Category Archives: Social Commentary

Fourteen Ways to Improve Air Travel

I’m just back from a trip, so I decided to revise and re-run one of my older posts.  It’s still accurate, but I needed to add a couple of points.  I’ve never seen an industry go downhill as fast as the airlines.  They have used 9/11 as an excuse to avoid any attempts at Customer service.  After our tax dollars bailed them out.

Think about that, those of you who don’t want to extend unemployment benefits.  We bail out entire incompetently run businesses, then people complain if we try to help the average person…

One of the reasons I don’t post as often as I might like is that I travel on business about 50% of the time. I’ve been doing this for almost 15 years now and I’ve really seen first hand the decline in quality of life for airline travelers. A lot of it– most of it– is the fault of the airlines, but my fellow travelers are also contributing heavily to the unpleasantness of travel through their own behavior. Here are 10 suggestions I think would improve the process for all of us.

1.Weld all airline seats to a stationary position. I’m tired of some drunken businessman laying in my lap and blocking my reading light all the way across the country.   I never recline my seat.   Not only does this lead to poor posture, I find the seat is even more uncomfortable reclined than upright. Exceptions would be made for overnight flights only.

2. Allow pets in the cabin and put ill-behaved children in the cargo hold in pet carriers. Not only would it deter terrorists if we had numerous dogs loose in the cabin, it would be much more pleasant than having some kid kicking your seat from coast to coast, screaming and crying at the top of their lungs or whining unattractively.

3. Either increase the width of the seat or enforce the policy for severely over weight people to have to buy two seats.   God knows I could lose a few pounds and I hate to say this, but it really makes for an uncomfortable flight if the person next to you taking half of your space.  If you have spent 5 hours hanging halfway into the aisle or unable to move your shoulders because the person next to you takes up so much space, you will know what I mean.

4. Limit carry on bags and enforce the limits. I’m sick and tired of people practically dragging steamer trunks onto 30 seater planes, then seeming amazed that they don’t fit in the overhead.

5. Deliver checked luggage in a timely manner. We now have to pay the airlines to handle checked baggage, so they should handle it quickly. I’m tired of waiting up to 45 minutes after landing for my bags to arrive.

6. Ban carry on food.  Either provide it or sell it, but don’t make me smell a meatball sub for hours in a confined, ill-ventilated space.

7. Define “weather” delays so the airlines don’t use it as a catch-all excuse not to staff or schedule appropriately or pay for hotel rooms for passengers they leave stranded.  I’ve seen the airlines use this excuse too many times when they strand people for several days due to canceled flights when there either is no weather issue or it was several days previous to the delay or cancellation.

8. Don’t let airlines claim an “on time” departure from pushback from the gate. Require it to be when the plane actually is airborne. This would greatly reduce the time spent sitting on planes on the tarmac.

9. Start calling “Flight Attendants” Stewards and Stewardesses again. This might bring their attitudes down a notch and make them a little less uppity and mean.

10.  Ban Flip Flops.  If, god forbid, there were an emergency these fools would cause half the people on the plane to die because they don’t have appropriate footwear.  Just think if there was a fire, crash landing, etc.  Would you want to be crawling over hot, tangled metal shoeless or with little pieces of plastic melted to your feet?  These people would delay the process and endanger everyone on the plane.  This isn’t just a style preference, this is a safety issue.

11.  Make people dress appropriately for travel in all other ways.  If you wear shorts and a tank top on a plane, you should expect to be cold.  Don’t make them turn down the air conditioning so those of us who are dressed appropriately for travel, burn up.

12. Nationalize the airlines and start over by reselling them to someone with a viable new business plan and customer focused strategy. We’ve gone so far downhill, this may be the only true fix….

13.  Remove the requirement that the Airlines be majority US owned.  I’m thinking Richard Branson.  Virgin Atlantic is a wonderful airline.  It seems only American’s no longer know how to run an airline.  Other countries do this much better…either learn from them or let them go ahead and run ours.

14.  Make them clean the damn planes.  I actually found a used diaper in my seat back pocket once.  When the stewards and stewardess come down the aisle to collect trash, I’m thinking we should all start keeping it and throwing it in the floor before we leave.  That may be the only way to force them to clean the planes.  Now, they expect us to do that ourselves, too.

More to come…I’ve got 3 more business trips over the next month or so…

And here’s a look at the way air travel once was:

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Filed under My Journey, Social Commentary, The Economy, Travel

Steak or Veggie Burger: Which is Greener? | Mother Jones

I found this a very interesting article.

Here is an excerpt and a link to the full story at the bottom:

A 2009 study by the Swedish Institute for Food and Biotechnology found that while producing a plate of peas requires a fraction of the energy needed to produce the same number of calories of pork, the energy costs of a pea-burger and a pork chop are about equal.

That’s not the only issue with fake meat. Consider the process that keeps your veggie burgers low in fat: The cheapest way to remove fatty soybean oil is with hexane, an EPA-registered air pollutant and suspected neurotoxin. A 2009 study by the Cornucopia Institute, a sustainable-farming nonprofit, found that Boca, Morningstar Farms, and Gardenburger (among others) market products made with hexane. The finding was enough to turn Cornucopia researcher Charlotte Vallaeys off of fake meat. “I can’t think of a single meat-alternative product where I could explain how every ingredient is made,” she says. “With a grass-fed burger, well, there’s one ingredient. And with grass-fed burgers I actually might be doing something good for the environment.”

via Steak or Veggie Burger: Which is Greener? | Mother Jones.

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Some Thoughts on Taxes

Let me start by saying, I’m lucky to have a job.  I’m even more lucky to have a pretty good job.  That means I pay a fair amount of taxes.  And guess what?  I don’t mind it.

I think of it as my civic duty.  I know that is a quaint concept in today’s world, but I think we all have an obligation to contribute to the common good.  That’s  how I view paying taxes.

I like that I am helping to finance education, social security, medicare, libraries, the Arts, mass transit and our public infrastructure.

I wish more of my tax dollars went to these and similar areas of focus and less to wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.  I wish more of my contributions went to safer food and small, family organic farms and less to corporate food providers like Monsanto.  I wish more went to small businesses than to Halliburton and other “defense” contractors.

I wish more of my tax dollars built things and helped the poor and unfortunate and less went to provide tax breaks for the wealthy.

That’s why I get so mad at the Republicans who want to extend the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy, but don’t want to fund unemployment insurance.

It may be time for a little healthy class warfare.   Or at least a healthy discussion…

The rich have brought it on themselves.  And they control the resources to prevail in any battle.  As long as money drives our political system via campaign contributions, they still have the advantage.

But we can still vote and call our elected officials.  We can make it harder t0 vote against working people or people temporarily without work and for the non-working, idle rich.

For every Bill Gates or Warren Buffet who want to help people by sharing their wealth, we have a dozen Paris Hiltons.

It wasn’t always this way.  For example, Andrew Carnegie built Carnegie Hall and countless libraries.  Today, the highest income groups seem to contribute so little.  Wealthy people no longer even have a concept of noblesse oblige.  It’s about “me” and “mine”.

Since the Republicans like to cite scripture for everything, how about Luke 12:48,

For unto whomsoever much is given, of him shall be much required: and to whom men have committed much, of him they will ask the more.

This sounds like a biblical justification to let the Bush Tax Cuts, that only applied to the very Rich, expire and let the wealthier classes help us retire the deficit they all seem so concerned with and greatly contributed to…via their tax cuts.

If  I’m willing to do my little part, why can’t they?

Instead of focusing on gaming the tax system and extending the Republican philosophy of  “I got mine, screw you”, they need to be contributing to the common good.

It’s their civic responsibility.  And it’s time the Democrats called the Republicans out on this instead of running in fear of the label “class warfare.”

Except for George Bush, most of us know you only declare war as a last resort to protect our way of life.

When people are losing their unemployment benefits, our bridges and roads are collapsing, our internet service is among the world’s worst, kids can’t afford to go to school without amassing a crushing debt load, our energy policy and systems are outdated, mass transit is a joke and all sorts of other issues face us as American’s.  They should be forced to do their part.

Let the Bush Tax Cuts expire.

Paris Hilton and her friends will survive.  They might even be forced to get and create real jobs that contribute to our economy and improve our world.

So much of today’s money was made without creating anything of substance.  What good did hedge funds do for anyone besides the people who bought them and made money betting on other people’s failures?

Let’s get back to building things.  If it takes forcing the rich to pay their share, so be it.

If they had been really contributing all along, we wouldn’t be in this position today…

Read some of the other posts I’ve run from people far wiser than I…

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Filed under My Journey, Politics, Social Commentary, The Economy

Unjust Spoils | The Nation

Great article from former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich in  The Nation:

Consider: in 1928 the richest 1 percent of Americans received 23.9 percent of the nation’s total income. After that, the share going to the richest 1 percent steadily declined. New Deal reforms, followed by World War II, the GI Bill and the Great Society expanded the circle of prosperity. By the late 1970s the top 1 percent raked in only 8 to 9 percent of America’s total annual income. But after that, inequality began to widen again, and income reconcentrated at the top. By 2007 the richest 1 percent were back to where they were in 1928—with 23.5 percent of the total.

Each of America’s two biggest economic crashes occurred in the year immediately following these twin peaks—in 1929 and 2008. This is no mere coincidence. When most of the gains from economic growth go to a small sliver of Americans at the top, the rest don’t have enough purchasing power to buy what the economy is capable of producing. America’s median wage, adjusted for inflation, has barely budged for decades. Between 2000 and 2007 it actually dropped. Under these circumstances the only way the middle class can boost its purchasing power is to borrow, as it did with gusto. As housing prices rose, Americans turned their homes into ATMs. But such borrowing has its limits. When the debt bubble finally burst, vast numbers of people couldn’t pay their bills, and banks couldn’t collect.

via Unjust Spoils | The Nation.

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Op-Ed Columnist – Tweet Less, Kiss More – NYTimes.com

Great Article in today’s New York Times from Bob Herbert.  I encourage you to click the link at the bottom and read the entire,short op-ed.  It’s really good.

Here is a brief excerpt:

We’ve got cellphones and BlackBerrys and Kindles and iPads, and we’re e-mailing and text-messaging and chatting and tweeting — I used to call it Twittering until I was corrected by high school kids who patiently explained to me, as if I were the village idiot, that the correct term is tweeting. Twittering, tweeting — whatever it is, it sounds like a nervous disorder.

This is all part of what I think is one of the weirder aspects of our culture: a heightened freneticism that seems to demand that we be doing, at a minimum, two or three things every single moment of every hour that we’re awake. Why is multitasking considered an admirable talent? We could just as easily think of it as a neurotic inability to concentrate for more than three seconds.

Why do we have to check our e-mail so many times a day, or keep our ears constantly attached, as if with Krazy Glue, to our cellphones? When you watch the news on cable television, there are often additional stories being scrolled across the bottom of the screen, stock market results blinking on the right of the screen, and promos for upcoming features on the left. These extras often block significant parts of the main item we’re supposed to be watching.

A friend of mine told me about an engagement party that she had attended. She said it was lovely: a delicious lunch and plenty of Champagne toasts. But all the guests had their cellphones on the luncheon tables and had text-messaged their way through the entire event.

Enough already with this hyperactive behavior, this techno-tyranny and nonstop freneticism. We need to slow down and take a deep breath.

And :

Let’s put down at least some of these gadgets and spend a little time just being ourselves. One of the essential problems of our society is that we have a tendency, amid all the craziness that surrounds us, to lose sight of what is truly human in ourselves, and that includes our own individual needs — those very special, mostly nonmaterial things that would fulfill us, give meaning to our lives, enlarge us, and enable us to more easily embrace those around us.

There’s a character in the August Wilson play “Joe Turner’s Come and Gone” who says everyone has a song inside of him or her, and that you lose sight of that song at your peril. If you get out of touch with your song, forget how to sing it, you’re bound to end up frustrated and dissatisfied.

As this character says, recalling a time when he was out of touch with his own song, “Something wasn’t making my heart smooth and easy.”

I don’t think we can stay in touch with our song by constantly Twittering or tweeting, or thumbing out messages on our BlackBerrys, or piling up virtual friends on Facebook.

We need to reduce the speed limits of our lives. We need to savor the trip. Leave the cellphone at home every once in awhile. Try kissing more and tweeting less. And stop talking so much.

Listen.

Other people have something to say, too. And when they don’t, that glorious silence that you hear will have more to say to you than you ever imagined. That is when you will begin to hear your song. That’s when your best thoughts take hold, and you become really you.

Op-Ed Columnist – Tweet Less, Kiss More – NYTimes.com.

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My Southern Gothic Background

There is a big difference between “Southern Gothic” and “The Jerry Springer Show.”  I should know.  I’m Southern.  And I’m a Virginian.

I’m just back from another day in my hometown, so I’m thinking about all this again…

Since I’m writing this blog, I feel this need to disclose the factors that color my perceptions.  Things a lot of people who know me know,  but that may surprise others.  In recent terminology, I’m “putting all my business in the Street.”

Discretion is so passe, so  what the hell?  So here we go…

“The Jerry Springer Show” is/was based on sensationalism and trashy revelations.  With our “Southern Gothic” tradition, we all know each other’s secrets and no one cares…It’s the inverse to the New England reticence.  We may choose not to acknowledge or mention certain details, but in the South, we all know each other’s business.  We put our crazy relatives out with the “sane” ones.  It never really occurs to us they are different.  For us, it’s just normal to have crazy relatives and to accept differences within the Family.   No locking them in the attic for us!  Well, most of the time…

I grew up dealing with this situation.

The first thing my Mother did after marrying my Father was to have his Mother committed.

Like all good Southern stories, there are multiple versions of the tale.  The one I prefer is that my Grandmother, Susan Catherine Rush Michaels, called up my parents one evening and told them she had just ground up a Coca Cola bottle in her Waring blender and drank it in a drink to try to kill herself because she was tired and depressed.

My Mother had no sympathy for quitters.  And she wanted her furniture.  So, off Susie went to the State Hospital at Staunton.

Unfortunately, for my Mother, my Grandmother’s maiden sisters, who lived with her, sold all the furniture during the Commitment Trip for cash because they were afraid my Mother would put them on the street penniless.  My Mother never got over this betrayal.

It’s also important to note the differences between my Mother’s family and my Father’s family.

My Father liked to think he came from a background beyond reproach.  He was descended from  a Signer of the Declaration of Independence, Dr Benjamin Rush of Philadelphia, and his relatives were allegedly inter-married with the Virginia Randolph family.  This means two things:  My Father could claim undisputed FFV status (First Family of Virginia, for the uninitiated-and no one ever disputes anyone’s claim) and that I was genetically predetermined to go to Washington and Lee University.

My Mother’s family was from the mountains and coal fields of West Virginia.  They literally walked down to Virginia to work in the cotton mills.  This may be why I had such a violent reaction to “Providence Gap” at Triad Stage.  I know these people and they there not the ones I saw on stage at that show, but I digress….

In any event, my Mother ultimately became a Cheerleader, which we all know means a woman determined to better her station in life by jumping and screaming in front of hundreds of strangers in 30 degree weather.  I hear she was beautiful and a classic Southern Belle.  My Father never had a chance…They married in 1950.

What my Mother apparently didn’t know was that my Father was from the most respected category of Southern lineages:  Old Family, No Money.   This is another thing she never got over…She always thought a woman had one card to play- her virginity- and that it went to the man best positioned to enable her to retire early.  She never recovered from, in her mind, misplaying her card.

Growing up, I always thought my Mother’s first name was “Goddammit”.  As in, “Goddammit Lou, what were you thinking?” or “Goddammit Lou, how much is this going to cost me?”  I’ll never forget her coming downstairs to the den one night when I was about 12, all dressed up in a new negligee’ and trying to look fetching, and my father just looking at her and saying:  “You still aren’t getting new furniture” and pouring another glass of bourbon.  Cheerleaders don’t have a long shelf life.

But it was her family that grounded me.  My Grandmother Sigmon could barely read and write, but I was much closer to her than the fancier Rush relatives.  I’m not quite sure how she produced my Mother.  She was non-judgemental, accepting of all people and infinitely curious about life.  She also thought my Mother was a pretentious fool.  My Father adored her.  She proved a Great Lady was made by an open heart and not by an open checkbook or family lineage.  She practically raised me, as a small child,  as my Mother was too busy with other things…

I found my Mother’s family infinitely interesting.  When she dumped me off at my Grandmother’s house in the Mill Village, I was in a different world.  Her instruction were not to play with anyone there or leave my Grandmother’s house.  She did not want me “mixing”.  But I did…

One of her brothers, my uncle, Wiseman Lafayette Sigmon, lived with my Grandmother and had not left the house since about 1945.  Today, we would call him crazy or agoraphobic.  Then, he was just different.  He would stay up late watching whatever would be on late night TV.  Back then, it wasn’t much.  But a lot of it was about history.  He loved history and learned it from TV.  I’m convinced he gave me my love of History that led me to major in it at Washington and Lee University so many years later.  He was crazy as a could be, but to me, he was just a normal part of my life.  I loved him.

My Mother’s Sister Goldie, was a working single woman.  Rare in that era.  She moved to Charlotte, NC, alone, in about 1965 and was the first one in her family to go out on her own.  She was a brilliant woman.  Valedictorian of her class in High School.  She took some college course, but never finished.  She knew her options were limited, but still made the best of it.  She was like my Auntie Mame.  She would sweep into Danville and give me a taste of the outside world.  She actually saw Carol Channing in “Hello Dolly” on Broadway, the first time she played it.  I never got over this revelation.  She let me know there was a life outside of Danville and  you could get out to a much more interesting place.  She also taught me not to forget your roots…She never did.  I’ve tried not to….I loved her very much.

My Uncle Sammy was a mystery to me.  He was younger than the others and just kind of a laid back, occasional presence.  He’s still an enigma to me.  I really don’t know him…

My other uncle, Daniel, was a cautionary tale.  I won’t speak of him too much as that was how I was raised-to not speak of or to him.  Let’s just say, I know White Trash when I see it.

This is where I come from…So, what can I say?

I learned to keep my eyes and ears open at an early age.  I come from a complicated background and from complicated people.  This all  taught me to watch people and question everyone and everything.  Not to accept anything at face value.  I have no regrets and many thanks for these lessons….

You know me a little better now, but none of this-and all of this- defines me.  That’s what it’s like to be Southern.  We like the Gothic side as much as the classy white bread side.  We invent ourselves and are a product of our past.

We all have secrets and we all usually know each other’s.  We just try to pretend otherwise.  We are raised to accept the perceptions one choses to offer at the expense of reality.  It’s much more pleasant.

We are all a mix of different energies.  That’s what makes us all unique and never boring…

I just choose to talk about the secrets and to explore them.  I’m getting older, but no less curious.

I want to keep all of this information forefront in my mind as I continue my journey.  It all colors who I am and will be…

It all means/meant different things at different stages in life.

And if Jerry Springer can put it all in the street to entertain people, I can put it out there to try to learn from it….

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Filed under Danville, My Journey, Social Commentary, Virginia

How Air Conditioning Undermined American Civilization

Let me start by saying, I love air conditioning.  I really don’t think I could live without it.  Summer is my least favorite season.

Of course, it is now hotter than it used to be due to the FACT of Global Warming.  It didn’t always get this hot– even in the South.

I hate the heat.  I’m more of a fall/winter person.

But air conditioning really has changed our American culture.

Before air conditioning– and I am old enough to remember when air conditioning was very rare– people interacted more.  Now, in our air-conditioned society, we rush to our houses, cars and offices and try to avoid spending any more time outside than necessary.  That means we interact with other people less.  We become more isolated.

Before air conditioning, people would sit on their porches in the evening and talk to their neighbors.  I well remember this from my Grandmother’s neighborhood when I used to stay with her in the early 1960’s.  It was social hour after dinner with everyone on their porches, roaming to and from each other’s homes and chatting.

Luckily, in my neighborhood, we still see our neighbors and talk to them.  That’s not always the case.  My partner, Steve, does better than I do because he is responsible for walking the dog.  He knows everything that goes on in Sunset Hills.

Air conditioning also made it possible for  places like Phoenix to grow.

It’s no secret, I hate Phoenix.  To me, it embodies all that is wrong with America.  Too many people, isolated in their homes to avoid the heat, too many highways and too many homogenized Big Box Stores and Chain Restaurants.  This new “culture” has wiped out the historical local culture, over whelmed the native American influence and destroyed or hidden the desert beauty that used to be there.  It’s become one big Wal-Mart.

It’s just wrong  for millions of people to be living in the middle of the desert.  It wouldn’t have happened without air conditioning…

So now we have to make more of an effort.

Thankfully, we do have the internet and FaceBook to build new cyber communities.  But they aren’t the same.  It’s still more real when you see people face to face and deal with oppressive heat together. It gives you a common bond.  You are all in it together.  It gives you a starting point for conversations that might lead you to get to know people better.  People with whom you might not have anything else in common, but the heat.  Or so you think until you start chatting…

That’s why I love New York.  You still have to take the subway and walk in the streets.  You are still forced to interact with people.  You all complain about the heat.  Even with air conditioning…

Enough said.

It’s hot as hell in here.  I need to go turn down the thermostat….

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Happy Bastille Day!

Joyeux Quatorze Juillet !   Bonne Bastille !

And a little more, from a confirmed Francophile:

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Why is “To Kill a Mockingbird” Being Attacked?

This is an intriguing article by Jesse Kornbluth on the Huffington Post…Here is an excerpt with the link to the full article at the bottom:

I never thought I’d see the day when the lawyer who argued Brown v. Topeka Board of Education before the Supreme Court and went on to be the first African-American to sit on that Court would have his career reduced to that most dreaded of all contemporary labels: “activist.”

I never thought I’d see the day when you can legally carry concealed weapons into airports and bars and — my sweet Lord! — churches.

I never thought I’d see the day when allegedly smart adults would tell me that America’s poor were so powerful that, given the chance to own real estate, they bought so many houses they couldn’t afford that they tanked the economy of almost every country in the world.

But then I never thought I’d see the day when “To Kill A Mockingbird” — a novel that has inspired readers for half a century — would be derided as a book about “the limitations of liberalism” (by Malcolm Gladwell, no less, in The New Yorker, of all places) and “a sugar-coated myth of Alabama’s past” with a hero who’s “a repository of cracker-barrel epigrams” (by Allen Barra, in the Wall Street Journal)

But as we approach July 11th — the 50th anniversary of the publication of “To Kill a Mockingbird” (to buy the paperback from Amazon, click here; shamefully, there is no Kindle edition) — it’s probably not surprising that we’re seeing one of America’s best-loved books criticized for its “politics.”

via Jesse Kornbluth: ‘To Kill A Mockingbird’ Anniversary: On Its 50th Birthday, Why Is ‘To Kill A Mockingbird’ Being Attacked? (VIDEO).

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Valley of the Dolls

A video tribute to one of my favorite trashy movies.

It’s so bad, it’s wonderful.

I can’t count the times I’ve seen it…

There was as much drama off-screen as on…Judy Garland was supposed to play the Susan Hayward part of Helen Lawson, but could not be coaxed out of her dressing room.  She had already recorded the songs and done the costume screen tests.

Rumor had it, Neely O’Hara was based on Garland and Helen Lawson was based on Ethel Merman.

And, of course, it was Sharon Tate’s most famous film.  Released just a year or so before she was tragically murdered by the Manson Family.

And it’s a perfect visual representation of late 1960’s fashion.

I remember having a fit because my parents would not take me to the theatre to see it when it first came out.  I was then about 10 years old…

What more can I say?

Here are some clips:

And here’s a campy, politically incorrect re-mix that I love:

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