The Other War We’re Not Winning

If you hadn’t heard that more than 10 percent of American households are in danger of running out of food, you’re not the only one. We don’t talk much about poverty anymore, in part because it’s a story that rarely makes headlines. “The issue is under-covered mainly because right now, the government is not actively engaged in programs trying to address the problem,” says David K. Shipler, author of The Working Poor: Invisible in America. Without War on Poverty programs to check in on, minimum-wage legislation to track, or new research findings to parse, reporters don’t have “hooks” on which to hang their stories. Consequently, there is a paucity of coverage outside of rare enterprise stories and ubiquitous holiday-themed tales about food shelves and shelters.

The result is that many people have an incomplete picture of poverty and what Shipler calls its “constellation of problems,” which magnify and reinforce one another. …

The Other War We’re Not Winning

The Shift Toward an Israeli-Syrian Agreement

The Middle East, already monstrously complex, grew more complex last week. First, there were strong indications that both Israel and Syria were prepared to engage in discussions on peace. That alone is startling enough. But with the indicators arising in the same week that the United States decided to reveal that the purpose behind Israel’s raid on Syria in September 2007 was to destroy a North Korean-supplied nuclear reactor, the situation becomes even more baffling.

The Shift Toward an Israeli-Syrian Agreement | Stratfor

Top Five Rules for Making Top Five Lists

1. Try to be original. No one cares if you do stuff the same way the
rest of us do. If you haven’t got something new to say, don’t bother.

2. Unless it’s about opinions, keep them to yourself unless you’re
an expert on the subject. You have a right to your opinions, but that
doesn’t necessarily mean the rest of us care. If it’s an opinion, say
so.

3. Check your facts. Check them again. Cite sources for things that other folks might want to check, or to read more about.

4. If you really must create one of the things, if your muse is just
pounding on the back of your eyeballs wanting to release some wisdom,
at least think about calling it something besides “Top Five (blah,
blah).” It’s so last century’s David Letterman, but unfunny.

5. Remember, you don’t have to list five things — really. If you run out of things to say, stop at four, or two, or….

Photo Essay: Latrine Graffiti

Photo Essay: Latrine Graffiti

It was late July, and hot. The temperature rose above fifty degrees during the day. The steel doorknobs on the latrine and shower trailers were hot to the touch. I spent a lot of time in the latrine trailers, reading the graffiti I found there because I had nothing better to do. Much of it was arcane, full of military acronyms and slang that only soldiers could understand. But one main theme stood out: soldiers were being stretched to the limits of endurance.

Bok Tower Offers Pleasant Passive Recreation, Peaceful Atmosphere

Historic Bok Sanctuary offers visitors Florida’s most abundant
opportunities for aesthetic, cultural and personal enrichment.
The lush landscapes of the Olmsted gardens,
the majesty and music of the Singing Tower
with its 60-bell carillon
and the splendor of Pinewood Estate
create an experience that inspires all who visit.

New! Concert Under the Stars May 3

Hunt for the Bok Bonus Trek Geocache

Plus… Listen to the Carillon!

Tortilla Art

The Great Tortilla Conspiracy is the world’s most dangerous tortilla art collective. Modeling themselves after the Free Masons, artists Jos Sances, Rene Yañez, and Rio Yañez bring the gospel of tortilla art to the masses like no other. The Great Tortilla Conspiracy uses the tortilla as a canvas to make art accessible to the masses. As a medium tortillas have the ability to expose the community to a wide range of issues. The Conspiracy uses their art to raise issues related to identity, immigration, miracle tortilla apparitions, the high price of tortillas in Mexico, and the rise of Transgenic Corn. The genetic engineering of corn is something that is impacting millions of people in the United States and Mexico and they address their concerns with it through their artwork and mischief.

The Great Tortilla Conspiracy – a set on Flickr

Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull

Museums began collecting rock-crystal skulls during the second half of the nineteenth century, when no scientific archaeological excavations had been undertaken in Mexico and knowledge of real pre-Columbian artifacts was scarce. It was also a period that saw a burgeoning industry in faking pre-Columbian objects. When Smithsonian archaeologist W. H. Holmes visited Mexico City in 1884, he saw “relic shops” on every corner filled with fake ceramic vessels, whistles, and figurines. Two years later, Holmes warned about the abundance of fake pre-Columbian artifacts in museum collections in an article for the journal Science titled “The Trade in Spurious Mexican Antiquities.”

Legend of the Crystal Skulls — Archaeology