In a statement issued about noon as the Capitol was digesting the stunning turn of events, Mr. Specter said he had concluded that his party had moved too far to the right, a fact demonstrated by the migration of 200,000 Pennsylvania Republicans to the Democratic Party.
“I now find my political philosophy more in line with Democrats than Republicans,” Mr. Specter said, acknowledging that his decision was certain to disappoint colleagues and supporters.
Now I know there’s Swine Flu, and earthquakes, and 9/11 re-enactments in New York, but this news is tremendous — spectacularly huge, as far as political news goes. Not only does it change the numbers in the Senate in an acutely important way, but it sends such a message of Change, which is what this administration is supposed to be all about.
I’ve been waiting so long for someone in the GOP to do the right thing, which is mainly, prove to its members that its OK to evolve: an entity that fears progress so much will never survive, the world is in a constant state of movement and chaos; whether we like it or not it is not now and will never be simple and still. And I’m in no way calling for every Republican to switch parties; instead I think this is a healthy reminder that politics is supposed to be fluid, not fixed. So many members of the GOP have been clinging to heavy issues that are, inevitably, sinking the ship. They need to stop focusing on religious and social topics, and start to actually talk about the money, which is the one thing you’ve got on your side right now. I think it was actually Megan McCain who said it best:
I consider myself a progressive Republican. I am liberal on social issues. And I think that the party is at a place where social issues shouldn’t be the issues that define the party. And I have taken heat, but in fairness to me, I am a different generation than the people that are giving me heat….We have a very big generation gap between me and my father….I was raised in an open-minded home. I was raised a Christian, but I was raised open-minded Christian — one to accept people, love people, not pass judgment.
People give Megan McCain a lot of sh*t because, I dunno, she’s young and she’s a female and she obviously looks in the mirror before she leaves the house. Well f**k them, in all honesty, I think she’s smart. She and Specter, not afraid of change. Nice kafiah Megan; I’m loving it. 
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind Control

Once again, reading the news this morning and I found myself in a state of complete shock. Either the New York Times has been hijacked by Charlie Kaufman or the end is nearing.
Brain Researchers Open Door to Editing Memory
Suppose scientists could erase certain memories by tinkering with a single substance in the brain. Could make you forget a chronic fear, a traumatic loss, even a bad habit.
Researchers in Brooklyn have recently accomplished comparable feats, with a single dose of an experimental drug delivered to areas of the brain critical for holding specific types of memory, like emotional associations, spatial knowledge or motor skills.
Even though that rat is tres cool (hip little black and white rat), it doesn’t make me feel any better about the fact that the scientist behind it has been injecting experimental “memory molecules” into its brain. Haven’t these people seen the goddamn movie? And never mind the ethical implications of erasing someone’s memory, who is funding this big brother project?
Now neuroscience, a field that barely existed a generation ago, is racing ahead, attracting billions of dollars in new financing and throngs of researchers. The National Institutes of Health last year spent $5.2 billion, nearly 20 percent of its total budget, on brain-related projects, according to the Society for Neuroscience.
As an agency of the Department of Health and Human Services, the NIH is funded, in fact, by you, and me, and the rest of the taxpayers. And while I’m all for the alleviation of pain, whether physical or emotional, heart disease is the leading cause of death for both men and women in the United States right now, and I would bet that there are some nutritionists/vegetable farmers/school cafeterias/victory gardeners out there who would happily take some of that $5.2 billion. Only problem is, you can’t control someone with their heart (not their actual literal heart that is).

Things may get confusing.
Iowa!
Posted by zoboxrox in human rights, miracle, politics on April 3rd, 2009
If it hadn’t been on more than one news station, I probably wouldn’t have believed it, but it appears that Iowa has legalized Gay Marriage — or, more precisely, il-legalized the ban on it. This makes Iowa one of a very small handful of states, and the only non-coastal one, that legally permits any two adult people to get married, no matter what the sexuality of the couple.
The Iowa Supreme Court legalized gay marriage Friday in a unanimous and emphatic decision that makes Iowa the third state — and the first in the nation’s heartland — to allow same-sex couples to wed.
In its decision, the high court upheld a lower court’s ruling that found a state law restricting marriage to between a man and woman violated Iowa’s constitution.
“We are firmly convinced the exclusion of gay and lesbian people from the institution of civil marriage does not substantially further any important governmental objective,” the Supreme Court wrote in its decision. “The Legislature has excluded a historically disfavored class of persons from a supremely important civil institution without a constitutionally sufficient justification.”
Ok, so whats going on here? California bans gay marriage and Iowa legalizes it?
Gay rights supporter and former state lawmaker Ed Fallon told NPR that the ruling is consistent with Iowa’s history.
“Iowa has always been on the cutting edge of civil rights,” Fallon said. “Whether it’s regarding desegregation of schools or the rights of African Americans to be full citizens.”
“This is huge. And I think it’s a testament to the fairness and sense of decency that Iowans have,” he said.
To be honest, this isn’t the first time Iowa has surprised me. In fact, its neither the second NOR third time either! The first was in college and is related to a home-grown corn-fed lad, but the second and third I think you all may remember as well:

Good Luck, Bad Luck?
Posted by zoboxrox in health, international, miracle, tragedy on March 25th, 2009

I just saw this and HAD to post it. This is the most unbelievable case of good luck/bad luck I’ve ever heard.
A 93-year-old Japanese man has become the first person to be certified as a survivor of both US atomic bombings at the end of the second world war, officials said today.
Yamaguchi was in Hiroshima on a business trip on 6 August 1945 when a US B-29 dropped an atomic bomb on the city. He suffered serious burns to his upper body and spent the night in the city. He then returned to his hometown of Nagasaki.
“As far as we know, he is the first one to be officially recognised as a survivor of atomic bombings in both Hiroshima and Nagasaki,” said Nagasaki city official Toshiro Miyamoto. “It’s such an unfortunate case, but it is possible that there are more people like him.”
Certification qualifies survivors for government compensation including monthly allowances, free medical checkups and funeral costs. Miyamoto said Yamaguchi’s compensation would not increase.
This guy looks pretty goddamn good for 93, never mind TWO ATOMIC BOMBS! He’s so cute too; I wanna take him home and make him my grandpa!


lane crash flew back Thursday to Paris, where she was embraced gently by her father, who tried to lift her spirits with a joke.
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